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High-net-worth families, family office principals and trustees in Switzerland face a sharper version of an old question in 2026: should you structure succession through a Swiss family foundation, a foreign trust recognised under Swiss law, or a straightforward testamentary will? The March 2026 shift to individual taxation, and the cantonal practice updates that followed, has narrowed the historic tax gap between foundations and foreign trusts, making the choice more fact-dependent than ever. This article delivers a dimension-by-dimension comparison of all three vehicles on tax, cost, timing, enforceability and governance, then gives you a concrete decision framework for choosing the right one before you instruct counsel.
The analysis below covers Swiss-domestic family foundations governed by the Swiss Civil Code, foreign-law trusts recognised in Switzerland under the Hague Convention on Trusts (ratified by Switzerland in 2007), and wills subject to Swiss civil-law probate and cantonal inheritance tax rules. Each vehicle serves a different combination of priorities, governance continuity, cross-border asset protection, or simplicity, and no single option dominates on every dimension. The side-by-side table in this guide is designed to let you identify your priority, match it to the right vehicle, and walk into your first meeting with counsel already knowing the right questions to ask.
A Swiss family foundation is established under Articles 80–89 of the Swiss Civil Code (ZGB). It is a legal entity, an endowment of assets dedicated to a defined purpose, with its own legal personality. Unlike an association, a foundation has no members and no owners; it has only beneficiaries who receive distributions according to the founder’s charter. Governance is carried out by a foundation board, and a supervisory authority (cantonal or federal) oversees compliance with the stated purpose. The founder sets governance rules in the foundation deed, but once established, direct founder control is deliberately limited.
Assets transferred into a Swiss family foundation leave the founder’s personal estate permanently. Distributions to family beneficiaries follow rules set in the charter, covering education, maintenance, or other defined family needs. Because the foundation itself survives the founder’s death, there is no probate interruption: governance passes to the successor board members, and beneficiaries continue to receive distributions without estate-administration delays. This makes the foundation a strong vehicle for multigenerational succession planning, provided the founder is willing to part with direct ownership during their lifetime.
A common question is how a foundation differs from a Swiss association. The key distinction: an association (Verein) has members who control governance through general meetings, while a foundation has no members at all, only beneficiaries and a board bound by the founder’s charter. For succession planning, foundations provide more durable governance because no membership vote can redirect the purpose.
Switzerland has no domestic trust law. There is no provision under Swiss law to create a “Swiss trust.” However, since Switzerland ratified the Hague Convention on the Law Applicable to Trusts and on their Recognition in 2007, foreign-law trusts, typically established under English, Jersey, Guernsey, Cayman Islands, or other common-law jurisdictions, are recognised as legal structures within Switzerland. Recognition means Swiss banks, land registries and courts will accept a trust’s existence and the trustee’s authority, provided the trust complies with the governing foreign law and Swiss mandatory rules (such as forced heirship protections).
The trustee holds legal title to the assets. The settlor transfers wealth out of their personal estate. Beneficiaries receive distributions according to the trust deed, at the trustee’s discretion (in a discretionary trust) or on a fixed schedule. Settlor control is deliberately limited, excessive retained control can cause the trust to be disregarded for Swiss tax purposes or challenged under Swiss forced heirship rules.
Foreign trusts offer significant flexibility for succession planning. A discretionary trust allows the trustee to adapt distributions to changing family circumstances, protecting spendthrift beneficiaries, managing generational transitions, or responding to tax-law shifts, without the formality of amending a foundation charter. Trusts can also incorporate letter-of-wishes mechanisms, protector roles, and reserved powers that give the settlor meaningful (though legally limited) influence over distributions during their lifetime.
Because the trustee already holds title at the settlor’s death, there is no Swiss probate process for trust-held assets. Succession is immediate and private, a material advantage for families with assets in multiple jurisdictions who want to avoid parallel probate proceedings.
A Swiss will is the simplest succession instrument. It can be holographic (entirely handwritten, dated and signed by the testator) or public (executed before a notary with two witnesses). Swiss civil law imposes forced heirship (Pflichtteilsrecht): direct descendants, the surviving spouse or registered partner receive a guaranteed minimum share of the estate, limiting the testator’s freedom to allocate assets. Probate proceedings are handled by cantonal authorities and can take several months to over a year for complex estates. Where the deceased held assets in Switzerland as a resident, Swiss probate formalities apply regardless of nationality.
For families with assets in multiple countries, a standalone Swiss will is rarely sufficient, coordinating wills across jurisdictions becomes essential to avoid conflicting probate proceedings.
