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Understanding what is a qualified investor in Switzerland is a gating question for every private equity sponsor raising capital through Swiss‑domiciled fund structures. Since the Limited Qualified Investor Fund (L‑QIF) regime entered into force on 1 March 2024, the answer has acquired even sharper commercial significance: only investors who satisfy the statutory definition may participate in an L‑QIF, and sponsors bear primary responsibility for documenting that status before closing. This guide maps the relevant provisions of the Financial Services Act (FinSA) and the Collective Investment Schemes Act (CISA), explains the practical link between client classification and L‑QIF admissibility, and provides a transaction‑ready documentary checklist that placement teams can deploy immediately.
Before diving into statutory detail, PE sponsors and fund counsel should note the following headline points:
The concept of the qualified investor in Switzerland sits at the intersection of two federal statutes. The FinSA, which governs the provision of financial services and the offering of financial instruments, establishes a client‑classification framework that distinguishes professional clients from retail clients. The CISA, which regulates collective investment schemes, incorporates and extends that classification to define who may invest in certain fund categories, most critically, the L‑QIF. Both statutes must be read together, a point emphasised by FINMA in its guidance on Swiss collective investment schemes and by the Swiss Fund Data industry platform.
Private individuals are not automatically treated as qualified investors. Under the FinSA framework, a natural person may elect to be classified as a professional client, and thereby become a qualified investor for CISA purposes, through one of two routes. In the first route, the individual must declare in writing that they hold at least CHF 500,000 in financial assets and possess, by education or professional experience, the knowledge necessary to understand the risks of the intended investments. In the second route, the individual must hold at least CHF 2 million in net financial assets, without any separate expertise requirement.
In both cases, a written opt‑in declaration is required; the individual must expressly waive the higher level of protection afforded to retail clients. Industry guidance published by Walder Wyss confirms that the opt‑in must be specific and documented, and that the financial institution is expected to retain a copy of the declaration alongside supporting asset evidence.
A private individual who has entered into a written asset‑management or investment advisory agreement with a bank, securities firm, or other regulated financial intermediary supervised by FINMA is also treated as a qualified investor under the CISA. The rationale is that the regulated intermediary acts as a professional gatekeeper, ensuring appropriate investment decisions. For PE sponsors, this category is practically significant: it allows high‑net‑worth individuals who may not meet the standalone CHF 500,000 or CHF 2 million thresholds, or who prefer not to opt in, to participate through their asset manager.
The key evidentiary requirement is the signed asset‑management agreement itself, supplemented by a confirmation from the regulated intermediary that the arrangement is current and has not been terminated or opted out of.
Banks, insurance companies, public‑sector pension funds, corporates with a professional treasury function, licensed asset managers of collective assets, and other entities supervised by FINMA or an equivalent foreign authority are automatically classified as professional clients under the FinSA and therefore as qualified investors under the CISA. No opt‑in is required. This category also extends to central banks, supranational institutions, and certain public entities. For PE sponsors, onboarding these investors is procedurally straightforward, but documentary proof of the entity’s regulatory status, a current licence extract, a constitutional charter, or an auditor confirmation, must still be obtained and filed.
The L‑QIF was introduced into the CISA through a legislative amendment that entered into force on 1 March 2024, as confirmed by the State Secretariat for International Financial Matters (SIF). The vehicle was designed to provide Switzerland with a competitive alternative to Luxembourg’s Reserved Alternative Investment Fund (RAIF) and similar structures in other European jurisdictions. The defining feature is speed and flexibility: an L‑QIF does not require FINMA product‑level authorisation before launch, provided it complies with the statutory L‑QIF requirements and restricts its investor base to qualified investors. The fund manager, however, must be a FINMA‑licensed asset manager of collective assets or a FINMA‑licensed fund management company.
For sponsors exploring Swiss fund formation, this structure offers a faster time‑to‑market than traditional authorised funds, a practical advantage explored in greater detail in our comprehensive guide to starting your own investment fund.
The CISA restricts L‑QIF participation exclusively to qualified investors. Retail clients, meaning any individual or entity that does not fall within the professional or qualified investor categories described above, may not invest under any circumstances. This restriction is structural, not merely contractual: the fund’s constitutive documents must expressly limit participation to qualified investors, and the fund manager bears ongoing responsibility for verifying compliance. The Asset Management Association Switzerland (AMAS) has published practical commentary confirming that fund managers are expected to implement robust investor classification procedures as part of their L‑QIF operational framework.
A critical but sometimes overlooked L‑QIF requirement is the two independent investors rule under CISA. An L‑QIF must have at least two investors that are independent of each other and independent of the fund manager. Industry observers expect this test to become a recurring structuring consideration for PE sponsors, particularly in club‑deal or single‑LP scenarios. The independence assessment looks at both economic and governance ties: investors controlled by the same ultimate beneficial owner, or investors that are affiliates of the fund manager’s group, will generally fail the test. PwC Switzerland’s L‑QIF briefing notes that sponsors should address this requirement early in the fundraising process, since a failure to satisfy the two‑investor test can prevent launch or trigger a restructuring obligation.
