[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
bank resolution liechtenstein

Our Expert in Liechtenstein

Bank Resolution & BRRD in Liechtenstein: What Banks and Legal Counsel Must Do in 2026

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

The framework for bank resolution in Liechtenstein has undergone its most significant transformation in over a decade, driven by the 2026 amendments to the Financial Market Law and the strengthened transposition of EU/EEA resolution standards, principally the Bank Recovery and Resolution Directive (BRRD), into national law. For credit institutions, their boards, and in-country legal counsel, these changes impose concrete new obligations: updated recovery and resolution plans, a recalibrated creditor hierarchy aligned with BRRD principles, expanded FMA resolution powers including bail-in, and binding minimum requirements for own funds and eligible liabilities (MREL).

This guide sets out, step by step, the practical compliance actions that Liechtenstein banks and their advisers must complete in 2026 to meet the FMA’s supervisory expectations under the reformed Bank Recovery and Resolution Act (RRA).

Executive Summary and Immediate Actions

Liechtenstein’s 2026 legislative package completes the principality’s alignment with the EU’s bank recovery and resolution framework, granting the FMA a comprehensive resolution toolkit and imposing new planning, funding and disclosure obligations on all licensed credit institutions. The practical effect is that every bank operating in Liechtenstein must now treat resolution planning as a standing regulatory requirement, not a one-off compliance exercise.

Five immediate actions for banks in 2026:

  • Conduct a gap analysis of your existing recovery plan (RP) and resolution plan (RRP) against the updated RRA provisions and FMA guidance.
  • Map your creditor hierarchy under the new BRRD-style ranking rules to identify bail-inable liabilities and any ranking mismatches with legacy instruments.
  • Review MREL eligibility across all outstanding capital instruments and senior liabilities, applying the Daisy-chain MREL fix introduced in the 2026 amendments.
  • Prepare for supervisory engagement, request a preliminary meeting with the FMA’s resolution division to confirm your institution’s resolution strategy and filing timeline.
  • Update governance frameworks including board-level decision matrices, crisis communication protocols and IT/data readiness for resolution execution.

Industry observers expect the FMA to move quickly in requesting updated plans, and early engagement with the authority is widely regarded as the most effective way to avoid supervisory escalation. Banks that delay risk being placed on an accelerated compliance timetable with limited room for negotiation on plan content.

Background, Recovery vs Resolution and the Legal Framework in Liechtenstein

Understanding bank recovery and resolution requires a clear distinction between two phases of institutional distress. Recovery is the phase during which a bank, acting under its own initiative and subject to supervisory oversight, deploys pre-planned measures to restore its financial position. Resolution, by contrast, is the phase during which a public authority, in Liechtenstein, the FMA, takes control of a failing institution and applies statutory tools to protect depositors, maintain critical functions and avoid taxpayer-funded bailouts. As the Single Resolution Board (SRB) defines it, bank resolution is an alternative to normal insolvency proceedings that allows authorities to manage the failure of a bank in an orderly fashion while preserving its essential services.

Liechtenstein’s national framework for bank recovery and resolution is anchored in the Bank Recovery and Resolution Act (RRA), which transposes the EU’s BRRD into EEA-compatible national law. The RRA designates the FMA as both the competent supervisory authority and the national resolution authority, a dual mandate that is characteristic of smaller EEA jurisdictions where the creation of a separate resolution body would be disproportionate. The 2026 Financial Market Law amendments strengthen this architecture, expanding the FMA’s resolution toolkit and aligning Liechtenstein’s regime more closely with the standards applied in the EU Banking Union and other EEA states.

Key Definitions Under the Revised Framework

Several core concepts are essential for practitioners working with Liechtenstein banking supervision and the resolution regime:

  • Failing or likely to fail (FOLTF). The threshold determination that triggers the FMA’s authority to place a bank into resolution. FOLTF assessment considers whether the institution has breached, or is likely in the near future to breach, its licence conditions, capital requirements or liquidity obligations such that continued authorisation is not justified.
  • Resolution tools. The statutory instruments available to the FMA once resolution is triggered, including the sale-of-business tool, the bridge institution tool, the asset separation tool and the bail-in tool. These are modelled on the BRRD toolkit and adapted to the Liechtenstein institutional context.
  • No-creditor-worse-off (NCWO) principle. The safeguard ensuring that no creditor receives less favourable treatment in resolution than it would in hypothetical insolvency proceedings, a principle that directly links the creditor hierarchy in resolution to the ranking rules in Liechtenstein insolvency law.
  • Resolution financing mechanism. Under Article 121 of the RRA, Liechtenstein is required to maintain a dedicated resolution financing arrangement, funded by contributions from licensed institutions, to provide backstop funding for resolution actions where required.

