In Switzerland, there isn't just one value for a house. There's the market value, the fair market value, the insured value, the loan-to-value ratio – and, of course, the assessed value of the property for tax purposes. This confusing array of terms is often bewildering for laypeople. It becomes particularly dangerous when these values are confused. your house based on its assessed value for property tax purposes is, in almost all cases, the worst deal of your life. Conversely, heirs are often pleased with a low assessed value for property tax purposes , only to be surprised when they later face high capital gains taxes upon sale. To avoid these financial pitfalls, you need to understand how the government calculates the assessed value of a property for property tax purposes, why it's almost always below market value, and what role it truly plays in your portfolio.
Egal, welche Fragen du rund um Immobilien hast – Loft ist da, um sie dir übersichtlich, verständlich und zuverlässig zu beantworten.
Stelle Fragen zu einer ImmobilieThe assessed value of real estate (also called cadastral value, official value, or tax value, depending on the canton) is a purely administrative figure. It serves as the basis for calculating wealth tax for the cantonal tax authorities.
Since real estate in Switzerland is considered an asset, it is subject to taxation. But how much is a house worth? Because the tax office cannot reassess every house each year, formulas and standardized valuation models are used. The assessed value of a property is therefore determined at a desk, based on land value tables, the year of construction, the volume, and the standard of finish.
It's important to know that the assessed value of a property for tax purposes almost always lags behind reality. Appraisals are often only updated every 10 to 15 years. In a market where prices can rise by 50% in ten years, the assessed value of a property often remains at an outdated level.
Does the assessed value of a property have anything to do with its selling price? Yes and no. It correlates with it, but it doesn't reflect it exactly. As a general rule of thumb in many cantons: The assessed value of a property is usually significantly lower than its market value.
The authorities usually aim to set the assessed value of a property at around 70 to 90 percent of its market value. In practice, especially in cantons with rapidly rising prices, such as Zurich or Zug, the assessed value of a property is often only 40 to 60 percent of the actual market price.
Why is this the case? The government wants to avoid a flood of appeals . If the assessed value of a property were exactly at market level, every owner would demand a reduction at the slightest market fluctuation. A lower assessed value serves as a buffer and ensures administrative efficiency. For you, this means: If your assessed value of your property is 800,000 Swiss francs, the selling price could easily be 1.2 or 1.4 million Swiss francs. Anyone using the assessed value as the asking price is giving away hundreds of thousands of francs.
Switzerland wouldn't be Switzerland without federalism. How the assessed value of real estate is calculated varies completely from canton to canton.
So, if you're talking to a friend from another canton about the assessed value of a property , you're comparing apples and oranges. A high assessed value in Aargau doesn't necessarily mean the property is more valuable than one with a low assessed value in Valais.
Even though the assessed value of a property is a poor guide for the selling price, it plays a major role in other areas.
A classic scenario where the assessed value of real estate causes disputes is inheritance division. For example, one child inherits the house, while the other receives a cash payment. If the family agrees on the assessed value as the basis for the division, the child with the house is significantly favored because the actual market value is much higher. The child receiving the cash payment is disadvantaged. In inheritance disputes, the assessed value should therefore be disregarded, and a current market value should be determined by experts. The assessed value is not a fair basis for distribution in this case.
When a property is sold, its assessed value indirectly comes into play again, albeit in a different form. The capital gains tax is calculated as the difference between the sale price and the acquisition costs (original purchase price + investments).
If you've inherited a property for which no historical purchase price is known (e.g., because it's been in the family for 50 years), some cantons use the assessed value of the property at a specific point in time as a substitute . If this historical assessed value is very low, the calculated profit, and therefore the tax burden, will be extremely high today. As you can see, the assessed value of a property is a double-edged sword. A low value saves on wealth tax today, but can drive up capital gains tax tomorrow.
When setting the asking price for your house, you should disregard the assessed value of the property . It's a bureaucratic tool, not a market-based one. Buyers are interested in location, condition, the specific surroundings, and supply and demand. They rarely ask about the assessed value of the property , except to estimate their future tax burden.
The only exception is if the assessed value of the property is extremely high (higher than the planned selling price), something is wrong. Then you've been paying too much tax for years. In this case, you should file an objection to the assessment, even if it's secondary to the sale itself. But the assessed value of a property is simply not a reliable indicator of its market value.
The assessed value of a property and its selling price are two different things. While the selling price reflects current market dynamics, the assessed value is a sluggish, administrative figure used to calculate wealth tax. In Switzerland, it is intentionally set below the market value – often by 20 to 40 percent.
the assessed value of your property as the basis for a sale will cost you money. Using it without reflection when dividing an inheritance will disadvantage your co-heirs. Consider the assessed value of your property for what it is: a figure used for tax purposes, not a price tag for your home.
If you want to know the actual market value beyond the tax assessment, Loft offers you independent and market-based valuation methods.
Egal, welche Fragen du rund um Immobilien hast – Loft ist da, um sie dir übersichtlich, verständlich und zuverlässig zu beantworten.
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