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Understanding how to register a gift made without notarial formality in Belgium online has become more urgent in 2026, as the Brussels‑Capital Region has extended the “risk period” for unregistered gifts from three years to five, aligning it with Wallonia while diverging sharply from Flanders, which retains a three‑year window. For anyone making or receiving a gift of movable property, cash, securities, art, or investment portfolios, the Belgian federal platform MyMinfin now offers a fully digital registration workflow that eliminates the need for a physical visit to a registration office.
This guide walks through every step of that online process, explains the gift tax rates Belgium applies by region (e.g. 3 % or 7 % in the Flemish region), and sets out a clear framework for deciding whether, and when, registration is worth the cost.
TL;DR, Three things you need to know about gifts other than gifts by notary deed:
Last reviewed: 3 June 2026. Regional gift‑tax rules change periodically, verify current rates with FPS Finance or your adviser before acting.
Belgian law distinguishes between two categories of gifts, and the registration rules differ fundamentally between them. Before exploring how to register a gift in Belgium online, it helps to understand what “registration” actually does and when it is required.
Registering a gift means presenting the gift document (or evidence of the transfer) to the Belgian tax authorities so that it receives an official date stamp, is entered into the public record, and, critically, triggers the payment of gift tax (also called registration tax on gifts). Once gift tax has been paid, the transferred assets are permanently removed from the donor’s estate for inheritance‑tax purposes.
Gifts of movable property, bank transfers, securities, cash, art collections, jewellery, or investment‑fund units, can be made by hand, by bank transfer, or through a document signed before a notary. Registration with the tax authorities is not legally compulsory for movable gifts. However, if the gift is not registered and the donor dies within the risk period, the full value of the gift is added back to the estate and taxed at (often substantially higher) inheritance‑tax rates. This risk is the primary reason most advisers recommend voluntary registration.
Any gift of immovable property, land, buildings, real‑estate rights, must be made by notarial deed. The notary is legally obligated to present that deed for registration, and the applicable registration tax is calculated and collected as part of the notarial process. There is no option to register an immovable gift through MyMinfin; the notary handles everything.
The federal MyMinfin platform, managed by FPS Finance, allows Belgian residents and, in many cases, non‑residents to submit a myminfin gift registration entirely digitally.
Gift taxation in Belgium is a regional competence: each of the three regions, Flanders, the Brussels‑Capital Region, and Wallonia, sets its own rates and rules. The applicable region is determined by the donor’s fiscal domicile (the region where the donor has lived for the longest period during the five years preceding the gift). Below is a comparison of the typical gift tax rates Belgium applies to registered movable and immovable gifts.
| Region | Movable gifts (registered via MyMinfin or notary) | Immovable gifts (notarial deed required) |
|---|---|---|
| Flanders | 3 % for gifts to a spouse, cohabitant, or lineal relatives (children, grandchildren, parents); 7 % for gifts to all other persons (siblings, nieces/nephews, unrelated recipients). | Progressive rates ranging from 3 % to 27 % for lineal relatives / spouses, and from 10 % to 40 % for all other recipients, depending on the value of the gift. Notarial deed is mandatory. |
| Brussels‑Capital | 3 % for gifts to a spouse, cohabitant, or lineal relatives; 7 % for gifts to all others. Brussels applies a 5‑year risk period for unregistered movable gifts. | Progressive scales similar to Flanders, with rates starting at 3 % (lineal) or 10 % (others) and rising with the value of the property. Notarial deed is mandatory. |
| Wallonia | 3.3 % for gifts to a spouse, cohabitant, or lineal relatives; 5.5 % for gifts to all others (rates differ slightly from the other two regions). Wallonia applies a 5‑year risk period. | Progressive rates broadly comparable to those in Flanders and Brussels, though thresholds and brackets differ. Notarial deed is mandatory. |
Rates are correct as of June 2026. Always verify the latest schedules on the FPS Finance portal or the relevant regional tax authority website.
The distinction between movable and immovable property is central to registering a gift in Belgium. Movable property, cash, bank balances, investment portfolios, art, vehicles, can be gifted informally (hand gift or bank transfer) and subsequently registered online. Immovable property, real estate, land, certain long‑term leasehold rights, must always pass through a notarial deed, which the notary then presents for registration. There is no “online shortcut” for immovable gifts; the notarial route is the only legally valid option.
