Before you fund a single loan on any Swiss P2P lending or crowdlending platform, there is a set of checks worth running once, in full, rather than picking up piecemeal from a marketing page. This checklist is that set. It is organised around the questions that determine what happens to your money if things go wrong, not around the features a platform advertises.
Work through it item by item against the specific platform you are considering. Most of the answers should be findable in the platform’s terms, its regulatory disclosures, or a direct question to support. If a platform cannot or will not answer one of these plainly, treat that as information in itself. Pair this checklist with the risk screener for a fuller structured assessment, and with Swiss P2P lending platforms for background on how to categorise platforms before you compare them.
Identity & licence
- Identify the exact legal entity operating the platform and where it is registered.
- Check whether that entity, or a partner it uses, holds any FINMA authorisation and confirm it against FINMA’s public registers.
- Confirm which Swiss laws the platform states apply to its loans, such as the Consumer Credit Act for personal loans.
Client money & custody
- Ask how your uninvested cash is held between deposit and the moment it is lent out.
- Confirm whether client funds are legally segregated from the platform’s own operating funds.
- Find out what happens to outstanding loans and your claim on them if the platform becomes insolvent.
- Check whether a third party, rather than the platform itself, services repayments and holds the loan contracts.
Loan quality & transparency
- Check whether the platform publishes historical default and delinquency figures, not just projected returns.
- Confirm how loans are diversified across your investment, and whether you can end up concentrated in a small number of borrowers.
- Read the underwriting criteria the platform states it applies before listing a loan.
- For secured loans, check the valuation date and method behind the stated security.
Fees & exit
- List every fee the platform charges, including ones taken from repayments rather than shown upfront.
- Check whether a secondary market or early-exit option actually exists, or whether your capital is locked until maturity.
- Confirm how currency conversion is handled and priced if loans are denominated in a currency other than Swiss francs.
Documents & support
- Request the actual loan agreement template, not just the platform’s summary description of it.
- Check whether investor support is reachable by a named channel and responds within a stated timeframe.
None of these checks require specialised financial training. They require reading the documents a legitimate platform should already be willing to show you, and being willing to walk away if it is not. Use the risk screener if you want a scored, structured version of this same process.
Sources & status
Based on public guidance from FINMA (finma.ch) and the Swiss National Bank (snb.ch). Illustrative figures are examples, not market data. Last checked: 14 July 2026.
Educational content, not financial advice. Lending investments can lose all invested capital and are not bank deposits. Verify every platform claim yourself before investing.