What Changed in 2026, Summary of Amendments and Legislative Timeline

The 2026 amendments to the Financial Market Law and the corresponding updates to the RRA represent the culmination of a multi-year legislative programme to bring Liechtenstein’s resolution regime into full conformity with EEA-transposed BRRD standards. The practical result is a significantly expanded resolution architecture affecting every licensed credit institution and, for the first time, extending IRRD-style resolution principles to certain investment firms.

Measure Practical Impact
Amended Financial Market Law, expanded FMA resolution mandate FMA confirmed as resolution authority with full BRRD-equivalent powers; expanded information-gathering and on-site inspection authority during resolution planning.
RRA amendments, bail-in tool and write-down/conversion powers codified Banks must identify bail-inable instruments; contractual recognition of bail-in clauses required in all new issuances governed by non-Liechtenstein law.
MREL calibration framework, including Daisy-chain MREL fix New rules on eligible liabilities, sale/trading restrictions for subordinated instruments, and downstream MREL allocation within banking groups operating through Liechtenstein entities.
Resolution financing mechanism, Article 121 RRA strengthened Mandatory contributions from licensed institutions; FMA empowered to levy extraordinary contributions in crisis scenarios.
Measures Edict Procedure, new enforcement mechanism FMA may impose binding resolution-related measures via administrative edict, enabling rapid enforcement where voluntary compliance is insufficient.
IRRD-style extension to investment firms Selected investment firms now subject to resolution planning requirements analogous to those applying to credit institutions, scope to be confirmed by FMA guidance.

The BRRD implementation in Liechtenstein follows the EEA Joint Committee Decision incorporating the directive into the EEA Agreement, with national transposition through the RRA and subordinate ordinances. The 2026 package represents the most substantial single update since the RRA’s original enactment.

Pre-2026 vs Post-2026: Comparison of the Resolution Framework

Item Liechtenstein (Pre-2026 / TVTG Insolvency) Liechtenstein (2026 Resolution Transposition / BRRD Style)
Resolution trigger National insolvency / bankruptcy procedures under general insolvency law “Failing or likely to fail” supervisory determination; specific resolution powers (bail-in, sale of business, bridge bank, asset separation)
Creditor ranking TVTG insolvency ranking per general insolvency law BRRD-style hierarchy with bail-in of eligible liabilities; depositor protection via DGS; resolution financing mechanism (Art. 121 RRA)
MREL Not applicable / limited subordination requirements MREL calibration and eligible liabilities rules; sale/restructuring restrictions; Daisy-chain MREL fixes for group structures
Resolution authority powers Limited to insolvency court proceedings and FMA supervisory withdrawal of licence Full BRRD toolkit: write-down and conversion, temporary stay on contractual obligations, transfer powers, bail-in, resolution financing deployment

Sources: FMA Resolution Authority page; RRA primary legislation; SRB BRRD definitions.

FMA Resolution Powers, What Supervisors Can Now Do

The 2026 amendments grant the FMA a comprehensive set of resolution powers that mirror those available to resolution authorities across the EU and EEA. Understanding the scope and conditions for the exercise of these FMA resolution powers is essential for banks conducting their compliance assessments and for legal counsel advising on instrument structuring and crisis management.

