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Belgium’s new exit tax regime, introduced by the draft law approved on 12 December 2025 and effective from 1 January 2026, has fundamentally changed the calculus for high‑net‑worth individuals considering a change of tax residence. The reforms impose a 10 % tax on unrealised capital gains in covered financial assets at the point of emigration, align Belgium more closely with the EU Anti‑Tax Avoidance Directive (ATAD), and tighten the conditions under which deferral and security arrangements are accepted. For HNWIs, family offices and their advisers, the window for effective pre‑departure planning is now measured in months rather than years, and the cost of inaction can be substantial.
This guide is designed for HNWIs and private client advisers evaluating emigration, HNWI relocation Belgium scenarios, or asset restructuring in 2026. It covers the legal triggers, deferral mechanics, practical exit tax mitigation strategies, a step‑by‑step pre‑departure checklist, and anonymised case studies illustrating both successful planning and costly mistakes.
The Belgian federal government’s tax‑reform package, approved on 12 December 2025, introduced a comprehensive capital‑gains regime for individuals and simultaneously overhauled the emigration tax Belgium framework. The measures took effect on 1 January 2026.
| Date | Measure | Immediate impact |
|---|---|---|
| 12 December 2025 | Draft law approved by Federal Government | Formal legislative process initiated; market certainty on scope and rates |
| 1 January 2026 | New capital‑gains regime and exit‑tax provisions effective | All departures from Belgian tax residence on or after this date fall under new rules |
| Ongoing 2026 | Royal Decrees and FPS Finance circulars expected | Detailed guidance on filing, security formats and deferral applications anticipated |
The reforms introduced several interconnected measures that affect both individual and corporate taxpayers:
Industry observers expect the FPS Finance to issue further circulars clarifying specific filing formats and valuation methodologies during the course of 2026. Until those circulars are published, practitioners are relying on the legislative text and authoritative firm commentary from sources including PwC Belgium, BDO Belgium and KPMG for guidance on the practical application of the rules.
The exit tax Belgium is triggered at the moment a Belgian tax resident transfers their tax residence to another jurisdiction. The taxable event is not a sale or disposal, it is the change of tax residence itself. Unrealised capital gains on covered financial assets, calculated as at the date of departure, form the taxable base.
Belgium determines tax residence using two principal tests, consistent with FPS Finance guidance:
A change of tax residence Belgium is considered to occur on the date the individual establishes their domicile and principal residence abroad. In practice, this is often the date of de‑registration from the Belgian population register (commune), although the tax administration may look beyond formal registration to establish the facts.
The 2026 exit tax applies to unrealised gains on the following categories of financial assets:
Consider a Belgian tax resident holding a portfolio of listed shares acquired over several years at a total historic cost of €2,000,000. At the date of departure, the fair market value is €3,200,000. The unrealised gain is €1,200,000.
Under the 2026 rules, the exit tax at the headline 10 % rate would be:
€1,200,000 × 10 % = €120,000
This amount is either payable immediately or, if the individual qualifies and elects, deferred subject to the conditions discussed below. This is an illustrative example; actual liability depends on the specific assets held, applicable exclusions and any treaty relief. Bespoke advice is essential.
The exit tax Belgium regime permits deferral of the immediate tax liability in specified circumstances. Deferral is not automatic, it must be elected and is subject to conditions regarding the destination jurisdiction, asset retention and the provision of security.
Deferral is generally available when the individual transfers their tax residence to:
The central condition is a two‑year holding requirement: the covered financial assets must be retained, not sold, gifted or otherwise disposed of, for a period of at least two years following the change of tax residence. If the assets are retained for the full two‑year period and the individual remains in a qualifying jurisdiction, the deferred tax may ultimately lapse (the precise mechanics remain subject to further FPS Finance guidance).
