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The search for qualified inheritance lawyers in Austria has intensified sharply since early 2026, driven by the Austrian Parliament’s active debate on reintroducing an inheritance and gift tax that was abolished in 2008. Whether you are a high‑net‑worth individual with assets in Vienna, a family office managing a cross‑border portfolio spanning Austria and Germany, or a private client adviser reassessing a client’s estate architecture, the window for proactive planning is narrowing. Austria’s forced‑heirship regime, the Pflichtteil, already constrains testamentary freedom, and layering a new tax on top of those civil‑law obligations will reshape how estates are structured, distributed and defended.
This guide provides the practitioner‑level detail needed to make informed restructuring decisions right now, covering Pflichtteil mechanics, cross‑border probate risks, the proposed tax’s interaction with compulsory‑share claims, and a concrete action checklist for testators, executors and advisers.
Every individual with significant Austrian‑situs assets or Austrian tax residency faces an immediate binary choice: restructure existing estate arrangements before any new inheritance tax takes effect, or document the current position thoroughly so that future exposure is fully understood and defensible. Inaction is the highest‑risk option because retroactive valuation‑date rules, common in comparable European inheritance tax regimes, could capture estates that are already the subject of succession planning.
The proposal under parliamentary debate (spring 2026) has not yet been enacted into law. However, committee discussions reported by the Austrian Parliament indicate cross‑party momentum, and industry observers expect a final vote before the end of the 2026 legislative session. The Austrian Federal Ministry of Finance has published preliminary guidance notes on potential reporting obligations, signalling that implementation planning is well advanced.
Austria abolished its inheritance and gift tax (Erbschafts‑ und Schenkungssteuer) effective 1 August 2008, following a Constitutional Court ruling that the existing valuations were unconstitutional. Since then, Austria has been one of the few EU member states with no general tax on inherited wealth. The parliamentary proposal tabled in early 2026 seeks to reintroduce a modernised inheritance tax with updated valuation methods and thresholds.
The proposal is currently at committee stage within the Nationalrat (National Council). Political reporting indicates that discussions in the finance committee are centring on thresholds, rates and exemptions for family businesses. No final bill text with specific rates has been published as of 10 May 2026, but the Austrian Parliament’s public records confirm that the proposal has been allocated to committee and that hearings are scheduled through the summer session.
| Date / Period | What Happened or Is Proposed | Practical Implication for Advisers & Testators |
|---|---|---|
| Q1 2026 | Parliamentary proposal tabled to reintroduce inheritance tax; referred to finance committee | Urgent review of all wills and estate plans; begin asset mapping and valuation exercises |
| Summer–Autumn 2026 (expected) | Committee hearings conclude; plenary vote anticipated before end of legislative session | If passed, estates with valuation dates after enactment may be subject to taxation, complete restructuring before this date |
| 0–6 months after passage | Implementing rules, thresholds and reporting forms to be published by the BMF | Prepare for compliance: reporting obligations, payment schedules, liquidity planning for tax liabilities |
Because the final tax rates and exemption thresholds remain under debate, advisers should model multiple scenarios, a low‑rate/high‑threshold model and a higher‑rate/lower‑threshold model, to stress‑test existing plans. The likely practical effect will be that estates above a meaningful threshold face a percentage‑based levy on inherited assets, with potential concessions for business succession.
Austria’s forced‑heirship system, the Pflichtteilsrecht, is one of the most consequential features of Austrian succession law and a primary reason why inheritance lawyers in Austria are consulted even when no tax is payable. Governed by §§ 756–796 of the Allgemeines Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch (ABGB), the Pflichtteil grants certain close family members a statutory entitlement to a minimum share of the deceased’s estate, regardless of what the will provides.
Under the ABGB, the following persons are entitled to a Pflichtteil:
Parents, grandparents and siblings are not Pflichtteil‑entitled heirs under the reformed Austrian inheritance law that took effect on 1 January 2017. The share is always calculated as one‑half of the intestate share that the claimant would have received had no will existed.
| Heir Type | Pflichtteil Share (Fraction of Intestacy Entitlement) | Proposed Tax Treatment (If Inheritance Tax Enacted) |
|---|---|---|
| Sole child (no surviving spouse) | ½ of entire estate = 50 % | Pflichtteil payment likely taxable as an acquisition by the claimant; deductible from the residuary estate’s taxable base |
| Surviving spouse + one child | Spouse: ½ of ⅓ = ⅙ (~16.7 %); Child: ½ of ⅔ = ⅓ (~33.3 %) | Each recipient taxed on their respective receipt; applicable thresholds and rates would apply individually |
| Surviving spouse + two children | Spouse: ½ of ⅓ = ⅙; Each child: ½ of ⅓ = ⅙ | Same per‑recipient principle; family‑business exemptions may apply to shares in operating companies |
| Surviving spouse only (no descendants) | ½ of ⅔ = ⅓ (~33.3 %) | Spousal exemptions, if introduced, could significantly reduce or eliminate the tax burden |
Consider a testator who dies leaving a net estate of €2,000,000, a surviving spouse and two adult children. The will leaves everything to a charitable foundation. Under the Pflichtteil rules:
The charitable foundation would receive the remaining €1,000,000 only after satisfying all Pflichtteil claims. This example demonstrates why estate planning in Austria requires careful structuring, even a full charitable bequest cannot bypass forced heirship.
