Company Formation

The AG in Switzerland (Aktiengesellschaft)

The AG (Aktiengesellschaft) is Switzerland's stock corporation, regulated by Art. 620 ff. of the Code of Obligations. Its capital of at least CHF 100,000, half of which must be paid in, is divided into shares; shareholders risk only their contribution, and the company alone answers for its debts. Directors appear on the public commercial register, shareholders do not. Governance runs through three organs: the general meeting, the board of directors and, above set size thresholds, the auditors. As of June 2026 the AG serves everything from one-person ventures to every company listed on the SIX exchange.

What is an AG under Swiss law?

An AG is a company limited by shares with its own legal personality, governed by Art. 620–763 of the Swiss Code of Obligations (CO). It owns its assets, contracts in its own name, and its shareholders' only statutory duty is to pay up the shares they subscribed (Art. 680 CO). The French and Italian texts of the law call the same form société anonyme (SA) and società anonima: one entity, three names.

The company is created by a notarised deed of incorporation and comes into existence on entry in the cantonal commercial register; every registered AG can be looked up free of charge on Zefix, the federal register portal. Alongside the GmbH, the AG is one of the two dominant company forms in Switzerland. It is the structure expected by investors, the usual vehicle for holding companies and foreign-owned subsidiaries, and the mandatory or de-facto form for banks and insurers. The incorporation steps themselves are the same as for any Swiss company; we cover them separately in the guide to Swiss company formation.

How much capital does a Swiss AG need, and how do its shares work?

Minimum capital, currency and share value

A Swiss AG needs share capital of at least CHF 100,000 (Art. 621 CO), and before registration at least 20 per cent of each share's nominal value (but never less than CHF 50,000 in total) must be paid into a blocked account (Art. 632 CO). Both figures are unchanged as of June 2026. Since the revised company law took effect on 1 January 2023, the capital may also be denominated in a foreign currency essential to the business (euro, US dollar, pound sterling or yen) at an equivalent value, and a share may carry any nominal value above zero; the old minimum of CHF 0.01 is gone.

Registered shares and the end of bearer shares

An unlisted AG today issues registered shares only. Bearer shares were abolished for non-listed companies by the federal act of 21 June 2019, in force since 1 November 2019: existing bearer shares were converted to registered shares by operation of law on 1 May 2021, and shares whose holders had still not come forward became void on 1 November 2024. Bearer shares survive solely for listed companies or where they are structured as intermediated securities.

How AG shares transfer, and the empty-shell rule

Shares change hands by assignment and an entry in the company's own share register; no notary and no commercial-register filing are involved, although the articles can make transfers conditional on board approval (Vinkulierung). One restriction applies since 1 January 2025: under Art. 684a CO, the sale of shares in a company that has no business activity, no realisable assets and is over-indebted is void, a rule aimed at trading in empty shells. A properly maintained ready-made shelf AG with clean, current accounts sits outside that prohibition.

The capital band and stamp duty

Two further capital points matter in practice. The capital band (Art. 653s ff. CO, also new in 2023) lets the articles authorise the board to move the capital up or down by as much as 50 per cent over a period of up to five years without repeated shareholder resolutions, with CHF 100,000 as the absolute floor. And the federal issuance stamp duty of 1 per cent applies only to capital contributions above an exemption of CHF 1,000,000, so a standard CHF 100,000 incorporation triggers none.

How is a Swiss AG governed?

A Swiss AG is governed through three bodies fixed in the Code of Obligations: the general meeting of shareholders, the board of directors and, where the size thresholds are met, the external auditors. The general meeting is the supreme organ (Art. 698 CO): it elects the board and the auditor, approves the annual accounts, decides on dividends and amends the articles. Since 1 January 2023 it may be held entirely online if the articles permit (Art. 701d CO), in hybrid form, or replaced by a written circular resolution, a practical change for foreign-held companies whose owners rarely travel to Switzerland.

The board of directors needs only one member, and board members face no nationality or residence condition as such. The residence rule attaches to representation instead: under Art. 718 para. 4 CO, at least one person authorised to represent the company (a director or an executive officer) must be resident in Switzerland. The board carries non-transferable duties under Art. 716a CO, including overall direction, organisation, financial control and supervision of management, and answers personally for breaches under Art. 754 CO. Setting the articles, board composition and registers up correctly from the start is the substance of AG formation work.

The Swiss AG at a glance

The table condenses the statutory features of the AG as they stand in June 2026; the audit rules that follow it deserve their own table.