In Flanders and Brussels, the 3 % flat rate applies when the donor and recipient are in a “direct line” relationship, parent to child, grandparent to grandchild, or are spouses or legal cohabitants. All other recipients (siblings, nieces, nephews, friends, or unrelated persons) fall into the 7 % category. In Wallonia, the rates are slightly different (3.3 % and 5.5 %), but the logic is the same: closer family ties attract a lower rate. These flat rates for movable gifts are significantly lower than the progressive inheritance‑tax scales, which can climb above 30 % for large estates, a key reason why early, registered gifting is a cornerstone of Belgian estate planning.
The “risk period” (also called the “look‑back period” or verdachte periode / période suspecte) is the window of time during which an unregistered gift is treated as part of the donor’s estate if the donor dies. If the donor survives beyond the risk period, the unregistered gift escapes both gift tax and inheritance tax entirely, a tax‑free outcome. If the donor dies within the period, however, the full value of the gift is added to the taxable estate and inheritance tax is levied at the higher progressive rates.
The regional positions are as follows since 2025: a 5-year risk period (extended tot 7 years is a family owned business is transferred by non-notarial gift).
Consider a practical scenario: a parent domiciled in the Brussels‑Capital Region gifts €500,000 in listed securities to an adult child. If the gift is registered, the parent pays 3 % gift tax, €15,000, and the securities are permanently removed from the estate. If the gift is not registered and the parent dies within five years, the €500,000 is added to the taxable estate. Depending on the total estate size, the marginal inheritance‑tax rate in Brussels can reach 30 % for lineal heirs, potentially resulting in a tax bill of €80,000 or more on that same €500,000, more than five times the gift‑tax cost.
For families planning a series of gifts over time, a strategy known as “gift layering”, the arithmetic strongly favours registration. By registering a gift in Belgium at each stage, the donor locks in the low flat rate and progressively reduces the taxable estate, regardless of how long they live. In contrast, relying on the risk period expiring introduces uncertainty that grows with the value of the estate and the donor’s age or health.
The decision framework is relatively straightforward:
Belgium’s gift‑tax rules apply based on the donor’s fiscal domicile, not the recipient’s location. A Belgian‑domiciled donor who gifts securities to a child living abroad still triggers Belgian gift‑tax obligations. Conversely, a gift from a non‑Belgian donor to a Belgian recipient generally falls outside the Belgian gift‑tax regime, though the recipient should check whether inheritance‑tax implications arise if the donor subsequently dies.
For physical gifts sent into Belgium from another country (art, jewellery, collectibles), EU customs rules apply. Gifts valued above €45 from a non‑EU sender are subject to customs duties and import VAT, with the recipient responsible for clearing the goods. Donors sending gifts from within the EU face no customs formalities, though a paper trail (invoice, valuation, gift letter) is advisable for gift‑tax purposes.
Bank transfers from abroad should include a clear description (e.g., “gift, [donor name] to [recipient name]”) to avoid anti‑money‑laundering queries. Belgian banks may flag large incoming transfers and request documentation; having a signed gift document and proof of the donor’s identity readily available will smooth the process. Families with assets across multiple jurisdictions should also consider how Belgian gift registration interacts with cross‑border estate planning and multi‑country wills.
Not every gift can be processed through MyMinfin. Belgian law mandates notarial involvement in the following situations:
The Belgian notaries’ federation (Fednot) publishes practical guidance on notarial fees and procedures. Donors contemplating gifts that may involve any of the above scenarios should consult a notary before proceeding.
Use this checklist before you submit your online registration:
Save all confirmation e‑mails and the MyMinfin reference number. These serve as your proof that gift tax has been paid and that the assets are excluded from the donor’s taxable estate.
Knowing how to register a gift in Belgium online, and understanding the tax and planning consequences of choosing not to, is essential for anyone transferring wealth in Belgium in 2026. The MyMinfin platform makes the registration process fast and accessible, while the divergent regional risk periods (three years in Flanders, five years in Brussels and Wallonia) add a layer of complexity that rewards careful planning. Whether you are making a modest bank‑transfer gift to a child or structuring a multi‑million‑euro family wealth transfer, the flat 3 % or 7 % gift‑tax rates remain significantly cheaper than the alternative: inheritance tax at progressive rates that can exceed 30 %.
For tailored guidance on registering a gift or structuring an estate plan, consult a qualified Belgian private‑client adviser through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice and updates on this topic, contact Tim Roovers at Sansen International Tax Lawyers, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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