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estate planning process Belgium 2026

Step‑by‑step Estate & Succession Planning in Belgium (2026), Wills, Declarations, Timelines and Tax Steps

By Global Law Experts
– posted 4 weeks ago

Last updated: 10 June 2026

The estate planning process in Belgium in 2026 follows a precise sequence, from drafting a valid will, through post‑death declarations, to the final distribution of assets and payment of inheritance tax. Belgium’s succession framework is governed by federal civil law (the Belgian Civil Code) but taxed at the regional level, meaning that Flanders, Wallonia and Brussels‑Capital each set their own inheritance‑duty rates and filing rules. For high‑net‑worth individuals, family offices and cross‑border estate holders, the 2026 Flemish reforms to registration duties and inheritance tax have altered the practical order and timing of several key planning steps.

This guide walks through each stage of the process, lists every document you will need, sets out the critical deadlines, and explains the costs and tax implications you should budget for.

Overview of the Estate Planning Process and Who It Applies To

Succession planning in Belgium affects three broad groups. First, Belgian residents, anyone domiciled in Belgium at the date of death will have their worldwide estate subject to Belgian inheritance tax, administered in the region where they last lived. Second, non‑residents who own Belgian‑situs assets, typically immovable property, must still navigate the Belgian declaration and tax process for those assets. Third, cross‑border families who hold assets in multiple jurisdictions need to coordinate Belgian requirements with the EU Succession Regulation (Brussels IV) and any applicable bilateral treaties.

The process divides into two broad phases: lifetime planning (will drafting, gift strategies, structuring) and post‑death administration (declaration of estate, tax payment, asset distribution). Understanding both phases as a single continuum is essential, because decisions taken during lifetime planning, such as the timing of a gift or the choice between a notarial and holographic will, directly affect the speed, cost and tax burden of the post‑death phase.

Regional competence is determined by the deceased’s fiscal domicile. If the deceased lived in Belgium for at least five of the ten years before death, the region where they lived longest during that period claims taxing rights. For foreign nationals who never resided in Belgium, only Belgian‑situs immovables are taxed, and the applicable region is where the property is located. Flanders, Wallonia and Brussels each publish separate rate tables and filing guidance through their regional tax authorities, while the federal FPS Finance (Service Public Fédéral Finances) provides overarching procedural rules for the declaration of estate.

What should you expect from the process at a high level? A practical checklist includes:

  • Drafting and depositing a valid will (or reviewing an existing one in light of the 2026 estate planning requirements).
  • Valuing assets and considering pre‑death transfers (gifts, usufruct arrangements, insurance structures).
  • Filing the declaration of estate with the competent regional tax office within the statutory deadline.
  • Paying inheritance tax within the assessment window set by the region.
  • Completing succession administration, transferring titles, closing accounts, distributing legacies.

Each of these steps is detailed below in the order a practitioner would carry them out.

Eligibility and Prerequisites for Estate Planning in Belgium

Who may make a will

Under the Belgian Civil Code, any person of sound mind who has reached the age of 16 may make a will, although minors between 16 and 18 may only dispose of up to half of the share that an adult could bequeath. There is no nationality or residence requirement, a foreign national may execute a valid Belgian will, and Belgian notaries regularly prepare wills for expatriates. The testator must act freely and without undue influence.

Forced heirship and limits on disinheritance

Belgium retains a forced heirship (réserve héréditaire / reserve) regime. Since the 2018 reform of the Belgian Civil Code, each child is entitled to a reserved portion equal to one half of the estate, regardless of the number of children. The surviving spouse retains a right to the usufruct of the family home and household contents. In practice, this means you cannot fully disinherit a child in Belgium, any testamentary disposition that infringes the reserved portion may be reduced (action en réduction) at the heir’s request. HNWIs with complex family structures should model the reserved portions before finalising bequests, particularly when assets include business interests or cross‑border holdings.

When you need cross‑border planning

If the testator holds immovable property outside Belgium, or if multiple family members are resident in different countries, the EU Succession Regulation (Regulation 650/2012) allows a choice of law, typically the law of the testator’s nationality at the time of death. Without an explicit choice, the law of habitual residence applies. For non‑EU assets, bilateral treaties or local conflict‑of‑law rules may override. Coordinating wills across jurisdictions, and ensuring that a Belgian will does not inadvertently revoke a foreign one, is a critical prerequisite that warrants specialist advice.

Step‑by‑Step Estate Planning Procedure in Belgium (2026)

The following eight steps cover the full lifecycle, from initial planning through to post‑death distribution. The timeline table below summarises who acts at each stage and the typical duration.

