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Belgium capital gains tax 2026 financial assets

Belgium 2026: What High‑net‑worth Individuals Must Know About the New Capital‑gains Tax on Financial Assets

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

From 1 January 2026, Belgium levies a new capital gains tax on financial assets, a landmark shift for a country that historically exempted most private portfolio gains from income tax. The 10 % flat‑rate charge applies to net realised gains on a broad catalogue of instruments, including listed and unlisted shares, bonds, ETFs, investment funds, crypto‑assets and certain insurance contracts. A per‑taxpayer annual exemption of €10,000, a 31 December 2025 valuation snapshot and a transitional election window running until 31 December 2030 give high‑net‑worth individuals, family offices and trustees both relief and complexity to manage.

This guide sets out who is affected, what is taxed, how the transitional rules work, and, critically, the practical planning steps that wealthy individuals and their advisors should take right now.

TL;DR, What Wealthy Individuals Need to Know

  • New 10 % flat rate. Capital gains realised on qualifying financial assets from 1 January 2026 onward are taxed at a flat 10 % rate for Belgian tax residents and, in certain circumstances, for non‑residents.
  • 31 December 2025 snapshot baseline. Gains accrued before 2026 are shielded: the taxable gain is calculated from the asset’s market value on 31 December 2025 (or the original acquisition cost, if the taxpayer can prove it and elects to use it during the 2026–2030 transitional period).
  • Broad asset scope. Shares (listed and unlisted), bonds, investment funds and ETFs/trackers, derivatives in certain cases, crypto‑assets and qualifying insurance contracts all fall within scope.
  • Annual exemption. Each taxpayer benefits from an annual exemption of €10,000 in net capital gains, subject to indexation in future years.
  • Immediate actions required. Compile 31 December 2025 valuations and supporting documentation, review broker withholding arrangements, assess pre‑entry tax planning if relocating to Belgium, and audit family‑office and trust structures for compliance.

Background, How the Belgium Capital Gains Tax 2026 Came About

Belgium was one of the last Western European jurisdictions without a general capital gains tax on private financial‑asset holdings. The political impetus for change intensified during coalition negotiations in late 2025, resulting in a programme‑law package that included the new tax regime. The measures were formally adopted and published in the Moniteur belge / Belgisch Staatsblad, Belgium’s official gazette, with an effective date of 1 January 2026. Subsequent parliamentary debate in early 2026 refined certain technical provisions, particularly around broker withholding obligations and the transitional election mechanism.

The stated policy objectives were twofold: broadening the personal‑income‑tax base to capture wealth gains that had long escaped taxation, and aligning Belgium more closely with neighbouring jurisdictions that already tax financial‑asset gains. Industry observers expect that administrative guidance from the Federal Public Service Finance (FPS Finance) will continue to develop throughout 2026 and 2027 as brokers, tax advisors and taxpayers encounter implementation questions.

Key Legislative Dates and Timeline

Date Event Practical Impact
Late 2025 Programme‑law package adopted; published in the Moniteur belge Legislation enters force; taxpayers and advisors must prepare for 1 Jan 2026 effective date
31 December 2025 Valuation snapshot date Market value on this date becomes the default acquisition cost for pre‑2026 holdings
1 January 2026 Tax applies to all qualifying disposals Broker withholding obligations begin; taxpayers must track gains and losses
2026–2030 Transitional election window Taxpayers may elect to use original acquisition cost instead of snapshot value, if they can prove it
Mid‑2027 (expected) First annual tax returns incorporating the new capital gains tax Self‑reporting required for gains not covered by broker withholding; filed via MyMinfin

Scope, Which Financial Assets Are Taxable in Belgium from 2026?

The taxable financial assets under Belgium’s 2026 capital gains regime cover a deliberately broad perimeter. A “transfer for consideration”, including a sale, exchange, redemption, or other disposal, of a qualifying financial asset triggers the tax where it gives rise to a realised gain. Gratuitous transfers such as gifts and inheritances remain outside scope, as do intra‑family restructurings that qualify for rollover relief under existing provisions.

