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    Meyka
    February 12, 2026 (23 days ago)

    Swiss Court Rules Spuhler’s Chalet AG a Tax Dodge; CHF 865k Back

    Featured image for: Swiss Court Rules Spuhler’s Chalet AG a Tax Dodge; CHF 865k Back
    Switzerland VAT News • Meyka

    Summary

    On 12 February 2026 the Swiss Federal Supreme Court ruled that Chalet AG, a single‑asset company holding a St Moritz chalet, was used to avoid VAT and ordered repayment of CHF 865,000 in input‑tax credits. The decision clarifies that private‑use assets cannot claim broad VAT input credits and signals stricter scrutiny of form‑over‑substance structures in Switzerland.

    Key Insights

    What did the Swiss Federal Supreme Court decide regarding Chalet AG's input‑tax credits?

    It ruled that Chalet AG, a single‑asset company mainly used for private purposes, could not claim broad VAT input‑tax credits and ordered repayment of CHF 865,000.

    When did the Swiss court ruling take effect?

    The decision was made on 12 February 2026.

    What does the ruling imply for other single‑asset entities in Switzerland?

    It signals stricter scrutiny; Swiss VAT authorities can deny or recover credits if the asset is used for private purposes, and audits may focus on evidence of economic activity and fair‑market pricing.

    How should Swiss owners of single‑asset companies respond to avoid VAT clawbacks?

    They should document usage, segregate private use, apply fair‑market rents, pro‑rate VAT recovery, and seek advance tax rulings to align structure with real use.

    Europe
    Switzerland
    Compliance
    Court Rulings
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