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Home / Europe / Hedging Swiss Franc · Updated 11 March 2026

Hedging
Swiss Franc (CHF).

Retail FX hedging — taking a position that offsets Swiss Franc (CHF) exposure — is generally not directly supported by EU neobanks. The retail-available alternatives are: holding CHF in a multi-currency wallet to offset CHF-denominated obligations, or buying a CHF-hedged ETF that does the institutional hedging internally.

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How it works

The mechanics of hedging CHF from Europe.

How CHF hedging actually works

The retail-grade hedge for an EU resident with CHF obligations is to hold matching CHF cash in a multi-currency wallet (Wise, Revolut, Bunq) — this is a 1:1 natural hedge against EUR/CHF fluctuations on the matched amount. For longer-dated or larger exposures, currency-hedged ETFs (often labelled 'EUR Hedged') do the institutional FX swap internally and pass the EUR-equivalent return through; these are available via Trade Republic and Revolut brokerage. True FX forwards and options are not available at EU neobanks — they require a corporate banking relationship.

Watchouts and hidden costs

Currency-hedged ETFs incur a hedging cost (typically 0.1–0.3% per year on top of the fund TER) — for short holding periods, the cost can exceed the benefit. Natural hedging via a multi-currency wallet is free but requires holding CHF cash, which has opportunity cost vs deploying that EUR elsewhere. For material exposures, consult a regulated investment advisor — the products available to retail EU residents are not designed for institutional hedging.

FAQ

hedging CHF: common questions.

Can I do FX hedging at an EU neobank?

Retail FX hedging products (forwards, options, swaps) are not currently offered at EU neobanks — these require a corporate banking relationship or a regulated FX broker. The retail-available alternatives are natural hedging via a multi-currency wallet (matching CHF cash to CHF obligations) or buying a currency-hedged ETF.

Is a multi-currency wallet a real hedge?

Holding CHF cash 1:1 against CHF obligations is a natural hedge — your EUR-equivalent exposure to EUR/CHF fluctuation on the matched amount is zero. Wise, Revolut, and Bunq all support CHF balances in their multi-currency wallets. The opportunity cost is that the CHF cash earns less yield than alternative EUR deployments.

What is a currency-hedged ETF?

A currency-hedged ETF (often labelled 'EUR Hedged') invests in CHF-denominated assets but uses institutional FX forwards to convert the CHF returns back to EUR continuously — the EUR investor receives the underlying asset return without the EUR/CHF FX volatility. The hedging cost is typically 0.1–0.3% per year on top of the fund TER.

Safety first

Is CHF actually protected at an EU neobank?

esisuisse covers eligible deposits up to CHF 100,000 per depositor per institution. Not every neobank holding CHF qualifies — EMIs (Wise) safeguard funds, which is structurally different from deposit insurance. Read the distinction in Deposit protection guide.