How to develop your Swiss pricing strategy?
Swiss pricing regulations, competition law frameworks, and cost calculation for Hungarian entrepreneurs — with legal references, sectoral differences, and 2025 data.
What laws and organizations regulate prices in Switzerland?
Switzerland has no general price authority that imposes uniform pricing across all sectors. Price freedom (Preisfreiheit) is the fundamental principle — businesses decide the price of their products or services. However, several laws and institutions limit this freedom.
Key laws affecting pricing:
Law | Abbreviation | Subject Matter |
|---|---|---|
Federal Cartel Act (Bundesgesetz über Kartelle und andere Wettbewerbsbeschränkungen) | KG / LCart | Prohibited agreements, abuse of market dominance |
Price Disclosure Ordinance (Preisbekanntgabeverordnung) | PBV | Mandatory display of consumer prices |
Federal Act Against Unfair Competition (Bundesgesetz gegen den unlauteren Wettbewerb) | UWG / LCD | Misleading pricing, false discount claims |
Federal Price Supervision Act (Preisüberwachungsgesetz) | PüG / LSPr | Price supervision in monopoly markets |
The main authorities:
WEKO (Wettbewerbskommission / COMCO): the federal competition authority that acts under the Cartel Act (KG). It investigates horizontal and vertical price agreements, market allocation, and abuse of dominance.
Preisüberwacher (Price Supervisor): a federal official appointed under the PüG who investigates unjustified price increases in non-competitive (monopoly or oligopoly) sectors — particularly energy, healthcare, and postal services.
SECO (Staatssekretariat für Wirtschaft): the federal secretariat responsible for economic affairs, which oversees internal market regulation, consumer protection, and trading conditions. SECO does not set prices but publishes guidelines and market analyses.
Cantonal authorities: in certain sectors (hospitality, retail, local services), cantons may maintain their own consumer protection and price labeling requirements.
From a Hungarian business perspective: the unified internal market regulation familiar in the EU does not apply in Switzerland. Switzerland is not an EU member, so EU competition law regulations (e.g., 1/2003/EC) do not directly apply — Swiss cartel law (KG) forms an independent legal system, though it is substantively parallel to EU rules in many respects.
How should you calculate Swiss costs before setting prices?
The basis for price determination is knowledge of total costs. In Switzerland, the following items are particularly high compared to most other European markets.
Labor costs
Swiss wage levels are among Europe's highest. According to 2024 data from the Federal Statistical Office (Bundesamt für Statistik / BFS), the median gross monthly wage is approximately 6,500–7,000 CHF (roughly 2,600,000–2,800,000 HUF at early 2025 exchange rates). Employer contributions — AHV/AVS (old-age and survivors' insurance), IV/AI (disability insurance), ALV/AC (unemployment insurance), and mandatory accident insurance (SUVA) — account for approximately 12–15% of gross wages on the employer side.
Important: In many Swiss sectors, collective labor agreements (Gesamtarbeitsvertrag / GAV) set minimum wages. If a GAV applies in your sector, you must comply with its wage minimums — this also determines the lower bound of your pricing calculation.
Taxes and contributions
Federal corporate tax (Bundessteuer): 8.5% on profits (effective approximately 7.83% after tax base adjustments).
Cantonal and municipal taxes: vary significantly by sector and canton. Total effective tax burden (federal + cantonal + municipal) typically ranges between 12–21%, depending on cantonal location. Zug canton, for example, is historically known for low tax burden (effective approximately 11–12%), while Geneva or Vaud are at higher levels.
VAT (Mehrwertsteuer / MWST): the standard rate has been 8.1% since January 1, 2024. Reduced rate for food, medicines, books: 2.6%. For accommodation services: 3.8%. The VAT registration threshold is 100,000 CHF annually — below this, VAT registration is not mandatory but can be requested voluntarily.
Logistics and infrastructure
Switzerland is not part of the EU's unified customs territory. Shipping goods from the EU to Switzerland requires customs procedures, and Swiss customs tariffs (Zolltarif) may incur customs duties and, for certain products, special levies (e.g., for agricultural products). Cross-border logistics costs and transit times are therefore higher than within the EU.