Asset Table, Taxable Financial Assets in Belgium

Asset Type Typical Examples Tax Treatment Under the 2026 Rules
Listed shares Euronext Brussels equities, foreign‑listed shares held via Belgian or foreign broker Fully taxable at 10 % on net realised gain above annual exemption
Unlisted shares Private‑company shares, pre‑IPO holdings, start‑up equity Fully taxable, valuation evidence particularly important
Bonds and debt instruments Government bonds, corporate bonds, structured notes Taxable; interaction with existing withholding tax on interest to be managed
Investment funds (UCIs) SICAV, FCP, BEVEK structures, both distributing and accumulating Taxable on disposal; existing “Reynders tax” rules on bond‑heavy funds continue to apply in parallel where relevant
ETFs and trackers iShares, Vanguard trackers held via European platforms Taxable; popular with Belgian retail and HNWI investors, withholding depends on broker location
Crypto‑assets Bitcoin, Ethereum, stablecoins, tokenised securities Included within scope; gains from disposal of crypto‑assets held as investment are taxable
Certain insurance contracts Branch 23 and Branch 26 products with investment component Taxable where surrender, partial withdrawal or maturity generates a gain attributable to financial‑asset performance
Derivatives (in certain cases) Options, futures, CFDs on qualifying underlyings Within scope where derived from qualifying financial assets; detailed rules on settlement and exercise apply

Certain assets remain excluded or subject to separate regimes. Real‑estate gains continue to be governed by existing rules, and gains on assets held within a Belgian company are subject to corporate‑income‑tax rules rather than the new personal capital gains tax. Gains realised within the normal management of private patrimony that fell below the old administrative thresholds were previously untaxed, that carve‑out has now been superseded by the 2026 regime for the listed asset classes.

Calculation Mechanics, Exemptions and Losses Under Belgium’s Capital Gains Tax 2026

The new capital gains tax on financial assets applies a flat rate of 10 % on the net realised gain. The gain is calculated as the difference between the disposal proceeds and the acquisition cost, which, for assets held before 1 January 2026, is either the 31 December 2025 snapshot value or the original purchase price (if elected under the transitional rules).

Annual Exemption

Each taxpayer is entitled to an annual exemption of €10,000 in net capital gains. This means only gains exceeding €10,000 in a given tax year are subject to the 10 % charge. The exemption is expected to be indexed in future years. Married couples and legal cohabitants filing jointly each benefit from their own €10,000 threshold, giving a household up to €20,000 in exempt gains per year.

Capital Losses, Offsetting and Carry‑Forward

Realised capital losses on qualifying financial assets may be offset against realised gains in the same tax year, reducing the net gain subject to tax. Early indications suggest that losses cannot be carried forward indefinitely, the likely practical effect will be that unused losses from one tax year may be carried forward for a limited period, though the precise carry‑forward window is an area where additional administrative guidance from FPS Finance is anticipated. Taxpayers should therefore consider the timing of gain and loss realisations within the same year to maximise the offset benefit.

Worked Example

Consider a Belgian tax resident who in 2026 realises the following transactions:

  • Sale of listed shares: Disposal proceeds €150,000; snapshot value on 31 December 2025: €120,000. Gain = €30,000.
  • Sale of ETF position: Disposal proceeds €80,000; snapshot value on 31 December 2025: €90,000. Loss = €10,000.
  • Net gain for 2026: €30,000 − €10,000 = €20,000.
  • Annual exemption applied: €20,000 − €10,000 = €10,000 taxable.
  • Tax due: €10,000 × 10 % = €1,000.

If the same taxpayer could prove that the original purchase price of the listed shares was €100,000 (below the snapshot value of €120,000), electing to use the snapshot value would be advantageous because it produces a smaller gain. Conversely, if the original cost were €130,000, above the snapshot, electing the original cost would reduce the taxable gain. This interplay makes the transitional election a critical planning decision.

