Wealth structuring
Bringing entities, holdings, residence and succession into one structure built to survive a handover.
Wealth structuringSwiss law gives you real freedom to decide who inherits (widened by the 2023 reform that cut the forced-heirship reserves), but only within rules that bite: compulsory portions, the choice of national law, and the marital-property division that happens before the estate is even distributed. Get one of them wrong and the result is not what you intended, and it cannot be fixed after death. We settle the choice of law, the property regime and the cantonal tax, and draft instruments that hold up for a cross-border family.
Choice of law, property regime and tax, settled first.
Succession planning arranges, in advance, who receives what on death and how: through a will or inheritance agreement, a marital-property agreement, and where useful a foundation or trust. Under the Swiss Civil Code, as summarised by the federal portal, you have real freedom (widened since 2023) but within forced-heirship reserves and the interaction of property and succession law. For a cross-border family the choice of law is decisive. We plan it in full, before it is needed.
Succession planning connects to wealth structuring, often uses a foundation or trust, and follows a relocation.
Four things shape a Swiss estate plan, and they interact. Getting any one wrong distorts the result.
| Element | What it does |
|---|---|
| Forced heirship | Reserves a minimum for close heirs (cut in 2023) |
| Choice of law | Foreigners may elect national law |
| Marital property | Settled before the estate is distributed |
| Cantonal tax | Varies by canton and relationship |
Since 2023 the disposable portion is larger (descendants’ reserve cut from three-quarters to one-half, parents’ reserve abolished, the spouse’s reserve unchanged), so there is more room to favour a spouse, a successor or a charity. But the reserves still bind, and the property regime and choice of law can change the picture entirely. We work all four together.
The reform widened testamentary freedom by cutting the protected reserves. The reserve is the share of a statutory heir’s legal entitlement that you cannot freely dispose of: what is left over is the disposable portion you can direct anywhere.
| Heir | Reserve before 2023 | Reserve from 2023 |
|---|---|---|
| Descendants | 3/4 of their entitlement | 1/2 of their entitlement |
| Surviving spouse | 1/2 | 1/2 (unchanged) |
| Parents | 1/2 | None, abolished |
The practical effect: a parent with children and a spouse can now direct a materially larger slice to the spouse, a chosen successor or a charity than before 2023. It also means any will drafted on the old reserves may now give away less freedom than the law allows — a plan written before the reform is worth revisiting. We recalculate the disposable portion on the current reserves and the marital-property split together, because the two are settled in sequence, not in isolation.
Settle the choice of law and property regime, model the tax, then draft instruments that fit, coordinated with any structure.
Understanding the family, where the assets sit, and the cross-border connections that drive the law.
Analysing whether to elect national law and how Swiss and foreign succession rules interact.
Settling the marital-property regime and modelling cantonal and foreign inheritance tax.
Drafting the will or inheritance agreement and property agreement to strict formal requirements.
Adding a foundation, trust or holding where it serves the plan, and coordinating the whole.
Cost depends on the complexity of the family and assets, the number of jurisdictions, and whether the plan involves a structure or a business succession. A straightforward will is modest; a multi-country estate with a business and a structure is a larger engagement, and far cheaper than the dispute an unplanned one causes.
We scope and quote against the situation. Pricing is on request.
Discuss your planA succession plan that gives effect to your wishes rests on:
Every other engagement allows a second pass; a succession plan does not. A will that ignores the marital-property regime, misses the choice of law, breaches a forced-heirship reserve, or fails a formal requirement produces a result that binds (a spouse under-provided for, a business forced into sale, avoidable tax incurred, heirs in dispute) and none of it can be corrected once the person has died. This is why the planning is deliberate, precise and done in advance, and why a plan made before the 2023 reform should be reviewed. We plan as if there is no second chance, because there is not.
Settling the law, the property regime and the tax, and drafting instruments that hold up for a cross-border family, is the work this firm does.
The decisive question for an international estate (which law governs) analysed before anything is drafted.
The marital-property division, the cantonal tax and the instruments planned as one outcome, not three separate documents.
Instruments drafted to strict formal validity and current law, so the plan does what it intends when it matters.
Bringing entities, holdings, residence and succession into one structure built to survive a handover.
Wealth structuringA durable vehicle that can hold family wealth or a business across the generational transition.
Swiss foundationA foreign-law trust, administered from Switzerland, where it serves cross-border succession.
Trusts & trustee servicesTell us your family, assets and where they sit. A partner settles the choice of law, the property regime and the tax, and drafts the instruments that hold up.