Switzerland and the wider DACH region are in the midst of one of the largest wealth transfer events in economic history. Over the next decade, hundreds of thousands of owner-operated businesses, many of them highly profitable, deeply established, and with loyal client bases built over decades, will change hands as their founders reach retirement age. The most attractive of these transitions never appear on public platforms. They are handled privately, through trusted relationships, by buyers who were in the right place at the right time.
The Swiss SME succession landscape
Swiss SMEs are the backbone of the economy, but they face an acute succession problem. Many founders built their businesses over decades and have no internal successor. Their children may have chosen different paths. Existing management may lack the capital or appetite for a buy-out. This creates a category of transition that is simultaneously urgent for the owner and invisible to the market. The seller wants a trusted, discreet process. The right buyer, often a strategic acquirer or an individual with operating experience, may be entirely unknown to them. An intermediary bridges that gap.
Where off-market acquisitions come from
Off-market business acquisitions in Switzerland typically originate from four sources: the seller's own professional network (accountants, lawyers, fiduciaries), sector-specific industry relationships, personal introductions through business networks, and trusted intermediaries who maintain active sourcing conversations with business owners across relevant markets. The last category, trusted intermediaries, is where most off-market deal flow comes from for buyers who lack deep local roots.
What buyers need to succeed in off-market acquisitions
- A clear acquisition mandate: industry, size, geography, financial criteria, and what you bring beyond capital
- Pre-arranged financing clarity. Swiss sellers value certainty and do not want to run a process twice
- Patience and discretion: the timeline is set by the seller's readiness, not the buyer's urgency
- A genuine value proposition beyond price. Swiss sellers often care deeply about the continuity of their business and staff
- Local credibility or a partner who provides it
The role of a trusted intermediary
An effective intermediary in Swiss business acquisitions is one who is genuinely known and trusted by the sellers they approach, not one who sends cold emails to business owners on behalf of a buyer. GKP builds and maintains long-term relationships with business owners, professional advisors, and industry networks across Switzerland. When a situation arises, GKP knows who the right buyers are and can approach them with a credible, professional introduction.
If you are a qualified buyer, individual, family office, or operating company, seeking off-market acquisition opportunities in Switzerland, GKP would welcome a confidential conversation about your criteria.
Questions fréquentes
Swiss business associations estimate that tens of thousands of Swiss SMEs will undergo ownership transition over the next decade, driven by founder retirement. In Germany, the figure is in the hundreds of thousands. The majority of these businesses will seek a discreet, relationship-based transition rather than a public sale process.
Industries with the most activity include hospitality (hotels, restaurants), business services (accounting, consulting, IT services), manufacturing and precision engineering, healthcare services, and professional practices. Luxury retail and niche consumer goods also produce regular succession situations.
Yes. GKP regularly works with international buyers, from Europe, the Gulf, and Asia, seeking Swiss acquisition targets. We provide local market access, relationship credibility, and intermediary support throughout the process. Understanding of Swiss cultural and commercial norms is essential for successful acquisitions, and GKP provides this context.
GKP typically charges a success fee upon completion of a transaction, structured according to the mandate value and complexity. For complex, long-duration mandates, a retainer may apply. All fee structures are agreed transparently in advance.