Snapshot and Transitional Rules, The 31 December 2025 Baseline

The snapshot mechanism is the single most important transitional feature of the Belgium capital gains tax 2026 regime. It ensures that gains accrued before 1 January 2026 are not captured by the new tax. For every qualifying financial asset held on 31 December 2025, the market value on that date is recorded as the deemed acquisition cost, unless the taxpayer elects otherwise.

Between 2026 and 2030, taxpayers may instead elect to use the original (historical) acquisition cost of an asset, provided they can supply adequate proof. This election can be beneficial where the original cost is higher than the 31 December 2025 snapshot value, for instance, where an asset was purchased at a peak and has since declined. It can also be disadvantageous where the original cost is lower, effectively pulling pre‑2026 gains into the tax net. The election is therefore asset‑by‑asset and year‑by‑year, requiring careful analysis.

After 31 December 2030, the transitional election window closes and only the 31 December 2025 snapshot value (or the actual acquisition cost for assets acquired after 1 January 2026) applies.

Documentation Checklist for the Original‑Cost Election

To successfully elect the original acquisition cost during the 2026–2030 transitional period, taxpayers should assemble the following evidence:

  1. Broker contract notes or trade confirmations showing the purchase date, quantity, price per unit and total consideration paid.
  2. Bank statements corroborating the outflow of funds on or around the acquisition date.
  3. Share‑transfer agreements for unlisted shares, including any shareholders’ agreement provisions on valuation.
  4. Valuation reports (independent or auditor‑prepared) for unlisted or illiquid holdings as at the acquisition date.
  5. Subscription or allotment letters for shares acquired via capital increases, IPOs or employee‑share plans.
  6. Inheritance or gift documentation if the asset was originally received gratuitously and subsequently becomes subject to the capital gains regime on a later disposal, the deemed acquisition cost at the date of the gratuitous transfer may be relevant.
  7. Crypto‑exchange records and wallet transaction logs showing the purchase price, date and fees for crypto‑assets.

Industry observers expect that FPS Finance will publish further guidance on acceptable forms of proof. Taxpayers who cannot produce satisfactory evidence will default to the 31 December 2025 snapshot value.

Residents vs Non‑Residents, Who Pays and How to Plan

The capital gains tax Belgium 2026 framework applies differently depending on the taxpayer’s residence status. Belgian tax residents, natural persons domiciled or with their centre of economic interests in Belgium, are subject to the tax on their worldwide qualifying financial‑asset gains, regardless of where the asset is held or where the transaction is executed.

Non‑resident natural persons face a more nuanced position. A non‑resident capital gains Belgium exposure can arise where the transfer of a financial asset is “deemed executed” in Belgium. This occurs principally where the sell order is placed through, or routed to, a Belgian intermediary. Non‑residents using Belgian‑based brokers or custodians should therefore scrutinise their execution arrangements. Where a double‑tax treaty exists between Belgium and the non‑resident’s home jurisdiction, the treaty may restrict Belgium’s right to tax, but treaty protection must be claimed and documented.

Reporting and Liability, by Taxpayer Type

Taxpayer Type Reporting / Withholding Practical Implications / Key Action
Belgian resident (natural person) Broker withholds (if Belgian intermediary) or taxpayer self‑reports via annual tax return; 10 % on net gain above exemption Gather 31 Dec 2025 baseline; instruct brokers to report; prepare proof to use original cost (if helpful)
Non‑resident natural person Taxable if transfer deemed executed in Belgium (orders routed to Belgian intermediary / deemed execution rules); otherwise may not be withheld Review execution place; consider re‑routing trades; seek treaty analysis if resident in treaty state
Trustee / family office / foundation Depends on legal status (taxable if subject to Belgian tax / treated as taxable entity); beneficiaries may be attributed Trustees should document distributions and keep valuation records; consider restructuring or in‑kind distributions

Pre‑entry tax planning for individuals relocating to Belgium deserves particular attention. An individual who becomes a Belgian tax resident after 1 January 2026 will be subject to the capital gains tax on gains realised after taking up residence. Gains accrued before Belgian residence begins should in principle be excluded, but proving the pre‑entry accrued gain requires robust documentation of the asset’s value at the date of immigration. Early engagement with a Belgian tax advisor before relocation is strongly recommended.

