Swiss VAT Rates in 2026
Switzerland has applied three VAT rates since 1 January 2024, following the AHV 21 pension reform vote. All three rates increased by 0.4 percentage points on that date.
| Rate type | Rate | Main applications |
|---|---|---|
| Standard rate | 8.1% | Most goods and services not listed under reduced or accommodation rates |
| Reduced rate | 2.6% | Food, non-alcoholic beverages, books, newspapers, magazines, medicine, farm products, seeds |
| Accommodation rate | 3.8% | Hotel and short-term accommodation services |
| Zero rate (exempt with input credit) | 0% | Export of goods and services to recipients abroad (Art. 23 MWSTG) |
| Exemption without input credit | Exempt | Insurance, financial services, healthcare, education (Art. 21 MWSTG) |
Swiss VAT Registration Threshold
Resident Companies: CHF 100,000 Worldwide Turnover
A company with registered office or permanent establishment in Switzerland must register for VAT when its worldwide taxable turnover exceeds CHF 100,000 in a calendar year (MWSTG Art. 10 para. 1). "Taxable turnover" means revenue from supplies subject to Swiss VAT at any rate, including zero-rated exports. Exempt-without-credit supplies (financial services, insurance) do not count toward the threshold.
Registration must be applied for within 30 days of exceeding the threshold. ESTV assesses VAT retroactively from the date the threshold was first exceeded, not from the registration date, so late registration can trigger back-tax liability.
Foreign Companies: Same Threshold, Different Mechanics
Foreign companies supplying taxable goods or services in Switzerland are subject to Swiss MWST on the same CHF 100,000 threshold, but the assessment considers only Swiss-sourced turnover for the threshold determination when the company has no Swiss establishment. Key scenarios:
- Mail-order / distance selling to Swiss consumers: CHF 100,000 of Swiss-addressed deliveries triggers mandatory registration (MWSTG Art. 10 para. 2 lit. b).
- Digital services (MOSS-equivalent): Foreign companies supplying electronic services (streaming, software, data) to Swiss recipients must register once the CHF 100,000 threshold is reached.
- Permanent establishment: A PE in Switzerland means the company is treated as a resident taxpayer for all Swiss turnover from that PE.
- Import of goods: Import VAT is assessed at the border by Swiss Customs (BAZG) separately from MWST registration; the importer of record handles customs regardless of registration status.
Voluntary Registration Below CHF 100,000
Companies below the threshold may elect voluntary registration under Art. 22 MWSTG. Common reasons:
- Input VAT recovery: Companies purchasing goods or services subject to Swiss VAT (equipment, office rent, professional services) can reclaim this input tax once registered.
- B2B credibility: A VAT number signals commercial substance to Swiss counterparties.
- Import VAT: Importers can defer and reclaim import VAT via the MWST return rather than paying it cash at the border.
- Intra-group cross-charges: Group companies may register to enable full input tax recovery on services received from related entities.
Voluntary registration is binding for a minimum of one full calendar year and cannot be cancelled retroactively within that period.
Swiss VAT Number: Format and Validation
Switzerland uses its UID (Unternehmens-Identifikationsnummer) as the basis for the VAT number. The format is:
Example: CHE-123.456.789 MWST
The suffix changes by region or invoice language. All three suffixes refer to the same registration. The old 6-digit MWST numbers (pre-2011 format) were phased out and fully abolished in 2014.
VAT numbers can be verified on the ESTV ePortal (uid.admin.ch) and the central UID register. The UID is also used for commercial register entries, social insurance contributions, and customs declarations, making it the single identifier across all Swiss business registries.
Swiss VAT Registration: Step-by-Step Process
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1
Determine registration date and method
Establish the date the CHF 100,000 threshold was or will be exceeded. Voluntary applicants choose their preferred registration date. Gather UID number (from ZEFIX commercial register entry), company statutory documents (Statuten), and details of the managing director.
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2
Create ESTV ePortal account
Access the ESTV ePortal at estv.admin.ch. The managing director or authorised representative creates an account linked to the company UID. Swiss residents use their CH-LOGIN credentials; foreign representatives use the ePortal registration flow.
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3
Complete the online registration form
Complete the MWST registration application: business activity description, expected taxable turnover, first taxable supply date, fiscal representative details (if applicable), and chosen filing period (quarterly is the default). Supporting documents may be requested by ESTV.
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4
Fiscal representative appointment (foreign companies)
Foreign companies that cannot demonstrate alternative reliable communication under the 2025 waiver provisions must provide the name, address, and written consent of a fiscal representative established in Switzerland. The fiscal representative assumes joint and several liability for VAT obligations of the foreign principal.
