Case report · Switzerland · dentist

“You earn too well — and that is exactly what makes the financing complicated.”

When the Swiss dentist heard this sentence, he first thought it was a joke.

Information

Note: this describes an anonymised real-world case. Personal data and individual financing details have been changed to protect those involved. The sequence reflects a typical advisory situation.

For more than ten years he had run a well-established dental practice in the canton of Aargau, employed twelve staff and generated stable profits. Privately he had considerable reserves and several securities accounts.

His plan was as simple as could be.

He wanted to buy two flats in Freiburg im Breisgau and let them long-term.

The equity ratio was high.

The rental income convincing.

The creditworthiness excellent.

Even so, he initially received no financing commitment.

Why Germany?

During his studies the dentist had lived in Germany for several years and knew the property market in the south-west very well.

His aim was not short-term speculation.

He wanted to invest part of his assets outside Switzerland while benefiting from a stable rental market.

The two flats were in a modern apartment building.

The key figures:

  • Total purchase price: 742,000 euros
  • Equity: 285,000 euros
  • Financing required: 515,000 euros

The economics were convincing.

Even so, the first meetings were sobering.

The surprising rejection

The first bank pointed to internal guidelines.

Foreign self-employed people would, as a matter of principle, only be financed to a limited extent.

The second bank examined the case more thoroughly.

After several follow-up questions, however, a rejection followed here too.

Reasoning:

The income situation was excellent, but could not be classified according to the internal assessment guidelines because of the Swiss company structure.

In other words:

The problem was not the income.

The problem was that the bank could not assess it properly.

Why the self-employed from Switzerland are often assessed differently

Many banks work with standardised credit-scoring procedures.

These work very well for classic employees.

For practice owners, entrepreneurs or freelancers based abroad, the assessment becomes considerably more complex.

Among other things, the following are reviewed:

  • company accounts
  • private withdrawals
  • profit development
  • asset building
  • liquidity reserves
  • tax particulars
  • exchange-rate risks

Not every bank has staff who analyse such documents regularly.

The analysis

Before a new financing enquiry, the overall economic situation was fully prepared.

It became clear:

The practice had generated continuously rising profits for years.

Private reserves were available in sufficient amounts.

There were no payment defaults or problematic liabilities whatsoever.

In addition, the dentist had a broadly diversified securities portfolio.

The two flats were convincing too.

They were in a sought-after location, were of high quality and achieved sustainable rental returns.

The decisive difference

This time there was no attempt to offer the financing to as many banks as possible.

Instead, an institution was specifically selected that regularly handles cross-border financings for entrepreneurs and freelancers.

All the particulars were explained even before the actual credit review.

As a result, the bank did not only understand the figures.

It understood the entire business model.

That is exactly what made the difference.

The financing

After the detailed review, the commitment followed.

The financing was structured for the long term.

A considerable part of the assets was deliberately left untouched to secure sufficient liquidity reserves.

The two flats were taken over a few weeks later and let immediately.

What other Swiss entrepreneurs can learn from this

Many self-employed people assume that high profits automatically lead to a financing commitment.

In practice, however, something else often decides.

The bank must be able to fully understand the economic situation.

The more complex company and asset structures are, the more important the choice of a financing partner with the relevant experience becomes.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Can Swiss self-employed people finance property in Germany?
Yes. Many banks handle such financings, provided the economic conditions are documented comprehensibly.
Are practice owners more difficult to finance than employees?
Not fundamentally. The review is, however, often more extensive.
Are profits or private withdrawals assessed?
Depending on the bank, different figures feed into the credit assessment.
Is financing several flats possible?
Yes. What is decisive is property quality, equity and the overall economic situation.
Can further investments be financed too?
In principle yes, provided the long-term sustainability of the overall financing is given.

Conclusion

This case shows that international entrepreneurs and freelancers often do not fail because of their economic capacity.

Much more often, individual banks lack the routine in dealing with cross-border company structures.

Anyone who prepares their asset and income situation professionally and specifically selects financing partners creates the best conditions for a successful property financing in Germany.

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Anonymised individual case, not a guaranteeable statement for other projects · advice free · commission paid by the bank · §34i GewO · not legal or tax advice · no financing commitment; conditions depend on creditworthiness, lending value and bank