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.
When selling a Swiss GmbH, buyers need clarity on the company, activity, ownership structure and handover. The listing should present these points calmly. It is for sellers of a limited liability company who want to create a clear and discreet listing. The page should lead to a clear listing, attract qualified inquiries and keep sensitive information under the seller's control.
A Swiss GmbH may be an operating business, a small succession case or a company with specific assets. The key is what buyers are meant to take over. A useful first presentation helps sellers explain the offer without publishing confidential data or internal documents too early.
Useful details include shares, activity, location, guide price, revenue, employees and handover. Detailed review follows after a relevant inquiry. Buyers should quickly understand the activity, scale, price logic, possible handover and the next step after a qualified inquiry.
For legal-form comparisons, see: sell a Swiss AG and sell a shell company naturally support this search intent and help sellers choose the most precise entry point.
It is for sellers of a limited liability company who want to create a clear and discreet listing.
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.
No. Understandable public key facts are enough. Confidential documents and details belong in the later review process.