Switzerland, specifically Geneva Canton, maintains a crypto-friendly regulatory environment under FINMA supervision with clear frameworks such as the Banking Act and DLT Act. FINMA emphasizes proportional, risk-based, and technology-neutral supervision, supporting innovation while ensuring market integrity.
| Status | crypto_friendly |
| Risk Score | 15/100 (Low Risk) |
| Region | europe |
| Currency | CHF |
| Capital Gains (Personal) | exempt_for_private_investors |
| Capital Gains (Corporate) | taxable_as_ordinary_income |
| VAT on Crypto | No |
| Required | Yes |
| Regulator | FINMA |
| Framework | Swiss DLT Act, AMLA, FinIA, Banking Act — FINMA SRO/FinTech/Banking framework |
| Ease | medium |
Licensing is required under FINMA with a medium difficulty level to obtain, ensuring compliance with Swiss financial market laws.
No significant enforcement actions reported; jurisdiction actively encourages crypto business
| KYC Required | Yes |
| Travel Rule | Yes |
| FATF Member | Yes |
| FATF Status | member_not_greylisted |
| FATF Body | FATF |
| Suspicious-Activity Reporting | Yes |
Status: technology_neutral_existing_law
FINMA applies a technology-neutral stance: existing Swiss financial market laws apply to DeFi where a legal entity or individual controls assets or provides financial services. Truly decentralised peer-to-peer protocols without identifiable operators typically do not trigger Swiss licensing. Where an entity controls the protocol (e.g. via governance tokens) or provides services, standard FINMA licensing and AMLA obligations apply. FINMA authorised the first DLT trading facility (BX Digital) on 18 March 2025. No DeFi-specific legislation exists as of 2026-06-01.
Status: regulated_case_by_case
Stablecoins are not governed by a specific Swiss stablecoin regulation as of 2026-06-01. FINMA applies its existing financial market law using a substance-over-form, technology-neutral approach. Stablecoin issuance may trigger FinTech, banking, or payment instrument licensing depending on economic function. A proposed Payment Instrument Institution license (consultation closed Feb 2026) will give Payment Instrument Institutions exclusive authority to issue value-stable crypto-based means of payment; expected in force 2027. Switzerland is NOT subject to MiCA (not EU/EEA member), though Swiss issuers offering into the EU must comply with MiCA.
Status: no_rules
No specific NFT regulation; generally permitted
| Legal | Yes |
| Electricity Cost | $0.15/kWh |
| Renewable Energy | 30% |
| Infrastructure | excellent |
Mining is legal with moderate electricity costs and good infrastructure; renewable energy accounts for 30% of electricity supply.
| Stability | very_stable |
| Sanctions | No |
| Corruption Index | 84/100 |
| Banking Access | open |
Risk Factors
Switzerland is not subject to OFAC, EU, UN or UK sanctions. Switzerland is neutral and aligns with EU/UN sanctions packages on Russia as a foreign policy choice. No capital controls, no FX restrictions. Strong rule of law, high judicial independence. Geneva is a major international financial and diplomatic centre. CPI 84/100 (Transparency International 2024).
Switzerland, specifically Geneva Canton, maintains a crypto-friendly regulatory environment under FINMA supervision with clear frameworks such as the Banking Act and DLT Act. FINMA emphasizes proportional, risk-based, and technology-neutral supervision, supporting innovation while ensuring market integrity.
Geneva (Canton) is classified by FATF as: member_not_greylisted.
Yes, licensing is required for VASPs.
KYC is mandatory for crypto businesses.
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Explore IT Services →Last reviewed: 2026-06-01 · Data source: Soken Crypto Legal Map
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