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liechtenstein trust law

Liechtenstein Trust Law Reform 2026: What Trustees, Settlors and Beneficiaries Must Do Before 1 July

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

On 1 July 2026, the most significant overhaul of Liechtenstein trust law in more than a decade takes effect. The reformed provisions of the Persons and Companies Act (Personen- und Gesellschaftsrecht, or PGR), specifically Articles 897 et seq. , introduce a new governance model, expanded trustee duties, stricter documentation standards and revised registration requirements for trusts established or administered in the Principality. Charitable and deposited trusts face an additional registration deadline of 31 December 2026, and practitioner commentary indicates that non-compliance may attract administrative fines of up to CHF 50,000.

This guide delivers a practical, step-by-step trustee compliance checklist, covering every deadline, notarial formality and sample clause that professional trustees, family offices, settlors and private client lawyers need to act on now.

Five immediate actions every trustee should take:

  1. Audit every trust deed under your administration against the new Articles 897 et seq. governance standards.
  2. Convene a trustee review meeting and minute all decisions regarding compliance.
  3. Identify trusts that require formal deed amendments and instruct a Liechtenstein notary.
  4. Update internal governance manuals, conflict-of-interest policies and beneficiary communication protocols.
  5. For charitable or deposited trusts, begin the registration process immediately, the 31 December 2026 deadline leaves limited margin for error.

What Changes in Liechtenstein Trust Law on 1 July 2026? Legislative Summary (Articles 897 et seq.)

The 2026 trust reform restructures the legal framework governing the creation, administration and supervision of trusts under the PGR. The reformed provisions, Articles 897 through 932, replace and consolidate earlier rules that practitioners widely regarded as outdated relative to international standards. The Liechtensteinische Landesverwaltung (LLV) factsheet on Articles 897–932 sets out the statutory framework in detail, while the Regierung des Fürstentums Liechtenstein has published implementation guidance clarifying the practical expectations for trustees and notaries.

Scope and definitions

The reformed articles apply to all trusts governed by Liechtenstein law, regardless of where the settlor or beneficiaries are domiciled. “Trust” retains its established PGR definition, a legal relationship in which a settlor transfers assets to a trustee who holds and administers them for the benefit of one or more beneficiaries or for a specified purpose. Crucially, the 2026 changes extend the supervisory reach to trusts that were previously subject to lighter-touch regulation, including private-purpose trusts and undisclosed (non-deposited) family trusts. Industry observers expect this broadened scope to affect a significant proportion of the approximately 4,000 active trust structures administered in Liechtenstein.

New governance model (key duties)

The trust reform introduces a codified governance model that imposes explicit standards on how trustees exercise their powers. Key elements include:

  • Documented decision-making. Trustees must record the rationale for significant decisions, investment allocations, distributions, appointment or removal of protectors, in written minutes or resolutions.
  • Beneficiary information rights. Beneficiaries gain enhanced rights to receive information about the trust’s administration, subject to defined exceptions where disclosure could undermine the trust’s purpose.
  • Conflict-of-interest management. Trustees must adopt and follow written conflict-of-interest policies. Where a conflict arises, the trustee must disclose it and, in specified circumstances, abstain from the relevant decision.
  • Delegation and investment standards. The reformed provisions codify the duty of care when delegating investment management and set clearer standards for the selection and monitoring of agents.

Registration and records

One of the most operationally significant changes concerns registration. Under Articles 897 et seq., charitable trusts and deposited trusts must be entered in the Commercial Register or filed with the Office of Justice (Amt für Justiz) by 31 December 2026. The LLV factsheet confirms that all trusts must maintain enhanced internal records, including a register of beneficiaries, a record of trust assets, and copies of all governance documents, accessible to the supervisory authorities on request. Professional trustees licensed under the Trustee Act (Treuhändergesetz, TrHG) are already subject to supervisory oversight by the Financial Market Authority (FMA); the trust reform extends analogous record-keeping duties to all trustees, whether professional or private.

Who Is Affected: Trust Types and Entity Roles Under the 2026 Liechtenstein Trust Law Reform

The scope of the trust reform is deliberately broad. Every participant in a Liechtenstein trust relationship should assess their position against the new requirements.