Step Who does it Typical duration
1. Initial review and goals Client + private‑client lawyer / tax adviser 1–2 weeks
2. Choose will type and draft instructions Client + notary / lawyer 1–4 weeks
3. Execute the will Notary (or testator for holographic will) Same day (notarial) or immediate (holographic)
4. Deposit or register the will Notary / testator Immediate; registration confirmation within 1–2 weeks
5. Valuation and pre‑death tax planning Tax lawyer / notary 2–8 weeks (depends on complexity)
6. Post‑death immediate actions Family / executor / notary 0–2 weeks after death
7. File declaration of estate Heirs / notary / tax agent Within 4 months of death (domestic deaths); see deadlines section
8. Succession administration and distribution Notary / executor / courts (if contested) 3–12 months (complex estates longer)

Step 1: Conduct an initial review and define goals

Engage a private‑client lawyer or tax adviser before any drafting begins. The first meeting should produce a comprehensive inventory of assets (Belgian and foreign), a map of family relationships and potential beneficiaries, and a statement of objectives, who should receive what, when, and under what conditions. For HNWIs, this inventory typically includes immovable property, investment portfolios, business interests, life insurance policies, pension entitlements and any prior gifts already made. The adviser should also identify whether the estate will fall under Flemish, Walloon or Brussels‑Capital tax jurisdiction, because this determines the applicable rates and filing rules.

Step 2: Choose the type of will

Belgian law recognises three main forms of will. Understanding how to write a will in Belgium means choosing the form that matches your circumstances:

  • Notarial will (testament authentique). Dictated by the testator to a Belgian notary in the presence of two witnesses (or a second notary). The notary records it as an authentic deed, which carries strong evidentiary value and is immediately deposited in the Central Register of Wills (CRT). This is the form recommended for complex or high‑value estates.
  • Holographic will (testament olographe). Entirely handwritten, dated and signed by the testator. No notary or witnesses are required, making it quick and low‑cost, but vulnerable to challenges on authenticity, unclear wording and loss.
  • International will. Executed under the Washington Convention (1973), declared before a notary and two witnesses, and accompanied by a certificate of conformity. Useful for testators with assets in multiple signatory states.

For most HNWI scenarios, the notarial will provides the strongest legal certainty, cross‑border recognition and protection against challenge.

Step 3: Draft and execute the will

Once the type is chosen, the notary (or the testator, in the holographic case) drafts the dispositions. The notarial appointment should address language, wills may be drafted in Dutch, French or German depending on the linguistic region, and any translation requirements for foreign heirs. Witnesses must be adults, have no personal interest in the will, and understand the language in which it is drafted. Execution of a notarial will is typically completed in a single sitting. For holographic wills, the testator must write every word by hand; typed or computer‑printed documents are invalid.

Step 4: Register or deposit the will

Notarial wills are automatically enrolled in the Central Register of Wills (Centraal Register van Testamenten / Registre Central des Testaments), maintained by the Federation of Belgian Notaries. Holographic wills should be deposited with a notary for safekeeping and voluntary registration, this is not legally mandatory but is strongly advised to ensure the will is found after death. Registration confirmation is typically received within one to two weeks.

Step 5: Valuation and pre‑death tax planning

Before any taxable event, advisers should model the inheritance tax exposure under the applicable regional regime and explore lifetime‑transfer strategies. Common techniques include:

  • Notarised gifts (donation notariée). Subject to gift tax (lower rates than inheritance tax in all three regions), but removed from the taxable estate immediately.
  • Indirect or bank gifts. Movable assets gifted by bank transfer without a notarial deed. If the donor survives three years (Flanders and Brussels) or five years (Wallonia) after the gift, no inheritance tax is due. If the donor dies within the look‑back period, the gift is added back to the estate.
  • Usufruct and bare‑ownership splits. Transferring bare ownership to the next generation while retaining usufruct can reduce the taxable base at death.
  • Insurance structures. Life insurance designating specific beneficiaries may be subject to separate tax treatment depending on the region.

The 2026 Flemish reforms (detailed below) have adjusted certain rate brackets, making the timing and structuring of gifts particularly important for Flanders‑based estates.

Step 6: Immediate post‑death actions

On death, the family or executor should:

  1. Obtain the death certificate from the local civil registry (commune / gemeente).
  2. Notify the deceased’s notary (if known) so the Central Register of Wills can be searched.
  3. Secure the deceased’s assets, contact banks (accounts are typically frozen on notification of death), insurers and tenants.
  4. Instruct a notary or succession lawyer to open the succession file.

