Swiss retailers face significant challenges with sales dropping 1.9% in early 2025, particularly impacting physical stores as shopping tourism continues to draw consumers abroad.

"The cut to 150 francs has had almost no impact."
"Swiss retailers importing goods should be able to adjust prices down in line with the lower prices they are paying for imported goods, although they are often slow to do this."
Swiss retail is bleeding. In a bruising first half of 2025, the sector witnessed sales plummet by a staggering 1.9% compared to last year. This isn't a minor fluctuation; it is a critical warning sign for the domestic economy. The Swiss Retail Federation, analyzing millions of debit and credit card transactions, confirms that physical stores are bearing the brunt of this downturn, with revenues crashing by 2.2%.
While brick-and-mortar establishments struggle to keep the lights on, the digital marketplace offers little solace. Online sales eked out a meager 0.8% gainâhardly enough to offset the massive losses on the high street. The data paints a stark picture: Swiss consumers are tightening their belts, and when they do spend, they are increasingly turning their backs on traditional Swiss shopfronts. The sector, representing 1,900 companies and over CHF 26 billion in turnover, is now grappling with a recessionary trend that shows no immediate signs of reversing.
The government's attempt to build a dam against shopping tourism has sprung a massive leak. Despite the Federal Council slashing the duty-free import threshold from CHF 300 to CHF 150 per person per day, Swiss license plates continue to flood parking lots in Germany and France. The allure of significantly lower prices abroad is proving far stronger than regulatory hurdles.
Dagmar Jenni, director of the Swiss Retail Federation, does not mince words regarding the policy's failure. "The cut to 150 francs has had almost no impact," she declares. The Federation is now demanding drastic measures, pushing for a draconian reduction of the limit to just CHF 50. Jenni argues that without looser regulations and reduced payroll taxes at home, Swiss retailers are fighting a losing battle against foreign competitors who can undercut them at every turn. The current strategy is not just ineffective; it is virtually invisible to the average bargain-hunting consumer.
Discretionary spending in Switzerland has hit a wall. The sharpest declines are ravaging non-essential categories, signaling a dramatic shift in consumer psychology. Sales of leisure goods, hobbies, toys, and clothing have tumbled. Even Switzerlandâs crown jewelsâits famed watches and jewellery sectorâare seeing demand evaporate domestically.
Only food sales have held steady, a clear indicator that households are prioritizing survival over lifestyle. Consumers are stripping their budgets down to the bare necessities, leaving retailers of discretionary goods in a precarious position. This is not just about finding cheaper alternatives; it is a fundamental pullback in consumption. As wallets close to everything but the basics, the diversity of the Swiss high street faces an existential threat, risking a future where only supermarkets and pharmacies survive the purge.
A relentlessly strong Swiss franc is acting as a double-edged sword, cutting deep into retail margins. While a strong currency should theoretically lower import costs, these savings are rarely passed on to the consumer with any urgency. Retailers and suppliers are sluggish to adjust pricing, creating a frustrating paradox where Swiss-made products often cost less in Munich or Lyon than they do in Zurich.
This pricing disparity is fueling the very shopping tourism that is killing domestic sales. The sector is caught in a trap: unable or unwilling to slash prices fast enough to compete with the Eurozone, yet facing a consumer base that is increasingly price-sensitive. With no turnaround expected soon, the Federation forecasts only slight growth for physical stores in the second half of the year. Unless the industry addresses these structural pricing absurdities, the Swiss retail landscape risks permanent scarring.