The table below is the centrepiece of this comparison. It maps ten decision dimensions against all three succession vehicles, using the legal and tax framework applicable in Switzerland as of mid-2026. Use it to identify which dimensions matter most for your situation, then read the detailed analysis that follows. For a general primer on the structural differences between trusts and foundations, see our guide on trusts vs foundations, what’s the difference.
| Dimension | Swiss family foundation | Foreign trust (foreign law) | Will / Probate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Legal form & governing law | Domestic foundation (Swiss Civil Code, Art. 80 ff.), own legal personality; cantonal supervision | Fiduciary vehicle under foreign law; recognised in Switzerland via the Hague Convention (ratified 2007) | Testament under deceased’s personal law; probate under Swiss civil procedure if Swiss assets or resident |
| Ideal client | Families seeking long-term governance, multigenerational continuity, domestic presence | Clients needing cross-border asset protection, flexible discretionary distributions, trustee confidentiality | Simple estates, clients wanting low cost, or where statutory succession is acceptable |
| Tax (general position) | Taxed as a legal person at cantonal + federal level; 2026 practice changes materially affect outcomes | Tax depends on settlor/beneficiary residence; often taxed at settlor or beneficiary level, fact-intensive | Inheritance/gift tax levied at cantonal level (no federal inheritance tax); many cantons exempt direct descendants |
| Probate & recognition speed | No probate, foundation owns assets; immediate governance continuity | No Swiss probate for trust-held assets; recognition straightforward under Hague Convention | Probate required, can be slower; assets potentially frozen during administration |
| Cost (setup & ongoing) | Higher upfront (legal, notary, capital admin) and ongoing (board, audit, supervisory fees) | Variable setup by jurisdiction; ongoing trustee fees + cross-border compliance costs | Lowest setup cost; executor/probate fees on distribution |
| Control & flexibility | Founder sets governance; less direct control post-transfer; strong structural governance | High flexibility via discretionary instruments; settlor control limited by trustee duties | Maximum control until death; freely revocable and amendable |
| Privacy | Generally confidential, not in commercial register | High confidentiality (varies by trustee jurisdiction and reporting obligations) | Wills may become public in probate; less confidential after death |
| Enforceability / dispute resolution | Swiss courts and cantonal supervisory authorities; established domestic enforceability | Enforceable but disputes may require foreign-court litigation; Hague Convention aids recognition | Enforceable via probate courts; forced heirship limits testamentary freedom |
| Liability / creditor exposure | Foundation assets separated from personal creditors (subject to avoidance rules) | Trust assets separated; creditor access depends on fraudulent-conveyance analysis | Estate assets liable during administration; creditors may file claims |
| Best for | Long-term multigenerational governance inside Switzerland | Cross-border asset segregation & bespoke trustee arrangements | Simple succession, modest estates, statutory order acceptable |
Each dimension below opens with a short declarative summary, followed by the practical analysis that drives the choice between a family foundation, a foreign trust and a will. Where quantified data is available, it is presented in table form. All cantonal tax figures are illustrative and should be verified with local counsel before being relied upon.
Tax is the dimension that changed most in 2026. Switzerland levies no federal inheritance or gift tax. Instead, inheritance and gift taxes are imposed at the cantonal level, with rates and exemptions varying significantly across the 26 cantons. Gift and inheritance taxes are triggered when the donor is a Swiss resident or the deceased was a Swiss resident at the time of death.
For foundations, the March 2026 move to individual taxation altered how cantonal authorities assess the foundation’s tax liability. Because a family foundation is already treated as a tax subject in the Swiss system, unlike a trust, which is typically transparent, the practical effect has been to make Swiss family foundations a more competitive alternative to foreign trusts for domestically oriented wealth. Industry observers expect cantonal practice to continue evolving as supervisory authorities publish updated guidance. Each canton’s treatment of foundation tax exemptions (particularly for foundations pursuing charitable or mixed family-charitable purposes) must now be verified individually.
For foreign trusts, Swiss tax authorities generally look through the trust to the settlor (during the settlor’s lifetime) or the beneficiaries (on distributions). The specific treatment depends on whether the trust is revocable or irrevocable, whether the settlor retains powers, and the residence of the settlor and beneficiaries. Advance tax rulings are strongly recommended.
For wills, the cantonal inheritance tax applies on distribution. Many cantons, including Schwyz and Obwalden, impose no inheritance tax at all. Others, such as Vaud, apply rates that vary by the beneficiary’s relationship to the deceased, with direct descendants typically benefiting from reduced rates or full exemptions.
