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Liechtenstein foundation taxation remains one of the most searched topics among international wealth planners, fiduciaries and in-house tax leads, and for good reason. The principality’s standard corporate income tax rate of 12.5 % applies to most foundations (Stiftungen), while charitable structures may qualify for full exemption. The OECD’s release of a new Pillar Two administrative toolkit on 30 April 2026 has introduced fresh questions about top-up tax exposure for foundation structures that hold or control multinational enterprise (MNE) entities. This guide consolidates the 2026 tax position, foundation tax exemptions Liechtenstein offers, realistic setup costs, and a practical trustee compliance checklist, everything a founder, trustee or adviser needs in one place.
| Item | Statutory Rule | Practical Note |
|---|---|---|
| Standard income tax rate | 12.5 % on net taxable income | Applies to private, family and commercial foundations alike |
| Foundation entry levy | 0.2 % of statutory/foundation capital (one-off) | Payable upon registration in the Commercial Register |
| Minimum income tax | CHF 1,800 per year | Due even where no taxable profit is generated |
Key trustee action items for 2026:
A Liechtenstein foundation, known locally as a Stiftung, is a legally independent entity endowed with assets by a founder for a defined purpose. Unlike a company, a foundation has no shareholders. Once established, it becomes a self-owning legal person: the dedicated assets belong to the foundation itself, not to its founder or beneficiaries. This feature of stiftung taxation architecture is central to its appeal for succession planning, asset protection and philanthropic purposes.
Liechtenstein law, anchored in the Persons and Companies Act (Personen- und Gesellschaftsrecht, PGR), recognises several foundation types:
Every Liechtenstein foundation must appoint a foundation council (Stiftungsrat) of at least two members, at least one of whom must be resident in the European Economic Area or Switzerland. The foundation council is the supreme governing body, responsible for asset management, distributions and regulatory compliance. Foundation registration in the Liechtenstein Commercial Register is mandatory, and the entry is publicly accessible via the government portal at llv.li.
Understanding the current foundation tax rates Liechtenstein applies is the starting point for any tax planning or compliance exercise. While the headline rate has remained stable in recent years, the interplay with Pillar Two creates new considerations for 2026.
All Liechtenstein foundations that are not exempt from taxation are subject to a flat corporate income tax rate of 12.5 % on their net taxable income. The taxable base includes worldwide income, investment returns, rental income, capital gains and, for commercial foundations, trading profits, less allowable deductions.
| Line Item | Amount (CHF) |
|---|---|
| Gross investment income | 500,000 |
| Less: allowable expenses (management, audit, trustee fees) | (80,000) |
| Net taxable income | 420,000 |
| Income tax at 12.5 % | 52,500 |
One important practical point: Liechtenstein does not impose municipal surtaxes on foundations beyond the national rate. The 12.5 % is the effective rate, there is no stacking of communal levies on top.
At establishment, every foundation must pay a one-off entry levy of 0.2 % of its statutory (foundation) capital. The minimum statutory capital for a private or family foundation is CHF 30,000. For a charitable foundation the threshold is the same, although in practice many charitable structures are endowed with significantly higher capital.
| Statutory Capital | Levy at 0.2 % |
|---|---|
| CHF 30,000 (minimum) | CHF 60 |
| CHF 1,000,000 | CHF 2,000 |
| CHF 10,000,000 | CHF 20,000 |
Regardless of whether a foundation earns taxable income in a given year, it must pay a minimum income tax of CHF 1,800 annually. This applies to all non-exempt foundations and is creditable against the foundation’s regular income tax liability when taxable profits arise. For passive family foundations with minimal annual income, the minimum tax is often the only effective charge beyond professional trustee and audit fees.
One of the most frequently asked questions in Liechtenstein foundation taxation is whether a foundation can be fully exempt from tax. The answer depends on the foundation’s purpose and the approval of the Liechtenstein tax authority (Steuerverwaltung).
