Swiss Precision for
a Less Centralized U.S. Market
Swiss companies bring discipline to finance, structure, and reporting. Orbiss helps translate that discipline into the U.S. system, where federal, state, payroll, sales tax, and intercompany requirements need to work together.
Where Swiss companies lose time in the U.S. operating model.
Swiss companies often arrive with strong controls. The challenge is adapting those controls to U.S. tax, payroll, and state-level variation.
Expecting One U.S. Rulebook
Federal rules are only the start. State tax, sales tax, payroll, and registrations vary by footprint.
Intercompany Flow Gaps
Swiss groups need clear support for royalties, service fees, cost sharing, loans, and transfer pricing positions.
VAT-to-Sales-Tax Translation
Swiss VAT does not map cleanly to U.S. sales tax. Nexus, taxability, exemptions, and filings need state review.
Structuring Around the Wrong State
The right setup depends on investors, hiring plans, operating states, tax treatment, and U.S. strategy.
Underplanning U.S. Payroll
U.S. hires can trigger withholding, unemployment tax, workers’ compensation, benefits, and state compliance.
Founder Mobility & Wealth Reporting
Swiss founders moving to the U.S. need to plan residency, equity, foreign accounts, investments, and filings.
Swiss precision meets U.S. variation.
Swiss companies are used to layered federal, cantonal, and communal considerations. The U.S. adds another version of that complexity through federal rules and state-by-state obligations.
Federal & Local Tax Layers
Swiss corporate taxation combines federal, cantonal, and communal layers, so the effective tax position can vary by location.
U.S. corporations face federal income tax plus possible state income, franchise, gross receipts, and local business obligations.
VAT vs. Sales Tax
Swiss VAT is administered nationally, with reduced rates for specific categories and a structure familiar to Swiss finance teams.
The U.S. has no federal VAT. Sales tax is administered by states and local jurisdictions, with different rules for nexus, rates, exemptions, and filings.
AG/GmbH vs. U.S. Entity Choices
Swiss companies often expand from AG or GmbH structures, with governance, audit, and canton-level expectations already in place.
U.S. expansion may involve a corporation, LLC, branch, or state registration strategy, each with different tax and reporting consequences.
IP, Royalties & Intercompany Flows
Swiss groups often manage intellectual property, financing, royalties, or service charges within a carefully structured group model.
U.S. subsidiaries need clean intercompany records, transfer pricing support, withholding analysis, and reporting that matches the actual operating model.
Payroll & Social Contributions
Swiss payroll is tied to AHV/AVS, pension, insurance, and cantonal requirements within a familiar local framework.
U.S. payroll requires federal withholding, Social Security, Medicare, unemployment taxes, state registrations, workers’ compensation, and benefits decisions.
Multilingual Group Reporting
Swiss finance teams often coordinate across languages, cantons, currencies, and international group reporting requirements.
U.S. reporting must connect bookkeeping, payroll, sales tax, tax filings, and management reporting into one usable finance process.
What Swiss Companies Should Clarify Before U.S. Expansion
Practical answers for Swiss founders, CFOs, finance teams, and internationally mobile individuals entering the U.S. market.
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Swiss companies are already used to layered tax systems, but the U.S. works differently. Federal rules apply across the country, while states can impose their own income, franchise, gross receipts, sales tax, payroll, and reporting obligations. The result depends on where the company operates, hires, sells, and holds assets.
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Not always. A Swiss company may sell into the U.S. before forming a subsidiary. A U.S. entity or registration strategy often becomes important when the company hires employees, signs local contracts, raises U.S. capital, holds inventory, opens a U.S. bank account, or creates a recurring U.S. operating presence.
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Swiss VAT is national. U.S. sales tax is state and local. Rates, thresholds, exemptions, product taxability, software taxability, marketplace rules, and filing calendars vary across jurisdictions. Swiss SaaS, medtech, life sciences, consumer goods, and e-commerce companies should review exposure before sales volume increases.
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Swiss groups should review management fees, royalties, service charges, cost-sharing arrangements, loans, IP use, withholding, and transfer pricing support. The U.S. subsidiary’s books should match the actual commercial arrangement, not just the legal structure.
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Delaware is common, especially for venture-backed or investor-facing companies, but it is not automatically the right choice. The right structure depends on investors, operating states, employee locations, tax treatment, banking needs, and long-term U.S. strategy.
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A Swiss-owned U.S. subsidiary should have bookkeeping, bank reconciliations, payroll entries, sales tax tracking, expense management, intercompany documentation, and monthly reporting that supports both U.S. compliance and Swiss parent-company visibility.
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