Family Offices, Trustees and Carried Interest, Practical Issues

Family offices, trustees and private‑equity professionals face specific compliance challenges under the new regime. The characterisation of an entity’s legal status, and whether gains are attributed to the entity itself or passed through to individual beneficiaries, determines both the rate of tax and the reporting obligation.

Trustee Compliance Checklist

  • Determine tax status. Confirm whether the trust or foundation is treated as a taxable entity under Belgian law or whether gains are attributed to underlying beneficiaries.
  • Valuation records. Maintain auditable records of 31 December 2025 valuations for all qualifying financial assets held within trust or foundation structures.
  • Distribution documentation. Document whether distributions to beneficiaries take the form of income, capital or in‑kind transfers, each has a different tax treatment.
  • Cross‑border reporting. For trusts with Belgian‑resident beneficiaries but foreign‑situs assets, ensure Belgian reporting obligations are met even where the trustee is not Belgian.
  • Review trust deeds. Assess whether existing trust instruments provide adequate powers for the trustee to manage tax elections (e.g., the transitional cost election) on behalf of beneficiaries.

Family‑Office Governance Actions

  • Centralise portfolio data. Ensure all accounts, across multiple brokers, jurisdictions and asset classes, feed into a single reporting system capable of calculating gains using both the snapshot value and original cost.
  • Tax‑loss harvesting policy. Establish a formal policy for realising losses within the same tax year to offset gains, particularly for portfolios with significant unrealised losses.
  • Carried interest review. For family offices with private‑equity co‑investments, review whether carried interest is characterised as a capital gain (subject to 10 %) or as professional income (subject to progressive rates up to 50 %). The new regime does not alter the fundamental characterisation test, but the introduction of a capital‑gains rate creates new incentives to structure correctly. Carried interest Belgium 2026 is an area where specialist advice is essential.

Withholding, Brokers and Reporting

Belgian‑based brokers and financial intermediaries are expected to withhold the 10 % tax at source for their Belgian‑resident clients. The withholding mechanism mirrors existing practices for the tax on stock‑exchange transactions (TOB), with the intermediary calculating the gain, applying the annual exemption (to the extent information is available) and remitting the tax to the Treasury.

Foreign brokers, including popular pan‑European platforms, are generally not required to withhold Belgian capital gains tax. Where a Belgian resident trades through a foreign broker, the taxpayer bears full responsibility for self‑reporting the gain in the annual personal‑income‑tax return, filed via the MyMinfin platform. The first returns reflecting the new tax are expected to be due in mid‑2027 for the 2026 tax year.

Broker Checklist for Clients

  1. Contact each broker or custodian and confirm whether they will withhold the Belgian capital gains tax automatically.
  2. Where withholding is applied, verify that the broker uses the correct acquisition cost (snapshot value or elected original cost) and applies the annual exemption correctly.
  3. For foreign brokers that do not withhold, ensure you have access to annual gain/loss statements in a format compatible with Belgian tax‑return reporting.
  4. If you hold accounts at multiple brokers, note that the €10,000 exemption applies per taxpayer across all accounts, not per broker. Over‑withholding by one broker cannot automatically be credited against under‑reporting at another.
  5. Retain all broker statements, contract notes and year‑end position reports for at least seven years (the standard Belgian tax‑assessment period for individuals).

Practical Planning Checklist for Belgium Capital Gains Tax 2026 on Financial Assets

The following step‑by‑step checklist is designed for high‑net‑worth individuals, family offices and their advisors. Each action includes a recommended timeline.