Trust type Key change Deadline
Deposited trust (registered with the Office of Justice) Must comply with the full new governance model; registration to be confirmed or updated 1 July 2026 (governance); 31 December 2026 (registration update)
Charitable trust (common-benefit purpose) Mandatory registration with the Commercial Register or Office of Justice; enhanced reporting 31 December 2026
Private (family) trust, non-deposited New governance, documentation and beneficiary communication duties apply 1 July 2026
Purpose trust (non-charitable) Governance model and record-keeping duties align with private trusts 1 July 2026

Professional trustees (licensed under the TrHG) will see the 2026 changes overlap with their existing FMA compliance obligations, but must still update internal policies to match the specific governance requirements of Articles 897 et seq. Private trustees, individuals or unlicensed entities acting as trustee for a single family structure, face the steepest adjustment, as many will encounter formal governance obligations for the first time. Settlors should review reservation-of-power clauses and protector provisions to ensure compatibility. Beneficiaries gain new information rights but should also understand the procedural steps required to exercise them.

Trustee Duties and Increased Liabilities: Practical Implications of the Trust Governance Reform

The 2026 reform substantially raises the bar for trustee conduct. The expanded duties are not aspirational guidelines, they carry specific enforcement consequences.

Fiduciary duties expansion

Under Articles 897 et seq., the trustee’s fiduciary duties are codified with greater precision than ever before in Liechtenstein trust law. Trustees must now:

  • Act in the best interests of the beneficiaries (or the trust purpose, for purpose trusts), with a codified duty of loyalty that goes beyond the previous common-law-inspired standard.
  • Exercise skill and care proportionate to their expertise. Professional trustees are held to a higher standard than private trustees, but the reform makes clear that ignorance of the duties is no defence for either category.
  • Maintain impartiality among beneficiaries where the trust deed provides for multiple classes of beneficiary, documenting how competing interests are balanced.
  • Inform beneficiaries proactively. The new provisions establish a positive obligation to communicate material information about the trust’s administration, replacing the former position where information rights were largely a matter of contractual negotiation within the trust deed.

Governance processes

The reforms require trustees to adopt formal governance processes covering at least the following areas:

  1. Investment policy statement. A written document setting out the investment objectives, risk parameters, asset-allocation strategy and monitoring frequency.
  2. Conflict-of-interest register. A maintained log of actual and potential conflicts, together with the measures taken to manage each conflict.
  3. Distribution policy. Where the trust deed grants discretionary distribution powers, the trustee must document the criteria and reasoning for each distribution decision.
  4. Delegation framework. Any delegation of investment management, administration or advisory functions must be formalised in writing, with clear terms of engagement, performance benchmarks and review mechanisms.
  5. Record retention schedule. Governance documents, minutes, correspondence with beneficiaries and transactional records must be retained for a minimum period following the termination of the trust.

Liability and sanctions

The consequences of falling short of the new standards are material. Practitioner commentary, notably the FBS Tax analysis published in May 2026, reports that the reform framework provides for administrative fines of up to CHF 50,000 for breaches of registration, record-keeping and governance duties. Beyond financial penalties, trustees who fail to comply face potential personal liability for losses caused to the trust estate by their governance failures. The likely practical effect will be a marked increase in professional indemnity costs for trustees who cannot demonstrate robust governance frameworks.

Sample internal policy checklist for trustees:

  • Written investment policy, adopted, signed and dated before 1 July 2026.
  • Conflict-of-interest policy, including register template and escalation procedure.
  • Beneficiary communication protocol, specifying what information is shared, when and how.
  • Delegation agreements, all current delegations reviewed and formalised in compliant written agreements.
  • Record retention schedule, aligned with the minimum statutory retention period.
  • AML/CRS due-diligence review, updated to reflect any new beneficial-ownership reporting triggered by the reform.

Do Existing Trusts Need Amendments? Decision Tree and Sample Clauses

Not every Liechtenstein trust deed will require a formal amendment. The decisive question is whether the existing deed already contains governance provisions that are compatible with, or at least not contradicted by, Articles 897 et seq.

When an amendment is required

A formal trust deed amendment is necessary where:

  • The deed contains trustee powers or governance provisions that conflict with the mandatory requirements of the reformed PGR (for example, clauses that purport to exclude the trustee’s duty to inform beneficiaries in circumstances where the reform makes that duty non-excludable).
  • The deed is silent on governance matters that the reform now requires to be addressed, for instance, the absence of any investment policy framework, conflict-of-interest protocol or delegation standard.
  • The deed contains outdated cross-references to former PGR articles that are repealed or renumbered.

