Traditional over-the-counter services are disappearing from Swiss banks as financial institutions accelerate their transition to digital services, marking a significant shift in Switzerland's banking landscape.

"Withdrawing or depositing money at the counter is becoming rarer, and may soon disappear altogether."
The iconic image of the Swiss bank tellerāa symbol of discretion and personal serviceāis rapidly facing extinction. Financial institutions across the Confederation are aggressively phasing out over-the-counter services, forcing a radical shift in how the Swiss populace interacts with their money. This is not a gradual drift; it is an uncompromising push toward automation.
Leading this charge with brutal efficiency are heavyweights like PostFinance and Bern Cantonal Bank (BEKB), which have already ceased handling cash transactions entirely. The message is clear: the human element of basic banking is obsolete. Even at Zurich Cantonal Bank (ZKB), the teller window has been relegated to crisis management, with staff distributing cash solely in "emergency" situations. As banks direct customers to ATMs and digital platforms, the traditional banking hall is being hollowed out, replaced by the cold efficiency of machines. This marks a definitive end to the era of face-to-face cash handling in Switzerland.
This dismantling of physical services is not merely a cost-cutting exercise; it is a direct response to a staggering collapse in consumer demand. The Swiss public is voting with their smartphones, abandoning physical queues for digital convenience at an unprecedented rate. The numbers from Raiffeisen paint a stark picture of this behavioral revolution.
A decade ago, nearly half of the bank's customersā46 percentārelied on counter services. Today, that figure has crashed to a mere 15 percent. This dramatic 31-percentage-point drop illustrates a profound disconnect between the expensive infrastructure of the past and the agile needs of the modern client. Banks are no longer willing to subsidize empty lobbies. While the transition may alienate traditionalists, the data suggests the vast majority of the market has already moved on, leaving the physical counter as a relic of a bygone financial age.
The decline of the counter is inextricably linked to a wider contraction of Switzerlandās banking infrastructure. The physical footprint of the financial sector is shrinking at an alarming pace. By the end of 2024, the total number of bank branches in the country stood at 2,476. While this may sound substantial, it represents a slash of one-third compared to just ten years ago.
Even the giants are retreating. UBS, the nation's largest bank, now maintains counter services in only half of its 190 branches. Raiffeisen, despite its cooperative roots, offers these services in just a third of its 774 locations. This is a brick-and-mortar exodus. As real estate costs soar and digital adoption becomes ubiquitous, the rationale for maintaining a dense network of fully staffed branches evaporates. The Swiss banking map is being redrawn, leaving fewer dots connected by physical roads and more by fiber optic cables.
The trajectory is irreversible. Data from the University of St. Gallen confirms that this is not a temporary fluctuation but a permanent structural change. The forecast is grim for cash loyalists: the number of branchesāand the cash services they houseāwill continue to fall. We are witnessing the final stages of decoupling money from its physical form.
While this modernization promises efficiency, it raises critical questions about accessibility and the social role of banking in local communities. However, the industry has made its choice. The Swiss bank of the future is a platform, not a place. As the last counters close, Switzerland cements its status as a leader in the digital finance revolution, leaving the tactile sensation of banknotes and the personal greeting of a teller to the history books.