Company formation in Liechtenstein remains one of the most strategically valuable steps for wealth managers, family offices, crypto entrepreneurs and international founders seeking a compliant, well-regulated European jurisdiction. With its unique blend of entity types the AG, GmbH, Foundation (Stiftung) and Anstalt Liechtenstein offers unmatched flexibility for operating businesses, asset protection, succession planning and tokenised financial products.
Global Law Experts connects you with specialist local counsel who guide every stage: entity selection, notarisation, Commercial Register filing, bank-account opening and ongoing compliance. Whether you are structuring a family office vehicle, launching a regulated token offering under the TVTG, or establishing a European subsidiary, our network delivers the legal depth and practical efficiency that short-form microsites cannot match.
The sections below set out every detail you need entity comparisons, step-by-step formation process, costs, tax obligations, crypto-licensing practicalities and answers to the most common questions all grounded in primary Liechtenstein law and regulator guidance.
Liechtenstein occupies a rare position at the intersection of the European Economic Area and the Swiss customs and currency area. Companies incorporated here benefit from passporting rights across the EEA, access to Swiss franc banking infrastructure, and a body of corporate law the Personen- und Gesellschaftsrecht (PGR) that has evolved over nearly a century to accommodate innovative legal forms found nowhere else in Europe.
Liechtenstein’s Foundation (Stiftung) and Anstalt (Establishment) are bespoke vehicles that blend features of companies and trusts. A Liechtenstein foundation can hold and manage family assets across generations, subject to supervision by the Foundation Supervisory Authority (STIFA). The Anstalt unique to Liechtenstein law offers even greater structural flexibility: it can be organised with or without participation certificates, making it an ideal shell for holding intellectual property, real estate portfolios or private investment structures. Families and trustees increasingly prefer these vehicles as compliant on-shore alternatives to offshore trusts, especially given evolving AML and beneficial-ownership transparency requirements across Europe.
Since the entry into force of the Token and TT Service Provider Act (TVTG), Liechtenstein has been at the forefront of regulating blockchain-based business models. The TVTG provides a clear licensing framework for token issuers, custody providers, validators and exchange operators a framework now widely regarded as MiCA-compatible. Crypto founders choose company formation in Liechtenstein precisely because the regulatory path is defined, the Financial Market Authority (FMA) is accessible, and the licensing regime covers the full token lifecycle from issuance to secondary-market trading.
Liechtenstein applies a flat 12.5 % corporate income tax (Ertragssteuer) on net profit for resident juridical persons. The country participates fully in OECD Common Reporting Standard (CRS) automatic exchange of information and has signed more than 20 Tax Information Exchange Agreements. Far from its legacy “tax haven” perception, modern Liechtenstein combines competitive rates with genuine substance and transparency expectations a combination that appeals to compliant international structures and satisfies the due-diligence requirements of banks and counterparties.
Selecting the correct legal form is the single most important decision in Liechtenstein company registration. The table below compares the five most commonly used structures under the PGR:
| Entity Type | Typical Use Cases | Minimum Capital | Ownership & Governance | Registry / Public Info |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AG (Aktiengesellschaft) | Operating groups, issuers, token companies | CHF 50,000 (partially or fully paid-in rules apply under PGR) | Shareholders; board of directors; shares may be bearer or registered subject to transparency rules | Handelsregister extract lists board & authorised signatories |
| GmbH | SMEs, subsidiaries, owner-managed companies | CHF 10,000 (typical under PGR / registry guidance) | Partners with capital contributions; one or more managing directors | Handelsregister extract shows partners & capital |
| Foundation (Stiftung) | Wealth planning, succession, family office asset holding | No fixed commercial minimum capital must be adequate; commercial foundations require register entry | Founder, foundation council/board, beneficiaries (governance per statutes) | Entered in Commercial Register when required; supervision by STIFA |
| Anstalt (Establishment) | Flexible holding/asset-holding, hybrid company–foundation features | No fixed “share capital” in the classical sense see registry Merkblatt | Founder + governing body (administration/board); may be organised with or without participation certificates | Entered in Handelsregister where applicable |
| Holding Company | Tax-efficient group structuring, IP/asset holding | Varies by underlying entity (AG/GmbH/Anstalt) | Board & shareholders per chosen legal form | Registry entry per chosen legal form |
The AG is the most familiar corporate form for international investors. Forming an AG in Liechtenstein requires a minimum share capital of CHF 50,000 under the PGR, with at least partial payment at incorporation. The AG suits operating companies, token issuers and entities seeking external capital because its share structure allows flexible capitalisation rounds and, where needed, listing-compatible governance.
The GmbH is the workhorse entity for subsidiaries and owner-managed businesses. With a minimum share capital of CHF 10,000, it provides limited liability at lower capitalisation. Governance is simpler one managing director suffices making it popular with entrepreneurs and smaller international groups.
