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Tax Lawyers Liechtenstein 2026: Globe Minimum Tax, GIR Filings & Trustee Obligations

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Liechtenstein’s 2026 implementation of the OECD GloBE minimum tax rules has moved the principality from planning into active enforcement, creating an urgent compliance window for every trustee, foundation administrator and licensed fiduciary managing in-scope entities. Tax lawyers in Liechtenstein are now fielding a surge of questions from MNE groups, family offices and corporate service providers who must register for GIR filings, compute effective tax rates under the new Qualified Domestic Minimum Top-Up Tax (QDMTT) framework, and document safe-harbour eligibility, all before hard deadlines that begin on 30 June 2026.

This guide delivers the step-by-step action plan fiduciaries need right now: who is in scope, what must be filed, how to calculate the top-up, and what records to keep to survive an audit.

Executive Summary and Immediate Actions

If you administer a Liechtenstein foundation, Anstalt or trust structure that sits within a multinational group exceeding the EUR 750 million consolidated-revenue threshold, the GloBE rules apply to you. The compliance clock is ticking, and the practical steps below should be treated as an immediate priority.

Key facts at a glance:

  • Who is in scope. Constituent entities of MNE groups with consolidated annual revenue of at least EUR 750 million in at least two of the four fiscal years immediately preceding the tested year. Liechtenstein foundations, Anstalts and locally administered trusts can all qualify.
  • Critical first deadline. 30 June 2026, GIR registration and initial transitional filings for fiscal years beginning on or after 1 January 2025 are due by this date under the March 2026 regulation amendments published on llv.li.
  • Minimum effective tax rate. 15 %, assessed jurisdiction by jurisdiction. Where a Liechtenstein entity’s effective rate falls below 15 %, a top-up tax is triggered, either through the QDMTT or, failing that, via the Income Inclusion Rule (IIR) applied by the parent jurisdiction.
  • Penalties. Administrative fines for late or incorrect GIR submissions are provided for under the amended Tax Act; early indications suggest a framework broadly aligned with existing Liechtenstein tax-penalty provisions.

Seven-step fiduciary checklist (day 0 to day 60):

  1. Confirm whether each administered entity meets the EUR 750 million group-revenue threshold.
  2. Register on the Liechtenstein Tax Administration’s (Steuerverwaltung) electronic portal for GIR submissions.
  3. Collect FY 2025 financial data: GloBE income, covered taxes, payroll and tangible-asset carve-outs.
  4. Run the jurisdictional effective-tax-rate calculation and assess whether the safe-harbour tests apply.
  5. Compute any QDMTT liability and prepare supporting documentation.
  6. Draft and distribute client disclosure letters to beneficial owners and board members.
  7. File the GIR and the domestic QDMTT return by 30 June 2026.

What Changed in 2026, Liechtenstein’s GloBE Implementation

Liechtenstein transposed the OECD Pillar Two GloBE Model Rules into domestic law through a series of legislative amendments that took effect in early 2026. The principality is a member of the OECD/G20 Inclusive Framework on Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) and committed, alongside the European Economic Area (EEA) partners, to adopt both the IIR and the QDMTT. The domestic minimum tax is set at the internationally agreed floor of 15 % on the GloBE income base.

Timeline of Regulatory Steps

Date Instrument What It Means for Fiduciaries
December 2024 Parliament approves the Mindestbesteuerungsgesetz (MindBestG), Minimum Taxation Act Legal basis established for GloBE transposition; application to fiscal years beginning on or after 1 January 2025.
March 2026 Government ordinance (Verordnung) published on llv.li detailing GIR form specifications, electronic-filing portal requirements and transitional safe-harbour elections Fiduciaries can begin portal registration; GIR data-field definitions confirmed.
April 2026 Steuerverwaltung releases official FAQ and administrative guidance on QDMTT calculations, entity-classification questions for foundations/Anstalts, and penalty framework Practical clarity on how Liechtenstein-specific entity forms are treated; safe-harbour documentation thresholds confirmed.
30 June 2026 First GIR filing deadline for transitional fiscal year 2025 All in-scope constituent entities (or their designated filing entity) must have registered and submitted.

Liechtenstein’s standard corporate income tax rate of 12.5 % sits below the 15 % GloBE minimum. Industry observers expect this gap to be the single largest driver of top-up tax obligations for Liechtenstein-resident entities within multinational groups. Fiduciaries should therefore treat the QDMTT not as an edge case but as the default compliance burden for most in-scope structures.

