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Verified · 2026-05-14 Ownership disclosure
Donation crowdfunding · Switzerland

Best donation crowdfunding platforms in Switzerland

Which platform delivers the most of every franc to Swiss recipients — and what the tax rules expect from donors and fundraisers across 26 cantons.

Top pick for Switzerland

On Fr100 via TWINT, WhyDonate delivers Fr97.85 to the recipient.

What wins here: TWINT-native checkout · public-benefit receipts · Swiss/EEA data residency

“For a Swiss cause, the strongest pick captures TWINT cleanly and issues a valid public-benefit donation receipt — on a CHF 100 gift, the low TWINT fee leaves far more for the cause than card rails.”

Recipient keeps · per Fr100
Fr97.85
Read WhyDonate review →
01

Giving in Switzerland

Dominant payment methods, the local currency, regulators, and the tax regime — the context that decides which platform actually serves a campaign here.

Switzerland runs on TWINT: the homegrown mobile wallet is accepted by roughly 86% of Swiss online shops and now clears hundreds of millions of payments a year, charitable giving included. Because TWINT settles bank-to-bank at a low fee (around 1.3% for a QR-code donation), platforms that pass that cost through deliver far more of each franc to the recipient than those routing gifts over credit-card rails.

Swiss charities that hold public-benefit (gemeinnützig) status — often signalled by the voluntary ZEWO seal — can give donors a receipt that is deductible on income tax. But the donor and fundraiser sides of the tax question differ, and both turn on the canton, which is why this guide splits them below.

On the payments side the financial-market regulator is FINMA; charitable tax-exemption is granted by the cantonal and federal tax authorities. Donor data sits under the revised Federal Act on Data Protection (revFADP, in force since 2023) — broadly aligned with the GDPR — so platforms with Swiss or EEA data residency carry a lighter compliance burden.

02

Top platforms for Switzerland

Ranked by how much of every 100 donated reaches the recipient under the local method (switch it to see the ranking move). We exclude platforms without Trustpilot reviews; the full catalogue is on the index.

Recipient-gets is shown for TWINT — the dominant method in Switzerland.

Method
# Platform · best for Recipient gets · per 100 Trustpilot Countries Residency
1
WhyDonate ★ Winner
EU/CH nonprofits — 0% fee, TWINT-ready
Fr97.85 1.9% + Fr0.25
4.9/5
115 ctry EEA
2
Leetchi
Group collections across the DACH region
€96.85 card rate*
4.2/5
36 ctry EEA
3
GoFundMe
Personal causes — broad brand reach
Fr96.80 card rate*
3.3/5
20 ctry US
4
Donorbox
Embeddable donation forms with Swiss receipts
Fr94.55 card rate*
4.0/5
23 ctry
5
GoGetFunding
Individual fundraisers running personal, medical, or emergency campaigns who prefer a fundraiser-paid platform fee over donor tipping, with broad international country availability.
Fr92.80 card rate*
4.0/5
56 ctry
6
Chuffed
Nonprofits, social enterprises, and community-cause organisers in 29 supported countries who want a 100%-free, tip-funded platform and are willing to complete identity verification before launching.
Fr92.20 card rate*
4.8/5
29 ctry
7
Steady
European creators, independent journalists, podcasters, and publishers who want recurring income from paying members rather than one-off donation campaigns.
Fr87.10 card rate*
2.6/5
32 ctry
* platform doesn’t support this method — figure falls back to card rate † doesn’t accept CHF — priced in its native currency See all 9 platforms in Switzerland →
03

Donation & taxes

The two questions readers most want answered — laid out as separate tracks so a donor and a fundraiser each find their own.

Tax is the reason many people land here. We split it cleanly: what a donor can deduct, and what a fundraiser might owe.

Researched · verified · 2026-06-02
If you are donating

Is my gift tax-deductible?

Gifts to a recognised Swiss tax-exempt (public-benefit) charity are deductible on income tax. At federal level you can deduct once your annual giving exceeds CHF 100, up to 20% of net income — but the cantonal cap varies.

