GmbH formation
The CHF 20,000 limited-liability company, the natural next form once the liability or the scale outgrows a sole proprietorship.
GmbH formationThe sole proprietorship is the fastest, cheapest way to trade in Switzerland: no minimum capital, register only at CHF 100,000 turnover. The price is unlimited personal liability, and one hard limit: it is generally open only to people who live in Switzerland. We confirm whether it fits, weigh it against a GmbH, and set it up, including the self-employment recognition that is the real hurdle.
No capital, fast to start, but personal liability and residence required.
A Swiss sole proprietorship (Einzelfirma) is a business carried on by one individual in their own name, governed for registration purposes by the Code of Obligations. There is no separate legal entity and no minimum capital, which makes it the fastest, cheapest way to start, and the reason the owner carries unlimited personal liability. It is the right form for a low-risk, owner-run activity, and the wrong one the moment real liability or outside capital appears.
If you live abroad, the sole proprietorship is generally not open to you. A Swiss GmbH or AG is the route. And if the activity carries real risk, the personal liability makes a company the safer form regardless of where you live.
The choice is not really about cost: it is about who carries the risk and whether you can even use the form. This is where the two diverge.
| Sole proprietorship | GmbH | |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum capital | None | CHF 20,000 (fully paid) |
| Liability | Unlimited, personal | Limited to the capital |
| Separate legal entity | No | Yes |
| Open to a non-resident | No, owner must live in CH | Yes, with a resident director |
| Taxation | Owner’s personal income | Corporate, then on distribution |
| Name | Must contain owner’s surname | Free company name |
For a resident freelancer with low risk, the sole proprietorship is often exactly right. For anyone abroad, anyone carrying real liability, or anyone who wants to trade under a brand rather than their own name, the GmbH earns its capital. We make that call against your situation, not a default.
Simpler than a company, but with one step that genuinely decides whether it works: the self-employment recognition. Timings are short where residence and the right to work are in place.
Confirming residence and, for non-EU/EFTA nationals, the permit that allows self-employment: the gate that decides whether the form is even available.
Registering with the AHV/AVS compensation office and evidencing genuine self-employment: several clients, own risk, own resources.
Setting the business name with the owner’s surname, and a business bank account separating private and business money.
Commercial-register entry, mandatory at CHF 100,000 turnover and optional below, plus VAT registration where turnover requires it.
Proportionate bookkeeping for the size, and a periodic check of whether the activity has grown past the point where a GmbH is the safer home.
A sole proprietorship has no minimum capital, so there is no equity to lock up. The cost is purely the work: the eligibility and self-employment recognition, the name and bank setup, and the register entry where turnover requires it.
We quote a fixed fee for the setup and the recognition. The value is a sole proprietorship that the authorities accept as genuinely self-employed, the step that most often goes wrong when it is done alone.
Ask for a fixed feeThe sole proprietorship has few formalities, but the ones it has are decisive:
Because there is no separate legal entity, a business debt is your debt, reachable against your home and savings. Founders attracted by “no capital, fast to start” sometimes skip past this, then take on a contract or a client claim that a company would have contained. If the activity can generate real liability, the right answer is not a sole proprietorship with insurance bolted on. It is a GmbH, where the company, not you, stands behind the obligation. We say so plainly before you start, not after a claim.
The paperwork is light; the judgement is not. Whether the form fits, whether the self-employment will be recognised, and when to move up to a company: that is where we earn our place.
If a sole proprietorship genuinely fits, we set it up and say so, and if the liability or your residence rules it out, we tell you before you spend, not after.
The AHV/AVS recognition handled with the right evidence, so you are accepted as self-employed rather than reclassified as an employee later.
The setup arranged so a later, tax-neutral conversion to a GmbH is a planned step once the risk or the profit justifies it.
The CHF 20,000 limited-liability company, the natural next form once the liability or the scale outgrows a sole proprietorship.
GmbH formationThe route for a founder based abroad, for whom a sole proprietorship is closed: what Swiss law actually requires to own a company here.
Company formationThe CHF 100,000 stock corporation, for when the activity needs real substance, outside investment or a non-public ownership register.
AG formationTell us where you live and what you will do. A partner confirms whether a sole proprietorship is even open to you, weighs it against a GmbH on liability and tax, and sets it up the right way.