Entities holding an SRO licence in Switzerland may serve as the licensed intermediary layer, but they do not substitute for the independent‑investor requirement.
The following decision tree summarises the relationship between FinSA client classification and L‑QIF admissibility. Sponsors and placement agents should work through this mapping for every prospective investor during due diligence.
This mapping exercise should be documented in the sponsor’s investor onboarding file. Maintaining an auditable record of each investor’s classification basis protects the fund manager and the sponsor in the event of a regulatory inquiry or investor dispute.
The practical core of any qualified investor onboarding process is the documentary evidence file. Sponsors who build a rigorous, standardised document‑request package at the start of fundraising will significantly reduce closing delays and compliance risk. The checklist below is organised by investor category.
For wealthy private clients electing qualified investor status, sponsors should collect the following:
Sponsors should retain these documents for the lifetime of the investment and for a minimum period after the investor’s exit, in line with Swiss anti‑money laundering recordkeeping requirements. Compliance teams should cross‑reference these files against the Swiss beneficial ownership register obligations where applicable.
For institutional and regulated entities, the documentary requirements are more straightforward but must not be treated as a formality. Sponsors should collect:
For private individuals qualifying through an asset‑management agreement, sponsors should collect:
These templates should be adapted to the specific facts of each transaction. Sponsors structuring subscription documentation may also wish to include qualified‑investor representations and warranties in the subscription agreement itself, cross‑referencing the supporting evidence described above. For guidance on structuring such transaction documents, see our overview of common elements of a term sheet.
Correct investor classification is necessary but not sufficient. Sponsors and placement agents must also address several adjacent compliance points that frequently arise when distributing PE fund interests to qualified investors in Switzerland.
Placement agents marketing fund interests in Switzerland may themselves require authorisation or registration. Under the FinSA, any entity that offers financial instruments to clients in Switzerland is generally subject to conduct rules and, depending on its domicile and activities, may need a licence. Sponsors engaging third‑party placement agents should verify the agent’s regulatory status and ensure that the agent’s marketing materials comply with Swiss offering‑document requirements, even where the target audience is restricted to qualified investors.
Foreign fund sponsors distributing interests to Swiss qualified investors must comply with CISA distribution rules, which require the appointment of a Swiss representative and a Swiss paying agent even where the fund is not authorised by FINMA. Switzerland does not currently operate a comprehensive foreign direct investment screening regime comparable to those in the EU or US, although targeted sector‑specific rules exist. The State Secretariat for International Financial Matters (SIF) publishes periodic updates on any proposed screening legislation. Separately, sponsors should note that Swiss qualified investor status does not equate to EU professional client status under MiFID II or manager‑level compliance under the Alternative Investment Fund Managers Directive (AIFMD). Cross‑border fundraising requires parallel classification under each applicable regime.
The following step‑by‑step workflow incorporates the classification, documentation, and compliance points discussed above into a single sponsor‑ready process:
Early engagement with Swiss PE counsel is advisable to ensure that subscription documents, side letters, and fund constitutive documents correctly reflect the qualified investor restriction and the two independent investors requirement.
| Category | How Admitted / Role | Key Documentary Proof Required |
|---|---|---|
| Wealthy private client (opt‑in) | Can elect professional / qualified investor status by written declaration if asset and (where applicable) expertise thresholds are met | Written opt‑in declaration; bank or custodian statements (within 3 months); portfolio evidence; proof of financial expertise (CV, certificates), expertise required for CHF 500k route only |
| Asset‑managed private client | Qualified by holding an ongoing written asset‑management or advisory agreement with a FINMA‑supervised intermediary | Signed asset‑management agreement; confirmation letter from regulated bank or fund manager; statement that the client has not opted out of professional classification |
| Institutional / regulated entity | Automatically qualified, banks, licensed asset managers of collective assets, pension funds, insurance companies, public entities | Current regulatory licence extract or registration certificate; constitutional documents (articles, charter); authorised signatory confirmation (board resolution or auditor/custodian letter) |
| Retail client | Does not qualify as a professional or qualified investor; higher level of FinSA protection applies | Not applicable, retail clients may not invest in L‑QIFs |
Determining what is a qualified investor in Switzerland is not an abstract legal exercise, it is the operational prerequisite for every L‑QIF fundraise and a growing number of other fund structures restricted to professional participants. Sponsors who invest in a robust classification and documentary‑evidence workflow at the start of their fundraising process will avoid costly delays, reduce regulatory exposure, and provide their investors with a smoother onboarding experience. The likely practical effect of continued L‑QIF adoption will be increasing standardisation of onboarding templates across the Swiss PE market, but for now, sponsors should not rely on assumptions and should verify every investor’s status against the FinSA and CISA criteria outlined above.
Professional legal advice from a Swiss private equity specialist is strongly recommended before admitting any investor or launching any L‑QIF.
Last reviewed: 23 May 2026. Updated to reflect L‑QIF market adoption developments since the regime entered into force on 1 March 2024.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Stefan Jud at Badertscher Rechtsanwälte AG, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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