Liechtenstein Trust Structures for Ultra-HNW Families
How ultra-high-net-worth families use Liechtenstein's trust and foundation structures for multi-generational wealth preservation with maximum privacy.
Liechtenstein Trust Structures for Ultra-HNW Families
Liechtenstein — a microstate of 40,000 people between Switzerland and Austria — has been a global center for trust and foundation law since 1926. The Liechtenstein Foundation (Stiftung) is one of the most powerful wealth preservation tools available to ultra-HNW families, offering flexible governance, robust asset protection, and favorable tax treatment.
The Liechtenstein Foundation (Stiftung)
A Stiftung is a self-governing legal entity with no owners or shareholders. Once assets are transferred to the foundation, they belong to the foundation — not to any individual.
Key Features
- Founder: Establishes the foundation and defines its purpose
- Foundation Council: Manages the foundation (minimum 2 members, at least 1 must be a qualified Liechtenstein resident)
- Beneficiaries: Receive distributions according to the foundation’s deed and bylaws
- No shareholders or owners — the foundation is its own entity
Asset Protection
- Assets transferred to a bona fide foundation are protected from future creditor claims after a 2-year hardening period
- The founder can retain certain rights (revocation, amendment, consent to distributions) while still achieving asset separation
- Forced heirship claims from foreign jurisdictions are generally not enforceable against Liechtenstein foundations
The Tax Structure
Foundation Tax
- Liechtenstein foundations pay a minimum annual tax of CHF 1,800 (~$2,000)
- If the foundation has taxable income (rare for pure holding foundations), corporate tax is 12.5%
- No withholding tax on distributions to beneficiaries
- No capital gains tax on the disposal of participations (participation exemption)
- No inheritance or estate tax — assets in the foundation pass to successive beneficiary classes without triggering death taxes
Personal Tax (if resident)
- Liechtenstein personal income tax: progressive up to 22.4% (including municipal surcharge)
- No capital gains tax for individuals
- Wealth tax of 0.1% of net assets per year
The Privacy
Liechtenstein does comply with international information exchange standards (CRS, OECD). However:
- Foundation registers are not publicly accessible
- Beneficiary information is held by the foundation’s trustee, not in a public register
- Information is shared only through formal treaty mechanisms upon qualified request
The Cost Structure
| Component | Annual Cost |
|---|---|
| Foundation establishment | CHF 15,000-30,000 |
| Foundation Council fees | CHF 5,000-15,000/year |
| Audit (if required) | CHF 5,000-10,000/year |
| Minimum tax | CHF 1,800/year |
| Legal and administrative | CHF 5,000-15,000/year |
| Total | CHF 30,000-70,000/year |
This is a structure for families with $10M+ in assets, where the annual administration costs are trivial relative to the estate and tax planning benefits.
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