Swiss VAT registration
& compliance

Swiss VAT starts at CHF 100,000 of worldwide turnover, runs at an 8.1% standard rate, and catches foreign suppliers through the fiscal-representation rule. We assess the obligation, register the business, provide representation where it is foreign, choose the reporting method that costs least, and run the periodic returns, with input tax properly recovered, off the same records as the accounts.

At a glance

Registered on time, recovered where recoverable.

Threshold, rate, representation and the right reporting method.

Threshold
CHF 100,000 worldwide turnover
Standard rate
8.1% (since 2024)
Reduced / special
2.6% / 3.8%
Foreign suppliers
Fiscal representative required
Returns
Quarterly, or biannual flat-rate
Which method costs less
The essentials

What Swiss VAT compliance involves

Swiss value-added tax applies once worldwide turnover from taxable supplies reaches CHF 100,000, at a standard rate of 8.1 percent. Compliance means registering on time, charging the right rate, recovering input tax on costs, and filing the periodic returns, quarterly under the standard method or twice a year under the flat-rate method. For foreign suppliers it adds a fiscal-representation requirement. Done well, VAT is neutral and input tax is recovered; done late, it becomes back-tax the business absorbs.

Who this is for

  • Swiss businesses crossing the CHF 100,000 threshold;
  • foreign suppliers, e-commerce sellers and digital providers into Switzerland;
  • companies needing input-tax recovery set up correctly;
  • businesses with cross-border supplies and place-of-supply questions.

Where it fits

VAT returns come off the same records as the bookkeeping, sit alongside the tax advisory, and for groups connect to cross-border structuring.

The decision

Standard or flat-rate method

Smaller businesses can choose how they account for VAT, and the choice affects both the admin and the amount paid. It is not automatic that the simpler method is the cheaper one.

Swiss VAT reporting methods (as of June 2026). Flat-rate availability is subject to turnover and tax limits.
 Effective (standard)Net-tax-rate (flat)
Filing frequencyQuarterlyTwice a year
Input-tax trackingDetailed, fully recoveredBuilt into the flat rate
Best whenHigh recoverable input VATLow input VAT, want simplicity
EligibilityAllWithin turnover/tax limits

A business with significant recoverable input VAT often pays less under the standard method despite the extra admin; one with few input costs may prefer the flat rate’s simplicity. We compare both on your actual figures and elect the one that genuinely costs less, rather than defaulting to whichever is easier.

How it runs

From registration to returns

VAT is a recurring discipline, set up once and run every period. We register, elect the method, and operate the returns off the accounts.

  1. Step 1

    Obligation check

    Confirming whether and when the CHF 100,000 threshold is met on worldwide turnover, and whether representation is required.

  2. Step 2

    Registration & method

    Registering with the Federal Tax Administration, appointing fiscal representation for a foreign supplier, and electing the reporting method.

  3. Step 3

    Set-up

    Coding the accounting for correct rates, input-tax recovery, and the place-of-supply treatment of cross-border supplies.

  4. Ongoing

    Periodic returns

    Preparing and filing the quarterly or biannual returns off the records, reconciled and on time.

  5. As needed

    Audit & correspondence

    Managing FTA queries and VAT audits, and correcting prior periods cleanly where needed.

Budget

What it costs

VAT compliance is scoped to the volume and complexity: a domestic business on the flat-rate method is lighter than a foreign supplier needing fiscal representation, security and cross-border place-of-supply analysis. The recurring return work is priced separately from the one-off registration.

We scope and quote against the business’s supplies and reporting method. Pricing is on request.

Discuss your VAT
What you need

What compliance requires

Clean Swiss VAT rests on a handful of things done correctly and on time:

  • timely registration once worldwide turnover reaches CHF 100,000;
  • fiscal representation where the business is foreign;
  • the correct rate on each supply, including the 2024 rate change;
  • accounting coded so input tax is recovered and apportioned correctly;
  • periodic returns filed on time off reconciled records.

Worldwide turnover, not Swiss turnover, triggers it

The trap that catches foreign businesses is assuming the CHF 100,000 threshold looks only at Swiss turnover. It does not. It is measured on worldwide turnover from taxable supplies, so a large foreign business making even modest taxable supplies in Switzerland can be liable from the first franc of Swiss activity. Discovering this late means back-tax on supplies already invoiced without VAT, which the business usually cannot recover from its customers. Checking the threshold on the right basis, before supplying into Switzerland, is what avoids an avoidable cost.

Why Goldblum

VAT, in detail

VAT is neutral when it is run properly and a cost when it is not. Registration, representation, the right method and accurate returns are the day-to-day fiduciary work this firm does.

On time

Registered before it bites

The obligation checked on worldwide turnover and registration made on time, so there is no back-tax on supplies invoiced without VAT.

Recovered

Input tax actually claimed

The records set up so recoverable input VAT is claimed and any apportionment holds — the part of VAT that pays for itself.

Foreign-ready

Representation handled

Fiscal representation provided and the registration and returns run for a foreign supplier operating into Switzerland from abroad.