Office rent and commercial space rental rates are also notably high: in Zurich and Geneva, premium office space rents around 500–900 CHF/m²/year, but outside cities and in smaller cantons this can be significantly lower.
Summary Calculation Considerations
Before pricing, it is advisable to assess the following items individually:
Direct labor costs (gross salary + employer contributions)
Material and procurement costs (including customs and shipping)
Infrastructure fixed costs (rent, utilities, insurance)
Administrative and accounting costs
VAT handling (if the business is VAT-registered)
Sector-specific licensing fees and mandatory insurance
Planned profit margin and risk reserve
What pricing practices are prohibited from a competition law perspective?
Swiss antitrust law (KG, SR 251) prohibits pricing agreements and conduct that noticeably restrict competition.
Horizontal price fixing
Price-fixing agreements between competitors at the same market level (e.g., two manufacturers, two retailers) are among the most serious violations. WEKO classifies these as "hard restrictions" (harte Abreden), which are illegal per se — regardless of economic justification.
Vertical price restrictions
Mandatory resale price maintenance (RPM) between manufacturer and distributor is also prohibited. A manufacturer may communicate a recommended consumer price (unverbindliche Preisempfehlung / UPE), but cannot require the distributor to comply with it.
Abuse of market dominance
If a business holds market dominance (Marktbeherrschung), it is prohibited to:
Apply excessively high prices (übermäßig hohe Preise)
Apply discriminatory pricing to different customers under equivalent conditions, if this has a competition-restricting effect
Engage in predatory pricing (Kampfpreisunterbietung): the dominant business sells below cost to drive out competitors
Misleading pricing (under UWG)
The Unfair Competition Act (UWG, SR 241) prohibits:
Displaying false "sale" prices (if the previous price was not genuine)
Comparative pricing if the comparison is misleading
Applying hidden charges that raise the price above the stated level
Requirements of the Price Disclosure Ordinance (PBV)
The Price Disclosure Ordinance (PBV, SR 942.211) requires that offers to consumers display the final price including VAT. This applies to online shops, catalogs, and physical stores alike. Violation of the disclosure requirement can be sanctioned by cantonal authorities.
What pricing strategies can be applied in Switzerland?
Within the legal framework, the business is free to choose its pricing approach. Below we review the applicability of the most common strategies in Switzerland.
Cost-based pricing (Kostenorientierte Preissetzung)
Markup pricing based on cost is the safest starting point, especially when entering a market. Its disadvantage is that it does not account for market demand and competitors' positions.
Value-based pricing (Wertorientierte Preissetzung)
The typical Swiss consumer and business buyer has higher quality expectations and is willing to pay a premium price if the value proposition (quality, reliability, service) supports it. Value-based pricing is particularly relevant in Switzerland's premium segments.
Penetration pricing (Penetrationspreissetzung)
A low introductory price used when entering a market. In Switzerland, this must be handled carefully: if the price remains persistently below cost and the business holds or seeks market dominance, WEKO may assess it as predatory pricing. In the absence of market dominance, penetration pricing is not illegal per se.
Dynamic pricing (Dynamische Preissetzung)
Pricing that varies by time or demand (e.g., hotels, airlines, e-commerce) is not legally prohibited in Switzerland, but price differences must remain within the bounds of PBV and UWG: the current price must always be clearly displayed, and references to previous prices are only permitted if they were genuinely valid.
Segmented pricing (Preisdifferenzierung)
Offering different prices to different customer groups (e.g., wholesalers vs. end users, B2B vs. B2C) is generally permitted, provided the price difference is objectively justified (e.g., different quantities, service levels, shipping terms). Discriminatory pricing — intended or likely to distort competition — is prohibited.
What documentation should be kept regarding pricing decisions?
Switzerland has no general legal obligation for a business to document every pricing decision in writing. However, documentation is advisable for several reasons and mandatory in certain cases.
