Banking

Escrow payments and how escrow works in Switzerland

An escrow payment is money held by a neutral third party — the escrow agent — and released to the seller only once conditions defined in a tripartite agreement are proven. Switzerland has no codified escrow statute: the arrangement combines the mandate rules of Art. 394 ff. and the deposit rules of Art. 472 ff. of the Code of Obligations. Banks, notaries, law firms and fiduciary companies act as agents, and a professional agent is a financial intermediary under Art. 2 para. 3 AMLA. The funds sit on a segregated rubric or blocked account until release or return.

How an escrow arrangement works step by step

An escrow arrangement runs through five stages: agreement, deposit, performance, verification and release. Each stage hands control to a different party, which is the point of the mechanism.

  1. Escrow agreement. Buyer, seller and escrow agent sign a tripartite contract that names the escrowed asset, lists the release conditions and the exact evidence that proves each one, fixes a long-stop date, allocates fees and interest, and sets the dispute procedure. Precision here decides everything later, because the agent will act only on what is written.
  2. Deposit. The buyer transfers the funds (or the seller lodges shares, source code or documents) to the escrow account. The agent confirms receipt to both parties in writing; in a sale, that confirmation normally starts the seller's duty to perform.
  3. Performance of conditions. The seller does what the underlying contract requires: transfers the shares, vacates the property, delivers the code or completes the registration.
  4. Verification. The agent checks the agreed evidence: a Commercial Register entry, a land-register extract, a signed handover protocol. It verifies documents against the contract; it does not judge the commercial quality of performance.
  5. Release. If the evidence is complete, the agent pays the seller. If the long-stop date passes without it, the funds return to the buyer. If the parties disagree, the balance stays frozen until a joint instruction or a final court or arbitral decision arrives.

The depositor (usually the buyer) funds the account, the beneficiary (usually the seller) earns release by performing, and the escrow agent holds and pays out, owing its duty to both sides at once and taking instructions from neither alone.

Escrow services: who can act as an escrow agent in Switzerland

Banks, notaries, law firms and fiduciary companies act as escrow agents in Switzerland; no separate escrow licence exists. What regulates the role instead is anti-money-laundering law: anyone who holds assets belonging to others on a professional basis is a financial intermediary under Art. 2 para. 3 of the Anti-Money Laundering Act (AMLA). As of June 2026 such an agent must either be prudentially supervised, as a bank is, or affiliate with a self-regulatory organisation recognised by FINMA.

That status has practical consequences before any money moves. The agent must verify the identity of both parties (Art. 3 AMLA), establish the beneficial owner of the funds (Art. 4 AMLA), document the transaction, clarify anything unusual and report grounded suspicion to the Money Laundering Reporting Office (MROS). An escrow whose parties cannot pass this onboarding never opens.

The agent's private-law duties follow mandate law: diligent and faithful performance under Art. 398 para. 2 CO, strict neutrality, and no discretion beyond the written conditions. Releasing early, or against incomplete evidence, exposes the agent to damages claims from either party. In practice, notaries dominate real-estate escrows because cantonal conveyancing already runs through them, law firms and fiduciaries handle share deals and commercial closings, and banks act mainly where the amount is large or the account itself is the deliverable.

How escrow accounts work in Switzerland

A Swiss escrow account is usually a rubric account: an account the escrow agent opens in its own name, designated with the transaction reference and kept apart from the agent's own assets. The alternative is a blocked account (Sperrkonto) in the depositor's name with a blocking agreement in the agent's favour, so the holder cannot draw on it without the agent's consent. Both structures appear throughout our Swiss banking guides.

Segregation matters in the worst case. Claims the agent acquired for the client's account can be separated from the agent's bankruptcy estate under Art. 401 CO, but only while the funds remain identifiable; commingling with the agent's own money destroys that protection. If the account bank itself fails, the esisuisse scheme covers deposits up to CHF 100,000 per client per bank as of June 2026, and how an escrow balance is attributed depends on whose name the account carries. Parties to a large escrow therefore choose the bank on its standing, not on the guarantee. Interest follows the bank's conditions, and the agreement should say who receives it and who bears the charges. Opening the underlying account follows the ordinary onboarding rules described in our non-resident account guide; where a party needs its own account after closing, that is a separate account-opening engagement.