Catalogue of FMA Resolution Tools

The FMA may now deploy the following resolution tools, individually or in combination, once the FOLTF threshold is met and the public interest test is satisfied:

  • Sale-of-business tool. Transfer of the institution’s shares, assets, rights or liabilities to a willing purchaser on commercial terms, without requiring shareholder approval.
  • Bridge institution tool. Transfer of critical functions and viable assets to a temporary entity controlled by the FMA, pending a permanent solution.
  • Asset separation tool. Transfer of impaired or non-performing assets to an asset management vehicle for orderly wind-down. This tool may only be used in conjunction with another resolution tool.
  • Bail-in tool. Write-down or conversion of eligible liabilities into equity to recapitalise the institution, following the statutory creditor hierarchy. This is the tool with the most significant implications for creditors and debt investors.
  • Write-down and conversion of capital instruments. The FMA may write down or convert relevant capital instruments (CET1, AT1, Tier 2) independently of the full bail-in tool, including at the point of non-viability.

In addition to these core tools, the FMA now has ancillary powers including the ability to impose a temporary stay on contractual termination rights (preventing counterparties from exercising close-out netting or acceleration clauses during the first 48 hours of resolution), to override transfer restrictions on shares and assets, and to require institutions to maintain detailed data and systems necessary for resolution execution.

When the FMA Will Use Which Power, Decision Framework

The FMA’s approach to resolution planning in Liechtenstein follows the principle of proportionality. Industry observers expect the authority to apply different preferred resolution strategies depending on the size, complexity and systemic relevance of the institution. For the largest banks, those with significant domestic deposit bases or cross-border operations, bail-in and sale-of-business strategies are the likely preferred approaches. For smaller, less complex institutions, orderly wind-down through insolvency proceedings may remain the preferred strategy, with resolution tools held in reserve.

Reporting and Notification Obligations to the FMA

Banks must now be prepared to provide the FMA with resolution-specific data on an ongoing basis, including liability data reports, critical function assessments, and information on financial contracts subject to resolution stay powers. The FMA may request ad hoc information submissions at any time during the resolution planning cycle, and institutions must be able to produce accurate data within the timescales specified by the authority.

Creditor Hierarchy and Depositor Treatment in Liechtenstein

The creditor hierarchy in Liechtenstein has been fundamentally restructured under the 2026 amendments to align with BRRD principles. This restructuring determines the order in which creditors bear losses in a bail-in scenario and is therefore critical for debt investors, treasury teams and legal counsel structuring instruments under Liechtenstein law.

Ranking (Highest Priority First) Liability Class Treatment in Resolution
1 Covered deposits (up to DGS limit) Excluded from bail-in; protected by Deposit Guarantee Scheme; DGS subrogates into the estate
2 Eligible deposits of natural persons and SMEs (amounts exceeding DGS coverage) Preferred ranking; bail-inable only after all lower-ranking classes exhausted
3 Other deposits and ordinary unsecured senior claims Bail-inable according to statutory hierarchy
4 Non-preferred senior debt (where designated) Bail-inable; designed to absorb losses before ordinary senior claims
5 Subordinated liabilities (Tier 2 instruments, other subordinated debt) Written down or converted before senior liabilities
6 Additional Tier 1 (AT1) instruments Written down or converted at the point of non-viability
7 Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) First to absorb losses; written down to zero before any other class is affected

Sources: RRA provisions as amended; FMA Resolution Authority guidance; BRRD creditor hierarchy framework.

Depositor preference is a cornerstone of the revised creditor hierarchy in Liechtenstein. Covered deposits remain fully protected by the national Deposit Guarantee Scheme, and the DGS itself subrogates into the claims of covered depositors in the resolution or insolvency estate. Eligible deposits of natural persons and SMEs that exceed the DGS coverage limit receive statutory preference over ordinary unsecured claims, an alignment with the BRRD’s depositor preference provisions that strengthens protection for retail and small-business customers. Industry bodies, including the Bankenverband Liechtenstein, have endorsed this enhanced protection as essential for maintaining public confidence in the banking system.

Funding, MREL/ALAC and Eligible Liabilities, Practical Checklist

The minimum requirement for own funds and eligible liabilities (MREL) is the quantitative backbone of the resolution regime. MREL ensures that banks maintain a sufficient quantum of loss-absorbing and recapitalisation capacity so that, in the event of resolution, the bail-in tool can be deployed effectively without resorting to public funds. The 2026 amendments to Liechtenstein’s RRA introduce a detailed MREL calibration framework, including the Daisy-chain MREL fix, a targeted amendment addressing the treatment of eligible liabilities held downstream within banking group structures.

