Swiss Wealth Tax Guide Swiss Wealth Tax Guide

Swiss Wealth Tax Guide

Swiss Wealth Tax Guide

Switzerland does not impose a federal wealth tax. Instead, wealth tax is levied by the cantons and municipalities. Thresholds, exemptions, and rates therefore vary by canton and even by commune.

1) Tax Authority and Legal Basis

The Federal Harmonization Law (StHG) leaves assessment and collection of wealth tax to the cantons. There is no federal wealth tax. Municipalities commonly apply a multiplier to the cantonal amount.

2) Who Is Subject to Wealth Tax?

Swiss residents are taxed on their worldwide net assets (assets minus debts). Typical assets include bank accounts and securities, real estate, life insurance surrender values, vehicles, boats/aircraft, and valuables (e.g., jewelry, art). Non-residents are taxed only on Swiss-situated assets (primarily real estate). Most cantons grant a personal allowance so only wealth above a threshold is taxable.

3) When and Where Is the Tax Assessed?

  • Assessment date: Annually on December 31.
  • Jurisdiction: Canton of residence; Swiss real estate is taxed where the property is located.
  • Basis: Net worth = total assets – liabilities.

4) Rates and Calculation

Cantonal wealth tax is typically progressive, though some cantons apply low flat bands. Combined cantonal/municipal burdens usually fall around ~0.1% to ~1% of taxable net wealth, depending on canton and communal multipliers.

5) Exemptions and Thresholds

Each canton sets its own allowance(s), often higher for married couples and with additional deductions for dependents. Municipal multipliers and detailed progression tables can materially affect the final burden.

6) Cantonal Overview — Allowances and Rates

The figures below are rounded, indicative ranges for singles to support quick comparisons. Exact brackets, communal multipliers, marital/child allowances, and special rules vary by canton.

Canton Allowance (Single) Wealth Tax Rates (approx.)
Aargau CHF 100,000 ~0.10% – 0.60%
Appenzell Innerrhoden CHF 80,000 ~0.05% – 0.30%
Appenzell Ausserrhoden CHF 80,000 ~0.05% – 0.35%
Basel-Landschaft CHF 100,000 ~0.10% – 0.55%
Basel-Stadt CHF 100,000 ~0.10% – 0.50%
Bern CHF 97,000 ~0.10% – 0.50%
Fribourg CHF 100,000 ~0.10% – 0.60%
Geneva CHF 111,000 ~0.175% – 0.45%
Glarus CHF 80,000 ~0.05% – 0.40%
Graubünden CHF 100,000 ~0.10% – 0.50%
Jura CHF 100,000 ~0.15% – 0.60%
Lucerne CHF 100,000 ~0.05% – 0.30%
Neuchâtel CHF 100,000 ~0.10% – 0.50%
Nidwalden CHF 50,000 ~0.02% – 0.0665%
Obwalden CHF 80,000 ~0.05% – 0.20%
Schaffhausen CHF 100,000 ~0.10% – 0.40%
Schwyz CHF 80,000 ~0.02% – 0.15%
Solothurn CHF 100,000 ~0.10% – 0.50%
St. Gallen CHF 100,000 ~0.10% – 0.40%
Thurgau CHF 100,000 ~0.10% – 0.40%
Ticino CHF 100,000 ~0.10% – 0.60%
Uri CHF 80,000 ~0.05% – 0.30%
Valais CHF 100,000 ~0.10% – 0.50%
Vaud CHF 100,000 ~0.10% – 0.60%
Zug CHF 100,000 ~0.0425% – 0.17%
Zurich CHF 77,000 ~0.05% – 0.30%

Important: Ranges are indicative. Final liability depends on the canton’s progression tables, municipal multipliers, marital status, dependents, deductions, and asset valuation rules.

7) Comparison to Inheritance Tax

Wealth tax is an annual levy on net worth. Inheritance tax is a transfer tax at death (cantonal as well) and often exempts close family. The two taxes are separate and follow different rules and rates.

Summary

Level
Cantonal & municipal (no federal wealth tax)
Liability
Residents: worldwide net assets; non-residents: Swiss-situated assets
Assessment
Annually, as of December 31
Tax Base
Total assets minus liabilities (with allowances/deductions)
Rates
Typically ~0.1% – 1% combined, by canton/commune
Allowances
Vary by canton; usually higher for married couples and with child deductions

Swiss Wealth Tax – Frequently Asked Questions

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