Key features of the Swiss AG (Aktiengesellschaft), as of June 2026
FeatureRule for the Swiss AG
Legal basisArt. 620 ff. CO; exists on entry in the commercial register (searchable on Zefix)
Minimum capitalCHF 100,000; at least 20% per share and CHF 50,000 in total paid in; EUR/USD/GBP/JPY possible since 2023
ShareholdersOne or more; individuals or legal entities; any nationality or residence
LiabilityCompany assets only; shareholders risk their contribution, nothing beyond it
Public disclosureDirectors and signatories on the public register; shareholders are not
Share typeRegistered shares; bearer shares only if listed or held as intermediated securities
AuditOrdinary above two of three: CHF 20m assets / CHF 40m revenue / 250 FTE; otherwise limited; opting-out at ≤10 FTE
Accounting and AGMBooks and accounts under Art. 957 ff. CO; ordinary general meeting within 6 months of year-end
Taxation pointersFederal 8.5% statutory on profit; combined effective ≈ 12–21% by canton; annual cantonal capital tax

Are the shareholders of a Swiss AG anonymous?

Shareholders of a Swiss AG are private rather than anonymous: they stay off the public commercial register, while internal registers and anti-money-laundering rules keep ownership traceable for banks and authorities. The company must keep a share register of its registered shareholders (Art. 686 CO). Anyone who, alone or in concert, acquires 25 per cent or more of the shares or votes must report the beneficial owner to the company within one month (Art. 697j CO), and the company records those reports in a separate beneficial-owner register; a shareholder who fails to report cannot vote, and dividend rights lapse for the period of default.

Two external layers complete the picture. Banks identify the beneficial owners of any corporate client under the Anti-Money Laundering Act before an account is opened. And on 26 September 2025 Parliament adopted the Transparency of Legal Entities Act, which will create a central federal register of beneficial owners (accessible to authorities and financial intermediaries, not to the public) on a date the Federal Council has yet to set, expected from late 2026 onwards. Anyone choosing the AG for untraceable ownership is solving the wrong problem; what the form actually delivers is ownership kept out of public view with full accountability to the state. In the AG formations we run, this is the misunderstanding we correct most often: foreign founders read "shareholders are not on the register" as invisibility, when the 25 per cent beneficial-owner report and the bank's AML file already make the owner known to the state and to the bank.

AG or GmbH: which form fits?

The AG and the GmbH give identical liability protection; they differ in capital, publicity and how easily ownership moves. A GmbH starts at CHF 20,000, fully paid, and every member is named on the public commercial register, with changes of ownership filed there too. The AG demands five times the minimum capital but keeps its owners off the public record and lets shares pass by simple assignment, supports several share classes, and can carry a capital band for future financing rounds.

AG vs GmbHTwo Swiss limited companies, compared — as of June 2026
AGAktiengesellschaft
GmbHGesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung
Minimum share capital (Code of Obligations)
AGCHF 100,000
GmbHCHF 20,000
Swiss AG vs GmbH compared, as of June 2026
AGGmbH
Paid in before registrationAt least CHF 50,000 (20% per share)Full CHF 20,000
Shareholder liabilityCompany assets onlyCompany assets only
Owners on the public registerPrivate: shareholders stay off itPublic: members named
Ownership transferAssignment + share-register entry; no notaryNotarised and filed with the register
Share classes / capital bandSeveral classes; capital band availableLimited; no capital band
Audit regimeIdentical: ordinary audit above two of three (CHF 20m assets / CHF 40m revenue / 250 FTE); otherwise limited; opt-out at ≤ 10 FTE
Usually best forInvestors, holdings, transferable or saleable ownershipOwner-run businesses with no financing plans

In practice the AG wins where outside investors are expected, a holding sits above operating entities, ownership may change or be sold, or counterparties and banks read CHF 100,000 of capital as the appropriate level of substance. The GmbH is usually the better fit for an owner-run business with no financing plans; the details are on our GmbH formation page.

What does a Swiss AG cost?

Forming a Swiss AG costs roughly CHF 2,000–4,000 in third-party fees as of June 2026 (notary, commercial register, blocked-account charge and advisory drafting) separate from the CHF 100,000 share capital, of which at least CHF 50,000 is paid in and stays with the company as its own funds. A foreign-owned AG with no one on the ground adds a resident director (about CHF 3,000–10,000 a year) and a registered office (about CHF 1,500–3,500 a year). The full itemised breakdown and the canton-by-canton notary spread are in our guide to Swiss company formation.

When is an AG the wrong form?

An AG is the wrong form when its capital and formalities cost more than its privacy and transferability return. The clearest cases:

  • A founder testing a market. A sole proprietorship needs no capital, no notary and no audit, and only becomes registrable once annual revenue reaches CHF 100,000. Converting later is routine; locking CHF 100,000 into an untested idea is not.
  • A small owner-run business. The GmbH does the same liability job for CHF 20,000. If the members do not mind appearing on the public register, the extra CHF 80,000 buys little.
  • Anyone underestimating the running load. Even the smallest AG must produce annual accounts, hold and minute a general meeting, maintain share and beneficial-owner registers, and either appoint an auditor or formally opt out. Amending the articles means a notary each time.
  • Concealment as the goal. The reporting duties above, plus the coming federal transparency register, make the AG a poor instrument for hiding ownership, and a legitimate one for keeping it merely non-public.
  • A company meant to sit empty. Since 1 January 2025, Art. 684a CO voids the sale of an over-indebted shell with no activity or realisable assets, so "parking" an AG without maintaining it destroys its resale value.

