Banking

Swiss bank account for non-residents

A non-resident can open a Swiss bank account in 2026, but approval turns on one thing more than any other: a clean, documented source of funds. There is no single legal minimum deposit: online-access banks can start from around CHF 0, while private banking usually begins at CHF 500,000. A complete application takes about four to eight weeks, and deposits are protected up to CHF 100,000 per client per bank. The bank is not testing your wealth; it is testing whether it can evidence where the money came from.

Who can open one

Swiss banks accept non-resident clients (individuals and companies) from most jurisdictions. Each bank assesses the applicant on source of wealth, source of funds, the purpose of the account and the risk the relationship carries. Nationality alone rarely decides the outcome; the quality of the file does. The same logic runs through our other Swiss banking guides: prepare the evidence first, then choose the bank.

Minimum deposits by bank segment

Swiss banks set their own minimums, so the realistic figure depends on the segment you approach rather than on a published rule. The ranges below hold as of June 2026; for a bank-by-bank view, see our comparison of 36 Swiss banks, from online options like CIM Bank to private banks like Pictet.

Bank segmentExample banksTypical minimum to openOpening method
Online-access / digitalSwissquote, Dukascopy, CIM BankCHF 0 – 50,000Mostly remote, with video identification
Universal / cantonalUBS, Zürcher Kantonalbank, other cantonal banksCHF 50,000 – 100,000Remote or a branch visit
Private bankingPictet, Lombard Odier, Julius Baer, Vontobel, SyzCHF 500,000 – 2,000,000+Usually in person

Account types span current and savings accounts, multi-currency and investment accounts, and corporate accounts for an operating company. Online platforms onboard fully by video; tier-one private banks often still want one meeting or a notarised power of attorney.

The source-of-funds file

A documented source of funds is the core of every Swiss application. Expect to evidence how the money was earned or acquired (employment, a business sale, dividends, inheritance or investment proceeds) with records a compliance officer can rely on: tax returns for the last two to three years, sale or employment agreements, and statements that form a clear trail from origin to today's holdings. A thin or inconsistent file is the most common reason an account stalls. This is the part we build for clients who use our account-opening service.

Documents you will need

Personal applicants submit a standard pack; a company adds its corporate records on top.

  • Certified passport copy (an apostille may be required, depending on your jurisdiction).
  • Proof of residential address less than three months old.
  • Source-of-wealth evidence: tax returns, sale agreements, employment or dividend records, inheritance or investment statements.
  • CV and the tax identification number from your country of residence.
  • For a company: a commercial-register extract under 12 months old, articles of association, the shareholder register with UBO disclosure, directors' passports, the last financial statements and source-of-funds proof.

Where the account sits behind an operating entity, the bank also checks economic substance, one reason account opening and company formation are best planned together.

Fees a non-resident should expect

Swiss banks price non-resident accounts above domestic ones because the compliance load is higher. As of June 2026, monthly maintenance typically runs from a few francs at a universal bank to several hundred at a private bank, with a non-resident surcharge often in the CHF 25 – 100 range. International wires usually cost CHF 5 – 50 outgoing, and some banks levy an account-activation charge. Confirm the fee schedule in writing before you fund the account.

Tax reporting: CRS, AEOI and FATCA

Switzerland has reported account data under the Common Reporting Standard since 1 January 2017. The Federal Tax Administration exchanges information each year with around 108 partner jurisdictions, and only non-residents' data is sent abroad. From 2026 crypto-asset accounts come into scope under the Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework, with the first exchange due in 2027. US citizens are reported separately under FATCA. Banking confidentiality still protects you from private third parties (unauthorised disclosure is a criminal offence) but it has not shielded accounts from your own tax authority since 2017.

Deposit protection

The Swiss deposit-insurance scheme, esisuisse, protects deposits up to CHF 100,000 per client per bank if a member bank fails. Because the limit is per bank, clients holding larger balances often spread them across institutions to keep more of the balance inside the guarantee.