  1. Compile 31 December 2025 valuations (immediate). Obtain year‑end 2025 portfolio statements from every broker, custodian and crypto exchange. For unlisted holdings, commission or update independent valuations. Store these records securely, they form the default acquisition cost for all pre‑2026 assets.
  2. Gather original‑cost proof (by mid‑2026). For each material holding, assemble contract notes, bank statements and transfer agreements proving the historical purchase price. This is required only if you wish to elect the original cost during the 2026–2030 transitional window, but the documentation exercise should begin immediately while records are accessible.
  3. Audit broker withholding arrangements (Q1 2026). Confirm which brokers will withhold and which will not. Consider consolidating accounts at a Belgian broker only if the service, cost and withholding benefits justify it, do not move accounts solely for tax reasons without a full cost‑benefit analysis.
  4. Model the transitional election (before first disposal). For each asset, compare the tax outcome under the snapshot value and the original cost. The election is asset‑by‑asset and applies per disposal, so pre‑trade modelling is essential.
  5. Pre‑entry tax planning for inbound movers (before relocation). If you are relocating to Belgium, document the market value of all financial assets on the day before you become a Belgian tax resident. Engage a Belgian advisor before the move to structure the transition and preserve evidence. Pre‑entry tax planning Belgium is a fast‑growing advisory field in 2026.
  6. Review wealth structures (Q1–Q2 2026). Assess whether existing holding structures (Belgian management companies, Luxembourg SOPARFIs, Dutch BVs, trust or foundation wrappers) remain efficient under the new regime. The capital gains tax may shift the relative attractiveness of personal holding versus corporate holding for certain asset classes.
  7. Address share‑based remuneration and carried interest (ongoing). For executives, founders and private‑equity professionals, review the characterisation of gains on shares, options, warrants and carried interest. The boundary between capital gains (10 %) and professional income (up to 50 %) is a high‑stakes classification question.
  8. Implement a tax‑loss harvesting policy (ongoing). Within family offices and large portfolios, establish governance for realising losses strategically to offset gains within the same tax year.
  9. Prepare for the first filing (by mid‑2027). Ensure your tax advisor or accountant has full data, gains, losses, exemptions used, broker withholdings applied, ready for inclusion in the 2026 personal‑income‑tax return filed via MyMinfin.

Risks, Pitfalls and Enforcement

The Belgian tax authorities are expected to direct significant audit resources toward the new capital gains tax in its early years. High‑net‑worth individuals and family offices should be alert to the following risk areas:

  • Insufficient proof for original‑cost election. Taxpayers who elect the historical acquisition cost but fail to produce adequate documentation risk having the election denied and being reassessed on the snapshot value, or, worse, facing penalties for incorrect returns.
  • Undeclared foreign‑broker trades. The Common Reporting Standard (CRS) and bilateral exchange‑of‑information agreements give FPS Finance access to foreign‑account data. Gains on financial assets held with foreign brokers that are not reported in the Belgian return will surface during automated cross‑checks.
  • Trustee non‑reporting. Foreign trustees managing assets for Belgian‑resident beneficiaries may not be aware of Belgian reporting obligations. The liability ultimately falls on the Belgian‑resident beneficiary if the trustee does not withhold or report.
  • Crypto‑asset traceability. Decentralised exchanges and self‑custody wallets create traceability gaps. The burden of proof for the acquisition cost of crypto‑assets rests squarely on the taxpayer, and the tax authorities have signalled heightened scrutiny of crypto disposals.
  • Penalties. Standard Belgian penalty provisions for incorrect or late returns apply. Industry observers expect the first enforcement wave to target high‑value portfolios and taxpayers with known foreign‑account holdings.

Conclusion, Recommended Next Steps for Wealth Planning in Belgium 2026

The introduction of the Belgium capital gains tax 2026 on financial assets is a structural change to the private‑client tax landscape. For high‑net‑worth individuals, the immediate priorities are clear: secure 31 December 2025 valuations, assemble historical‑cost documentation, model the transitional election for each material holding, and confirm broker withholding arrangements. Family offices and trustees must update governance frameworks and reporting systems. Those relocating to Belgium should engage a specialist advisor before arrival to preserve the pre‑entry gain exclusion.