The Daisy-chain MREL fix, as analysed in detail by Mondaq, resolves a structural problem that arose where intermediate holding companies or subsidiary banks within a group held MREL-eligible instruments issued by other group entities, creating a risk of double-counting or circular loss absorption. The 2026 amendments impose deduction requirements and restrictions on the sale of subordinated eligible liabilities to retail investors, aligning Liechtenstein’s rules with the EU’s “BRRD II” refinements.

Practical MREL Documentation Steps

Banks should work through the following MREL compliance checklist as a matter of priority:

  • Identify all outstanding eligible liabilities. Compile a comprehensive inventory of capital instruments, subordinated debt and senior unsecured liabilities, noting governing law, maturity, contractual terms and call features.
  • Assess contractual recognition of bail-in. For all instruments governed by non-Liechtenstein law, verify that contractual clauses recognising the FMA’s bail-in powers are included. Where missing, plan remediation or replacement issuance.
  • Apply Daisy-chain deduction rules. For group structures, identify intra-group holdings of MREL-eligible instruments and calculate required deductions to avoid double-counting.
  • Review sale and trading restrictions. The 2026 amendments introduce tighter rules on the distribution of subordinated eligible liabilities to retail investors. Ensure distribution channels and investor suitability processes are updated accordingly.
  • Prepare MREL reporting templates. The FMA is expected to require regular MREL reporting aligned with EBA reporting standards. Establish data feeds and reporting infrastructure in advance of the first filing deadline.
  • Engage with the FMA on MREL calibration. MREL targets are set on an institution-specific basis by the resolution authority. Request early dialogue with the FMA to understand the calibration methodology, any transitional arrangements and the expected compliance timeline.

Updating Recovery and Resolution Plans, Step-by-Step Playbook

Resolution planning in Liechtenstein is no longer a paper exercise conducted at a distance from day-to-day operations. The 2026 reforms require banks to maintain recovery plans (authored by the institution) and resolution plans (authored by the FMA with institutional data input) that are operationally credible, regularly updated and capable of being executed at speed. This section provides a 12-step playbook for updating both plans.

Twelve-Step Resolution Plan Update Checklist

  1. Appoint a project lead and steering committee. Assign a senior officer (typically the Chief Risk Officer or General Counsel) to lead the update programme, with board-level sponsorship and a cross-functional steering committee including Treasury, IT, Legal and Compliance.
  2. Conduct a regulatory gap analysis. Compare your existing RP and RRP against the 2026 RRA amendments, FMA guidance and any institution-specific feedback received from the authority.
  3. Update the business and legal entity mapping. Ensure that the plan accurately reflects the bank’s current legal structure, branch network, material subsidiaries and critical functions.
  4. Refresh the critical functions assessment. Identify functions whose discontinuation would materially impact the financial system, real economy or depositors in Liechtenstein. Map these to legal entities and service agreements.
  5. Recalibrate the creditor hierarchy table. Incorporate the new BRRD-style ranking, identify all bail-inable liabilities and flag any ranking mismatches with legacy instruments.
  6. Verify MREL eligibility and sufficiency. Complete the MREL documentation steps outlined above and confirm that projected MREL meets or exceeds the FMA’s calibration target.
  7. Assess operational continuity in resolution. Test whether critical IT systems, payment infrastructure, outsourcing arrangements and access to financial market infrastructure would remain operational during a resolution scenario.
  8. Update the governance and decision matrix. Define the decision-making chain for escalation from recovery to resolution, including trigger indicators, notification protocols and delegated authorities.
  9. Prepare the communication plan. Draft template communications for depositors, creditors, counterparties, employees and regulators to be deployed during a resolution event.
  10. Conduct a dry-run or desktop simulation. Test the plan’s executability through a scenario-based exercise involving senior management and key operational staff. Document lessons learned.
  11. Submit the updated plan to the FMA. File the updated recovery plan and provide all data requested by the FMA for the authority’s preparation of the resolution plan, within the specified filing window.
  12. Establish an annual review cycle. Resolution planning is not a one-off exercise. Establish a formal annual review and update process, with interim updates triggered by material changes to the bank’s structure, strategy or risk profile.