When an amendment may not be needed

If the trust deed was drafted with broad, modern governance clauses, such as a general duty to act in accordance with applicable law as amended from time to time, and does not contain provisions that actively contradict the new articles, then the reformed PGR provisions will apply by operation of law. In such cases, the trustee should still minute a formal resolution confirming that the deed has been reviewed and found compatible, and update any internal governance policies accordingly.

Sample amendment clauses

Where amendments are required, the following sample clauses illustrate the type of language to consider. These are indicative and should be adapted to each trust’s specific circumstances with appropriate legal advice.

Clause 1, Trustee power alignment:

“The Trustee shall exercise all powers conferred by this Deed and by law in accordance with the provisions of Articles 897 et seq. of the PGR as in force from time to time, and in the event of any inconsistency between this Deed and any mandatory provision of the PGR, the mandatory provision shall prevail.”

Clause 2, Beneficiary communication:

“The Trustee shall, subject to the exceptions permitted by Articles [reference] of the PGR, proactively inform each Beneficiary of material matters relating to the administration of the Trust, including but not limited to annual accounts summaries, material changes in investment strategy, and any distribution decisions.”

Clause 3, Delegation and investment policy:

“The Trustee shall maintain a written investment policy statement and shall review the same at intervals not exceeding twelve months. Any delegation of investment management shall be documented in a written agreement specifying the scope of delegation, the standard of care required of the delegate, and the Trustee’s monitoring obligations, in each case consistent with the requirements of Articles 897 et seq. of the PGR.”

Notarial form and typical wording

Under Liechtenstein practice, substantive amendments to a trust deed generally require notarial authentication (notarielle Beurkundung) where the original deed was executed in notarial form or where the deed itself prescribes notarial formalities for amendments. The amendment deed should be prepared in consultation with a Liechtenstein notary and will typically follow a structured format: recitals identifying the original trust deed and the reason for amendment, operative provisions setting out the amended clauses verbatim, and a closing attestation clause with the notary’s seal and signature.

Practical Steps: Trustee Compliance Checklist to Complete Before 1 July 2026

The following step-by-step checklist is designed to help trustees prioritise and sequence the actions needed to achieve compliance with the reformed Liechtenstein trust law provisions. Each step is mapped to a recommended timeline.

Step-by-step timed actions

  1. Immediate, Trust deed audit. Compile a complete register of all trusts under your administration. For each trust, obtain the current trust deed, any supplementary deeds or side letters, and the existing governance documentation. Flag every deed for review against the Articles 897 et seq. requirements.
  2. Immediate, Convene trustee review meeting. Schedule a formal meeting of all trustees (or the board of the corporate trustee) to discuss the reform and assign responsibility for the compliance review. Minute all decisions.
  3. Within 14 days, Legal review. Instruct a Liechtenstein-qualified lawyer or notary to conduct a clause-by-clause review of each trust deed identified as potentially non-compliant. Obtain a written opinion on whether amendments are required.
  4. Within 30 days, Draft amendments. For trusts requiring amendments, prepare draft amendment deeds incorporating the necessary governance, communication and delegation clauses. Circulate drafts to all relevant parties (co-trustees, protectors, and settlors where their consent is required).
  5. Within 45 days, Update governance manuals. Prepare or update the internal governance manual for each trust, covering at minimum: investment policy, conflict-of-interest policy, beneficiary communication protocol, delegation framework and record retention schedule.
  6. Within 60 days, Notarisation. Execute the amendment deeds before a Liechtenstein notary. Ensure the notary attests each deed and that signed originals are filed correctly.
  7. Before 1 July 2026, Confirm compliance. Following notarisation, minute a formal trustee resolution confirming that all necessary amendments have been executed, governance policies updated, and the trust is compliant with Articles 897 et seq.
  8. Before 31 December 2026 (charitable/deposited trusts only), Registration. File the required registration documents with the Commercial Register or the Office of Justice. Confirm receipt and retain proof of filing.

Timeline summary

Timeframe Action Responsible party
Immediate Deed audit and trustee meeting Lead trustee / trust officer
Within 14 days Instruct legal review Trustee + Liechtenstein lawyer/notary
Within 30 days Draft amendments and circulate Lawyer / notary + trustee
Within 45 days Update governance manuals Trustee / compliance officer
Within 60 days Notarisation of amendments Notary + all signing parties
Before 1 July 2026 Confirm compliance by trustee resolution All trustees
Before 31 Dec 2026 Registration of charitable/deposited trusts Trustee + Office of Justice / Commercial Register

Notarial and Registration Formalities: How to Amend, Deposit and Register

Understanding the practical mechanics of amending a trust deed in Liechtenstein is critical for meeting the 1 July 2026 deadline. The notarial formalities are well established but must be followed precisely to produce a legally effective amendment.

