UK agrees FTA with Switzerland: What’s in it for tech?

On 13/07/2026, DBT announced that the UK has agreed an FTA with Switzerland. The Deal has been hailed by DBT as the most extensive trade deal in services yet signed by the UK. DBT estimates the Deal will, in the long run, lead to an increase of £5.2 billion a year in UK services exports to Switzerland. 

You can find the full DBT Press Release on the gov.uk website. Where you can also find a full factsheet outlining the agreement

Below, we outline what was in the Deal for the tech sector and analyse what it means for the future of trade with Switzerland.   

Data and Digital Trade

DBT have touted the digital trade aspects of the FTA as one of the Deal’s key successes. The Deal includes binding provisions to secure the free flow of data in and out of the Switzerland’s jurisdiction. The aim is to allow businesses to store and process client data outside of Switzerland. This comes alongside other measures designed to protect IP and copyrighted material in Switzerland. The Deal includes protections against businesses being forced to disclose their source code of software or cryptographic material as a condition for doing business in Switzerland and vice versa for Swiss firms in the UK.  

Similarly, many services firms will now not be required to establish a physical presence in Switzerland to supply services there in a first for a Swiss trade deal, though a complete list is yet to be published.  

In digital trade, the Deal includes provisions to simplify customs documentation, reduce data requirements and will create the option to submit documents and pay licences or qualification fees online. This also includes direct facilitation of digitalised trading, with the FTA facilitating paperless trading, digital payments, e-commerce and promoting future co-operation on key technology areas such as AI.  

In telecoms, the Deal commits the UK and Switzerland to surcharge-free international roaming with protections for telecoms providers. Similarly, it commits to open and competitive telecoms markets.

Business Mobility

A significant amount of the Deal focuses on promoting labour mobility for skilled employees. The Deal includes the aforementioned commitments to stop firms requiring a local presence to trade. It also includes measures that build on the UK-Switzerland Services Mobility Agreement. These include a scheme to help graduate trainees gain experience in other offices in both countries without the need for visas. It also secures the 90-day period of visa-free travel to deliver services between the UK and Switzerland. The Deal also builds on the UK-Swiss Recognition of Professional Qualifications Agreement (RPQA) to include lawyers, and in many sectors Switzerland has committed not to introduce requirements for UK firms to hire a percentage of Swiss nationals for a Swiss subsidiary. 

Financial Services

The Berne Financial Services Agreement between the UK and Switzerland came into force at the start of 2026. The Deal supports this by securing the right of UK firms to supply into Switzerland from the UK, to transfer financial data across the Swiss border to clients in Switzerland from outside of Switzerland, and to not have to transfer back-office functions to Switzerland. 

Procurement

The Deal includes a number of measures designed to improve UK firms’ access to Swiss procurement at Federal, Cantonal and Municipal level. These include commitments to modernise procurement procedures to make it easier for UK firms to compete, to promote the use of electronic means throughout the procurement process and to look at how opportunities can be made more accessible by removing language and geographical barriers. DBT are touting these as ‘the best access in the world to Switzerland’s procurement market’ of any country or jurisdiction in the world.  

Other commitments

The Deal includes other commitments including: 

  • A commitment that consumer protection agencies in the UK and Switzerland will collaborate to protect consumers using online marketplaces 
  • A pledge to establish a working group of UK and Swiss officials that will create dialogue on innovation amongst experts in industry, research and academia to understand how technology is evolving and identify opportunities for further innovation and commercial gain. 
  • A commitment by both the UK and Switzerland not to weaken or roll back environmental and labour protections to encourage trade or investment between the parties. 
  • A pledge to promote SMEs using the scheme, particularly SMEs operated by women, youth, persons with a disability and minority groups. To help SMEs navigate the scheme, the full text of the agreement and summaries will be published for free on a public website.  

Analysis

The UK-Switzerland FTA is being hailed as ‘the UK’s most significant trade deal for services ever’ by DBT. As a standalone agreement, there is certainly a great deal of depth for services, and reflects that the fact that most UK exports are in services and are digitally-delivered through provisions on encouraging both digital trade and the digitalisation of trade. 

A great amount of the deal seems to focus on facilitating market access without demanding market presence, with extensive measures to ensure that British and Swiss firms can trade with one another without requiring a physical presence in the country. This will help UK tech companies, especially SMEs, who will also gain additional protections for their IP and data transfers in and out of Switzerland. 

The measures on procurement are also welcome, allowing UK firms to bid more easily for contracts from Swiss government. The several layers of government in Switzerland, including the Federal nature of government and the importance of the Swiss cantons and municipalities, may be hard for UK firms to navigate initially and so the additional pledges to make procurement easier for UK firms to access are welcome. UK firms now have a wider pool of potential export destinations to choose from, with supplying a Swiss Canton or Municipality a potentially fruitful way for an SME especially to begin exporting.   

The support for financial services firms to more easily trade with Switzerland is also welcome, especially if fintech firms benefit from the provisions of the deal and the protections offered for data transfers by FS firms. 

Overall though, this looks like a good deal for the UK tech sector, we look forward to seeing the full text and to seeing whether the UK will replicate similar beneficial commitments in FTAs and DTAs with other countries and jurisdictions.  

The main question now is what the actual text of the FTA is. So far, DBT has published factsheets but not the FTA itself. These factsheets have kept certain pledges vague. For example: ‘The deal also provides greater certainty for investors by preventing a range of future restrictions on how UK businesses can operate, grow and manage investments in Switzerland’. We look forward to having greater clarity on this when the text of the Deal is published, as the UK Government has committed to doing. 

While the Deal’s provisions and commitments have been agreed, this is not the end of the process. After the lawyers comb through the text for legal scrubbing purposes, the Deal will still need to be signed and ratified by the two countries, with ratification likely to take a long time on the Swiss side. techUK will be looking through the exact text of the deal once published and looks forward to working with the UK Government to ensure companies use the Deal and its full potential is realised.  

You can find techUK’s quote on the Deal, which was quoted in the Government press release, below: 

techUK International Policy and Strategy Lead Sabina Ciofu said:  

“This agreement is great news for UK technology companies trading with Switzerland. It provides greater certainty for businesses, makes it easier to operate across both markets and reflects the needs of an increasingly digital economy. We welcome the conclusion of negotiations and look forward to working with the UK Government to help businesses make the most of the opportunities the agreement creates.” 

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Otherwise, sign up to the International Trade Newsletter here to stay up to date with our all of our market access work and our international trade work generally.  


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Meet the team 

Sabina Ciofu

Sabina Ciofu

International Policy and Strategy Lead, techUK

Daniel Clarke

Daniel Clarke

Senior Policy Manager for International Policy and Trade, techUK

Theophile Maiziere

Theophile Maiziere

Policy Manager - EU, techUK

Archie Breare

Archie Breare

Policy Manager - Trade, techUK

 

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