When a non-resident cannot use the standard process

A non-resident does not use the ordinary retail process in a few specific cases. US citizens face FATCA reporting that leads many Swiss banks to decline retail US-person relationships, leaving a small group of specialist banks. Russian nationals have been restricted since 2022: Switzerland blocks deposits above CHF 100,000 from Russian persons unless they hold a Swiss or EU residence permit or dual citizenship, and major banks have requested a Swiss permit since March 2023. Funds with any sanctioned connection, and politically exposed persons, trigger enhanced due diligence or refusal. In each of these cases the question is structural, not procedural — speak to an adviser before approaching a bank.

How long it takes

A complete application typically takes four to eight weeks from submission to an active account, and longer where the compliance review asks for more. The bank is rarely the bottleneck; the time goes into assembling a file that answers the source-of-funds question before it is asked.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions.

01Can a non-resident open a Swiss bank account in 2026?
Yes. Swiss banks open accounts for non-residents, but each applicant is assessed individually on source of wealth, source of funds and risk profile. A clear, documented source-of-funds file is the single biggest factor in approval.
02What minimum deposit do Swiss banks expect from non-residents?
As of June 2026 there is no single legal minimum: each bank sets its own. Online-access banks can start from around CHF 0, universal banks usually expect CHF 50,000 to CHF 100,000, and private-banking relationships commonly start at CHF 500,000 and run to CHF 2,000,000 or more.
03How long does opening take?
Typically four to eight weeks once a complete file is submitted, longer where the compliance review needs further documentation. Preparation, not the bank, is usually the bottleneck.
04What documents does a non-resident need?
A certified passport copy, proof of address under three months old, source-of-wealth evidence (tax returns, sale or employment agreements, dividend, inheritance or investment records), a CV and your tax identification number. A company adds a commercial-register extract, articles of association, a shareholder register with UBO disclosure, directors' passports and recent financial statements.
05Can I open a Swiss bank account remotely?
At online-access banks, yes: they onboard fully by video identification. Universal and cantonal banks may allow remote opening or ask for a branch visit. Tier-one private banks usually still want one meeting or a notarised power of attorney before they activate the relationship.
06Can a US citizen open a Swiss bank account?
It is harder. FATCA reporting leads many Swiss banks to decline retail US-person relationships, so US citizens are usually left with a small group of specialist banks that accept the compliance load. The account is structurally different from the start, not just a longer version of the standard process.
07Can a Russian national open a Swiss bank account?
Only within the sanctions limits. Since 2022 Switzerland blocks deposits above CHF 100,000 from Russian persons unless they hold a Swiss or EU residence permit or dual citizenship, and major banks have asked for a Swiss permit since March 2023. Any sanctioned connection means refusal.
08What fees should a non-resident expect?
Non-resident accounts are priced above domestic ones. As of June 2026, monthly maintenance runs from a few francs at a universal bank to several hundred at a private bank, with a non-resident surcharge often in the CHF 25–100 range and outgoing international wires around CHF 5–50. Confirm the schedule in writing before funding the account.
09Is my money safe in a Swiss bank?
Deposits are protected up to CHF 100,000 per client per bank by the Swiss deposit-insurance scheme, esisuisse, if a member bank fails. Because the limit is per bank, clients with larger balances often spread them across institutions to keep more of the total inside the guarantee.
10Do I need a Swiss company to open a Swiss bank account?
No. A non-resident individual can open a personal account on their own. A company account is a separate route, used when the account sits behind an operating entity. There the bank also checks economic substance, which is why account opening and company formation are best planned together.
11Will Switzerland report my account to my home country?
For non-residents, yes. Under the Common Reporting Standard, Switzerland exchanges account data each year with around 108 partner jurisdictions. US citizens are reported separately under FATCA. A Swiss account is confidential from private third parties, not from your own tax authority.
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