Single listing
For one business with a selectable duration.
1 month
All amounts exclude VAT.
- Publish 1 listing
- Anonymous or visible contact details
- Save as draft possible
No payment before publication.
For one business with a selectable duration.
1 month
All amounts exclude VAT.
No payment before publication.
For regular sellers with several listings.
3 active listings
Billed yearly. All amounts exclude VAT.
No payment before publication.
Offering a lease agreement for takeover needs a precise listing. Buyers want to understand location, rent, charges, remaining term, permitted use, fit-out and handover conditions. Clear information helps avoid unrealistic expectations and supports serious inquiries.
The listing should describe address or area, visibility, access, floor space, room layout, condition, infrastructure, surroundings, potential customer flow and permitted use. For a shop, workshop, office or production space, these details quickly show whether the lease fits.
Rent, charges, deposit, remaining term, renewal options, indexation, termination, restrictions, subletting, assignment and maintenance duties should be explained carefully. Sellers build trust when known clauses are separated from points that still need clarification.
Fit-out, installations, permits, completed works, items to be taken over, use restrictions and required landlord consent strongly affect value. The listing should not promise a transfer if contractual or administrative approval is still open.
If the offer mainly concerns furniture, installations or operating equipment, Sell inventory may be more precise. If a machine or technical installation is the main asset, Sell machinery often describes the offer better.
It means offering the economic takeover of a lease or location, usually with transfer conditions that still need to be checked.
Location, space, use, rent, charges, remaining term, termination, deposit, fit-out, permits, restrictions and landlord consent are important.
Because takeover or assignment often depends on the contract and the landlord. The listing should say what has already been clarified.
Yes. A sufficient remaining term, renewal option or stable conditions can make the lease more attractive to buyers.
Yes. Rent, charges and possible adjustments help buyers assess the real cost of the location.
Yes, if this is permitted and clearly described. The listing should state what stays, what is taken over and what is excluded.
Inventory is more suitable if the value mainly lies in furniture, devices, installations or equipment, rather than the lease itself.
No. company.ch helps sellers publish the listing and receive inquiries, but it does not replace legal, real estate or commercial review.