Who and What Is in Scope, Entities, Foundations, Anstalts and Trusts

Any entity that forms part of an MNE group with consolidated revenue of at least EUR 750 million is a potential constituent entity under the GloBE rules. Liechtenstein’s domestic transposition follows the OECD Model Rules closely: the scope test is applied at the group level, and every entity resident, or with a permanent establishment, in the principality must be assessed individually for effective-tax-rate purposes.

Liechtenstein-Specific Entity Definitions

Liechtenstein’s legal landscape includes structures not commonly found in other jurisdictions. Understanding their treatment under GloBE is critical for tax lawyers in Liechtenstein and the fiduciaries who administer them.

  • Foundation (Stiftung). A separate legal entity under the Persons and Companies Act (PGR). Where a foundation is subject to Liechtenstein corporate income tax and sits within an in-scope MNE group, it is treated as a constituent entity. Private-benefit foundations used for wealth structuring are in scope if connected to a qualifying group; purely charitable foundations may qualify for exclusions under the OECD rules, but fiduciaries must document the exclusion claim.
  • Anstalt (Establishment). A uniquely Liechtenstein corporate form with or without legal personality. For GloBE purposes, an Anstalt that is a separate taxable person under domestic law is generally classified as a constituent entity. Commercial Anstalts with active business operations require particular attention to intercompany service arrangements and transfer-pricing documentation.
  • Trust. Liechtenstein recognises trusts under the Trust Enterprise Act. Where a trust is treated as a flow-through entity, the analysis turns on whether the trustee or the underlying settlor/beneficiary is the taxpayer. Where the trustee is a Liechtenstein-licensed fiduciary, trustee reporting obligations attach regardless of the trust’s own tax status. Fiduciaries administering foreign trusts with Liechtenstein-sited assets must coordinate with the settlor’s and beneficiary’s home jurisdictions.
Entity Type In Scope for GloBE? Common Issues for Fiduciaries
Foundation (Stiftung) Yes, if part of an MNE group meeting the EUR 750 m threshold and subject to tax in Liechtenstein Verify group connection; document any charitable-purpose exclusion; compute covered taxes including coupon-tax interactions
Anstalt Yes, where treated as a separate taxable person, confirm commercial vs. non-commercial classification Verify tax residency; reconcile intercompany charges; ensure transfer-pricing files are GloBE-ready
Trust (Liechtenstein-administered) Depends on transparency, if opaque and taxable, yes; if transparent, obligations may attach at beneficiary level Determine flow-through vs. opaque status; collect settlor/beneficiary jurisdiction data; coordinate cross-border GIR filings

GIR Filing Requirements, Registration, Data and Deadlines

The Global Information Return (GIR) is the standardised data return through which MNE groups report the information necessary for tax authorities to administer the GloBE rules. In Liechtenstein, the Steuerverwaltung requires electronic submission through its dedicated portal. Every fiduciary managing an in-scope entity must understand the registration process, the data fields, and the hard deadlines.

Registration Steps and Timeline

  1. Obtain a Liechtenstein tax identification number (Steuernummer) for each constituent entity if not already held. Entities without a domestic tax number must apply directly to the Steuerverwaltung.
  2. Register on the electronic GIR portal (accessible via the Steuerverwaltung section of llv.li). Registration requires a valid digital certificate (e-identity) for the filing person, typically the licensed fiduciary or an authorised tax representative.
  3. Designate the filing entity. Under the OECD framework, an MNE group may appoint one entity to file the GIR on behalf of all constituent entities in Liechtenstein. Fiduciaries administering multiple entities within the same group should confirm the designation in writing with the ultimate parent entity.
  4. Submit a test filing if the portal offers a validation environment, early indications suggest the Steuerverwaltung will provide a sandbox tool for the first transitional year.

Data Fields Required

The GIR data requirements follow the OECD’s standardised XML schema. Fiduciaries will need to compile the following categories of information for each constituent entity:

  • Entity identification. Legal name, jurisdiction of incorporation, jurisdiction of tax residence, tax identification numbers in all relevant jurisdictions, ownership chain and ultimate parent entity details.
  • Financial data. GloBE income or loss (adjusted from financial-accounting net income), revenue, profit before tax, covered taxes accrued and paid, deferred tax adjustments, and any post-filing adjustments from prior years.
  • Substance carve-outs. Payroll costs for eligible employees physically located in Liechtenstein, and the carrying value of tangible assets situated in the jurisdiction, both used to calculate the substance-based income exclusion (SBIE).
  • Top-up tax computation. Jurisdictional effective tax rate, excess profit, top-up tax percentage, QDMTT amount (if applicable), and any safe-harbour election details.
  • Ownership and allocation data. Ownership interests held by group entities, allocation keys for top-up tax, and details of any minority-owned constituent entities.