A foundation may apply for tax-exempt status if it exclusively and irrevocably pursues charitable, religious, cultural, scientific or other public-benefit purposes. The key conditions are:
The foundation council submits an application to the Steuerverwaltung, accompanied by the foundation deed, by-laws, a description of planned activities and financial projections. If exemption is granted, the foundation is relieved from income tax and the annual minimum tax.
However, exempt status brings its own reporting obligations. The foundation must file annual accounts demonstrating continued adherence to its public-benefit purposes, and the tax authority retains the right to revoke exemption if the criteria are no longer met. Mixed-purpose foundations, those with both private and charitable aims, are only partially exempt, in proportion to the assets and income dedicated to charitable activity.
The taxation of distributions from Liechtenstein foundations is a nuanced area of liechtenstein foundation taxation that depends on the type of distribution, the tax status of the beneficiary and the foundation’s own record-keeping.
Liechtenstein tax law distinguishes between distributions of original capital and distributions of accumulated income. Distributions of originally dedicated capital (and capital reserves) can be made tax-free to beneficiaries, but only where the foundation maintains a properly documented Evidenzkonto (tax evidence account). This account tracks every inflow and outflow of capital versus income since the foundation’s establishment. Without a reliable Evidenzkonto, the tax authority may treat all distributions as taxable income distributions, creating a potentially significant compliance risk for trustees.
Liechtenstein itself does not impose withholding tax on distributions from foundations to beneficiaries. The tax treatment therefore depends primarily on the beneficiary’s country of residence. Consider two scenarios:
Industry observers expect the importance of the Evidenzkonto to increase further as cross-border transparency frameworks expand. Trustees who allow this record to lapse face not only local compliance risk but also difficulties in providing beneficiaries with the documentation they need to satisfy their own tax authorities.
The OECD released its updated Pillar Two administrative toolkit on 30 April 2026, providing tax administrations, and by extension, taxpayers and their advisers, with enhanced guidance on how the Global Anti-Base Erosion (GloBE) Model Rules apply in practice. For Liechtenstein foundation taxation purposes, the toolkit’s clarifications raise specific questions about whether foundations can be drawn into the global minimum tax net.
The GloBE rules establish a 15 % minimum effective tax rate for MNE groups with consolidated annual revenue of EUR 750 million or more. Where a constituent entity of such a group is located in a jurisdiction where its effective tax rate falls below 15 %, a top-up tax is allocated to bring the rate up to the floor. Liechtenstein’s 12.5 % headline rate sits below this threshold, making top-up tax exposure a live concern.
Not every Liechtenstein foundation is affected. The GloBE rules apply only to constituent entities of in-scope MNE groups. Industry observers note that the practical decision tree for trustees involves three questions:
The comparison table below summarises how Pillar Two exposure varies by foundation type:
| Entity Type | Local Tax / Reporting (LI) | Pillar Two / Top-Up Exposure (2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Pure passive family foundation | Minimal annual filings; foundation levy at registration; minimum tax CHF 1,800 | Low, unlikely to be a constituent entity unless it controls corporate subsidiaries in an MNE group |
| Commercial / trading foundation | Full corporate tax returns; Evidenzkonto; possible VAT registration | Higher risk, may be a constituent entity; must allocate GloBE income; top-up possible |
| Foundation owning MNE subsidiaries | Consolidated evidence obligations; distribution documentation | High, constituent entity exposure; top-up allocation rules apply under IIR/UTPR |
For foundations that may fall within scope, the following compliance steps are advisable in 2026:
Early indications suggest that the majority of purely passive family foundations will remain outside the GloBE net. However, foundations that sit atop corporate holding structures, particularly those with commercial subsidiaries in multiple jurisdictions, should treat Pillar Two compliance as an urgent priority in 2026.
Trustees of Liechtenstein foundations bear significant legal and fiduciary responsibilities that extend well beyond investment management. The 2026 regulatory environment places heightened emphasis on documentation, anti-money laundering (AML) compliance and beneficial-ownership transparency.
The foundation council owes duties of loyalty and care to the foundation itself, not to the founder or individual beneficiaries. Members must act in the foundation’s best interests, avoid conflicts of interest, and manage the assets prudently. Breaches can result in personal civil liability and, in serious cases, criminal prosecution.