| Item | Swiss family foundation | Foreign trust | Will / Probate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Typical setup cost | CHF 15,000–50,000 (legal, notary, initial capital administration) | CHF 5,000–30,000 (jurisdiction formation + trustee onboarding) | CHF 0–2,000 (holographic or notarial will); probate costs additional |
| Ongoing annual costs | CHF 5,000–30,000+ (accounting, governance, supervisory fees, audit) | Trustee fees typically 0.5%–1.5% of assets under management + admin | Executor/probate admin fees (varies by canton) + potential inheritance tax |
| Tax treatment (summary) | Taxed at foundation level per canton; some cantons offer exemptions, 2026 practice must be verified per canton | Taxed at settlor/beneficiary level based on residence; fact-intensive; advance ruling recommended | Inheritance/gift tax by canton and relationship; many cantons exempt direct descendants |
A Swiss family foundation carries the highest all-in cost: legal structuring, notarisation of the foundation deed, initial capital endowment, plus annual board governance, audit and supervisory authority fees. A foreign trust’s costs are driven by the trustee’s fee structure and the complexity of cross-border compliance. A will is by far the cheapest vehicle to create, but probate costs, executor fees and cantonal inheritance tax on distribution can narrow the gap for larger estates. Families with estates exceeding CHF 5 million should model all-in costs over a 20-year horizon before concluding that a will is “cheaper.”
Foundations and trusts transfer assets during the founder’s or settlor’s lifetime. At death, there is no probate interruption, governance continues and beneficiaries receive distributions without delay. By contrast, probate of a Swiss will can take several months to well over a year for complex or contested estates. For families where liquidity continuity matters, for example, where a family business must continue operating, the probate route introduces meaningful risk.
Both foundations and trusts ring-fence assets from the personal creditors of the founder/settlor. However, Swiss law contains avoidance provisions: transfers made to defeat creditors can be challenged (typically within prescribed look-back periods). Trust assets are similarly protected, but creditor access depends on the governing trust law’s fraudulent-conveyance rules. Estate assets under a will remain exposed to creditor claims until probate concludes and all debts are satisfied.
Swiss family foundations enjoy straightforward domestic enforceability: Swiss courts and cantonal supervisory authorities resolve disputes under Swiss law. Foreign trusts are recognised under the Hague Convention, and Swiss courts will give effect to a validly constituted foreign trust, but they will not enforce trust provisions that conflict with Swiss mandatory rules, particularly forced heirship rights. Disputes over trust interpretation or trustee conduct may need to be litigated in the trust’s governing jurisdiction, adding cost and delay. Wills are enforceable through probate courts, but contested wills, especially those involving cross-border elements, can generate prolonged litigation. Switzerland’s regulatory environment for financial intermediaries, including SRO-licensed entities, adds a compliance layer for professional trustees operating domestically.
The March 8, 2026 move to individual taxation is the single most significant recent change affecting the family foundation vs foreign trust vs will decision in Switzerland. Before this shift, the tax treatment of Swiss family foundations relative to foreign trusts created a structural arbitrage that often favoured the trust route for tax-sensitive families. The 2026 changes narrow that gap by adjusting how foundation income and distributions are assessed at the cantonal level.
Several cantons have since published updated practice guidance on foundation tax exemptions, particularly for foundations combining family and charitable purposes. The likely practical effect will be to make Swiss family foundations more attractive for domestically oriented wealth, while foreign trusts retain their edge for families with significant cross-border asset holdings or complex international beneficiary structures.
A related question that frequently arises: does Switzerland tax foreign inheritance? The answer is residency-dependent. Cantonal inheritance and gift taxes apply when the deceased was a Swiss resident at the time of death. A non-resident’s estate is generally not subject to Swiss inheritance tax unless it includes Swiss-situated immovable property. This means the family foundation vs foreign trust vs will decision is inseparable from the family’s residency position, and residency can shift, making periodic review essential.
Early indications suggest that new beneficial ownership reporting requirements will increase transparency obligations for both foundations and trusts connected with Switzerland, further levelling the playing field on privacy between the two vehicles.
The right vehicle depends on four pivot points: where you live, where your assets are, what governance you need after death, and which cantonal tax regime applies. The table below maps the most common priority combinations to a clear recommendation.
| If your priority is… | Choose |
|---|---|
| Long-term domestic governance, a formal successor body, continuity of purpose across generations | Swiss family foundation |
| Cross-border asset protection, flexible discretionary distributions, trustee confidentiality | Foreign trust (select a reputable trust jurisdiction; plan for Swiss recognition) |
| Low upfront cost, simple estates, full control retained until death | Will (but verify forced heirship limits and cantonal tax exposure) |
| Mixed domestic + international assets with governance needs | Foundation + will (foundation for core domestic wealth; will for residual / personal items) |
| Maximum tax efficiency for cross-border distributions with multiple beneficiary jurisdictions | Foreign trust (with advance Swiss tax ruling) |
Not every succession plan requires a complex structure, but several trigger conditions move the decision firmly into territory where professional advice is essential. Engage a Swiss private-client lawyer when:
For your first meeting, prepare: a summary of asset locations and estimated values, a family tree (including any non-Swiss-resident members), your current will or trust documentation (if any), and a list of priorities (governance, tax, privacy, speed). Your counsel will use these to recommend a structure, model costs and identify the right canton for foundation domiciliation or trust administration.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Julian Kläser at MLL Legal AG, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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