Deadlines

The first GIR filing deadline for Liechtenstein is 30 June 2026, covering fiscal years beginning on or after 1 January 2025. This date was confirmed in the March 2026 government ordinance. For subsequent fiscal years, the filing deadline is expected to fall 15 months after the close of the relevant fiscal year, with a transitional extension of 18 months for the first year, consistent with the OECD Administrative Guidance.

Fiduciaries should note that the 30 June 2026 date applies to both the GIR and the domestic QDMTT return. Missing this deadline triggers the penalty framework described below.

Penalties and Extensions

The April 2026 administrative guidance confirms that penalties for late or incorrect GIR filings fall within the existing framework of the Liechtenstein Tax Act (Steuergesetz). Administrative fines may be imposed for failure to file, late filing, or submission of materially incomplete or inaccurate data. The guidance indicates that the Steuerverwaltung retains discretion over penalty amounts, and that voluntary corrections submitted before an audit notification may receive more favourable treatment. Fiduciaries should seek local counsel immediately if a deadline is at risk.

Calculating Effective Tax, QDMTT, Safe Harbour and Documentation Requirements

Because Liechtenstein’s domestic corporate income tax rate of 12.5 % falls below the 15 % GloBE minimum, most in-scope entities will owe a top-up. The QDMTT is Liechtenstein’s mechanism to collect that top-up domestically, before a foreign parent jurisdiction can impose it via the IIR. Proper documentation of the QDMTT calculation is essential for every fiduciary.

QDMTT Explained

The Qualified Domestic Minimum Top-Up Tax is a domestically levied charge that brings the effective tax rate on GloBE income up to 15 %. It is calculated on a jurisdictional basis, aggregating the income and covered taxes of all constituent entities resident in Liechtenstein, rather than entity by entity. The QDMTT has priority: where Liechtenstein imposes a qualifying QDMTT, the parent jurisdiction’s IIR top-up is reduced accordingly, avoiding double taxation.

Documentation requirements for the QDMTT include:

  • A reconciliation from financial-accounting profit to GloBE income for each entity.
  • A schedule of covered taxes, distinguishing current taxes, deferred taxes and any adjustments required under the GloBE rules (e.g., recapture of deferred tax assets).
  • The SBIE computation showing eligible payroll and tangible-asset values.
  • The final jurisdictional effective-tax-rate calculation and resulting top-up tax amount.

Safe-Harbour Mechanics

The OECD Transitional Safe Harbour provides temporary relief for jurisdictions where certain simplified tests are met, based on Country-by-Country Report (CbCR) data. Liechtenstein’s implementation follows the OECD guidance: if the CbCR data for a jurisdiction shows a simplified effective tax rate of at least 15 %, or if total revenue and profit are below de minimis thresholds, the full GloBE computation may be dispensed with for that jurisdiction in the transitional period.

Fiduciaries must document the safe-harbour election and retain supporting CbCR extracts. A safe-harbour election that later proves incorrect (e.g., due to CbCR restatements) may result in retrospective top-up liability. Cautious fiduciaries will run both the safe-harbour test and the full QDMTT computation in parallel during the transitional years.

Worked Example, Foundation Within an MNE Group

Consider a Liechtenstein foundation (Stiftung Alpha) that is a constituent entity of an MNE group. The foundation holds intellectual property licensed to group companies and earns royalty income. For FY 2025:

Item Amount (EUR) Notes
GloBE income (adjusted) 4,000,000 Royalty income less allowable deductions under GloBE rules
Covered taxes (Liechtenstein CIT at 12.5 %) 500,000 Current tax; no material deferred-tax adjustments
SBIE, payroll carve-out (5 % of eligible payroll) 50,000 Foundation employs 4 staff in Vaduz
SBIE, tangible-asset carve-out (5 % of carrying value) 30,000 Office premises and equipment
Excess profit (GloBE income − SBIE) 3,920,000 4,000,000 − 80,000
Jurisdictional ETR 12.5 % 500,000 / 4,000,000
Top-up tax percentage 2.5 % 15 % − 12.5 %
QDMTT payable 98,000 2.5 % × 3,920,000

In this example, the fiduciary must ensure that the EUR 98,000 QDMTT liability is computed, documented and paid alongside the GIR filing. The foundation’s board minutes should record the QDMTT obligation, and the beneficial owner should receive a disclosure explaining the additional tax.

Trustee, Foundation Administrator and Licensed Fiduciary Obligations, Practical Steps and Records

Licensed fiduciaries in Liechtenstein carry legal responsibilities that extend beyond mere tax return preparation. Under the Treuhändergesetz (Trustees Act) and related professional regulations, fiduciaries must act with due diligence, inform clients of material regulatory changes, and maintain comprehensive records. The GloBE regime adds a significant new layer of trustee reporting obligations.