  • Minimum CHF 100. At federal level and in most cantons you can only deduct once your total donations for the year exceed CHF 100.
  • Up to 20% of net income. Federal income tax caps the deduction at 20% of net income; most cantons mirror this, but the limit ranges from about 5% (Neuchâtel) to unlimited (Basel-Landschaft) — check your canton.
  • Recipient must be tax-exempt in Switzerland. The charity must hold cantonal/federal public-benefit (gemeinnützig) status and be domiciled in Switzerland. A ZEWO seal is a useful signal, but the legal test is the tax-exemption ruling.
  • Gifts to individuals don’t count. Money given to a person or a private crowdfunding pot is not a deductible donation, however good the cause.
What’s deductible (federal)
GiftDeductibleCondition
To a tax-exempt Swiss charityYesOver CHF 100, up to 20% of net income
Total giving below CHF 100NoUnder the floor
To an individual / private potNo
Federal deduction limits (2026) Operator-verified
Minimum to claim
CHF 100
Federal cap
20% of net income
Cantonal range
~5% to unlimited
If you are raising money

Do I owe tax on what I collect?

There is no federal gift tax in Switzerland — but most cantons levy one on the recipient, and crowdfunding proceeds can also be income depending on what donors get in return.

  • Gift tax is cantonal. Switzerland has no federal gift tax; any liability falls on the recipient and depends on the donor’s canton of domicile. Spouses and direct descendants are generally exempt, and most cantons exempt small occasional gifts (e.g. CHF 5,000 in Zürich).
  • Many small public gifts. A genuine cause funded by many donors, each under the cantonal allowance, is typically untaxed — but a single large gift over the threshold can be reportable.
  • If donors get something back. Rewards, goods or services given in return can make the proceeds taxable income (and possibly VAT) rather than a gift.
  • Recognised charities are exempt. A Swiss public-benefit organisation receives gifts free of gift tax and can issue donors a deductible receipt.
Likely treatment
Your situationLikely treatment
Individual · donors under cantonal allowanceUsually untaxed
Individual · one gift over the allowanceCantonal gift tax may apply
Recognised public-benefit charityExempt, with conditions
Rewards or goods given in returnMay be income / VAT
Gift tax (cantonal, 2026) Operator-verified
Federal gift tax
None
Spouse / descendants
Usually exempt
Occasional-gift allowance
e.g. CHF 5,000 (ZH)

This isn’t tax advice. Swiss gift tax is set canton by canton and crowdfunding situations vary — confirm your case with your cantonal tax authority before you file.

04

Local payment methods

How donors in Switzerland actually pay — and why the method matters as much as the platform.

TWINT86% Credit / debit card40% Bank transfer (QR-bill)25% PayPal12% PostFinance10%
TWINT Primary 86% adoption

Switzerland’s default mobile method — accepted by around 86% of online shops, with QR-code donations settling instantly at a low fee. Essential for any Swiss campaign.

Credit / debit card 40% adoption

Widely used, especially by international donors. Percentage fees make it the priciest path per franc.

Bank transfer (QR-bill) 25% adoption

The Swiss QR-bill remains common for larger and older-donor gifts — low cost, but slower to confirm.

PayPal 12% adoption

Popular for one-off and cross-border gifts; the fee structure sits above local rails.

PostFinance 10% adoption

PostFinance Pay / e-finance is trusted by many Swiss donors, particularly older cohorts.

Method choice moves the recipient-gets figure more than the platform brand: a ~1.3% TWINT fee beats card percentages, so a TWINT-native platform delivers more of each franc to the cause.

05

Frequently asked

Platform and tax questions, together — because most people arrive with one of each.

Which platforms work in Switzerland?

The platforms in the table above support TWINT and Swiss payouts. Swiss-focused options like wemakeit, Lokalhelden (Raiffeisen) and HappyPot sit alongside international platforms, and RaiseNow powers TWINT donation flows for many Swiss charities. Those that pass through the low TWINT fee deliver more of each franc than card-first platforms.

Are donations tax-deductible in Switzerland?

Yes, if the recipient is a Swiss tax-exempt (public-benefit) organisation. At federal level you can deduct once your annual giving exceeds CHF 100, up to 20% of net income; cantonal caps vary from about 5% (Neuchâtel) to unlimited (Basel-Landschaft). Gifts to individuals or private campaigns are not deductible.

Will I be taxed on money I raise?

There is no federal gift tax, but most cantons levy one on the recipient based on the donor’s canton. Spouses and direct descendants are generally exempt, and small occasional gifts are usually allowance-free (e.g. CHF 5,000 in Zürich). Many small public gifts for a genuine cause are typically untaxed, and a recognised charity is exempt. If donors get goods or services back, it may be income or VAT instead.

What’s the cheapest way to receive donations here?

A platform that passes through TWINT’s low fee. On a CHF 100 gift a ~1.3% TWINT fee beats typical card percentages, so the method matters as much as the platform brand.

06

Other countries

Same methodology, different jurisdiction.

How we rank

Rankings are produced by a public editorial methodology — open to peer review. We disclose ownership, scoring weights, and every change.

Read methodology →