Minimum Required Data Fields for RRP and RP Submissions

Data Category Key Items
Legal entity structure Organisational charts, ownership percentages, jurisdictional presence, branch details
Critical functions Function descriptions, user volumes, revenue share, legal entity mapping, substitutability assessment
Financial data Balance sheet, liability structure by instrument class and governing law, intra-group exposures, off-balance-sheet commitments
Operational data IT systems inventory, outsourcing register, access to FMIs (payment systems, CCPs, CSDs), key personnel dependencies
Recovery indicators Quantitative triggers (CET1, LCR, NSFR, large exposures), qualitative triggers (market confidence, rating actions), escalation thresholds
MREL data Instrument-level detail (ISIN, governing law, maturity, call dates, contractual bail-in recognition clauses), MREL surplus/shortfall calculation

The likely practical effect of the 2026 reforms is that FMA resolution planning expectations will be closer to those seen in the EU Banking Union, where the SRB has established detailed data templates and annual planning cycles. Banks that invest early in data infrastructure and governance frameworks will be significantly better positioned to meet these expectations without operational disruption.

Engaging with the FMA, Supervisory Meeting Playbook and Filing Timelines

Proactive engagement with the FMA is not merely advisable, it is a strategic necessity under the 2026 resolution framework. The FMA’s resolution division operates as both plan assessor and plan author (for the authority-side resolution plan), making early and constructive dialogue essential for managing supervisory expectations and avoiding adverse findings.

Pre-meeting preparation checklist:

  • Agenda proposal. Submit a proposed agenda at least two weeks before any supervisory meeting, covering the institution’s resolution strategy, any open items from prior assessments and proposed timelines for plan submissions.
  • Gap analysis summary. Provide a concise summary of your regulatory gap analysis, identifying areas of full compliance, partial compliance and planned remediation actions with target dates.
  • MREL position paper. Present your current MREL calculation, projected compliance trajectory and any requests for transitional arrangements or phased compliance.
  • Draft recovery plan sections. Where possible, submit draft sections of the updated recovery plan for preliminary FMA review, particularly the critical functions assessment and the creditor hierarchy table.

The FMA’s filing expectations should be confirmed directly with the authority’s resolution division. Industry observers expect the FMA to issue formal guidance specifying filing windows and data templates. Banks should monitor the FMA’s Resolution Authority page for updated guidance and circulars.

For institutions requiring specialist legal support in preparing for FMA engagement, the Liechtenstein lawyer directory provides access to practitioners with resolution and Liechtenstein banking supervision expertise.

Practical Risks and Common Pitfalls

The transition to a full BRRD-style resolution regime in Liechtenstein introduces operational and legal risks that banks must identify and mitigate proactively. Early indications from other EEA jurisdictions that have undergone similar transitions suggest several recurring pitfalls:

  • Legacy contract clauses. Existing ISDA master agreements, loan documentation and bond indentures may contain termination, acceleration or cross-default provisions triggered by the commencement of resolution proceedings. Banks must review all material contracts and, where necessary, negotiate amendments or include contractual recognition of resolution stay powers.
  • Cross-border recognition. For banks with operations or counterparties outside the EEA, the enforceability of FMA resolution actions in third-country jurisdictions may be uncertain. Contractual recognition clauses (particularly for bail-in) are the primary mitigation tool, but legal opinions on enforceability should be obtained on a jurisdiction-by-jurisdiction basis.
  • Depositor and creditor communications. Poorly managed communication during a resolution event can accelerate deposit flight and undermine market confidence. Banks must have pre-approved communication templates and trained spokesperson protocols ready for immediate deployment.
  • MREL issuance timing. Banks that delay MREL-eligible issuance may face unfavourable market conditions or insufficient time to build adequate buffers before the FMA’s compliance deadline. Early engagement with debt capital markets advisers is recommended.
  • Data and IT readiness. The FMA’s resolution data requirements demand accurate, granular and rapidly producible information. Banks with fragmented IT systems or manual reporting processes face significant operational risk in meeting these demands under time pressure.

Bank Resolution in Liechtenstein, Recommended Next Steps

The 2026 reforms to bank resolution in Liechtenstein mark a watershed moment for the principality’s financial sector. Every licensed credit institution must now operate under a resolution framework that closely mirrors EU BRRD standards, with the FMA empowered to deploy the full range of resolution tools, including bail-in, to manage institutional failure in an orderly manner.

