UBS report reveals St. Moritz as Switzerland's most expensive real estate market, with luxury property prices showing signs of cooling after years of growth.

"The reasons for the slowdown are not demand... but rather exaggerated price increases in previous years."
St. Moritz has unequivocally cemented its status as the playground of the global elite, commanding a staggering starting price of CHF 43,000 per square metre. This astronomical figure propels the Engadin municipality to the very top of Switzerland's luxury real estate hierarchy, leaving all competitors in its wake. While the broader market shows signs of hesitation, the allure of this high-altitude haven remains potent, demanding a premium that few locations on Earth can match.
For the ultra-wealthy, the entry ticket to this exclusive club has never been higher. We are witnessing a market where location is not just a factor; it is the only factor. The data is clear: despite global economic headwinds, the absolute pinnacle of the Swiss property market operates in a stratosphere of its own. However, this dominance comes amidst a shifting landscape, where the frenetic buying sprees of the past are beginning to meet the hard reality of valuation limits.
The relentless surge of the Swiss luxury market is finally hitting the brakes. Annual price growth has plummeted to an average of just 1.2% in 2024—a dramatic halving compared to the previous year. This is not a crash, but a critical correction. The market is grappling with the consequences of its own excess; UBS analysts explicitly point to "exaggerated price increases in previous years" as the primary culprit for this cooldown, rather than a drying up of demand.
While apartment buildings managed a modest 3% uptick, single-family homes have flatlined, remaining virtually unchanged. This stagnation signals a psychological ceiling has been reached. Buyers, supported by falling interest rates and strong stock market performances, are still present, but they are no longer willing to pay any price. The era of blind bidding wars is over, replaced by a more calculated, cautious investment landscape.
While St. Moritz occupies the throne, the battle for the silver medal is fierce. Gstaad snaps at the leader's heels with luxury flats starting at a formidable CHF 39,000 per square metre, followed closely by Verbier at CHF 36,000. These figures represent the baseline for entry; however, for the truly exceptional properties, the ceiling is non-existent. In rare, ultra-exclusive cases, prices are skyrocketing to a mind-bending CHF 100,000 per square metre.
This stratification of the Alpine market highlights a distinct hierarchy of prestige. The gap between the top three and the rest of the mountain regions is widening. While the average buyer faces high barriers, the billionaire class is operating in a micro-economy where scarcity drives valuations to unprecedented heights. Whether in the Bernese Oberland or the Valais, the message is consistent: prime alpine real estate remains one of the world's most expensive asset classes.
Beyond the ski slopes, the lowlands are fighting their own battle for supremacy. Cologny reigns as the most expensive non-mountain municipality, commanding nearly CHF 36,000 per square metre, while Küsnacht dominates the Goldcoast of Lake Zurich at CHF 32,000. These urban enclaves continue to attract the working elite, offering proximity to economic hubs without sacrificing exclusivity.
To understand the current cooling, one must look at the explosive context of the last half-decade. Current luxury prices sit a massive 27% higher than in 2019. The Zug region alone has witnessed a staggering 40% surge in this period, outperforming even the prestigious Lake Zurich region (30-40%). In contrast, the shores of Lake Geneva and Ticino—where top spots like Ronco sopra Ascona hold court—saw more modest rises of under 20%. As the market stabilizes, these regions now face the test of sustaining these historic valuations.