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Published on January 17, 2026

Buying Moving Company Leads in Switzerland: The Complete Buyer's Guide

How much a moving lead costs, why volume matters more than exclusivity in this sector, and how to stay compliant with the nLPD: the guide for moving companies looking to buy leads in Switzerland.

Unlike an emergency repair, a house move is planned: customers usually know their moving date weeks or even months in advance, and they compare several quotes before picking a provider. For a moving company, this means one thing: how fast and how relevant your quote response is matters just as much as the price you offer. A customer who requested five quotes will often go with whoever replied fastest with a clear offer.

Buying moving leads lets you capture these quote requests the moment they're made, rather than relying solely on your website's organic ranking or word of mouth. This guide is for moving companies considering buying leads: what it costs, how to judge quality, why volume tends to matter more than exclusivity in this sector, and which legal framework applies in Switzerland.

Why buy moving leads in Switzerland

The Swiss moving industry is strongly seasonal: demand spikes noticeably in summer, as well as around month-end and lease-end periods, when a large share of tenants change address. Outside these peaks, spontaneous demand can be more irregular, making it hard to keep a steady flow of business through word of mouth or a low-visibility website alone.

A purchased moving lead is a customer who already has a moving date in mind, an origin and a destination, and who's actively looking for one or more quotes. For a company, buying leads helps smooth out that seasonality by capturing demand right as it appears, filling a truck-and-crew schedule weeks ahead rather than scrambling to cover quiet stretches at the last minute.

How much does a moving lead cost in Switzerland

The price of a moving lead mainly depends on the size of the move (studio, family apartment, house), the distance (local, intercantonal or international), the exclusivity level, and the time of year. Unlike real estate brokerage, where a single mandate can carry very high value, the margin per move is comparatively modest, which naturally makes this sector more price-sensitive per lead and more volume-oriented.

On the Swiss market, observed ranges typically run from a few francs to a few tens of francs per shared lead, up to somewhat more for a well-qualified exclusive lead on a large-volume move. These figures stay indicative: they vary by provider, season (summer and lease-end periods tend to cost more due to demand) and order volume. The only reliable way to get a number for your business is to request a detailed, no-obligation quote.

How to judge the quality of a moving lead

A quality moving lead shows several signals: a realistic moving date close enough to still be relevant, precise origin and destination addresses, an estimate of the volume to move (number of rooms, whether there's a lift, floor level), and valid contact details. A customer with no fixed date yet, or only vaguely considering a move in the coming months, represents weaker intent than one whose lease ends in six weeks.

Because customers in this sector often compare several quotes in parallel, callback speed plays a decisive role in conversion: a lead delivered in real time, called back within the hour, converts noticeably better than one handled the next day. A good provider delivers leads in real time and shares an indicative average conversion rate, letting you benchmark your own performance against it.

Exclusive or shared leads: what really matters in moving

In this sector, most customers spontaneously approach several companies to compare prices, often via comparison sites. A lead shared between three or four moving companies is therefore common practice and generally accepted by the market: customers themselves expect to receive several quotes, unlike a home seller who prefers to deal with a single trusted agency.

That doesn't mean exclusivity has no value: for a large-volume move or a premium service (international relocation, storage, white-glove service), an exclusive lead still makes sense to avoid a price war. But for the bulk of the standard market, a strategy combining shared-lead volume with fast callbacks is often more profitable than betting everything on exclusivity — especially since the margin per job is more modest than in real estate or legal services.

Legal framework: nLPD and consent

In Switzerland, buying moving leads must comply with the federal data protection act (nLPD). Every customer whose details you receive — origin and destination addresses, phone number, e-mail — must have given explicit consent to be contacted by one or more moving companies, and that consent must be tracked by the provider, especially when a lead is shared between several companies.

Before buying, check that the provider can demonstrate the origin of consent (quote-request form, checkbox, timestamp) and clearly discloses how many companies a given lead is sent to. As the receiving company, you remain responsible for how you handle the data you receive: keep it only as long as needed to process the quote, and respect the customer's right to opt out of further contact.

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Frequently asked questions

How much does a moving lead cost in Switzerland?

Price depends on move size, distance, season and exclusivity level. Shared leads, common in this sector, typically cost a few francs to a few tens of francs. A tailored quote is the only reliable way to get a figure for your business.

Why are shared leads so common in the moving industry?

Because customers naturally compare several quotes before choosing, often through comparison sites. Shared leads reflect this buying behaviour and let responsive companies stay competitive without paying exclusive-lead pricing.

How do I know if a moving lead is good quality?

Check that the date is realistic and near-term, that the move's volume is estimated, that addresses are specified, and that the customer consented to being contacted. Call back as fast as possible — speed is the number-one conversion factor in this sector.

Is it legal to buy moving leads in Switzerland?

Yes, provided the provider can show that each customer consented to being contacted, in line with the nLPD, including when the lead is shared between several companies. You remain responsible for how you handle the data once received.

Do I need a contract to start buying moving leads?

No. Most providers, including our platform, let you start with a small test volume with no mandatory subscription, then scale up during high-season periods.

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