The five priority actions for the remainder of 2026 are clear: complete your regulatory gap analysis, update your recovery and resolution plans, map and verify your MREL position, engage proactively with the FMA’s resolution division, and ensure your contracts, communications and IT systems are resolution-ready. Banks that treat these requirements as a strategic investment rather than a compliance burden will be best positioned to maintain regulatory confidence and market credibility.

For specialist guidance on bank resolution in Liechtenstein, including resolution plan preparation, MREL structuring, creditor hierarchy analysis and FMA engagement strategy, consult the experienced financial markets practitioners listed in our Liechtenstein lawyer directory.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Thomas Stern at Bergt Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Finanzmarktaufsicht Liechtenstein, Resolution Authority
  2. Single Resolution Board, What is a bank resolution?
  3. Mondaq, Liechtenstein’s 2026 Bank-Resolution Upgrade: The Daisy-Chain MREL Fix
  4. Global Legal Insights, Banking Laws and Regulations 2026 (Liechtenstein)
  5. Chambers Practice Guides, Banking Regulation 2026 (Liechtenstein)
  6. Bankenverband Liechtenstein, Regulation
  7. Bank Frick, A Comprehensive Overview of Liechtenstein’s Banking Regulation

FAQs

What does Liechtenstein's 2026 financial market law change about bank resolution?
The 2026 amendments complete Liechtenstein’s transposition of BRRD-equivalent resolution standards, granting the FMA full resolution powers including bail-in, write-down and conversion of capital instruments, sale-of-business and bridge institution tools, and a strengthened resolution financing mechanism under Article 121 of the RRA. Banks must now maintain updated recovery and resolution plans and meet MREL requirements.
Credit institutions licensed in Liechtenstein fall under the BRRD-transposed provisions of the RRA, requiring recovery and resolution plans, MREL compliance and adherence to the statutory creditor hierarchy. The 2026 amendments also extend IRRD-style resolution planning requirements to certain investment firms, with the precise scope to be confirmed by FMA guidance. The framework applies through the EEA Agreement, not directly under EU law.
The FMA has been confirmed as Liechtenstein’s national resolution authority with powers to apply the sale-of-business tool, bridge institution tool, asset separation tool and bail-in tool. It may also exercise write-down and conversion of capital instruments, impose temporary stays on contractual termination rights, override transfer restrictions and levy contributions to the resolution financing mechanism.
Banks must conduct a gap analysis against the 2026 RRA amendments, refresh their critical functions assessment, recalibrate the creditor hierarchy table under BRRD-style rules, verify MREL eligibility and sufficiency, test operational continuity in resolution scenarios, update governance and communication frameworks, and submit updated plans to the FMA within the specified filing window.
MREL, the minimum requirement for own funds and eligible liabilities, ensures banks hold sufficient loss-absorbing and recapitalisation capacity for resolution. Liechtenstein banks should inventory all eligible instruments, assess contractual bail-in recognition clauses, apply Daisy-chain deduction rules for group holdings, and engage the FMA early to understand institution-specific calibration targets and transitional arrangements.
Depositor protection is strengthened under the 2026 framework. Covered deposits remain fully excluded from bail-in and protected by the national Deposit Guarantee Scheme. Eligible deposits of natural persons and SMEs that exceed the DGS coverage limit now receive statutory preference over ordinary unsecured claims, aligning Liechtenstein’s rules with the BRRD’s depositor preference hierarchy.
The FMA is expected to issue formal guidance specifying filing windows and data templates following the entry into force of the 2026 amendments. Industry observers expect the authority to establish an annual planning cycle aligned with EBA standards. Banks should monitor the FMA’s Resolution Authority page for updated guidance and request a preliminary supervisory meeting to confirm institution-specific deadlines.
By Kerwin Tan

posted 3 hours ago

By Awatif Al Khouri

posted 3 hours ago

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law 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.

Newsletter Sign Up
About Us

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 Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

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.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

Bank Resolution & BRRD in Liechtenstein: What Banks and Legal Counsel Must Do in 2026

Send welcome message

Custom Message