Pflichtteil claims are subject to a three‑year limitation period running from the date the entitled heir gains knowledge of the death and of the disposition that infringes their Pflichtteil right (§ 1487a ABGB). An absolute long‑stop period of thirty years applies from the date of death. Claims are monetary, the Pflichtteil‑entitled heir receives a cash payment, not a share of specific assets, which makes liquidity planning essential for executors.
In practice, the majority of Pflichtteil disputes in Austria are resolved through negotiated settlements, often facilitated by inheritance lawyers acting for both sides. Litigation is pursued when valuations are contested, particularly where the estate includes real property, business shares or artwork, and typically involves court‑appointed expert valuers. Mediation is increasingly encouraged by Austrian courts and can significantly reduce both costs and emotional damage to family relationships.
The interplay between forced heirship and inheritance taxation is one of the most complex areas requiring specialist inheritance lawyers in Austria. Because the Pflichtteil is a civil‑law claim (not a testamentary gift), its tax treatment under any reintroduced regime will depend on the specific legislation enacted. Industry observers expect the following principles to apply, based on comparative analysis of German inheritance tax law (Erbschaftsteuergesetz) and earlier Austrian practice:
Assume a €3,000,000 estate, a hypothetical inheritance tax rate of 15 % above a €500,000 personal exemption, one surviving child as sole Pflichtteil claimant, and a non‑related residuary beneficiary (e.g., a friend):
This example illustrates a critical planning trap: the non‑related residuary beneficiary bears a disproportionate tax burden because personal exemptions for non‑family recipients are typically much lower. Without restructuring, the testator’s philanthropic or personal wishes may be significantly undermined by the combined effect of Pflichtteil claims and taxation.
Lifetime gifts present another planning trap. Under the ABGB (§ 789), gifts made by the deceased to Pflichtteil‑entitled heirs within two years of death, and gifts to third parties within the same period, are added back (Hinzurechnung) to the calculation estate. If the reintroduced tax mirrors this rule, as early indications suggest it may, pre‑death gifting strategies must be executed well in advance and properly documented.
Cross‑border probate is where the complexity multiplies, and it is also where the value of experienced inheritance lawyers in Austria becomes most apparent. Austria’s geographic, linguistic and economic ties to Germany mean that Austria‑Germany estates are by far the most common cross‑border configuration. But the same principles apply to estates with assets in Switzerland, Italy, the Czech Republic or other neighbouring states.
The EU Succession Regulation (Regulation No. 650/2012, commonly known as “Brussels IV”) governs which country’s substantive succession law applies to the estate. The default rule is that the law of the deceased’s habitual residence at the time of death applies. However, testators may elect the law of their nationality instead (Article 22). This choice‑of‑law election can be decisive for international succession planning, an Austrian national habitually resident in Germany can opt for Austrian law (or vice versa), which may change forced‑heirship entitlements and, critically, the applicable Pflichtteil percentages and limitation periods.
| Issue | Austria | Germany |
|---|---|---|
| Inheritance tax status (2026) | Proposed reintroduction (under parliamentary debate; not yet enacted) | In force continuously; rates 7–50 % depending on class and value |
| Pflichtteil entitlement | Descendants and surviving spouse/registered partner only (§§ 756 ff ABGB) | Descendants, surviving spouse and parents (§ 2303 BGB) |
| Pflichtteil share | ½ of intestacy share | ½ of intestacy share |
| Limitation period for Pflichtteil claims | 3 years from knowledge; 30‑year long‑stop (§ 1487a ABGB) | 3 years from knowledge; 30‑year long‑stop (§ 2332 BGB and § 199 BGB) |
| Gift clawback period (for Pflichtteil) | 2 years for gifts to third parties; unlimited for gifts to heirs (§ 789 ABGB) | 10 years with annual 10 % reduction (§ 2325 BGB) |
| Applicable succession regulation | EU Succession Regulation (Brussels IV) | EU Succession Regulation (Brussels IV) |
| Probate court involvement | Mandatory court‑supervised Verlassenschaftsverfahren led by a court‑appointed notary (Gerichtskommissär) | Probate court issues Erbschein (certificate of inheritance) on application |
| Double taxation relief | Austria‑Germany DTA (limited to certain asset classes); if reintroduced tax enacted, new DTA provisions would be needed | Unilateral credit rules (§ 21 ErbStG) for foreign tax paid |
In Austria, probate proceedings (Verlassenschaftsverfahren) are supervised by a district court, with a notary acting as Gerichtskommissär (court commissioner). The notary prepares an inventory, determines heirs and facilitates distribution. In Germany, executors (Testamentsvollstrecker) operate with broader independent powers. When assets sit in both jurisdictions, the executor must navigate both procedural systems, obtain the European Certificate of Succession where applicable, and ensure that Pflichtteil claims lodged in one jurisdiction are recognised in the other.
