Swiss home electronics retailers saw a 4.4% sales drop in 2024, marking the second consecutive year of decline as post-pandemic market saturation and economic uncertainties impact consumer spending.

"As an above-average number of electronic devices were purchased during the coronavirus period, the market is currently struggling with saturation."
"The general consumer sentiment has also deteriorated as a result of increasing global uncertainties."
The numbers are in, and they paint a grim picture for Swiss retailers: the home electronics market is bleeding revenue. In a stark revelation from market researchers GfK and NIQ, the sector suffered a damaging 4.4% drop in sales throughout 2024, dragging total revenue down to CHF 5.2 billion. This isn't just a momentary dip; it is a deepening crisis.
This alarming figure marks the second consecutive year of contraction, significantly worsening from the 3.1% decline recorded in 2023. The trajectory is clear and concerning. While the Swiss economy grapples with broader headwinds, the electronics sector is taking a disproportionate hit. The days of effortless growth are over, replaced by a brutal correction that is stripping billions from the industry's bottom line. Retailers are now confronting a harsh new reality where consumer wallets are snapping shut, and the momentum of the past decade has ground to a screeching halt.
The pandemic party is officially over, and the hangover is brutal. During the coronavirus era, Swiss consumers engaged in an unprecedented buying frenzy, stocking up on laptops, tablets, and home entertainment systems to survive lockdowns. Now, the market is choking on that very saturation. Households are fully equipped, and the demand for upgrades has evaporated.
Market researchers identify this "pull-forward" effect as the primary driver of the current slump. Why buy a new television in 2024 when the premium model purchased in 2021 is still pristine? Compounding this issue is a souring consumer sentiment. Faced with increasing global uncertainties—from geopolitical tensions to economic instability—Swiss shoppers are becoming fiercely protective of their disposable income. The result is a perfect storm: a market flooded with existing devices meeting a consumer base that is too anxious to spend. The industry is effectively paying the price for its own pandemic-era boom.
Bricks-and-mortar retail is fighting for its life, and it is losing. A staggering shift has occurred: more than half of all home electronics sales in Switzerland are now generated online. This digital tipping point is decimating physical stores, forcing a radical reshaping of the Swiss high street. The casualties are already mounting, with iconic names vanishing from the landscape.
In the past year alone, the industry witnessed the collapse or disappearance of well-known chains such as PCP Steg, Melectronics, Microspot, and Weltbild. These weren't just shops; they were institutions. Their exit leaves a vacuum that is rapidly being filled by aggressive foreign low-cost providers like Action and Temu. These international disruptors are pushing into the market with ruthless efficiency, undercutting prices and further squeezing domestic retailers. The message is undeniable: adapt to the digital-first reality or face extinction. The era of the traditional Swiss electronics shop is ending, replaced by warehouses and delivery vans.
Don't expect a rebound anytime soon. The forecast for 2025 is bleak, with analysts predicting another 2% decline in sales. The first half of the year is expected to be particularly weak, dragging the sector further into the red before any potential uptick in the second half. This is not a temporary blip; it is a prolonged recession for the tech retail sector.
Experts warn that a sustained stabilization of business is unlikely to materialize until 2026 at the earliest. The Swiss economy is currently navigating choppy waters, with growth forecasts lowered due to international trade tensions and US policy uncertainties. For electronics retailers, this means at least another 12 to 18 months of austerity, strategy pivots, and survival tactics. The boldest companies may survive by reinventing themselves, but for many, the long road to 2026 will be a treacherous journey through a shrinking market.