The complexity of the transitional rules, the interaction with existing taxes (TOB, Reynders tax, withholding tax on investment income) and the cross‑border dimensions for non‑residents and trust structures all argue strongly for early, specialist legal and tax advice. Wealth planning Belgium 2026 demands a proactive, documentation‑first approach, waiting for the first filing deadline is not a strategy.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Tim Roovers at Sansen International Tax Lawyers, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. FPS Finance, Belgian Federal Public Service Finance
  2. Belgian Official Gazette, Moniteur belge / Belgisch Staatsblad
  3. PwC, Belgium Individual Tax: Significant Developments
  4. KPMG Belgium, The New Capital Gains Tax on Financial Assets
  5. EY, The New Belgian Capital Gains Tax: What Changes in 2026
  6. Deloitte Belgium, New Capital Gains Tax: Impact on Share‑Based Remuneration
  7. Loyens & Loeff, Capital Gains Tax in Belgium Becomes Reality as from 1 January 2026
  8. TOB.tax, Capital Gains Tax (Practical Guide)

FAQs

Is there capital gains tax in Belgium in 2026?
Yes. From 1 January 2026, Belgium applies a 10 % flat‑rate tax on net realised capital gains from qualifying financial assets, including shares, bonds, ETFs, investment funds, crypto‑assets and certain insurance contracts. An annual exemption of €10,000 per taxpayer applies, and gains accrued before 2026 are protected by a 31 December 2025 snapshot baseline.
The regime covers listed and unlisted shares, bonds and debt instruments, investment funds (SICAV, FCP), ETFs, crypto‑assets, derivatives on qualifying underlyings and certain Branch 23/26 insurance products. Real estate and assets held within corporate structures are excluded from the personal capital gains tax and remain subject to their existing regimes.
No. The law establishes a 31 December 2025 snapshot: the market value of assets on that date becomes the default acquisition cost. Gains realised after 1 January 2026 are measured from that baseline. During the 2026–2030 transitional period, taxpayers may elect to use the original (historical) acquisition cost instead, provided they can supply adequate proof.
Belgian tax residents are subject to the tax on worldwide qualifying financial‑asset gains. Non‑residents are taxable only where the disposal is “deemed executed” in Belgium, principally where the sell order is placed through a Belgian intermediary. Double‑tax treaties may limit Belgium’s right to tax non‑resident gains, but treaty relief must be actively claimed.
Belgian brokers are expected to withhold the 10 % tax at source for resident clients, similar to the existing TOB mechanism. Foreign brokers generally will not withhold, placing the reporting burden on the taxpayer via the annual personal‑income‑tax return filed through MyMinfin. Clients using multiple brokers must coordinate to ensure the €10,000 exemption is applied correctly across all accounts.
Realised losses on qualifying financial assets can be netted against realised gains in the same tax year. The rules on carry‑forward of unused losses are expected to be limited in duration, further administrative guidance from FPS Finance is anticipated. Taxpayers should aim to realise losses in the same year as gains wherever possible.
Broker contract notes, bank statements, share‑transfer agreements, independent valuation reports, subscription letters and crypto‑exchange records are all potentially relevant. The burden of proof rests on the taxpayer. If adequate documentation cannot be produced, the 31 December 2025 snapshot value applies by default.
The fundamental characterisation test, capital gain versus professional income, remains unchanged. Carried interest that qualifies as a capital gain is subject to the new 10 % rate; carried interest classified as professional income is taxed at progressive rates up to 50 %. The introduction of the capital‑gains rate increases the stakes of correct classification, making specialist structuring advice essential for private‑equity professionals.

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Belgium 2026: What High‑net‑worth Individuals Must Know About the New Capital‑gains Tax on Financial Assets

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