Our Expert in Switzerland
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Last reviewed: 12 May 2026
Family foundations Switzerland have long served as the vehicle of choice for high-net-worth dynasties seeking to ring-fence assets for education, welfare and intergenerational support. Between 2024 and 2026, however, a wave of cantonal harmonisation, tighter transparency expectations and strengthened supervisory procedures has rewritten the compliance rulebook for every existing and prospective Swiss family foundation. Whether you are a founder weighing whether to establish a new structure, a family office reviewing an ageing charter, or an adviser guiding a cross-border conversion, this playbook consolidates the legal framework, the practical steps and the governance templates you need to act with confidence in 2026.
The Swiss family foundation remains one of the most robust civil-law vehicles for preserving and distributing family wealth across generations. It offers legal personality separate from the founder, perpetual duration and, when correctly structured, meaningful asset protection. Yet 2026 is emphatically not the year to “set and forget.” Founders and their advisors should evaluate every existing or planned foundation against four threshold questions:
If the answer to any of these is “no” or “uncertain,” a structured review, and potentially a full charter restructure, should be a 2026 priority. The sections below walk through each issue in detail, with checklists and model clauses you can implement immediately.
A Swiss family foundation is a legal entity established under Articles 80 ff. of the Swiss Civil Code (ZGB) and further constrained by Article 335 ZGB. Unlike a commercial foundation or a public-utility (gemeinnützige) foundation, its purpose is directed exclusively at the benefit of a defined family circle. It has no members, no shareholders and no owners. Once validly constituted, the foundation exists as an independent legal person whose assets are irrevocably dedicated to the purpose set out in its charter (Stiftungsurkunde).
Article 335 ZGB provides that a family foundation may be established to cover the costs of education, endowment or support of family members. The provision explicitly prohibits family fideicommissa (Familienfideikommisse), entailments that attempt to bind assets to a family lineage in perpetuity in a manner that restricts alienation. The Swiss Federal Court has consistently interpreted Article 335 restrictively: a family foundation may not function as a general wealth-accumulation vehicle, a holding company substitute or an unrestricted discretionary trust. Distributions must serve one of the three stated purposes, and the foundation charter must define the beneficiary circle and distribution criteria with adequate precision.
Unlike an association (Verein), which requires a membership base and democratic governance, a family foundation concentrates control in the foundation council and derives its legitimacy from adherence to the founder’s charter rather than from member votes.
One of the most common questions from founders and family offices is whether a foundation, a trust or an association best serves their planning objectives. The comparison below highlights the structural differences that matter most for decision-making. For a deeper analysis, see our guide on trusts vs foundations.
| Feature | Swiss Family Foundation (Art. 80 ff., 335 ZGB) | Foreign Trust (recognised under incorporation theory) | Association (Verein, Art. 60 ff. ZGB) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Legal form | Independent legal entity with own legal personality | Common-law relationship; no separate legal personality under Swiss law | Legal entity with members and democratic governance |
| Beneficiaries / members | Family members defined in charter; no membership | Beneficiaries defined in trust deed; no Swiss-law membership concept | Members who exercise governance rights |
| Supervisory regime | Cantonal supervisory authority; annual accounts and reports typically required; AML/KYC where managing financial assets | No Swiss supervisory authority for the trust itself; Swiss-resident trustees subject to Swiss AML and tax obligations | Generally less supervised unless pursuing public-utility purposes; canton-dependent reporting |
| Cross-border recognition | Recognised domestically; foreign recognition follows incorporation theory and bilateral treaties | Recognition depends on trustee residency and asset situs; complex interaction with Swiss tax rules and AEoI obligations | Straightforward domestic recognition; limited cross-border utility for wealth structuring |
| Tax treatment | Subject to corporate income and capital taxes; rates vary by canton; no general tax exemption for family foundations | Taxation based on beneficial ownership and trustee residence; FATCA/CRS reporting applies | Tax-exempt only if meeting strict public-utility criteria; otherwise standard corporate taxation |
Industry observers note that the Swiss family foundation remains the preferred domestic vehicle where the goal is long-term, purpose-restricted family wealth management with regulatory oversight, while trusts continue to dominate where common-law jurisdictions or maximum settlor flexibility are paramount.
Setting up a foundation in Switzerland follows a defined legal sequence. While the process is well-established, each step carries practical considerations that founders frequently underestimate. Below is a seven-step checklist.
From the point at which a final charter draft exists, the notarisation-to-registration process typically takes four to eight weeks, depending on cantonal register workload. The broader project, including purpose definition, charter drafting, tax structuring and governance design, can take three to six months for a well-advised founder.
