Swiss law tightens shell-company transfers
Two reforms have changed how shell companies (Firmenmäntel) may be dealt with in Switzerland: the end of retroactive audit opting-out, and a clear prohibition on transferring over-indebted shell entities. Both reward buyers and sellers who do their due diligence — and punish those who do not.
No more retroactive opting-out
Smaller companies can waive the statutory audit ("opting-out"). What is no longer possible is doing so retroactively. Under the revised Art. 727 et seq. of the Code of Obligations, in force since 1 January 2023, an opting-out decision applies only to future financial years and must be adopted in good time by the shareholders' or members' meeting. A company that has not opted out correctly cannot fix the position after the fact.
Stricter rules on shell-company transactions
The Federal Act on Combating Abusive Bankruptcies introduced tighter oversight of shell-entity transfers, amending several statutes at once: the Code of Obligations, the Debt Enforcement and Bankruptcy Act, the Criminal Code and the Federal Direct Tax Act. The central change: the new Art. 684a CO prohibits transferring shares in an over-indebted, inactive company that has no realisable assets. Commercial registers gained the power to ask for audited financial statements where a transaction looks suspicious.
What it means for shelf-company deals
The legitimate market is unaffected: a clean, solvent shelf company with real substance can still be acquired and put to work quickly. The reforms target the abusive end (selling a hollow, indebted shell to move liabilities or frustrate creditors) where civil and criminal consequences now follow. The practical takeaway is simple: before acquiring or selling any ready-made entity, check its balance sheet, its audit position and its history. Where speed matters, a properly maintained shelf company bought with proper diligence remains the fastest compliant route into a Swiss corporate structure. Enforcement is likely to intensify as the authorities apply these provisions.
Frequently asked questions.
01Can you still buy and sell shelf companies in Switzerland?
02What changed about the audit opting-out?
03What are the consequences of getting it wrong?
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