According to the Swiss Venture Capital Report, investment in Swiss start-ups fell by 15.5% to CHF 1.25 billion in the first half of the year. While funding rounds remained stable, the report notes a lack of major investments in biotechnology and a shift in capital towards IT hardware.

"Significant changes across sectors and cantons."
A staggering 15.5% plunge has wiped hundreds of millions from the Swiss start-up ecosystem in just six months. The latest Swiss Venture Capital Report (SVCR) reveals that total investment volume plummeted to CHF 1.25 billion in the first half of the year, sending shockwaves through a market that had hoped for a robust recovery. This isn't just a minor correction; it is a decisive shift in how capital flows through the Alpine nation. While the raw number of deals remains resilient at 123 roundsâhalting a multi-year downward trend in deal countâthe sheer size of the checks being written has shriveled. Investors are tightening their belts, favoring stability over the speculative moonshots that defined the post-pandemic era. This contraction forces Swiss entrepreneurs to confront a harsh new reality: the era of easy money is officially over, and only the most fiscally disciplined will survive this liquidity crunch.
IT hardware is defying the gravity of the broader market, soaring by more than 60% to reach a record-breaking CHF 324 million in funding. This explosive growth marks a fundamental pivot in investor appetite. While the software-heavy ICT sector and the traditionally dominant biotechnology field grapple with a lack of major investment rounds, tangible technology is winning the day. The absence of 'mega-deals' in biotech has left a gaping hole in Zurichâs portfolio, previously the crown jewel of Swiss life sciences. In contrast, the surge in hardware suggests that venture capitalists are now betting big on deep-tech and physical innovationâsemiconductors, robotics, and advanced manufacturingâthat offer clear, defensible intellectual property. This structural realignment indicates that Switzerland is doubling down on its industrial roots to weather the venture winter.
Vaud has seized the throne, outperforming Zurich with a commanding CHF 330 million in capital invested. This performance puts the Lake Geneva region on par with the legendary record years of 2021 and 2022, a feat that seemed impossible given the current economic climate. The secret to Vaudâs dominance? A powerhouse IT hardware sector. Three of the top ten largest fundraising rounds in the country were secured by Vaud-based hardware start-ups, showcasing the region's ability to attract massive scale-up capital. Meanwhile, Zurich is reeling from historically low figures. The German-speaking hub, usually the engine of Swiss finance, is suffering from a drought in ICT funding and a total absence of the blockbuster biotech deals that usually bolster its stats. The geographic center of gravity for Swiss innovation is shifting West, driven by the technical excellence radiating from the EPFL ecosystem.
The exit market remains frozen, with only 21 equity exits recordedâa figure that mirrors the stagnant performance of 2025. These exits are the essential lifeblood of the venture cycle; without them, capital remains trapped, and limited partners see no returns. However, beneath this frozen surface, there are signs of a thaw. The SVCR notes a marked increase in strategic investments, which frequently serve as the precursor to full-scale acquisitions. Large corporations are moving into position, cherry-picking distressed or high-potential start-ups before the market fully rebounds. While the IPO window remains largely shut, these strategic maneuvers suggest that the 'exit backlog' is beginning to clear. For founders, the message is clear: if you can't go public, make yourself indispensable to a global giant.
Despite the double-digit decline in total funding, a surprising wave of optimism is sweeping through the investor community. When surveyed about the next twelve months, Swiss venture capitalists expressed significantly higher confidence than they did a year ago. This bullish outlook covers the general economic climate, their own planned investment activity, and the anticipated number of successful exits. The SVCR identifies this confidence as a definitive sign of a looming recovery. The market has bottomed out, the 'tourist' investors have left, and what remains is a leaner, meaner, and more resilient Swiss start-up scene. As inflation stabilizes and interest rate paths become clearer, the stage is set for a powerful rebound in the second half of the year. Switzerland isn't just surviving the downturn; it is recalibrating for a more sustainable era of growth.