For estates with German real property, inheritance tax is due in Germany regardless of the deceased’s or heir’s residence, meaning that a reintroduced Austrian tax could create genuine double taxation unless credit mechanisms or a revised bilateral treaty are put in place. Early indications suggest that negotiating updated DTA provisions will be a priority if the Austrian proposal passes.
Waiting for final legislation before acting is the most common, and most expensive, mistake in estate planning. The following action checklist, developed from cross‑border inheritance practice, prioritises tasks by urgency.
Austrian estate planning in Austria relies on a relatively narrow but powerful set of legal instruments. The choice between them depends on the composition of the estate, the family dynamics and the anticipated tax treatment.
Austria’s Privatstiftung has been a favoured vehicle for wealth preservation since its introduction in 1993. Assets transferred into a foundation leave the founder’s estate, potentially reducing Pflichtteil claims, but the transfer itself may be subject to gift taxation if the proposed tax is enacted with a gift component. Industry observers expect that any reintroduced tax will include anti‑avoidance rules targeting foundation transfers made within a specified period before death.
For family businesses, restructuring the holding entity can separate operating assets (which may qualify for a business‑succession exemption) from passive investment assets (which likely will not). This distinction mirrors the approach in Germany’s Erbschaftsteuergesetz (§§ 13a–13c), where productive business assets receive substantial tax relief.
Life insurance policies payable on death to named beneficiaries pass outside the probate estate in most jurisdictions. In Austria, the proceeds are available immediately, before probate concludes, to fund Pflichtteil payments and tax liabilities. Correctly structured, life insurance can prevent forced asset sales and preserve the integrity of operating businesses.
Austria follows a regime of separate property during marriage (Gütertrennung), with a division of matrimonial savings and assets only upon divorce. Pre‑nuptial agreements (Ehepakte) can modify these rules and, critically, can also address the interaction between marital property claims and Pflichtteil entitlements. For high‑net‑worth families, aligning the marital property regime with the estate plan is essential, a disconnect between the two can produce unexpected Pflichtteil exposure or double‑counting of assets.
Even with optimal planning, Pflichtteil claims may arise. The key to successful defence or negotiation is preparation, specifically, a robust evidence base establishing the estate’s value and the testator’s intentions.
The cost‑benefit analysis for litigation versus settlement almost always favours settlement where the parties’ valuations are within 15–20 % of each other. Legal costs in contested Pflichtteil proceedings, including court‑appointed valuations, can easily reach 5–8 % of the disputed amount.
When instructing an Austrian inheritance lawyer, come prepared with the following documentation to maximise the efficiency, and minimise the cost, of the initial consultation:
Legal fees in Austria are typically charged on an hourly basis (ranging from €200 to €450 per hour for experienced inheritance practitioners) or, for probate administration, as a percentage of estate value governed by the Austrian Notary Tariff Act (Notariatstarifgesetz). Pflichtteil litigation may involve additional court fees and expert valuation costs. A qualified Austrian inheritance lawyer will provide a fee estimate at the outset and agree on a retainer scope before substantive work begins. The Austria inheritance lawyer directory is a useful starting point for identifying practitioners with the right cross‑border experience.
The spring 2026 parliamentary debate marks a turning point for estate planning across Austria. Whether or not the proposed inheritance tax is enacted, the exercise of reviewing Pflichtteil exposure, mapping cross‑border assets and stress‑testing wills against multiple legislative scenarios is valuable in its own right, and for many families, overdue. The interplay between Austria’s forced‑heirship regime and a potential new tax layer creates planning challenges that generic advice cannot resolve. Engaging experienced inheritance lawyers in Austria, particularly those with demonstrated cross‑border expertise in Austrian‑German estates, is the single most effective step any testator, executor or family office can take right now. This page will be updated within 72 hours of any bill passage or official implementing guidance.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Senad Albani M.A. at Rechtsanwaltskanzlei Albani GmbH, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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