Swiss banking has been through a long compliance transformation. By 2026 the picture is well-established: banking in Switzerland is professional, conservative, and broadly accessible to genuine residents with clean profiles - and consistently selective with everything else.
For cross-border movers becoming Swiss-resident, the practical map below is what we work through.
Categories of Swiss bank
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Major Swiss universal banks (UBS, Raiffeisen, Cantonal banks like ZKB, BCV, BCG, BCB; PostFinance for some functions). Full-service. Different cantonal banks for different cantons - the cantonal bank is often the natural first conversation.
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Swiss private banks. For higher-balance clients or specific service profiles. Different relationship cadence.
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Branches and specialist providers. Foreign-bank branches in Switzerland; specialist providers for certain professional services.
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EU-licensed digital providers (Wise, Revolut, others). Functional alongside a Swiss account for some flows; not a substitute for a Swiss IBAN where needed.
What banks ask for from a new resident
- Passport / national ID
- Swiss residence permit (or the receipt while the permit is being issued; cantonal practice varies)
- Proof of Swiss address (lease, utility bill, residence registration)
- Employment or income evidence - employment contract, pension statements, source-of-funds for opening transfers
- AML / source-of-wealth narrative for the initial deposit, particularly for larger amounts
- CRS declarations of tax residencies
- For non-Swiss-source wealth: documentation explaining accumulation - sale of business, employment over years, inheritance, settled investment account history
What complicates things
- Specific source countries: certain country combinations face additional questions due to AML risk frameworks.
- Specific sectors: crypto, gaming, regulated specialty industries face enhanced due diligence.
- Specific structures: trusts, foundations, holding structures all require careful explanation.
- Movement of wealth across many borders without continuous documentation: gaps in the documented record are the most common reason an otherwise clean case stalls.
What does not complicate things, despite the reputation
- Being a foreigner. New residents from compatible countries open accounts routinely.
- Multi-currency accounts. Swiss banks are comfortable with multi-currency by design.
- Cross-border travel patterns. Swiss banks understand mobile clients.
The CRS reality
Swiss banks report account information under CRS to your tax residences. This is the baseline assumption of any banking relationship. Planning around the assumption that "Swiss banks don't report" is decades out of date and will create problems faster than benefits.
What we tell movers
- Open the cantonal bank or universal bank early - within the first weeks of residence. The relationship is easier to start when you're a new resident than to back-fill a year later.
- Bring the source-of-wealth narrative ready. A clean explanation of where your money came from and how it accumulated is the single most useful preparation.
- Treat the bank as a long-term relationship, not a transactional one. Swiss banking still rewards continuity.
- Use EU-licensed digital providers for some flows where they're more efficient (Wise for FX, for instance), but do not try to substitute them for a real Swiss bank if Swiss-IBAN functionality is needed.
Swiss banking is workable. The cases that struggle are the ones where the documentation didn't hold up, not the ones where the country was wrong.