Realistic cost bands (excluding the endowment itself) generally fall into the following ranges. These figures are indicative and will vary by canton, complexity and adviser fee structures, founders should obtain tailored quotes.
| Cost component | Indicative range (CHF) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Legal advice (charter drafting, structuring) | 10,000 – 40,000 | Higher end for complex cross-border or multi-generation structures |
| Notary fees | 1,500 – 5,000 | Canton-dependent; proportional to endowment in some cantons |
| Commercial register fees | 500 – 1,500 | Varies by canton |
| Governance setup (board charter, policies) | 5,000 – 15,000 | Includes conflict-of-interest policy, investment guidelines |
| Tax advisory (cantonal ruling, structuring) | 5,000 – 20,000 | Essential where cross-border elements exist |
| Document required | Who signs / provides | Registration step |
|---|---|---|
| Foundation deed (public deed) | Founder, before notary | Submitted to commercial register |
| Foundation charter (Stiftungsurkunde) | Founder (appended to deed) | Filed with register and supervisory authority |
| Proof of endowment deposit | Bank confirmation | Register verifies sufficiency |
| Declaration of acceptance by council members | Each council member | Filed with register |
| Identification documents (council members) | Each council member | AML/KYC compliance and register file |
The period from 2024 to 2026 has brought the most significant recalibration of Swiss foundation compliance in a generation. Driven by federal policy goals around transparency and a push toward uniform cantonal supervision, the reforms affect every family foundation, whether newly established or decades old.
The principal reform themes are threefold. First, cantonal supervisory authorities have moved toward harmonised reporting standards, meaning that foundations can no longer rely on historically lenient practices in certain cantons. Second, transparency expectations have intensified: supervisors increasingly require up-to-date beneficiary registers, documented investment policies and clear records of distribution decisions. Third, the procedural powers of supervisory authorities have been strengthened, giving them more effective tools to investigate, intervene and, where necessary, require charter amendments or board changes.
For family foundations specifically, the practical effect is that the distinction between “supervised” and “lightly touched” is disappearing. Even foundations that historically received minimal supervisory attention should now expect periodic reviews, requests for documentation and formal compliance assessments.
Cantonal supervisory authorities for foundations are increasingly adopting a risk-based approach. The likely practical effect for family foundations includes more frequent submission cycles for annual reports (annually rather than on request), proactive communication of material changes (board composition, charter amendments, significant transactions) and readiness to cooperate with auditors and supervisors during on-site or desk-based reviews. Foundations with cross-border elements, foreign beneficiaries, offshore assets or non-resident council members, can expect heightened scrutiny.
For families holding wealth through trusts, associations, holding companies or outdated foundation charters, the question of whether to restructure a family foundation, or convert another vehicle into one, has become urgent. The 2024–2026 reforms make it clear that only structures with up-to-date charters and compliant governance will pass supervisory scrutiny without difficulty.
Conversion to a Swiss family foundation is realistic where the family’s objectives genuinely align with the Article 335 purposes (education, endowment, support), where the assets are sufficient to sustain the structure and where the family is prepared to accept the governance and supervisory obligations that come with foundation status. Conversion is not appropriate where the primary goal is commercial asset management, where beneficiaries require unrestricted discretionary distributions or where the family needs the flexibility of a common-law trust without Swiss regulatory oversight.
Early indications suggest that supervisory authorities view well-documented, proactive restructures favourably, particularly where the restructure addresses known governance or compliance gaps in the predecessor structure.
Robust foundation governance is the single most important factor in avoiding supervisory intervention, beneficiary disputes and reputational damage. The foundation council bears collective responsibility for the lawful, purposeful and efficient management of the foundation.
Council members owe a duty of loyalty (acting in the foundation’s interest, not personal or third-party interests) and a duty of care (exercising the diligence of a reasonably competent person in the same position). These duties are enforceable by the supervisory authority, by beneficiaries (in limited circumstances) and, in cases of wilful misconduct or gross negligence, through personal liability claims.
The following clauses represent core elements that every Swiss family foundation board charter should contain. These can be adapted to the specific needs of the family and structure:
Best practice for Swiss family foundations in 2026 is to hold a minimum of two ordinary council meetings per year, with additional meetings convened as needed for material decisions. Minutes should record attendance, agenda items, deliberation summaries, decisions taken, dissenting opinions and any conflicts disclosed. Internal controls should include segregation of signing authority (dual signatures for transactions above a defined threshold), periodic review of the investment portfolio against the investment policy and annual verification of the beneficiary register.
The family foundation tax Switzerland landscape is complex because taxation is determined at the cantonal level, and no two cantons apply identical rates or practices. At the federal level, a family foundation is subject to corporate income tax on its net income and, in most cantons, to capital tax on its net assets. Distributions to beneficiaries are generally treated as income in the hands of the recipients and may also trigger gift or inheritance tax consequences depending on the canton of residence.
Important: Tax treatment varies significantly by canton. Founders and advisors should always obtain canton-specific advice from qualified tax counsel before establishing or restructuring a family foundation.
The following checklist consolidates the key compliance obligations that every Swiss family foundation should address in 2026. It can be used as an annual review tool for the foundation council.
Downloadable templates (to be prepared by editor): Model board charter (doc), conflict-of-interest policy (doc), annual compliance checklist (pdf), beneficiary register template (doc).
The Swiss family foundation remains a powerful vehicle for structured, long-term family wealth management, but only when its charter, governance and compliance framework are fit for purpose. The 2024–2026 reforms have made it clear that passive stewardship is no longer sufficient. Founders, family offices and advisors working with family foundations in Switzerland should take three immediate actions: audit existing structures against the compliance checklist above, update governance documents to reflect current supervisory expectations and seek specialist advice where cross-border elements or cantonal tax questions arise. A well-governed Swiss family foundation, designed with precision and maintained with discipline, will serve families for generations.
Note: Templates are available for download upon request. Contact Global Law Experts for access.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Marie Flegbo-Berney at BONNARD LAWSON, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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