Banks will freeze accounts upon learning of the death and require sight of the declaration of estate or a certificate of inheritance (acte d’hérédité / erfrechtverklaring) before releasing funds.

Step 7: File the declaration of estate

The declaration of estate (déclaration de succession / aangifte van nalatenschap) is the formal inventory filed with the competent regional tax office, listing all assets and liabilities of the deceased. According to FPS Finance guidance, the declaration must be filed within four months of death when the death occurs in Belgium. Where the death occurs elsewhere in the European Economic Area, the deadline extends to five months; for deaths outside the EEA, the deadline is six months. These deadlines apply across Flanders, Wallonia and Brussels‑Capital.

The declaration must include the value of all worldwide assets (for residents) or Belgian‑situs assets (for non‑residents) as at the date of death. Heirs, their representatives or a notary acting on their behalf may file the declaration. Underdeclaration or late filing triggers penalties and interest.

Step 8: Succession administration and distribution

Once the declaration is filed and the inheritance tax assessment is received, the succession can be wound up. The notary (or court, in contested cases) oversees the partition of assets among the heirs, transfers title to immovable property at the Land Registry, and ensures all debts and legacies are paid. Uncontested estates are typically finalised within three to twelve months. Estates involving litigation, business valuations or international elements may take considerably longer. Heirs who wish to accept the estate only to the extent it is solvent may do so by accepting under benefit of inventory (acceptation sous bénéfice d’inventaire), which requires a filing at the court registry.

Documents Needed for Estate Planning in Belgium

The table below lists the documents typically required at various stages of the estate planning process in Belgium in 2026. Collecting these early, ideally during the lifetime planning phase, avoids delays after death. For foreign‑issued documents, check whether apostille (for Hague Convention countries) or full consular legalisation is required, and arrange sworn translations into the relevant Belgian official language.

Document Notes
Death certificate Issued by the local civil registry; original required for notary and FPS Finance filings.
Will (original) Notarial deed or holographic original; notary searches the Central Register of Wills.
Marriage certificate / PACS / separation or divorce documents Certified copy from civil registry; apostille if issued abroad.
Identity documents for deceased and all heirs Passport or national ID card; certified copies.
Proof of domicile / fiscal residence Municipal registration certificate or tax‑residence attestation.
Property deeds for Belgian immovables Notarial deeds or title registration extracts; needed for valuation and Land Registry transfers.
Bank and investment statements (balances at date of death) Issued by banks and custodians; required for the declaration of estate.
Insurance policies and pension statements Including beneficiary designations; relevant for separate tax treatment.
Company and shareholding evidence Share registers, shareholder agreements, articles of association.
Loan and mortgage statements Outstanding balances at date of death; deductible from taxable estate.
Powers of attorney and prior succession agreements Notarial acts or signed agreements; check validity post‑death.
Tax returns (last 3 years) Filed with FPS Finance; useful for valuation cross‑checks and undeclared‑asset risk.
Evidence of prior gifts / inter vivos transfers Notarial deeds or bank‑transfer records; may be added back to taxable estate within look‑back periods.
Foreign documents (apostilled and translated) Apostille or consular legalisation plus sworn translation into Dutch, French or German as applicable.

Probate Timeline in Belgium and Key Deadlines

Meeting deadlines is critical. Late filings attract penalties, interest and, in serious cases, surcharges. The table below summarises the key post‑death deadlines for the declaration of estate in Belgium and related steps.

Action Deadline
File declaration of estate, death in Belgium 4 months from the date of death
File declaration of estate, death in another EEA country 5 months from the date of death
File declaration of estate, death outside the EEA 6 months from the date of death
Payment of inheritance tax Due within 2 months of receipt of the tax assessment notice (region‑dependent; instalment arrangements may be possible)
Acceptance or renunciation of the estate No fixed statutory deadline, but heirs should act promptly; creditors may petition the court to compel a decision after 3 months and 40 days from death
Acceptance under benefit of inventory Declaration filed at the court registry; 3‑month inventory period plus 40 days for deliberation, starting from acceptance
Transfer of immovable property at the Land Registry No strict external deadline, but transfer is needed to complete the succession and may affect subsequent tax obligations
Full succession administration (uncontested) Typically 3–12 months from death

These deadlines are set by federal and regional law and apply uniformly across Flanders, Wallonia and Brussels‑Capital for the declaration of estate. Extensions are rarely granted and require a formal request demonstrating exceptional circumstances. In practice, engaging a notary or succession lawyer immediately after death is the most reliable way to avoid missing the probate timeline in Belgium.