Required documents and process

The typical notarial amendment process requires the following:

  • Original trust deed (or a certified copy), the notary must verify the existing terms and the amendment power being exercised.
  • Draft amendment deed, prepared by the instructing lawyer, setting out the precise changes in operative form.
  • Evidence of authority, proof that the person executing the amendment has the power to do so (board resolutions for corporate trustees; trustee resolutions for individual trustees; and, where applicable, settlor consent or protector approval).
  • Identification documents, valid passports or identity cards for all signatories, as required for notarial authentication under Liechtenstein law.
  • AML documentation, where the notary is subject to due-diligence obligations, current know-your-customer documentation for the trust and its participants.

The notary will read or explain the amendment deed to the parties, witness the signatures, and apply the notarial seal and attestation. The executed original is retained by the notary and certified copies are issued to the parties.

Deposit and filing with the Office of Justice

For deposited trusts, the amendment must be filed with the Office of Justice (Amt für Justiz) within the timeframe prescribed by the trust deed or, absent such a provision, within a reasonable period following execution. Charitable trusts must complete their registration with the Commercial Register by 31 December 2026. The registration filing typically requires submission of the trust deed (or a summary thereof), details of the trustee, the trust purpose, and a declaration of compliance with the applicable PGR provisions. The LLV factsheet on Articles 897–932 provides further procedural detail.

Typical notary fees and timeframes

Notary fees in Liechtenstein are regulated by the Notary Fee Ordinance (Notariatsgebührenverordnung) and depend on the value of the transaction and the complexity of the deed. Industry observers expect straightforward trust deed amendments to be processed within two to four weeks from instruction to execution, although complex multi-party amendments or those requiring coordination across jurisdictions may take longer. Trustees should factor in additional time for translation, apostille or legalisation if any documents originate outside Liechtenstein.

Cross-Border Issues and Family Office Considerations Under the Liechtenstein Trust Law Reform

Liechtenstein trusts frequently involve settlors, beneficiaries and assets spread across multiple jurisdictions. The 2026 reform does not operate in a vacuum, its interaction with the tax, regulatory and private international law frameworks of other countries demands careful attention.

Common scenarios and solutions

  • Choice of law. Trust deeds should contain an express choice of Liechtenstein law as the governing law of the trust. Where the trust deed is silent, the 2026 reform provisions will apply by default to trusts with their closest connection to Liechtenstein, but uncertainty may arise if cross-border trusts lack explicit choice-of-law language. Trustees should use the amendment window to insert or confirm a clear governing-law clause.
  • CRS and AML interplay. The enhanced beneficial-ownership record-keeping under Articles 897 et seq. intersects with Liechtenstein’s obligations under the Common Reporting Standard (CRS) and anti-money-laundering (AML) legislation. Trustees who are already CRS-compliant will find overlap, but should verify that their internal records satisfy both the CRS reporting requirements and the new PGR governance standards, as the two regimes may differ in scope and detail.
  • Settlor and beneficiary home jurisdictions. Changes to trust governance, particularly enhanced beneficiary information rights, may have unintended consequences in jurisdictions that treat the provision of information as evidence of a beneficiary’s “interest” in the trust for tax purposes. Family offices managing cross-border trusts should obtain local tax advice in the settlor’s and each major beneficiary’s home jurisdiction to assess whether the reformed communication duties could trigger adverse tax outcomes.
  • Reservation-of-benefit risks. Where the settlor retains powers (such as the power to revoke, the power to direct investments, or the right to add or exclude beneficiaries), the reformed governance framework may bring greater transparency to those retained powers. In jurisdictions such as the United Kingdom, this transparency could reinforce arguments that the trust is a “sham” or that the settlor has reserved a benefit. Early legal review is essential.