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5
ESTV review and registration confirmation
ESTV reviews the application (10-20 business days for standard cases; up to 6 weeks for complex foreign-company applications). On approval, ESTV issues a VAT registration confirmation letter bearing the CHE-XXX.XXX.XXX MWST number. The effective date is the date stated in the application, not the confirmation date.
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6
First VAT return
The first VAT return covers the period from the effective registration date to the end of the first filing period. Input tax credits on costs incurred before registration but in preparation for taxable activity can be reclaimed on this first return (Art. 32 MWSTG start-up input-tax correction).
Fiscal Representative: 2025 Reform
The partial revision of MWSTG effective 1 January 2025 amended Art. 67 to introduce a conditional waiver from the fiscal representative requirement for foreign companies. Prior to 2025, a fiscal representative established in Switzerland was mandatory for every foreign company registering for MWST.
| Criterion | Before 2025 | From 2025 |
|---|---|---|
| Requirement | Mandatory for all foreign registrants | Default required; waiver available |
| Waiver conditions | None | Alternative reliable communication with ESTV + clean compliance track record |
| Who grants waiver | N/A | ESTV discretion, assessed at registration |
| Joint liability | Yes -- fiscal representative jointly liable | Waiver removes this protection; ESTV retains direct enforcement against foreign company |
| Typical cost | CHF 800-3,000 per year | Same if appointed; zero if waived |
In practice, ESTV grants the waiver selectively. New foreign registrants without a Swiss compliance history are generally advised to appoint a fiscal representative for at least the first two years, then apply for waiver review.
VAT Filing Periods and Methods
Quarterly Filing (Default)
The standard filing period is quarterly (Quartalsabrechnung). Returns are due 60 days after the end of each quarter (30 April, 31 July, 31 October, 28/29 February). Payment is due on the same date. ESTV issues a reminder notice if the return is not submitted on time.
Monthly Filing
Available on application. Beneficial for exporters and companies with consistent input-tax surpluses, as it reduces the period for which VAT refunds are delayed. The monthly return is due within 30 days of the end of each month.
Annual Filing (from 2025)
The 2025 MWSTG reform introduced an annual filing option for qualifying taxpayers:
- Taxable turnover not exceeding CHF 5,005,000
- Three consecutive filing periods with clean compliance (no late filings, no outstanding payments)
- Prior application and ESTV approval
Under annual filing, a simplified return is submitted once per year (within 60 days of the financial year end). ESTV requires quarterly instalment payments (Vorauszahlungen) based on the prior year's liability to prevent cash-flow advantages for the Confederation.
Effective vs Flat-Rate Method
| Method | How it works | Who benefits |
|---|---|---|
| Effective method (standard) | Output tax on all taxable supplies minus actual input tax on all business purchases. Exact calculation. | Companies with significant input VAT (equipment-intensive, mixed use) |
| Flat tax rate (Saldosteuersatz) | Output tax calculated at a fixed sector rate (set by ESTV by activity code) applied to gross revenue. No itemised input-tax deduction. Revenue ceiling: CHF 5,024,000; tax liability ceiling: CHF 108,000. | Small service businesses with minimal input VAT and simple bookkeeping |
Switching between methods requires ESTV approval and is permitted once every five years. The flat-rate method cannot be combined with certain input-tax corrections and is generally unsuitable for companies with substantial capital expenditure or export activity.
Reverse Charge (Acquisition Tax)
Under Art. 45 MWSTG, Swiss businesses acquiring services from foreign suppliers are liable to self-assess VAT at the applicable Swiss rate on the service value received. Key rules:
- Registered taxpayers: Apply reverse charge on all imported services regardless of amount, declare in Box 382 of the MWST return, and simultaneously claim the equivalent input tax in Box 405. For fully taxable businesses, the mechanism is cash-flow neutral.
- Non-registered businesses: Must self-register and pay acquisition tax if imported services exceed CHF 10,000 per calendar year (Art. 45 para. 2 MWSTG). This commonly affects small businesses and associations receiving foreign software subscriptions, data services, or consulting fees.
- Reverse charge does not apply to the import of goods (covered by customs / import VAT) or to supplies already subject to Swiss VAT by the foreign supplier.
Group VAT (Gruppenbesteuerung)
Two or more legal entities under common control may form a VAT group under Art. 13 MWSTG (Gruppenbesteuerung). Once formed, the group files a single consolidated VAT return and intra-group supplies are outside the scope of VAT. Conditions:
- All group members must be domiciled or have a PE in Switzerland
- Common control (majority ownership or controlling influence) must exist
- The group representative (Gruppenträger) is jointly and severally liable for all VAT obligations of the group
- Individual members cannot file their own returns during membership
VAT groups are common in Swiss holding structures, real-estate companies, and banking groups. They require careful planning: input-tax recovery is determined at the group level, not entity level, which can reduce recovery rates if exempt activities are concentrated in certain members.