Documenting competition law compliance
If WEKO initiates an investigation, the business must demonstrate that its pricing decisions were made independently, without consultation with competitors. Tools for this include:
Internal pricing calculations and decision records
Market research documentation
Correspondence records (demonstrating no price-fixing discussions with competitors)
VAT documentation
A VAT-liable business must maintain records according to the Federal Tax Administration (Eidgenössische Steuerverwaltung / ESTV) requirements: invoices, revenues, deductible input VAT. The retention obligation is 10 years.
Contractual price documentation
In B2B relationships, it is recommended to document the price and conditions for price changes in a written contract. Swiss law (Obligationenrecht / OR, SR 220) does not mandate written form for sales, but written documentation is decisive evidence in disputes.
Price lists and catalogues
Under the Price Display Ordinance (PBV), price lists, websites, and catalogues intended for consumers must be kept current. Displaying outdated prices may constitute a violation of the Unfair Competition Act (UWG).
How does pricing differ by sector?
Retail and e-commerce
The PBV applies comprehensively: the final consumer price (including VAT) must be displayed on all communication channels. Online retailers must clearly indicate shipping costs before the customer places an order.
Services (B2B and B2C)
Service prices are freely set, but advance disclosure of hourly rates and total project costs is part of consumer protection expectations. In certain regulated professions (lawyers, doctors, pharmacists), cantonal fee guidelines exist that are not mandatory maximums but serve as reference points.
Pharmaceuticals and healthcare
This is the most strictly regulated sector. Prices for drugs financed by mandatory health insurance (KVG/LAMal) are set in the Specialist List (Spezialitätenliste / SL) approved by the Federal Department of Home Affairs (EDI/DFI). Drugs not on the list have freely set prices, but the market authorization process (Swissmedic) is itself rigorous.
Energy sector
Electricity and gas pricing operates under a dual system: network fees (Netznutzungsentgelte) are subject to regulatory approval (monitored by ElCom), while freely traded energy prices develop under competitive market conditions. The Price Supervisor regularly examines the justification of energy prices.
Agriculture and food
Certain agricultural products (milk, sugar, grain) are subject to federal support and price regulation mechanisms within agricultural policy. Imported food products are subject to tariffs and agricultural levies, which affect cost and thus price.
What risks and sanctions should be expected?
WEKO sanctions
Under Article 49a of the Competition Act (KG), WEKO may impose fines on offending businesses of up to 10% of turnover achieved on affected markets in the preceding three years. In particularly serious cases (e.g., horizontal cartels), this can be a substantial amount.
WEKO also operates a leniency programme (Bonusregelung): a business that first reports a cartel and cooperates in the investigation may receive full immunity or fine reduction.
UWG sanctions
Violation of the Unfair Competition Act (UWG) can give rise to both civil claims (damages, injunction) and criminal liability. Criminal sanctions apply in cases of intentional violation.
Price Display Ordinance violations
Breach of the price disclosure regulation can be investigated and sanctioned by cantonal authorities. The level of sanction varies by canton.
Tax authority risk
If pricing is challengeable from a transfer pricing perspective (particularly between related entities), ESTV may apply corrections and impose additional tax. Swiss transfer pricing rules are based on OECD guidelines.
Sources
Federal Chancellery — legal database (Systematische Rechtssammlung / SR): https://www.fedlex.admin.ch
WEKO — Wettbewerbskommission (Swiss competition authority): https://www.weko.admin.ch
SECO — State Secretariat for Economic Affairs: https://www.seco.admin.ch
Federal Tax Administration (ESTV) — VAT information: https://www.estv.admin.ch
Price Supervisor (Preisüberwacher): https://www.preisueberwacher.admin.ch
ch.ch — official Swiss public administration portal: https://www.ch.ch
Federal Statistical Office (BFS) — wage and economic statistics: https://www.bfs.admin.ch
ElCom — Swiss Federal Electricity Commission (energy market supervision): https://www.elcom.admin.ch
In Brief
In Switzerland, price freedom is the principle, but several laws and authorities restrict it: the WEKO (Cartel Act) prohibits cartels, the price supervisor monitors monopolistic sectors, and the UWG (Unfair Competition Act) bans deceptive pricing. When calculating prices, account for high wage costs (CHF 6,500–7,000 median gross monthly salary), effective tax burden of 12–21%, 8.1% VAT, and customs duties for imports from the EU.