Related

What VAT runs alongside

The books

Accounting & bookkeeping

The day-to-day records the VAT returns come straight off, kept so tax, VAT and accounts reconcile.

Accounting & bookkeeping
People

Payroll & social security

Swiss payroll, AHV/ALV/BVG and source tax: the other recurring filing a Swiss employer must run.

Payroll & social security
Start here

Tax advisory

The corporate tax position VAT sits beside: effective-rate modelling and the reliefs that move the number.

Tax advisory
FAQ

Swiss VAT: FAQ

01When must a business register for Swiss VAT?
A business must register for Swiss VAT once its worldwide turnover from taxable supplies reaches CHF 100,000 a year. Below that threshold registration is optional, though it can be worthwhile to recover input tax. The threshold is based on worldwide turnover, not just Swiss turnover, which catches many foreign businesses by surprise. Charitable and certain non-profit bodies have a higher threshold. We assess whether and when the obligation bites for your specific activity, so registration happens on time rather than late with back-tax.
02What is the current Swiss VAT rate?
The standard rate is 8.1 percent, in force since 1 January 2024 when it rose from 7.7 percent. A reduced rate of 2.6 percent applies to essentials such as food, books and medicines, and a special rate of 3.8 percent applies to accommodation services. Swiss VAT rates remain among the lowest in Europe. Applying the correct rate to each supply, and handling the rate change correctly across periods that straddle it, is part of getting the returns right.
03Does a foreign company need to register for Swiss VAT?
Often, yes. A foreign business making taxable supplies in Switzerland is generally liable to register once its worldwide turnover reaches CHF 100,000, and a foreign company without a Swiss establishment must appoint a fiscal representative in Switzerland and, in many cases, provide security. The rules catch foreign suppliers of services and goods, e-commerce sellers and digital providers. We act as or arrange the fiscal representation and handle the registration, so a foreign supplier meets the obligation without a Swiss office.
04What is fiscal representation and when is it needed?
A foreign business liable for Swiss VAT but without a Swiss establishment must appoint a Swiss-resident fiscal representative (Steuervertreter) to act as its contact point with the Federal Tax Administration and handle its VAT obligations. The representation is a condition of being registered as a foreign taxpayer. It is not optional for those businesses. We provide fiscal representation and manage the registration, returns and correspondence, so the foreign supplier is compliant in Switzerland while operating from abroad.
05How often are Swiss VAT returns filed?
Usually quarterly under the standard effective method, or twice a year under the net-tax-rate method available to smaller businesses. The return reports output VAT on supplies and recovers input VAT on costs, with the balance paid to or refunded by the Federal Tax Administration. Deadlines are firm and late filing attracts interest and penalties. We run the periodic returns off the same accounting records as the financial statements, so the figures reconcile and the filing is on time.
06What is the net-tax-rate method?
The net-tax-rate (or flat-rate) method lets smaller businesses, below defined turnover and tax thresholds, apply a single industry-specific rate to their turnover instead of tracking input VAT in detail, and file twice a year rather than quarterly. It simplifies compliance and can be advantageous depending on the input-tax profile, but it is not always cheaper. A business with high recoverable input VAT may do better under the standard method. We compare the two for your figures and elect the one that actually costs you less.
07Can a Swiss business recover input VAT?
Yes. A VAT-registered business generally recovers the input VAT it pays on goods and services used for its taxable activity, offsetting it against the output VAT it charges. Input tax on costs relating to exempt or non-business activity is not recoverable, and mixed use requires apportionment. Proper input-tax recovery is where good VAT compliance pays for itself. We set up the records and coding so recoverable input tax is actually claimed and the apportionment, where needed, stands up.
08What about VAT on exports and cross-border services?
Exports of goods and many services supplied to recipients abroad are zero-rated or outside the scope of Swiss VAT, while imports are subject to import VAT collected at the border. The place-of-supply rules for services determine where VAT is due, which is central for cross-border and digital businesses. Getting these rules right is what keeps a Swiss business from over- or under-charging on international supplies. We map the supplies and apply the correct treatment to each, including the reverse-charge where it applies.
09What happens if a business registers late or files wrong?
Late registration means back-tax on supplies that should have carried VAT, plus interest, and the business may be unable to recover the VAT it never charged its customers, a real cost. Errors in returns attract corrections, interest and potential penalties. The Federal Tax Administration also conducts VAT audits. Because the cost of getting it wrong lands on the business, not the customer, timely registration and accurate returns are not optional housekeeping. We keep the compliance current so these costs do not arise.
10What does Goldblum do on VAT?
We assess the registration obligation, register the business, provide or arrange fiscal representation for foreign suppliers, choose the reporting method that costs least, and run the periodic returns off the accounting records with input tax properly recovered. We handle the place-of-supply and cross-border treatment, and manage correspondence and audits with the Federal Tax Administration. The aim is VAT that is correct, recovered where recoverable, and never a source of back-tax surprises.

Crossing the VAT threshold?

Tell us your turnover and where you supply. A partner confirms the registration obligation, sets up representation if you are foreign, and runs the returns on the method that costs least.