Maintaining an accurate Evidenzkonto is not optional. This account records, on a cumulative basis, the capital contributed to the foundation and the income it has generated over time. It underpins the tax treatment of every distribution: without it, the ability to make tax-free capital returns to beneficiaries is effectively lost. Trustees should update the Evidenzkonto annually and reconcile it with audited financial statements.
Liechtenstein’s due diligence framework requires trustees to identify and verify the identities of the founder, beneficial owners and any persons with significant control over the foundation. Beneficial-ownership information must be filed with the relevant register and kept current. Non-compliance can result in sanctions, including fines and loss of the trustee licence.
| # | Task | Responsible Party |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Confirm foundation’s registration in the Commercial Register is current | Foundation council / trustee |
| 2 | Update Evidenzkonto with prior-year income and distributions | Trustee / accountant |
| 3 | File annual tax return and pay minimum tax (CHF 1,800) or assessed tax | Tax adviser / trustee |
| 4 | Assess Pillar Two constituent-entity status (MNE group mapping) | Tax adviser |
| 5 | Verify beneficial-ownership register filing is complete and accurate | Foundation council |
| 6 | Conduct annual KYC refresh on all beneficiaries | Trustee / compliance officer |
| 7 | Review foundation deed and by-laws for consistency with current law | Legal adviser |
| 8 | Prepare and approve audited annual financial statements | Auditor / foundation council |
| 9 | Document all distributions with Evidenzkonto extracts and board resolutions | Foundation council / trustee |
| 10 | Archive AML records, transfer pricing files and tax certificates for a minimum of ten years | Trustee / compliance officer |
Realistic cost planning is essential for any prospective founder. Liechtenstein foundation setup costs vary depending on the complexity of the structure and the level of professional services engaged, but the following ranges reflect current market practice.
| Cost Item | Typical Range (CHF) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Statutory / foundation capital (minimum) | 30,000 | Dedicated assets; remains within the foundation |
| Foundation entry levy (0.2 %) | 60–20,000+ | Scales with capital; one-off at registration |
| Commercial Register fees | 500–1,500 | Government registration and publication charges |
| Notarisation of foundation deed | 1,500–5,000 | Depends on deed complexity |
| Legal / tax advisory fees (setup) | 5,000–25,000 | Varies with structure complexity and cross-border elements |
| Annual trustee / administration fees | 5,000–30,000+ | Depends on asset volume and activity level |
| Annual audit fees | 3,000–10,000 | Mandatory for most foundations |
| Minimum income tax (annual) | 1,800 | Payable regardless of income |
| Phase | Duration | Key Activities |
|---|---|---|
| Preparation | 0–2 weeks | Draft foundation deed; appoint council members; KYC / AML checks on founder |
| Notarisation & registration | 2–6 weeks | Notarise deed; file with Commercial Register; pay entry levy |
| Tax & regulatory registrations | 4–8 weeks | Register with Steuerverwaltung; open bank account; establish Evidenzkonto |
In straightforward cases, a single-jurisdiction family foundation with a clearly defined beneficiary class, the entire process from first instruction to completed registration can be achieved within six to eight weeks. Complex cross-border structures with multiple asset pools may take longer.
Liechtenstein foundation taxation in 2026 operates within a stable domestic framework, 12.5 % income tax, CHF 1,800 minimum tax and a one-off 0.2 % establishment levy, but the external environment is evolving rapidly. The OECD Pillar Two toolkit released on 30 April 2026 means that foundations sitting within MNE group structures must now take top-up tax allocation seriously, while all trustees should treat the Evidenzkonto as a non-negotiable compliance document.
The practical steps are clear: map your group structure, calculate effective tax rates using the GloBE methodology, update your Evidenzkonto and ensure that AML and beneficial-ownership filings are current. For foundations that remain purely passive and family-oriented, the compliance burden is manageable, but should not be neglected.
For tailored guidance on any aspect of Liechtenstein foundation taxation, from initial structuring to Pillar Two exposure analysis, find a qualified Liechtenstein tax lawyer through the Global Law Experts directory.
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.
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