The best-known statutory escrow is the capital-deposit account used in company formation. Art. 633 CO for the AG, and Art. 777c CO for the GmbH, require cash capital contributions (CHF 100,000 minimum capital for an AG with at least CHF 50,000 paid in, CHF 20,000 for a GmbH, as of June 2026) to be deposited with a bank and blocked until the company is entered in the Commercial Register. The bank then releases the money to the new company. The logic is identical to contractual escrow; only the release trigger is fixed by statute. The mechanics are covered in our Swiss company formation service.

What escrow is used for in Switzerland

Escrow is used wherever payment and performance cannot happen at the same moment: company sales, real estate, software, domains and cross-border trade. The table shows the recurring patterns and what actually triggers release.

Typical Swiss escrow use cases, the escrowed asset and the usual release trigger (as of June 2026)
Use caseWhat is escrowedTypical release trigger
M&A holdback / earn-outPart of the purchase price, commonly 5–15%Expiry of the warranty period or resolution of notified claims
Real-estate purchaseDeposit or full purchase priceEntry of the ownership transfer in the land register
Share-purchase completionPurchase price for the sharesUpdated share register and Commercial Register filing of the new board
IP / source-code escrowSource code, keys and build documentationVendor insolvency or a defined maintenance default
Domain transactionPurchase price for the domainRegistrar confirms transfer into the buyer's account
Cross-border goods tradePayment for the consignmentPresentation of shipping and inspection documents

The share-purchase pattern is most visible with ready-made entities: a buyer of a Swiss shelf company pays the price into escrow, and the agent releases it once the share register is updated and the Commercial Register filing for the new board is made. The seller never hands over a live company unpaid, and the buyer never pays for an entity not yet under its control.

What escrow services cost in 2026

Swiss escrow has no statutory tariff; fees follow market practice, and the agreement decides who bears them. As of June 2026, three models recur. A flat fee, typically a four-figure amount in CHF, covers a standard share or property escrow run by a law firm or fiduciary. Ad valorem pricing of roughly 0.1–0.5% of the escrowed amount per year, with a minimum charge, applies to larger or longer arrangements such as M&A holdbacks. Banks add their own account opening and maintenance charges; a plain capital-deposit account costs a few hundred francs at most banks. Drafting custom conditions is billed hourly on top.

These are market observations, not published tariffs. No official fee schedule exists. Obtain a written quote before signing and check whether it includes the AML onboarding of both parties, which agents sometimes price separately. Costs are commonly split equally or borne by the buyer.

Which Swiss laws govern escrow

Switzerland has no codified escrow law. An escrow agreement is an innominate contract combining the mandate under Art. 394 ff. CO (which supplies the agent's duty of care and the rules on instructions) with the deposit under Art. 472 ff. CO, which governs safekeeping and return of the asset. Segregation in the agent's bankruptcy rests on Art. 401 CO. Because the statute supplies so little, the contract does the real work: vague release conditions are the main source of escrow disputes.

Foreign parties can submit their escrow to Swiss law by choice of law under Art. 116 of the Private International Law Act, and many do even where neither party is Swiss. The reasons are sober ones: a stable currency for CHF-denominated escrows, predictable courts, and an agent population (banks, notaries, regulated fiduciaries) that is itself supervised. None of that removes the need for a precise agreement.

When escrow is the wrong tool

Escrow is the wrong tool where the risk is pure non-payment rather than a conditional exchange. If a seller's only fear is the buyer's default, a bank guarantee or standby letter of credit (an abstract undertaking typically built on Art. 111 CO) pays on first demand without parking the buyer's capital for months. The buyer keeps liquidity; the seller gets a bank's promise instead of a frozen balance.