Key Takeaways
- Build total cost of ownership into your pricing: gross wages, employer contributions (12–15%), material and procurement costs (including customs duties), infrastructure fixed costs, and tax burden (federal 8.5%, cantonal and municipal 4–13%).
- Avoid horizontal price-fixing agreements with competitors — WEKO classifies these as 'hard restrictions' and deems them illegal per se, regardless of justification.
- Do not apply predatory pricing or unjustifiably high prices if you hold market power — WEKO and the price supervisor investigate and sanction these practices.
- Display the final price including VAT across all communication channels (webshop, catalogue, retail) — the Price Display Ordinance (PBV) mandates this; violation incurs cantonal sanctions.
- Document pricing decisions and calculations — in a competition investigation, you must prove prices were set independently, without coordination with competitors.
- Choose from applicable pricing strategies: cost-based (safe starting point), value-based (Swiss consumers expect higher quality), or segmented pricing (objectively justified price differences are permitted).
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Swiss median gross monthly salary, and what employer contributions apply?
According to Federal Statistical Office (BFS) 2024 data, the median gross monthly salary is CHF 6,500–7,000 (approximately 2.6–2.8 million HUF). Employer contributions — AHV/AVS (old-age and survivors' insurance), IV/AI (disability insurance), ALV/AC (unemployment insurance), and mandatory accident insurance (SUVA) — account for 12–15% of gross salary. Many sectors are governed by collective labour agreements (GAV) that set binding minimum wages.
What tax burden should be expected in Switzerland?
Federal corporate tax is 8.5% on profit (effective approximately 7.83%). Cantonal and municipal taxes vary significantly by sector and canton; total effective tax burden typically ranges from 12–21%. Zug canton, for example, is known for low tax burden (approximately 11–12%), while Geneva or Vaud are at higher levels. The standard VAT rate as of 1 January 2024 is 8.1%; reduced rate for food, medicines, books is 2.6%; for accommodation services 3.8%.
What does price freedom mean in Switzerland, and what restrictions apply?
Price freedom (Preisfreiheit) is the principle — you decide the price of your product or service. However, several laws restrict this: the federal Cartel Act (KG) prohibits price-fixing and abuse of market power, the Price Display Ordinance (PBV) mandates display of the final price, the UWG (Unfair Competition Act) bans deceptive pricing, and the price supervisor (Preisüberwacher) monitors monopolistic sectors.
What sanctions threaten pricing violations?
WEKO can impose fines up to 10% of turnover earned on affected markets in the preceding three years for Cartel Act violations. UWG violations trigger civil liability (damages, injunction) and criminal liability. Price Display Ordinance violations are sanctioned by cantonal authorities. Tax authorities may apply corrections and additional tax for transfer pricing issues.
How should pricing decisions be documented?
While there is no general legal obligation to document every pricing decision in writing, documentation is recommended and in some cases mandatory. In a competition investigation, you must prove pricing decisions were made independently, without coordination with competitors. Required: internal pricing calculations, market research documents, correspondence records. VAT-liable businesses must maintain records for 10 years. In B2B contracts, it is advisable to document price and price adjustment terms in writing.
What pricing strategies can be applied in Switzerland?
Cost-based pricing (markup on cost) is the safest starting point. Value-based pricing is relevant, as Swiss consumers expect higher quality standards. Penetration pricing (low introductory price) should be applied cautiously — it cannot remain below cost long-term if you hold market power. Dynamic pricing is not legally prohibited, but the current price must always be clearly displayed. Segmented pricing (different prices for different customer groups) is permitted if objectively justified.
What customs procedures and costs apply to shipments from the EU to Switzerland?
Switzerland is not part of the EU customs union. Goods shipped from the EU to Switzerland require customs clearance, and Swiss customs tariffs apply; certain products (e.g., agricultural goods) may incur special duties. Cross-border logistics costs and lead times are therefore higher than within the EU. Office rental and retail space costs are also elevated: in Zurich and Geneva, premium office space runs CHF 500–900/m²/year.
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