General information
VAT applies throughout the entire Swiss customs territory (“Inland”), including:
- Switzerland
- Customs and bonded warehouses at Swiss ports
- Principality of Liechtenstein
- German municipality of Büsingen am Hochrhein
Taxable Persons (Art. 10 Swiss VAT Law)
A taxable person is anyone who, under their own name and independently, carries on a business with the aim of generating sustainable income from the supply of goods or services on an ongoing basis. This includes professional/commercial activities, bearing entrepreneurial risk, and not merely temporary operations.
Switzerland – General VAT Information
- Tax authority: Federal Tax Administration
- VAT in local languages: Mehrwertsteuer (MWST) / Taxe sur la valeur ajoutée (TVA) / Imposta sul valore aggiunto (IVA)
- Currency: CHF (Swiss Franc)
- VAT number format: CHE-123.456.789 MWST
VAT rates
- Standard: 7%
- Reduced: 5% and 3.7%
- Zero-rated (0%) and exempt supplies exist
Registration thresholds
- Established businesses: CHF 100,000 turnover
- Non-established businesses: CHF 100,000 turnover (also applies to intra-EU distance sales and electronically supplied services under OSS)
Other rules
- VAT grouping: Allowed (treated as single taxable person)
- Voluntary registration: Permitted
- Intra-EU dispatches/arrivals: N/A (Switzerland is not in the EU)
- Recovery of VAT by non-established businesses: Yes
Compliance
- VAT returns: Due last day of the month following the reporting period (monthly or quarterly)
- European Sales Listing / Intrastat: Not applicable
- Electronic invoicing: Optional for B2B/B2C; mandatory for supplies to federal administration if contract value ≥ CHF 5,000
Other news from Switzerland
VAT in Switzerland in 2026
Switzerland
Author: Ema Stamenković
Switzerland's VAT includes a standard rate of 8.1%, reduced rate of 2.6% for essentials, and special rate of 3.8% for accommodations. Potential future increases may finance defense spending. VAT (Mehrwertsteuer / TVA / IVA) is one of Switzerland’s most important indirect taxes. It is added by the seller to the price of most goods and services and paid to the authorities. Unlike in EU countri... Read more
Swiss VAT Refunds Available for Foreign Companies
Switzerland
Author: Ema Stamenković
Foreign companies incur Swiss VAT when operating in Switzerland but can recover it through the Swiss Federal Tax Administration. Eligibility requires registration outside Switzerland, no local supplies causing VAT liability, and reciprocal refund agreements. A fiscal representative is needed, with a minimum claim of CHF 500. Documentation includes VAT certificates and compliant invoices. Refunds o... Read more
Electronic Services via App Stores: Swiss VAT Duties for Non‑Resident Sellers
Switzerland
Author: Ema Stamenković
Foreign digital service providers must register for Swiss VAT if global sales exceed CHF 100,000, regardless of low Swiss sales. Platforms may not handle VAT for all markets. Providers should ensure contract terms clarify their VAT responsibilities to avoid compliance risks. Foreign providers of digital services (e.g., apps, streaming, in-app services) often distribute via platforms like Apple's A... Read more
Cutting VAT Refund Limits to Power Switzerland’s Tourism and Shopping Appeal
Switzerland
Author: Ema Stamenković
Foreign visitors significantly impact Switzerland's economy; reducing VAT refund minimums aims to enhance competitiveness in shopping and tourism. Foreign visitors' purchases now play a big role in Switzerland's economy. Not only do watch and jewelry retailers benefit from tax-free shopping, but SMEs that sell goods in the lower to middle price range—such as souvenirs, specialty foods, handi... Read more
Switzerland Seeks Feedback on Main VAT Changes
Switzerland
Author: Ema Stamenković
Switzerland is seeking feedback on VAT amendments: lowering the bundled services threshold from 70% to 55% for simplicity, and expanding the platform tax regime to electronic services, obligating platforms for VAT collection. Furthermore, a provision allowing alternative tax periods is withdrawn due to complexity. Feedback due by March 20, 2026. The Swiss Government is seeking feedback on two majo... Read more
Switzerland to Allow Annual VAT Reporting for Small Businesses
Switzerland
Author: Ema Stamenković
Started in January 1, 2025, Swiss SMEs may choose annual VAT reporting if their taxable turnover is below CHF 5,005,000 and they have a compliant history. Applications via the SFTA ePortal are due by February 28, 2026. Advance payments are required, with specific deadlines and potential revocation conditions. As of January 1, 2025, Swiss VAT-registered small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) can... Read more
Switzerland Opens Annual VAT Filing to Small Businesses
Switzerland
Author: Ema Stamenković
Businesses with low revenue can switch to annual VAT returns easily. Thousands of businesses are already submitting their VAT returns annually rather than quarterly. This is achievable for businesses with an annual revenue not surpassing CHF 5,005,000 and that have filed and settled their returns promptly for the last three years. Changing is easy and can be performed directly in the ePortal servi... Read more