Costs, Fees and Inheritance Tax Steps in Belgium

Budgeting for the full cost of succession planning in Belgium means accounting for professional fees, government charges and, most significantly, inheritance tax. The table below sets out indicative ranges for 2026.

Item Typical amount Notes
Notary fee for drafting / executing a will €200–€1,000+ Depends on complexity; set by notarial tariff schedule.
Notarial succession administration Several hundred to several thousand EUR Often a percentage of estate value or flat fee for standard estates.
Inheritance tax (succession duty) Progressive rates; regionally variable Flanders, Wallonia and Brussels each apply separate rate tables. In Flanders, direct‑line rates range from 3 % to 27 %; between non‑related parties, rates may reach 55 %. The 2026 Flemish reforms lower certain brackets, see the section below.
Valuation fees (property, business, art) €500–€5,000+ Specialist appraisals for high‑value or illiquid assets.
Lawyer / tax adviser fees €200–€600 per hour, or fixed project fees HNWI estates are frequently billed on a project basis.
Registry and filing fees Nominal (tens to low hundreds EUR) Court registry charges, Land Registry transcription fees.

For succession planning in Belgium, the inheritance tax steps deserve particular attention. After the declaration of estate is filed, the regional tax office reviews the declared values, may request additional information or independent valuations, and issues an assessment notice. Tax is then payable within the period stated on that notice. HNWIs should note that undervaluation of immovable property can trigger a re‑assessment with penalties, it is generally advisable to commission a professional valuation at the outset.

Individuals planning ahead should also consider the interaction between gift tax and inheritance tax. In all three regions, gift tax on movable assets (typically 3 % for direct‑line beneficiaries in Flanders, 3.3 % in Wallonia and Brussels) is substantially lower than inheritance‑tax rates. This differential creates a strong incentive for lifetime giving, particularly when the donor can survive the look‑back period. Those considering relocating within Belgium or abroad should be aware of the exit tax rules that may apply to certain structures.

What Changes in 2026: Flemish Reforms and Practical Effects

The most significant 2026 development for the estate planning process in Belgium is the package of Flemish inheritance‑tax and registration‑duty reforms. According to PwC Belgium, these reforms reduce certain Flemish inheritance‑tax rates and adjust the registration‑duty structure for immovable‑property transfers, producing tangible savings for estates falling under Flemish jurisdiction.

The practical effects for HNWIs and their advisers include:

  • Lower direct‑line inheritance‑tax brackets in Flanders. The reduced rates widen the gap between Flemish and Walloon/Brussels rates, making the timing of domicile changes and the structuring of Belgian‑situs assets more significant than before.
  • Adjusted registration duties on property donations and sales. The interplay between gift tax and registration duty has shifted, making it worth re‑modelling any planned immovable‑property transfers.
  • Renewed urgency to review existing wills and gift plans. Industry observers expect that HNWIs with Flanders‑based estates should revisit testamentary arrangements drafted before the reform, because rate changes may alter the optimal allocation of legacies and the preferred sequencing of lifetime gifts.
  • Valuation approach. The likely practical effect of the reforms is that estates will need to pay closer attention to the date‑of‑death valuation of Flemish immovables, because the adjusted rate brackets make the declared value more directly determinative of the final tax bill.

Early indications suggest that advisers in Flanders are already re‑timing gift strategies and updating succession models to reflect the new brackets. Estates in Wallonia and Brussels‑Capital are not directly affected by these Flemish measures, but should monitor any parallel reform proposals in their own regions. The relevant legislative texts are published in the Moniteur belge (Belgian Official Gazette).

Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

  • Unclear or ambiguous beneficiary wording. Vague language in a will invites disputes. Use precise identification (full names, dates of birth, national register numbers) and clear contingency clauses.
  • Failing to deposit a holographic will. If no one knows where the will is, it may never be found. Always deposit a holographic will with a notary and register it in the Central Register of Wills.
  • Ignoring forced‑heirship rules. Dispositions that exceed the available portion will be reduced on challenge. Model the reserved portions before finalising any plan.
  • Missing the declaration deadline. Late filing triggers automatic penalties and interest. Engage a notary or tax adviser within days of the death.
  • Mismatching foreign and Belgian wills. A later will can inadvertently revoke an earlier one. Use explicit non‑revocation clauses and coordinate drafting across jurisdictions.
  • Undervaluing assets. Declaring an artificially low value for immovable property risks re‑assessment, surcharges and criminal penalties. Commission independent valuations.
  • Neglecting to update plans after the 2026 reforms. Rate changes in Flanders may render a previously optimal plan sub‑optimal. Schedule a review with your adviser.
  • DIY holographic wills with procedural errors. The will must be entirely handwritten, dated and signed. A single printed word, a missing date or a signature on the wrong page can invalidate the entire document.
  • Overlooking the look‑back period for gifts. Gifts made without payment of gift tax within three years (Flanders/Brussels) or five years (Wallonia) before death are added back to the taxable estate. Factor survival periods into any gifting strategy.

