Key elements of the Swiss Pillar Two implementation
Due to the tight timeline set forth by the OECD/G20, Switzerland decided to implement Pillar Two by way of a transitional ordinance which is based on a constitutional amendment approved by the Swiss elective citizens in a public vote on 18 June 2023.
As a result of uncertainty in relation to the adoption of Pillar Two, the Federal Council decided at that time to introduce only a QDMTT in Switzerland through a transitional ordinance which entered into force on 1 January 2024. The QDMTT ensures that in-scope multinational groups with entities in Switzerland are subject to a minimum tax rate of 15% on profits generated in Switzerland. This measure is designed to keep potential top-up tax revenues within Switzerland.
The additional tax collected from the application of the QDMTT will be split between the cantons (75%) and the federation (25%). The additional revenues generated after any additional required payments in the national fiscal equalization scheme will be reinvested in measures to consolidate the attractiveness of Switzerland as a business location.
On September 4, 2024, the Federal Council announced that the IIR would come into effect on January 1, 2025. The IIR ensures that if a foreign business unit of a Swiss multinational group is taxed below the 15% minimum rate in another jurisdiction, the ultimate parent entity in Switzerland will be liable to pay a top-up tax in Switzerland.
The Federal Council has not yet implemented a UTPR in Switzerland and with the continuing discussions at the OECD level with non-implementing jurisdictions such as the US it remains uncertain as to whether a UTPR will be enacted in Switzerland.
Next steps
With the first GloBE Information Return (GIR, the internationally standardized Pillar Two information return) due 18 months after the end of the first fiscal year of being in-scope of the GloBE rules, or 30 June 2026 for companies with a 31 December year end in-scope for 2024 (the return deadline is 15 months for the following fiscal years), affected companies must respond now and move from the readiness phase to the design phase of their internal Pillar Two implementation. Generally, all in-scope MNEs should now have an initial understanding on how the group structure impacts the tax calculation and collection mechanisms, have identified data gaps for the filing obligations related to Pillar Two and have run a high-level provisioning and Transitional Safe Harbor exercise as part of the year end financial reporting. Since Switzerland has not introduced an IIR for 2024, Swiss headquartered groups also need to understand where they have filing obligations and potential tax payment obligations. Moving into the design phase of the implementation life cycle requires detailed decisions to be made on the combination of people, process and technology which would provide the most efficient and effective solution to manage all reporting, compliance and planning activities on an ongoing basis.