Key Dates and Obligations at a Glance

Date Requirement Who it affects
1 July 2026 New trust governance provisions (Articles 897 et seq. PGR) enter into force, expanded trustee duties, governance processes and documentation standards apply All trustees, settlors and beneficiaries of Liechtenstein trusts
31 December 2026 Registration/deposit deadline for charitable and deposited trusts with the Commercial Register or Office of Justice Charitable trusts and deposited trusts
Ongoing Maintain enhanced governance records; comply with notarial formalities for all future trust deed amendments; retain records for minimum statutory period All trustees (professional and private), notaries, family offices

Obligations by entity type:

Entity type Primary obligation Additional consideration
Professional trustee (TrHG-licensed) Align existing FMA compliance framework with Articles 897 et seq.; update internal policies and templates Higher standard of care; potential professional liability exposure
Family office / private trustee Adopt formal governance processes for the first time; prepare written policies and maintain records May need to engage external compliance support
Charitable trust Complete registration by 31 December 2026; comply with governance duties from 1 July 2026 Enhanced reporting obligations; administrative fines for late registration

Conclusion

The 2026 reform of Liechtenstein trust law marks a decisive shift towards codified governance, enhanced transparency and stronger accountability for trustees. The window to achieve compliance is narrow: the core provisions take effect on 1 July 2026, and charitable trusts must be registered by 31 December 2026. Trustees who delay risk not only administrative fines but also personal liability exposure and reputational harm. The practical steps are clear, audit, amend, update and register, and the cost of inaction far exceeds the cost of compliance. For any professional trustee, family office or private client adviser with a Liechtenstein trust under their care, now is the time to act.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Sabine Dorn at Müller & Partner Rechntsanwältea, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Regierung des Fürstentums Liechtenstein, Trustee Act / Legislative Papers
  2. LLV (Liechtensteinische Landesverwaltung), Factsheet on Trust (Art. 897–932)
  3. Universität Liechtenstein, Liechtenstein Trust Conference 2026
  4. Mondaq, Liechtenstein Trust Law Reform 2026/27
  5. Oxford Academic (Trusts & Trustees), Comparative Paper on 2026 Reform
  6. FBS Tax, An Alpine Wake‑Up Call
  7. Grant Thornton Switzerland / Liechtenstein, Overview of Liechtenstein Trust
  8. Liechtenstein Trust, Establishment and Administration Guide

FAQs

What exactly changes in Liechtenstein trust law from 1 July 2026?
The reformed Articles 897 et seq. of the Persons and Companies Act (PGR) introduce a codified governance model for all Liechtenstein trusts. This includes expanded trustee duties covering documentation, beneficiary information, conflict management and investment governance, together with revised registration and record-keeping requirements.
Not necessarily. Trusts whose deeds already contain modern, compatible governance provisions may not require formal amendments. However, where a deed is silent on governance matters now required by the reform, or where it contains clauses that conflict with mandatory new provisions, a notarial amendment will be necessary. All trusts should be reviewed and a trustee resolution should document the outcome of that review.
Trustees must adopt written governance processes (investment policy, conflict-of-interest register, distribution documentation, delegation framework), proactively inform beneficiaries of material matters, and maintain enhanced records. Practitioner analysis indicates that administrative fines of up to CHF 50,000 may be imposed for non-compliance, and trustees face potential personal liability for losses attributable to governance failures.
Convene a trustee review meeting immediately. Audit all trust deeds under administration. Instruct a Liechtenstein lawyer or notary to identify deeds needing amendment. Draft and execute amendments before 1 July 2026. Update governance manuals and internal policies. For charitable or deposited trusts, begin the registration process well ahead of the 31 December 2026 deadline.
Yes. While the governance requirements apply to all trusts from 1 July 2026, charitable and deposited trusts must complete their registration with the Commercial Register or the Office of Justice by 31 December 2026.
Liechtenstein law permits a degree of overlap between the roles of settlor, trustee and beneficiary, which is one of the features that distinguishes the Liechtenstein trust from common-law models. However, such overlap raises practical and tax consequences, particularly in the settlor’s home jurisdiction, where it may be treated as evidence that the trust is ineffective for tax purposes or that the settlor has reserved a benefit. The 2026 governance reforms bring greater transparency to these arrangements, which could intensify scrutiny by foreign tax authorities.
Amendments typically require a written amendment deed prepared by a qualified lawyer, notarial authentication by a Liechtenstein notary (where the original deed was in notarial form or the deed prescribes this), and filing or deposit with the Office of Justice within the applicable timeframe. The notary will verify authority to amend, witness signatures, and apply the notarial seal.
Family offices should insert or confirm express choice-of-law clauses in all trust deeds. They should document all governance decisions meticulously, verify that CRS and AML records meet both Liechtenstein and home-jurisdiction standards, and obtain local tax advice in each major beneficiary jurisdiction to assess whether the enhanced beneficiary information rights could trigger adverse tax outcomes.
By George Fouskarinis

posted 24 minutes ago

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Liechtenstein Trust Law Reform 2026: What Trustees, Settlors and Beneficiaries Must Do Before 1 July

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