Conclusion

The estate planning process in Belgium in 2026 demands careful sequencing, from the initial asset inventory and will execution, through pre‑death gift strategies, to the post‑death declaration and final distribution. The interplay between federal civil law and regional tax regimes, particularly following the 2026 Flemish reforms, means that no single template fits every estate. HNWIs, family offices and cross‑border asset holders should treat succession planning in Belgium as a dynamic exercise, revisiting plans whenever legislation, family circumstances or asset structures change.

By following the steps, documents and deadlines set out in this guide, and engaging qualified advisers at each stage, you can materially reduce the tax burden, avoid penalties and ensure that assets pass to the intended beneficiaries as smoothly and quickly as the law allows.

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 (Belgium), Declaration of Estate & Inheritance Tax Guidance
  2. Chambers Practice Guides, Succession & Estate Planning 2026 (Belgium)
  3. Tiberghien / Chambers, Succession & Estate Planning 2026 (Belgium)
  4. PwC Belgium, 2026 Changes in Flemish Inheritance / Registration Duties
  5. Expatica, Wills and Estate Planning in Belgium
  6. European e‑Justice Portal, Succession (Belgium)
  7. Moniteur belge / Belgian Official Gazette
  8. Legacio, Online Wills (Belgium)

FAQs

What is the new inheritance rule in Belgium and how does it affect my planning?
In 2026, the Flemish Region introduced reforms that reduce certain inheritance‑tax brackets and adjust registration duties on property transfers. The practical effect is that HNWIs with Flanders‑based estates should review existing wills, re‑model gift strategies and reassess the valuation of immovable assets. Estates subject to Walloon or Brussels rules are not directly affected but should monitor parallel reform proposals. Bespoke tax modelling with a qualified adviser is recommended.
You have three options: a notarial will (dictated to a notary before two witnesses, recommended for HNWIs), a holographic will (entirely handwritten, dated and signed by the testator) or an international will (executed under the 1973 Washington Convention). For cross‑border clarity and evidentiary strength, the notarial will is the most secure choice. A notary can prepare and execute a will in a single appointment.
The heirs or their notary must file a declaration of estate with the regional tax office. For deaths occurring in Belgium, the deadline is four months from the date of death; five months for deaths elsewhere in the EEA; and six months for deaths outside the EEA. Required documents include the death certificate, the original will, bank and investment statements, property deeds and evidence of all assets and liabilities at the date of death.
An uncontested estate is typically finalised within three to twelve months. Complex estates, particularly those involving contested wills, business valuations, international assets or court proceedings, may take considerably longer. The primary variables are the speed of filing the declaration of estate, the time required for the regional tax office to issue an assessment, and any delays in transferring immovable property at the Land Registry.
Not fully. Belgian forced‑heirship rules guarantee each child a reserved portion of one half of the estate (shared equally among all children). A will that infringes this reserve may be challenged through an action en réduction. Consult a notary or succession lawyer to understand how these limits apply to your specific family and asset structure.
Late filing triggers penalties and interest charged by the regional tax office. The longer the delay, the higher the surcharges. If you realise a deadline has been missed, engage a tax lawyer or notary immediately to file the declaration as soon as possible and to negotiate any reduction in penalties. Proactive communication with the tax office can mitigate the consequences.
Online platforms can help you prepare a draft, but a valid holographic will must still be entirely handwritten, dated and signed by the testator. A printed document, even one generated from a reputable platform, does not satisfy the legal requirements. For HNWIs, a notarial will prepared by a qualified Belgian notary is strongly preferred over any online alternative.
At the earliest possible stage. For high‑net‑worth individuals, professional advice is essential before making inter vivos gifts, when assets span multiple countries, when the estate includes business interests, and whenever forced‑heirship or liability considerations under Belgian law arise. After a death, a notary or succession lawyer should be instructed within days to ensure filing deadlines are met. The Global Law Experts lawyer directory can help you identify qualified Belgian private‑client practitioners.
By Global Law Experts

posted 4 hours ago

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Step‑by‑step Estate & Succession Planning in Belgium (2026), Wills, Declarations, Timelines and Tax Steps

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