Where deferral is granted, the Belgian tax authorities may require the taxpayer to provide security for the deferred amount. Acceptable forms of security are expected to include:
Early indications suggest that security requirements may be relaxed where assets remain declared and held with a Belgian‑based financial institution, though this is an area where further regulatory guidance is anticipated.
| Scenario | Deferral / security available? | Practical implication for HNWI |
|---|---|---|
| Moving to EU Member State or treaty partner; assets retained for 2 years | Yes, deferral typically allowed; security may be required but could be waived if assets remain declared with a Belgian custodian | Immediate cash tax avoided; must file deferral application and may need to provide bank guarantee |
| Moving to a non‑treaty or non‑information‑sharing jurisdiction | No or very limited, deferral unlikely; immediate tax typically due on departure | Full cash liability on emigration; consider pre‑departure crystallisation or restructuring to reduce the taxable base |
| Disposing of covered assets within 24 months after departure | Deferral lost, deferred tax becomes immediately payable | Selling within the holding window triggers the full deferred amount; plan disposal timing carefully |
| Returning to Belgium within 24 months | Return may cancel or reverse exit tax in certain cases | Provides a safety valve for temporary relocations; confirm eligibility with advisers before relying on this rule |
Effective exit tax mitigation requires action well before the planned departure date. The strategies below represent the principal planning levers available under the 2026 regime. Each involves trade‑offs and potential anti‑avoidance risks that must be assessed on a case‑by‑case basis.
One of the most direct mitigation approaches is to crystallise gains on covered assets before departure, during a period when the gains may be subject to a lower effective rate or fall within available exemptions.
Transferring personal financial assets into a Belgian holding company before departure may, in certain situations, alter the exit‑tax treatment by interposing a corporate layer. However, this strategy carries significant complexity:
Legal interpretation, this area is particularly sensitive to anti‑avoidance scrutiny. Bespoke advice is essential before implementing any restructuring.
Branche 23 (unit‑linked) life insurance policies are expressly within scope of the exit tax. However, certain policy structures, particularly those held through foreign‑law trusts or foundations, may interact with the exit tax in complex ways depending on the look‑through treatment applied by the Belgian administration. Taxpayers holding assets through trusts should obtain a specific ruling or opinion on the exit‑tax treatment well in advance of departure.
The choice of destination jurisdiction is a critical variable in exit tax Belgium planning:
Where deferral requires security, the cost and availability of bank guarantees or asset pledges becomes a planning factor. For a deferred liability of €500,000, a bank guarantee at a typical annual fee of 0.5–1.5 % represents a cost of €2,500–€7,500 per year, materially lower than the immediate tax, but still a cash‑flow consideration over the two‑year holding period.
For older HNWIs or those with succession planning already underway, gifting covered assets to the next generation before departure may remove those assets from the exit‑tax base, provided the gift itself does not trigger other tax liabilities (e.g. gift tax). The interaction between the exit tax and Belgian gift and inheritance tax requires careful coordination.
A Belgian entrepreneur holds 100 % of shares in an operating company. Historic cost: €100,000. Current fair market value: €5,000,000. Unrealised gain: €4,900,000.
Illustrative example, actual outcomes depend on specific facts, applicable exemptions and anti‑avoidance analysis. Seek bespoke advice.
A family office manages a diversified portfolio of ETFs, bonds and crypto‑assets for a Belgian tax resident. Total historic cost: €8,000,000. Current value: €11,500,000. Unrealised gain: €3,500,000.
| Strategy | Potential tax saving | Key risk / cost | Typical lead time |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre‑departure crystallisation | Moderate to high (depends on rate differential) | Anti‑avoidance challenge; transaction costs | 3–6 months |
| Holding‑company restructuring | Potentially high | GAAR risk; corporate tax layer; complexity | 6–12 months |
| Treaty‑country deferral + security | High (full deferral; possible lapse) | Security cost; 2‑year lock‑in; compliance | 1–3 months |
| Gift to next generation | Moderate (removes assets from exit‑tax base) | Gift tax; loss of control; succession implications | 3–6 months |
| Insurance policy restructuring | Low to moderate | Look‑through risk; insurer willingness | 3–6 months |
Effective tax residency planning requires a structured sequence of actions aligned to the planned departure date. The checklist below is organised around a six‑month and three‑month countdown.
