Our Expert in Germany
No results available
Anyone planning a cross-border relocation tax move from Germany to Switzerland in 2026 faces a fundamentally different regulatory landscape than even a year ago. The German exit tax, formally the Wegzugsteuer under §6 of the Foreign Tax Act (Außensteuergesetz, AStG), now intersects with the amended Germany–Switzerland double-taxation agreement (DTA), whose amending protocol entered into force on 27 November 2025. This guide provides the practical compliance framework that shareholders, entrepreneurs, employees with equity plans, and their advisors need to navigate the German exit tax Switzerland obligations, access treaty relief, and manage cash-flow through deferral or instalment arrangements.
Below, you will find the legal tests that determine who is caught, a worked calculation, step-by-step application procedures, a downloadable compliance checklist, and answers to the seven questions asked most frequently by individuals moving to Switzerland in 2026.
Yes. Germany imposes an exit tax on individuals who give up German tax residency while holding qualifying participations in corporations. The mechanism is a deemed disposal: at the moment you cease to be a German tax resident, the law treats your shares as if they had been sold at fair market value, and the difference between that value and the original acquisition cost is subject to German income tax, even though no actual sale has taken place.
The legal basis is §6 AStG. It applies regardless of the destination country, meaning moves to Switzerland trigger the same statutory test as moves within the EU. However, moves to Switzerland, a non-EU, non-EEA country, have historically received less favourable treatment regarding automatic deferrals compared with intra-EU relocations, a distinction that remains relevant in 2026.
| Condition | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Shareholding threshold | Direct or indirect holding of at least 1 % in a corporation at any point during the ten years preceding the move |
| German tax residency period | Unlimited tax liability in Germany for at least seven of the twelve years before the move |
| Triggering event | Giving up residence (Wohnsitz) or habitual abode (gewöhnlicher Aufenthalt) in Germany |
| Tax base | Fair market value minus acquisition cost of the qualifying shares, taxed as income |
If all conditions are met, the deemed gain is included in the taxpayer’s final German income-tax assessment. Industry observers expect the Finanzamt to scrutinise Switzerland-bound relocations particularly closely in 2026 given the volume of high-net-worth departures currently under way.
Liability falls on the individual who meets the statutory tests, not on the company whose shares are held. Three elements must be checked in every case.
Section 6 AStG captures anyone who, at any time during the last ten years, held at least 1 % of the share capital of a corporation, whether directly, indirectly, or through attribution rules. Indirect holdings through partnerships or trusts can be aggregated. Even if the taxpayer’s stake has fallen below 1 % by the date of the move, the tax may still apply if the threshold was met at any earlier point within the look-back window.
Germany’s unlimited tax liability arises from having a Wohnsitz (permanent home) or gewöhnlicher Aufenthalt (habitual abode, broadly defined as physical presence exceeding six consecutive months) in Germany. The exit tax is triggered when both of these cease. Merely registering a de-registration (Abmeldung) does not alone end the habitual abode; the Finanzamt will look at actual living arrangements.
The deemed disposal occurs on the last day on which the taxpayer is treated as having unlimited German tax liability. In practice, this is the day before the Swiss cantonal registration takes full effect and the German residence is conclusively abandoned. Getting the date wrong by even a single day can shift the valuation into a different tax year.
Assume an individual holds 15 % of a German GmbH. The shares were acquired for €200,000 and have a fair market value of €2,000,000 on the date of departure. The deemed gain is €1,800,000. Under the partial-income method (Teileinkünfteverfahren), 60 % of this gain, €1,080,000, is subject to income tax at the taxpayer’s personal rate. At a combined marginal rate (income tax plus solidarity surcharge) of approximately 47.5 %, the exit tax liability would be roughly €513,000, payable without any actual cash inflow from a share sale.
| Entity / holding type | Trigger for Wegzugsteuer | Reporting / next steps |
|---|---|---|
| Individual with ≥ 1 % in corporation | Giving up German tax residency, deemed disposal under §6 AStG | File German income-tax return, commission valuation, apply for deferral or instalments if eligible |
| Employee with stock options (vested / unvested) | Vested participations may trigger; plan terms and vesting schedule matter | Early valuation, consider exercise timing pre-move, verify DTA treatment of employment income |
| Corporate seat transfer / business relocation | Complex tests involving permanent establishment and place of management | Engage transfer-pricing and M&A tax counsel; seek advance rulings |
The protocol of 21 August 2023 amending the Germany–Switzerland DTA entered into force on 27 November 2025 following the completion of ratification procedures in both countries. For individuals moving to Switzerland in 2026, this protocol reshapes the framework for avoiding double taxation on capital gains, dividends, and certain other income streams.
Under the Germany–Switzerland DTA, the primary mechanism for avoiding double taxation on gains that have already been subject to German exit tax is a tax credit: if Switzerland later taxes the same gain on an actual sale, the taxpayer may claim a credit for the German tax already paid. The credit method, rather than outright exemption, means the taxpayer must document the German tax paid and present it to the Swiss cantonal tax authority at the time of the real disposal.
