What to expect on top of administrative costs
The administrative expenses and costs to set up a company are relatively low in Switzerland. They stand at between 700 francs to just over 1,000 francs for sole proprietorships, from 2,000 francs to just over 8,000 francs for a limited liability company and can exceed 15,000 francs for a private limited company.
Other necessary one-off investments also involve significant cost. These include for example:
- Product development
- Production (e.g. technical systems, equipment and machinery)
- Marketing (for the launch)
- Business equipment (furniture, hardware, telephones, etc.)
- Warehousing
To work out how much money the company actually needs, a simple budgeted income statement and the assets side of a planned balance sheet are ideal, and both are things you should use when founding your company. Your cash requirements can really start to mount up if you include salaries, social security contributions, materials and investment in machinery and vehicles, etc. Entrepreneurs starting their own company should ideally provide 30 to 50 percent of their starting capital from their own funds or, in the case of a private limited company, from shareholder loans (equity). The remainder is made up of debt capital and can come in the form of bank loans, (interest-free) loans from family and friends or from venture capitalists.