What must a Swiss AG do every year?

Every Swiss AG must keep books and prepare annual accounts (balance sheet, profit and loss account and notes) under Art. 957 ff. CO, retain its records for ten years, and hold the ordinary general meeting within six months of the financial year-end (Art. 699 para. 2 CO). The audit position depends on size, and the thresholds below have applied unchanged for years; figures confirmed as of June 2026.

Audit duty of a Swiss AG under Art. 727–727a CO, as of June 2026
Audit regimeWhen it appliesWhat it means in practice
Ordinary auditTwo of three exceeded in two consecutive years: CHF 20 million balance-sheet total, CHF 40 million revenue, 250 full-time positions (annual average); or demanded by shareholders holding 10% of the capitalFull audit by a licensed audit expert with a detailed report to the general meeting
Limited auditThe default for every AG below the ordinary-audit thresholdsA review with limited assurance: interviews and analytical checks rather than a full audit
Opting-outNo more than 10 full-time positions on annual average and the consent of all shareholdersNo statutory auditor at all; reversible, and banks or buyers may still ask for audited figures

Tax adds the final layer: an annual corporate tax return at the canton of seat, VAT registration once worldwide turnover reaches CHF 100,000 (standard rate 8.1 per cent since 1 January 2024), and social-security contributions on any salaries paid. None of this is exotic, but all of it recurs, which is why the choice of form deserves the comparison work in our other company-formation guides before the notary is booked, not after.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions.

01What does AG stand for?
AG stands for Aktiengesellschaft, the Swiss stock corporation, société anonyme (SA) in French, società anonima in Italian. It is a company limited by shares under Art. 620 ff. of the Code of Obligations, with its own legal personality; only the company's assets answer for its debts.
02What is the minimum capital for a Swiss AG?
CHF 100,000. At least 20 per cent of each share's nominal value, and no less than CHF 50,000 in total, must be paid in before registration. Since 1 January 2023 the capital may instead be set in euros, US dollars, pounds or yen at an equivalent value.
03Can one person own a Swiss AG?
Yes. Swiss law allows a one-person AG: a single shareholder who may also be the sole board member. The only structural condition is that at least one person authorised to represent the company must be resident in Switzerland (Art. 718 para. 4 CO).
04Are the shareholders of a Swiss AG public?
No. The commercial register shows the directors and signatories, not the owners. Shareholdings sit in the company's internal share register and, from 25 per cent upwards, in its beneficial-owner register. Both must be shown to banks and authorities on request, but neither is open to the public.
05What is the difference between an AG and a GmbH?
Capital and publicity. An AG needs CHF 100,000 (at least half paid in) and keeps shareholders off the public register; a GmbH needs CHF 20,000 fully paid and lists every member publicly. GmbH transfers are entered in the commercial register; AG shares move by simple assignment. Liability protection is identical.
06Does a Swiss AG need an audit?
It depends on size. An ordinary audit applies once two of three thresholds are exceeded in two consecutive years: CHF 20 million balance-sheet total, CHF 40 million revenue, 250 full-time staff. Below that a limited audit applies, and a company averaging no more than 10 full-time staff can opt out entirely with unanimous shareholder consent.
07Can foreigners own a Swiss AG?
Yes, fully. Swiss law sets no nationality or residence condition on shareholders, so 100 per cent foreign ownership is permitted. The residence rule sits at management level only: at least one person able to sign for the company must live in Switzerland (Art. 718 para. 4 CO).
08Does a Swiss AG still have bearer shares?
Only listed companies, or bearer shares held as intermediated securities, may keep them. For all other companies bearer shares were abolished by the law of 21 June 2019: remaining ones were converted to registered shares by law on 1 May 2021, and shares of unidentified holders became void on 1 November 2024.
09What is the capital band (Kapitalband)?
An instrument introduced on 1 January 2023 (Art. 653s ff. CO). The articles may authorise the board to raise or lower the share capital within a range of up to 50 per cent in either direction for up to five years, without a fresh general-meeting resolution each time. The capital may never fall below CHF 100,000.
10Can a Swiss AG hold its general meeting online?
Yes. Since 1 January 2023 a fully virtual general meeting is permitted if the articles of association provide for it (Art. 701d CO). Hybrid meetings and written circular resolutions are also available, and unlisted companies may waive the independent proxy in their articles.
11How is a Swiss AG taxed?
At federal, cantonal and communal level. The federal statutory rate is 8.5 per cent on profit after tax; cantonal and communal taxes come on top, producing combined effective rates of roughly 12 to 21 per cent depending on the seat, as of June 2026. Cantons also levy a small annual tax on capital.
12When must a Swiss AG hold its annual general meeting?
Within six months of the end of the financial year (Art. 699 para. 2 CO). The ordinary general meeting approves the annual accounts, resolves on the use of profit and discharges the board. The accounts themselves must be prepared under Art. 957 ff. CO within the same window.
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