Liechtenstein foundations serve primarily wealth-structuring and succession purposes. They are established by a founder’s declaration, governed by a foundation council, and subject to STIFA oversight where required. Commercial foundations must register with the Handelsregister; private-benefit foundations may operate without public registry entry, depending on their purpose and activities.
The Anstalt is unique to Liechtenstein law and functions as a hybrid between a company and a foundation. It can hold assets, conduct commercial activity or serve as a pure holding vehicle. The Anstalt is particularly attractive for family office and wealth structuring because of its governance flexibility and the founder’s ability to reserve extensive rights.
Any of the above entities can serve as a holding company for tax-efficient group structuring, IP ownership or asset management, benefiting from Liechtenstein’s 12.5 % corporate tax rate and its extensive double-tax treaty network within the EEA.
The following eight steps outline the standard company registration process in Liechtenstein. Timelines are indicative and may vary for complex structures, regulated activities or non-standard banking requirements.
Core documents include the articles of association (or foundation deed), a founders’ resolution, specimen signatures of directors, certified copies of identification documents and proof of registered office. All formation instruments must be authenticated by a Liechtenstein notary public; foreign documents require apostille or consular legalisation.
The Office of Justice operates the Handelsregister. Upon acceptance of the filing, the entity is assigned a registration number and a public extract is made available. Certain changes board composition, capital increases, amendments to statutes require subsequent filings and may trigger publication obligations.
Liechtenstein banks require thorough KYC documentation from founders and beneficial owners. For foreign crypto-related businesses, this process can be the primary bottleneck. Escrow arrangements may be available where the full share capital is deposited before incorporation is completed, ensuring the capital-deposit certificate can be issued without delay.
Timeline: A straightforward AG or GmbH formation from initial instruction to Commercial Register entry typically takes 4–8 weeks. Complex structures involving TVTG licensing or bank-account opening for high-risk crypto flows should allow 2–4+ months.
Formation costs depend on entity type and complexity. Typical components include:
Resident companies pay the 12.5 % Ertragssteuer on net profit, with minimum tax provisions applying even in loss-making years. Annual tax returns must be filed with the Tax Administration. VAT registration applies where the entity provides taxable supplies exceeding the threshold. Companies must maintain AML/KYC records on customers and business partners, update UBO registers, and cooperate with competent authorities under the SPG. Failure to maintain substance or report accurately exposes the entity and its officers to administrative penalties and potential deregistration.
Liechtenstein’s Token and Trustworthy Technology Service Provider Act (TVTG) provides one of Europe’s most comprehensive regulatory frameworks for blockchain-based business models. For crypto founders, the TVTG is the reason company formation in Liechtenstein is so frequently preferred over other EEA jurisdictions.
The TVTG applies whenever tokens are generated, stored, transferred, exchanged, created for third parties, or when trustworthy technology is used to validate transactions or provide custody. If your business model involves any of these activities on a commercial basis, an FMA registration is required before operations commence.
The FMA operates a structured registration process for TT service providers. Applicants must demonstrate organisational adequacy, technical security, AML compliance and capital requirements. The FMA engages in pre-application dialogue an important practical step that helps crypto founders align their documentation and business plan before formal submission.
Liechtenstein entities particularly AGs and Anstalts are used for asset tokenisation (real estate, art, fund interests), security token offerings, digital bond issuance and regulated custody. The TVTG’s technology-neutral drafting ensures that new blockchain protocols and token standards can be accommodated without legislative amendment.
Crypto founders forming a Liechtenstein entity should address the following from the outset:
Global Law Experts maintains a curated network of Liechtenstein-qualified law firms, licensed fiduciaries and tax advisers with deep experience in AG and GmbH formation, foundation establishment, Anstalt structuring and TVTG licensing. Our member firms advise across the full lifecycle from initial structuring and company formation to ongoing compliance, tax planning and cross-border restructuring.
“The GLE network connected us with a Vaduz firm that handled our AG incorporation and TVTG registration in parallel, cutting months off our expected timeline. Their practical knowledge of FMA expectations was invaluable.” Digital-asset fund manager, Luxembourg
“We used GLE to find specialist counsel for a Liechtenstein foundation as part of a multi-jurisdictional succession plan. The adviser’s understanding of both PGR and Swiss cross-border tax implications was exactly what we needed.” Multi-family office, Zurich
Liechtenstein Corporate & Fiduciary Team: A Vaduz-based firm with over 20 years’ experience advising on entity formation, commercial register filings, ongoing corporate governance and regulatory compliance. The team handles more than 80 new incorporations per year across all PGR entity types.
Blockchain & Financial Regulatory Practice: A specialist practice combining corporate law with deep fintech expertise. The team has guided more than 30 token issuers and TT service providers through FMA registration under the TVTG, from pre-application dialogue to post-licensing compliance audits.
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