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.
Selling a Swiss AG needs a clear first presentation. Buyers want to understand legal form, activity, location, guide price and handover without sensitive details becoming public too early. The page is for sellers of a stock corporation who want to create a structured listing and receive relevant buyer inquiries. The page should lead to a clear listing, attract qualified inquiries and keep sensitive information under the seller's control.
A Swiss AG may be operating, hold assets or be offered as an existing company. The listing should make clear what is being offered and which facts are enough for a first inquiry. A useful first presentation helps sellers explain the offer without publishing confidential data or internal documents too early.
Useful details include activity, canton, guide price, revenue, employees, shareholder structure and possible handover. Legal and tax checks remain with the parties involved. Buyers should quickly understand the activity, scale, price logic, possible handover and the next step after a qualified inquiry.
If the legal form is still being compared, these entry points can also help: sell a Swiss GmbH and sell a shell company naturally support this search intent and help sellers choose the most precise entry point.
The page is for sellers of a stock corporation who want to create a structured listing and receive relevant buyer inquiries.
Sector, region, guide price, revenue, team, legal form, sale type and planned handover create a clear base for relevant buyer inquiries.
Yes. The listing can provide enough orientation for serious inquiries without publishing the exact name, address, direct contact details or sensitive figures.
They see the public facts needed for an initial assessment. Confidential details can be shared later, after a qualified inquiry.
An inquiry is relevant when the buyer understands the offer, sees a possible fit and can explain why they want to receive more information.
No. company.ch connects sellers and buyers through listings and inquiries, but does not replace legal, tax, financial or valuation advice.
Not necessarily. The important point is to describe the status clearly so buyers understand whether it is an operating business, a company or specific assets.