Client Engagement and Disclosure Checklist

Before the first GIR filing, fiduciaries should complete the following engagement and disclosure steps:

  • Scoping letter. Send a written notice to each client (beneficial owner, founder, board of directors) explaining that the GloBE minimum tax applies and outlining the entity’s likely in-scope status. Include a request for any group-level data the fiduciary does not already hold (e.g., consolidated revenue figures from the ultimate parent).
  • Data-collection mandate. Obtain a signed mandate or board resolution authorising the fiduciary to collect, process and submit financial and ownership data required for the GIR.
  • Fee estimate. Provide a realistic cost estimate for GloBE compliance work, including QDMTT computation, GIR preparation and ongoing monitoring, to avoid disputes later.
  • Conflict check. Where the fiduciary administers multiple entities within the same MNE group, confirm that no conflicts arise from consolidated filing arrangements.

Board Minutes and Beneficiary Communications

Foundation councils (Stiftungsräte) and Anstalt boards must formally acknowledge the GloBE obligations. Best practice includes:

  • A board resolution confirming awareness of the Mindestbesteuerungsgesetz and delegating compliance tasks to the fiduciary or an external tax adviser.
  • Annual beneficiary communications (where required by the foundation deed or applicable law) disclosing any QDMTT payments and their impact on distributions.
  • Documented consideration of whether to elect the safe-harbour and the rationale for that election.

Record Retention and Audit File Checklist

Fiduciaries should maintain a GloBE compliance file for each in-scope entity. The file should contain, at minimum:

  • A copy of the submitted GIR (XML and human-readable PDF).
  • The QDMTT computation workpapers, including the GloBE-income reconciliation and covered-tax schedules.
  • The safe-harbour analysis and supporting CbCR extracts.
  • Transfer-pricing documentation relevant to intra-group transactions affecting GloBE income.
  • Ownership charts showing the full chain from the constituent entity to the ultimate parent.
  • Copies of all client disclosure letters, signed mandates and board resolutions.
  • Correspondence with the Steuerverwaltung, including registration confirmations and any extension requests.

Retention periods should follow the general Liechtenstein tax-record retention rules, typically ten years from the end of the relevant tax period, or longer if specified in the professional regulations governing licensed fiduciaries.

Entity Comparison: Reporting Obligations and Timelines

The following comparison table summarises the GIR filing and trustee reporting requirements across Liechtenstein’s most common entity types. Fiduciaries should use this as a quick-reference tool when triaging their client portfolios for GloBE compliance.

Entity Type Is GIR / GloBE Reporting Required? Trustee / Fiduciary Obligations (Summary)
Foundation (Stiftung) Yes, where the foundation is a constituent entity of an MNE group meeting the EUR 750 m threshold and is subject to Liechtenstein corporate income tax. Document any charitable exclusion claim thoroughly. Register entity for GIR portal; gather FY data; compute effective tax; prepare and file QDMTT return; document safe-harbour tests; maintain audit file; notify foundation council and beneficiaries as required by deed.
Anstalt Yes, where treated as a separate taxable person under domestic law and part of an in-scope group. Confirm commercial vs. non-commercial classification with the Steuerverwaltung. Same as foundations. Additionally: verify Anstalt tax compliance with respect to intercompany service arrangements; reconcile transfer-pricing documentation; pay particular attention to commercial-activity classification and PE risk.
Trust (Liechtenstein-administered) Depends on transparency status. Opaque trusts taxable in Liechtenstein: yes. Transparent trusts: obligations may attach at the beneficiary or settlor level. Coordinate with all relevant jurisdictions. Determine opaque vs. transparent status; collect ownership/control data from settlor and beneficiaries; coordinate cross-border GIR filings with parent-jurisdiction advisers; file GIR if the trust is the designated filing entity.

Fiduciaries administering Anstalts should note that the Anstalt’s hybrid nature, which can resemble a corporation, a trust or a sole proprietorship depending on its constitutional documents, requires case-by-case analysis. Where an Anstalt lacks separate legal personality, the GloBE rules may look through to the founder, potentially shifting the filing obligation to another jurisdiction. This is an area where experienced Liechtenstein tax lawyers add critical value.