Compliance, Penalties, and 2025 Director Liability
| Violation | Consequence |
|---|---|
| Late payment of VAT | 4% per annum interest (Verzugszins) from due date (MWSTG Art. 87) |
| Late or non-filing of return | ESTV issues default assessment (Ermessenseinschatzung); additional interest applies |
| Tax evasion (Steuerhinterziehung) | Fine up to 3x the evaded tax; criminal prosecution possible for intentional evasion |
| Late registration | Back-tax from date threshold was exceeded; 4% interest on entire back-tax amount |
| Managing-director liability (from 2025) | Personal joint liability for company VAT debts in cases of wilful or gross negligence |
VAT Considerations for Shelf Company Buyers
A Swiss shelf company (Vorratsgesellschaft) is registered in the commercial register but has had no business activity and therefore no VAT registration. After acquisition, the new owner should assess VAT obligations immediately:
- Projected turnover test: If the new business activity is expected to generate more than CHF 100,000 of taxable Swiss turnover within the first 12 months, mandatory registration applies from the date business commences.
- Voluntary registration: Even if projected turnover is below CHF 100,000, voluntary registration is worth considering if significant input VAT will be incurred in the start-up phase (fitting out offices, purchasing equipment, engaging Swiss suppliers).
- Timing of registration: Apply for VAT registration via ESTV ePortal immediately after the commercial register records the new director and ownership. The effective date stated in the application can be backdated to the acquisition date if commercial activity has already commenced.
- Input-tax correction on pre-registration costs: Swiss VAT law permits a one-time start-up input-tax correction (Art. 32 MWSTG) on the first return, allowing recovery of input VAT paid on goods and services acquired within a defined period before registration that are now used for taxable supplies.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the VAT registration threshold in Switzerland?
The mandatory registration threshold is CHF 100,000 of worldwide taxable turnover per calendar year (MWSTG Art. 10 para. 1). This applies equally to resident Swiss companies and foreign companies supplying goods or services in Switzerland. Companies below the threshold may register voluntarily to recover input VAT (Art. 22 MWSTG).
What does a Swiss VAT number look like?
The format is CHE-XXX.XXX.XXX MWST (or TVA in French, IVA in Italian). It is derived from the UID, the unique company identifier used across the commercial register, social insurance, and customs systems. The old 6-digit MWST numbers were phased out and fully abolished in 2014.
How long does Swiss VAT registration take?
ESTV processes standard applications via ePortal in 10-20 business days. Complex cases involving foreign companies, fiscal representative questions, or specific supply-chain structures may take 4-6 weeks. Registration is retroactive to the stated effective date, so late registration can trigger back-tax liability on prior taxable supplies.
Do foreign companies need a fiscal representative for Swiss VAT?
Before 2025, yes -- mandatory for all foreign registrants. The 2025 partial revision of MWSTG (Art. 67 revised) introduced a waiver for companies that can demonstrate alternative reliable communication with ESTV and a clean compliance history. In practice, ESTV grants the waiver selectively, and new foreign registrants are generally advised to appoint a fiscal representative initially.
What filing period applies to a newly registered Swiss company?
Quarterly filing is the default for new registrants. Returns are due within 60 days of the end of each quarter. Monthly filing is available on application (beneficial for exporters). Annual filing is available from 2025 for companies with turnover up to CHF 5,005,000 and three consecutive periods of clean compliance.
What is the reverse charge mechanism under Swiss VAT?
Under Art. 45 MWSTG, Swiss recipients of services from foreign companies self-assess VAT on those services. Registered businesses handle this on their VAT return (cash-flow neutral for fully taxable companies). Non-registered businesses must register and pay acquisition tax once imported services exceed CHF 10,000 per year -- a threshold commonly crossed by businesses using foreign software or consulting services.
Can a Swiss shelf company be VAT-registered immediately after acquisition?
Yes. A shelf company has no prior VAT registration. After acquisition, apply via ESTV ePortal once the commercial register reflects the new director and ownership. The registration can be effective from the acquisition date if taxable activity has already commenced. Input VAT incurred before registration but in preparation for taxable business may be reclaimed on the first return under the Art. 32 MWSTG start-up correction.
What are the Swiss VAT penalties for late registration or late filing?
ESTV charges 4% per annum interest on late payments (MWSTG Art. 87). Tax evasion can result in fines up to three times the evaded amount. Late registration triggers back-tax from the date the threshold was exceeded, plus 4% interest on the entire back-tax. The 2025 reform introduced joint and several personal liability of managing directors for VAT debts in cases of wilful or grossly negligent non-compliance.