The process of agreeing acceptable security with the Belgian tax administration is expected to involve correspondence with the competent local tax office. Industry observers expect that taxpayers who proactively offer a bank guarantee or asset pledge, rather than waiting for the administration to request one, will experience a smoother deferral approval process. The likely practical effect is that early, transparent engagement reduces both processing delays and the risk of the administration requesting a higher security amount.
Facts. An entrepreneur (age 52) holds 80 % of a Belgian tech company valued at €12 million, with a historic cost of €200,000. They plan to relocate to Portugal for personal and business reasons.
Options considered. (A) Immediate departure with deferral and security. (B) Pre‑departure share reorganisation via contribution to a new holding company. (C) Partial gift of shares to adult children before departure.
Recommended plan. Option A was selected as the primary route. Portugal is an EU Member State, allowing deferral. A bank guarantee of approximately €1,180,000 (10 % of the €11.8 million gain) was arranged. The entrepreneur retained the shares for the full two‑year deferral period. Option C was implemented as a parallel succession measure for a 15 % stake, removing approximately €1.77 million of gain from the exit‑tax base.
Lesson. Starting the process early, six months in advance, allowed time to obtain a robust share valuation and negotiate the bank guarantee at competitive terms.
Facts. A family office manages €25 million in diversified financial assets (ETFs, bonds, crypto) for a Belgian‑resident principal relocating to Switzerland.
Options considered. (A) Full deferral (subject to confirmation that Belgium–Switzerland treaty provisions qualify). (B) Pre‑departure partial crystallisation of highest‑gain positions. (C) Restructure into a Luxembourg‑based investment vehicle before departure.
Recommended plan. Option B was implemented first: ETF positions with €4 million of embedded gain were sold pre‑departure, with capital‑gains tax paid at the applicable Belgian rate. The remaining portfolio (with €3.5 million of residual unrealised gain) was moved under Option A, with deferral applied and security provided. Option C was rejected due to anti‑avoidance risk and the complexity of cross‑border vehicle establishment.
Lesson. Treaty analysis was critical, the Belgium–Switzerland double‑tax treaty includes information‑exchange provisions, but the precise deferral eligibility required specialist confirmation. Assumptions about Swiss treaty status without legal verification would have been a costly error.
Facts. A retired executive (age 68) holds €6 million in bonds and listed shares, with €1.8 million of unrealised gains. They plan to move to France to be closer to family.
Recommended plan. Straightforward deferral to France (EU Member State). No pre‑departure crystallisation was required because the gain was moderate and the deferral conditions were clearly met. A pledge over existing Belgian custody account assets served as security. The total cost of the pledge arrangement was under €5,000 for the two‑year period.
Lesson. Not every departure requires aggressive planning. For moderate gain profiles with a clear EU destination, the deferral route can be simple and cost‑effective, but it still requires proper filing and documentation.
The exit tax Belgium regime imposes strict compliance obligations. Failure to meet these can result in penalties, interest and extended audit exposure.
The 2026 reforms have made exit tax Belgium a live and immediate concern for every high‑net‑worth individual considering a change of tax residence. The 10 % rate on unrealised gains, combined with the tightened deferral conditions and expanded asset scope, means that the financial cost of departing Belgium without proper planning can be very significant. Equally, the regime offers genuine opportunities for well‑advised taxpayers: deferral to qualifying jurisdictions, pre‑departure crystallisation, security optimisation and succession‑integrated planning can all materially reduce the effective burden.
The critical variable is time. Valuations, restructuring, security negotiations and deferral applications all require lead time. HNWIs and family offices that begin the process three to six months before their intended departure date will have the widest range of options and the lowest risk of costly errors. Those who engage a qualified Belgium private client specialist early will be best positioned to navigate the new landscape.
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.
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