How Tax Lawyers in Liechtenstein Can Help, Services, Templates and Next Steps

The 2026 GloBE compliance landscape is complex, deadline-driven and high-stakes. Global Law Experts connects trustees, foundation administrators and multinational tax teams with experienced Liechtenstein tax lawyers who provide:

  • GIR readiness assessments. A structured review of your entity portfolio to identify in-scope entities, data gaps and filing obligations before the 30 June 2026 deadline.
  • QDMTT and safe-harbour computation support. Preparation or review of jurisdictional effective-tax-rate calculations, SBIE carve-outs and top-up tax computations with full documentation for audit defence.
  • Trustee disclosure templates. Client-facing communication templates covering scoping letters, board resolutions and beneficiary notifications, adapted to Liechtenstein foundation and Anstalt governance requirements.
  • Ongoing compliance monitoring. Post-filing services including annual GIR updates, deferred-tax tracking and coordination with parent-jurisdiction advisers on IIR credit claims.

To discuss your GloBE compliance position or request a confidential readiness assessment, contact a Liechtenstein tax adviser through Global Law Experts today.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Stephanie Marxer at Toendury + Partner AG, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Government of the Principality of Liechtenstein, Steuerverwaltung (Tax Administration)
  2. OECD, Inclusive Framework on BEPS / GloBE Model Rules
  3. OECD, GloBE Information Return (GIR) Guidance
  4. PwC Liechtenstein, GloBE / Minimum Tax Technical Notes
  5. Bergt Law, Commentary on Liechtenstein GloBE Implementation
  6. Orbitax, Global Minimum Tax Implementation Tracker

FAQs

Who must file a GIR in Liechtenstein for the 2026 GloBE rules?
The GIR must be filed by, or on behalf of, every constituent entity of an MNE group with consolidated annual revenue of at least EUR 750 million that is tax-resident in Liechtenstein or has a permanent establishment there. This includes foundations, Anstalts and opaque trusts that meet the threshold. An MNE group may designate a single filing entity for all Liechtenstein constituent entities, but each entity must be registered with the Steuerverwaltung. Licensed fiduciaries administering such entities are responsible for ensuring the filing is complete and timely.
Yes, where they are constituent entities of an in-scope MNE group. Foundations subject to Liechtenstein corporate income tax at 12.5 % will almost always trigger a QDMTT obligation because the domestic rate is below the 15 % GloBE minimum. The same applies to commercially active Anstalts. Both entity types may also benefit from the transitional safe-harbour if CbCR data shows a simplified ETR of at least 15 % or if revenue and profit fall below the de minimis thresholds. Fiduciaries must document the safe-harbour election and retain the supporting data.
The first GIR filing deadline is 30 June 2026, covering fiscal years beginning on or after 1 January 2025. This date was confirmed in the government ordinance published in March 2026. For the initial transitional period, the OECD Administrative Guidance allows an 18-month filing window, and Liechtenstein has adopted this extended timeline. Subsequent annual filings are expected to revert to a 15-month window after the fiscal year-end.
At a minimum, trustees and licensed fiduciaries should maintain: (1) the GloBE-income reconciliation from financial-accounting profit, (2) covered-tax schedules with current and deferred tax breakdowns, (3) SBIE computation workpapers, (4) the final jurisdictional ETR calculation and QDMTT return, (5) safe-harbour election documentation and supporting CbCR extracts, (6) transfer-pricing files for intra-group transactions, (7) ownership charts showing the full group structure, and (8) copies of all client disclosures, board resolutions and Steuerverwaltung correspondence. Retention should follow the ten-year rule under Liechtenstein’s general tax-record requirements.
The April 2026 administrative guidance confirms that penalties fall within the existing Liechtenstein Tax Act framework. The Steuerverwaltung may impose administrative fines for failure to file, late submission, or materially incomplete or inaccurate filings. The guidance indicates that the authority retains discretion over penalty amounts and that voluntary self-corrections made before an audit notification may receive more favourable treatment. Because penalty amounts can vary significantly based on facts and circumstances, fiduciaries who anticipate missing a deadline should seek advice from Liechtenstein tax lawyers immediately to explore extension options and mitigate exposure.
Liechtenstein is not listed as a non-cooperative jurisdiction by the EU or the OECD. However, its 12.5 % corporate income tax rate is below the 15 % GloBE minimum, which means that constituent entities resident in the principality will almost always be subject to a top-up tax. The adoption of the QDMTT demonstrates Liechtenstein’s commitment to international tax transparency and ensures that the top-up revenue is collected domestically rather than by a foreign parent jurisdiction. For reputational and compliance purposes, thorough GloBE documentation is essential for every Liechtenstein-based entity within an MNE group.
By Awatif Al Khouri

posted 7 minutes ago

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Tax Lawyers Liechtenstein 2026: Globe Minimum Tax, GIR Filings & Trustee Obligations

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