Record High Company Bankruptcies Mark Economic Challenges
Switzerland witnesses unprecedented rise in company bankruptcies in 2024, with an 18% increase in corporate insolvencies signaling economic pressures.
Switzerland witnesses unprecedented rise in company bankruptcies in 2024, with an 18% increase in corporate insolvencies signaling economic pressures.

"The number of company bankruptcies climbed to a new high."
"Creditreform experts expect another increase in bankruptcies in the new year."
Switzerland is confronting a staggering economic reality as corporate insolvencies shatter previous records. In a dramatic departure from stability, the nation witnessed a total of 11,506 company bankruptcies in 2024, marking a critical 15% overall increase. Even more alarming is the specific surge in pure corporate insolvencies due to over-indebtedness, which skyrocketed by 18%. This is not merely a statistical fluctuation; it is a resounding warning signal echoing through the Swiss economy.
While deficiencies in organization accounted for a modest 6.6% rise, the sheer volume of financial collapses points to deep-seated systemic pressures. The creditors' association, Creditreform, confirms that these figures represent a new historical high, shattering the calm of the previous year. As businesses grapple with these pressures, the facade of corporate invincibility is cracking. The data demands immediate attention: the Swiss corporate landscape is shifting violently, and the era of easy survival appears to be over.
The construction industry is crumbling under the weight of this economic downturn, accounting for a massive 20% of all recorded bankruptcies. One in every five failed companies in 2024 belonged to this sector, highlighting a critical vulnerability in Switzerland's infrastructure development engine. This is not an isolated hemorrhage; the pain is spreading rapidly across other vital sectors.
Trade and business services are equally battered, each claiming 18% of the total bankruptcy pie. Meanwhile, the hospitality industry, often the jewel of Swiss tourism, is confronting its own crisis, representing 11% of all failures. These sectors form the backbone of the domestic economy, and their simultaneous struggle suggests a widespread contagion rather than a localized issue. As scaffolding comes down on unfinished projects and
Geography plays a pivotal role in this unfolding drama. While economic powerhouses like Zug, Geneva, Schwyz, and Vaud maintain high absolute numbers of failures, smaller cantons are witnessing explosive percentage growth. Nidwalden, Appenzell Innerrhoden, and Graubünden are seeing rapid spikes, proving that no corner of the confederation is immune to the shockwaves.
Yet, a paradox emerges amidst the decay. The entrepreneurial spirit refuses to be extinguished. In a defiant display of optimism, nearly 53,000 new start-ups were registered in 2024, an increase of over 2% from the previous year. However, this growth is shadowed by a grim reality: deletions from the commercial register surged by 6.1% to 32,618. The result is a net decrease of 2.5% in commercial register movements. While the tertiary sector drives 70% of these new ventures, the high churn rate suggests a volatile environment where new companies are born into a storm they may not survive.
The crisis is bleeding from the corporate world into private households. Private bankruptcies climbed by 6.2% to reach 8,779 cases, with a disturbing shift toward living persons declaring insolvency rather than deceased estates. This rise in personal financial collapse underscores the depth of the economic pressure facing Swiss residents.
Looking ahead, the forecast remains turbulent. Creditreform experts predict the numbers will continue to climb in 2025, driven by a critical amendment to the Federal Act on Debt Enforcement and Bankruptcy. Effective since the start of the year, this legal shift mandates that public law debts—such as taxes and duties—must now be claimed through bankruptcy proceedings rather than simple seizure. This regulatory tightening is poised to push even more struggling entities over the edge. Switzerland must brace for impact; the financial storm of 2024 may have just been the opening act.