The Swiss retail sector saw minimal growth of just 1% in 2025, according to market researcher NielsenIQ. The trend of consumers moving from brick-and-mortar stores to online shopping continues, with e-commerce growing by approximately 10% while in-store sales likely declined.

"A turnaround is also not in sight."
"In-store sales are therefore likely to have fallen again in 2025."
Swiss retail is barely breathing. The sector posted an anemic growth of just 1% in 2025, a figure that masks a much more aggressive transformation tearing through the industry. While physical stores struggle to keep the lights on, the digital marketplace is exploding. According to market researcher NielsenIQ, e-commerce surged by a massive 10% last year, continuing an unrelenting exodus of Swiss consumers from the high street to the web.
This isn't just a shift; it is a cannibalization. With the total market growing by a microscopic margin, that double-digit online boom confirms a harsh reality: in-store sales are plummeting. The traditional Swiss shopping experience is being dismantled transaction by transaction. NielsenIQ’s data, which monitors roughly 40 major retailers, paints a picture of a sector in flux, where physical footprints are shrinking in relevance against the convenience of digital carts. The message for 2025 is undeniable: adapt to the digital wave or drown in the stagnation of the physical world.
The pain is not distributed equally. While the Swiss population must eat, they are increasingly refusing to buy anything else. The food and near-food sector managed to scrape together a 1.2% increase according to NielsenIQ, or an even more optimistic 2.5% per the Swiss Retail Federation. This essential spending is the only lifeline keeping the headline numbers from collapsing entirely.
In stark contrast, the non-food sector is in freefall. NielsenIQ reports a meagre 0.6% rise, but the Swiss Retail Federation delivers a far more alarming verdict: a devastating 4% drop in the non-food sector. This discrepancy highlights a critical fracture in the economy. Discretionary spending has evaporated. From electronics to apparel, retailers are grappling with a consumer base that has snapped its wallet shut. The disparity between essential and non-essential spending exposes a cautious, crisis-weary population that is prioritizing survival over lifestyle, leaving non-food retailers to fight over scraps.
Who do you believe? The stagnation reported by NielsenIQ might actually be the optimistic view. Their data, drawn from roughly 40 large retailers covering half the market, shows a 1% uptick. However, the Swiss Retail Federation, which casts a wider net, reports a nominal decline of 1.3% for the entire year. This statistical tug-of-war suggests that while the giants are treading water, smaller specialty retailers are likely drowning.
The NIQ Market Monitor explicitly states it does not represent the whole market, leaving out the specialty shops that form the backbone of many Swiss towns. If the major players are barely growing at 1%, and the overall sector is down by 1.3%, the math implies a slaughter among independent businesses. We are witnessing a consolidation of power where only the largest entities with the deepest pockets can withstand the headwinds, while the broader retail ecosystem faces an existential contraction.
Don't expect a rescue in 2026. The Swiss Retail Federation has issued a blunt warning: a turnaround is nowhere in sight. The culprits are familiar and relentless. Geopolitical instability is rattling consumer confidence, but the true assassin of Swiss retail therapy is domestic: skyrocketing health insurance premiums. As mandatory costs soar, disposable income is being siphoned away from shops and into monthly bills.
Combined with the persistent perception of high retail prices, Swiss households are in defensive mode. The psychological impact of these financial burdens cannot be overstated. When citizens feel poorer due to fixed costs, their first casualty is the shopping trip. The industry is confronting a structural ceiling on growth that no amount of marketing can smash through. Until the pressure on the Swiss wallet eases—an unlikely scenario in the near term—retailers must brace for another year of austerity, fighting tooth and nail for every Franc.