Three further situations argue against escrow. Recurring trade flows are cheaper under documentary credits or documentary collection, because escrow is negotiated per transaction and does not scale across repeated shipments. Small consumer purchases are already covered by marketplace protection or card chargeback at no extra fee, so set-up costs exceed the exposure; below a low six-figure amount, fixed costs often outweigh the protection in commercial deals too. Conditions that cannot be evidenced in a document do not belong in escrow either: an agent verifies papers, not quality, so a dispute over whether software "works properly" belongs in acceptance testing and an arbitration clause, not in a release condition.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions.

01What is an escrow payment?
An escrow payment is money lodged with a neutral third party, the escrow agent, who releases it to the seller only once conditions agreed in a tripartite contract are proven. If the conditions fail by the agreed long-stop date, the funds return to the buyer. Neither party can reach the money unilaterally while it sits in escrow.
02Who can be an escrow agent in Switzerland?
Banks, notaries, law firms and fiduciary companies. Switzerland issues no separate escrow licence, but anyone professionally holding third-party assets is a financial intermediary under Art. 2 para. 3 AMLA and must be prudentially supervised or affiliated with a FINMA-recognised self-regulatory organisation.
03How much does an escrow service cost?
There is no statutory tariff. As of June 2026, market practice is a flat four-figure fee in CHF for a standard share or property escrow, or roughly 0.1–0.5% of the escrowed amount per year with a minimum charge, plus the bank's account fees. The escrow agreement allocates who pays.
04Is escrow money protected if the bank fails?
Only partly. The esisuisse scheme covers deposits up to CHF 100,000 per client per bank as of June 2026, and how an escrow balance is attributed depends on whose name the account carries. Larger escrows rely on the account bank's solvency, so parties choose the bank deliberately.
05What is the difference between escrow and a bank guarantee?
A bank guarantee (typically built on Art. 111 CO) pays the beneficiary on first demand if the counterparty defaults; no money is parked in advance. Escrow actually holds the funds and releases them against documented conditions. Guarantees suit pure payment risk; escrow suits exchanges where performance must be verified.
06How long does an escrow arrangement take to set up?
Typically one to three weeks: drafting the tripartite agreement, AML onboarding of both parties and opening the escrow account. Account opening at the bank is usually the slowest step. The escrow itself then runs as long as the underlying transaction needs, from days to several years for M&A holdbacks.
07Does Switzerland have a specific escrow law?
No. Swiss law contains no codified escrow statute. An escrow agreement is treated as an innominate contract combining the mandate rules of Art. 394 ff. CO with the deposit rules of Art. 472 ff. CO, so the contract itself defines the conditions, evidence and release mechanics.
08Is an escrow agent subject to Swiss anti-money-laundering law?
Yes. Professionally holding assets belonging to others makes the agent a financial intermediary under Art. 2 para. 3 AMLA. The agent must verify both parties' identities (Art. 3 AMLA), establish the beneficial owner (Art. 4 AMLA), document the transaction and report grounded suspicion to MROS.
09Is a capital-deposit account a form of escrow?
Functionally, yes. Art. 633 CO requires cash capital contributions for a Swiss AG (and Art. 777c CO for a GmbH) to be deposited with a bank and blocked until the company is entered in the Commercial Register. The trigger is fixed by statute rather than negotiated by the parties.
10Can escrow be used when buying a shelf company?
Yes, it is the standard mechanism. The buyer pays the purchase price into escrow; the agent releases it once the share register has been updated and the Commercial Register filing for the new board has been made. Both sides are protected during the handover of an existing legal entity.
11Does a Swiss escrow account earn interest?
That depends on the account bank's conditions for the balance and term in question. The escrow agreement should state who receives any interest and who bears account charges; in practice interest usually follows the party that ultimately receives the principal.
12What happens if buyer and seller disagree about release?
The escrow agent freezes the balance. It releases only on a joint written instruction or a final court or arbitral decision, as the agreement provides; in unresolved cases the agent may deposit the funds with the competent court. The agent never arbitrates the underlying dispute itself.
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