Taxpayers should obtain a certified copy of the German exit-tax assessment notice (Steuerbescheid) and retain all valuation documentation, as Swiss authorities will require proof of the exact amount of German tax attributable to the deemed gain.
Returning to the shareholder above: if the GmbH shares are later sold in 2029 for €2,500,000 while the taxpayer is a Swiss resident, Switzerland would, in the absence of treaty relief, potentially tax the full gain from the original acquisition cost. Under the DTA credit mechanism, the ~€513,000 of German exit tax already paid can be credited against the Swiss tax on the overlapping portion of the gain, preventing double taxation on the €1,800,000 of appreciation that occurred while the taxpayer was German-resident. Only the additional €500,000 of post-move appreciation would be taxed exclusively in Switzerland.
The immediate cash-flow burden of the Wegzugsteuer can be severe, particularly where the shares are illiquid. German law provides mechanisms to defer exit tax under §6 AStG, although the conditions differ depending on whether the move is within the EU/EEA or to a third country such as Switzerland.
For moves to EU or EEA member states, §6 AStG provides an automatic, interest-free and indefinite deferral. Switzerland is neither an EU nor an EEA member, so this automatic deferral does not apply. However, the Germany–Switzerland DTA and the bilateral Agreement on the Free Movement of Persons have been interpreted by courts and the German Federal Ministry of Finance (BMF) to extend deferral-like treatment under certain conditions. The exit taxation may be imposed in the event of a move to Switzerland, but, according to BDO’s analysis of current practice, must be deferred permanently and without interest where the taxpayer meets the qualifying conditions.
The application for deferral should be filed together with, or shortly after, the final German income-tax return for the year of departure. The following documents are typically required:
Where an outright indefinite deferral is not granted, payment in instalments may be available. A sample instalment schedule is shown below.
| Year | Instalment amount | Cumulative paid | Remaining balance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Year 1 (year of move) | €73,286 | €73,286 | €439,714 |
| Year 2 | €73,286 | €146,572 | €366,428 |
| Year 3 | €73,286 | €219,858 | €293,142 |
| Year 4 | €73,286 | €293,144 | €219,856 |
| Year 5 | €73,286 | €366,430 | €146,570 |
| Year 6 | €73,286 | €439,716 | €73,284 |
| Year 7 | €73,284 | €513,000 | €0 |
Assumptions: total exit tax liability of €513,000 spread equally over seven annual instalments. In practice, the Finanzamt may adjust the number and size of instalments based on the taxpayer’s liquidity and the security offered.
The following numbered checklist covers the critical steps for managing the German exit tax Switzerland obligation. It is designed for taxpayers and their advisors to use as a tracking tool.
German occupational and private pensions may remain subject to German limited-tax liability even after the move. The Germany–Switzerland DTA allocates taxing rights for pensions based on the income type and the source state. Lump-sum pension withdrawals before or shortly after the move require careful timing to avoid double taxation and to fall within the correct treaty article.
Germany’s extended limited tax liability for inheritance and gift tax can apply for up to ten years after emigration if either the donor/deceased or the recipient retains German nationality. Shares that have already been subject to Wegzugsteuer must be valued consistently to avoid conflicts between the exit-tax assessment and any subsequent inheritance- or gift-tax assessment.
Company founders often hold participations well above the 1 % threshold and face the largest exit-tax liabilities. Pre-move strategies, such as contributing shares to a holding company, implementing share splits to reduce individual exposure, or accelerating planned share sales before departure, must be evaluated on a case-by-case basis. The general anti-avoidance rule (§42 AO) applies, meaning any restructuring must have genuine economic substance beyond tax minimisation.
Equity compensation (restricted stock units, stock options, phantom shares) requires a layered analysis. Vested participations meeting the 1 % threshold fall within §6 AStG. Even where the threshold is not met, employment-income rules may allocate part of the compensation to the German employment period. The DTA employment-income article and the exit-tax article must be read together to determine which portion of a stock-plan gain Germany may tax and which portion falls to Switzerland.
The Finanzamt’s approach to exit-tax cases can vary significantly between local offices. The following practical tips help manage the process.
Switzerland does not impose an exit tax on individuals leaving or arriving in the country. Incoming residents are generally subject to Swiss income tax from the date of registration. For taxpayers moving to Switzerland from Germany, the key Swiss-side considerations include:
The convergence of Germany’s Wegzugsteuer regime and the updated Germany–Switzerland DTA protocol makes 2026 a pivotal year for anyone relocating. Missteps in valuation, timing, or application procedure can result in immediate, undeferrable tax demands running into the hundreds of thousands of euros. Three steps should be taken without delay:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Melina Mavridou at Mavaro GmbH, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 23 minutes ago
posted 47 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Advisory Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest advisor briefings and news within Global Advisory Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Advisory Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional advisory services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced advisors, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message