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Capital adequacy (Details)
SFr in Millions
12 Months Ended
Dec. 31, 2023
CHF (SFr)
Dec. 31, 2022
CHF (SFr)
Swiss capital    
Swiss CET1 capital SFr 38,187 SFr 40,987
Going concern capital 38,646 54,843
Gone concern capital 38,284 42,930
Total loss-absorbing capacity (TLAC) 76,930 97,773
Swiss risk-weighted assets and leverage exposure    
Swiss risk-weighted assets 181,690 249,953
Leverage exposure SFr 524,968 SFr 653,551
Swiss capital ratios    
Swiss CET1 ratio 0.210 0.164
Going concern capital ratio 21.30% 21.90%
Gone concern capital ratio 21.10% 17.20%
TLAC ratio 0.423 0.391
Swiss leverage ratios    
Swiss CET1 leverage ratio 7.30% 6.30%
Going concern leverage ratio 7.40% 8.40%
Gone concern leverage ratio 7.30% 6.60%
TLAC leverage ratio 14.70% 15.00%
Capital ratio requirements %    
Swiss CET1 ratio requirement 10.00% 9.28%
Going concern capital ratio requirement 14.30% 13.58%
Gone concern capital ratio requirement 10.725% 13.58%
TLAC ratio requirement 0.25025 0.2716
Leverage ratio requirements %    
Swiss CET1 leverage ratio requirement 3.50% 3.25%
Going concern leverage ratio requirement 5.00% 4.75%
Gone concern leverage ratio requirement 3.75% 4.75%
TLAC leverage ratio requirement 8.75% 9.50%
Description of Other Regulatory Limitations Certain of the Bank’s subsidiaries are subject to legal restrictions governing the amount of dividends they can pay (for example, pursuant to corporate law as defined by the Swiss Code of Obligations).Under the Swiss Code of Obligations, dividends may be paid out only if and to the extent the corporation has distributable profits or distributable reserves. For operating companies, legal reserves may be distributed if they exceed, after deduction of any accumulated losses, treasury shares and reserves for own shares held by subsidiaries, 50% of the share capital registered in the commercial register. Furthermore, dividends may be paid out only after shareholder approval.  
FINMA Pillar 2 capital add-on SFr 1,445 SFr 1,850