Swiss Inheritance Law Swiss Inheritance Law

Swiss Inheritance Law

Swiss Inheritance Law — Intestate Succession, Wills & Inheritance Agreements, Cross-Border Issues

Last updated: 3 Oct 2025

Swiss Inheritance Law

A practical overview of Swiss inheritance law under the Swiss Civil Code (ZGB): intestate succession, wills and inheritance agreements, forced shares (as reformed on 1 Jan 2023), executors, acceptance/disclaimer, how “probate” works in Switzerland, cross-border topics, a short tax note, a checklist, and FAQs.

Intestate succession (statutory shares)

Without a valid will/Erbvertrag, the estate is distributed by parentelas (Stämme):

ScenarioWho inherits?Typical split with spouse/registered partner
Descendants exist Spouse/registered partner and descendants Spouse 1/2, descendants 1/2 (per stirpes)
No descendants, parents alive Spouse/registered partner and parents (2nd parentela) Spouse 3/4, parents 1/4 (parents split equally)
No descendants or parents Grandparents and their issue (3rd parentela) — failing which the canton/persons designated by law Allocated within the parentela, per stirpes

Registered partners are broadly equated with spouses for succession. Cohabitees have no automatic statutory share.

Forced shares (Pflichtteile) — reform effective 1 Jan 2023

  • Descendants: compulsory portion = 1/2 of their statutory share (reduced from 3/4).
  • Parents: no compulsory portion since 2023 (removed by reform).
  • Spouse/registered partner: compulsory portion remains (typically 1/2 of their statutory share).

The freely disposable portion increased due to the 2023 reform, allowing more flexible estate planning (e.g., for spouses/partners or charities).

Wills vs. inheritance agreements (Erbvertrag)

Wills (Testament)

  • Holographic (entirely handwritten, dated, signed).
  • Public (notarial) will before a notary with two witnesses.
  • Oral emergency will (exceptional; strict conditions, two witnesses; short validity).
  • No joint wills: Joint spousal wills are not admitted; use an inheritance agreement instead.

Inheritance agreements (Erbvertrag)

  • Contract between the testator and (prospective) heirs/beneficiaries.
  • Form: public deed before a notary + two witnesses.
  • Can bind parties (e.g., waiver of forced shares; reciprocal arrangements in blended families).
  • Amendments require consent of the contracting parties.

Typical clauses & tools

  • Executor (Willensvollstrecker) for administration and distribution.
  • Vermächtnis (legacy) — a specific asset or sum to a person/charity (beneficiary is not an heir).
  • Usufruct for spouse/partner over the family home or portfolio.
  • Vorerbeneinsetzung/Nacherbeneinsetzung (successive heirship; akin to life/remaining interests).
  • Conditions & reversion (e.g., substitution if a beneficiary predeceases).
  • Coordination with marital property (güterrechtliche Vorschriften) before calculating the estate.

Acceptance, disclaimer & liability

  • Acceptance: express or tacit (e.g., taking estate assets).
  • Disclaimer (Ausschlagung): heirs can renounce within a 3-month period (from learning about their entitlement; extensions for heirs abroad are possible via the authority).
  • Limiting liability: benefit of public inventory (öffentliches Inventar) or official liquidation can protect against unknown debts.
  • Deadlines and procedures are supervised by the competent cantonal inheritance authority/notary.

“Probate” in Switzerland (authorities & documents)

Switzerland does not have Anglo-American “probate”. Instead:

  • Competent authority (cantonal inheritance authority or notary) opens the estate and oversees initial measures.
  • Certificate of inheritance (Erbbescheinigung / certificat d’héritier) confirms who may represent the estate and receive assets.
  • Executor (if appointed) administers and distributes according to the will/Erbvertrag and law.
  • Public inventory or official liquidation may be ordered on request or ex officio to protect creditors/heirs.

Cross-border issues (applicable law & assets)

  • Applicable law: Under Swiss PILA, succession of a person domiciled in Switzerland is generally governed by Swiss law, unless a foreign national makes a valid professio iuris in favor of their national law.
  • EU Succession Regulation (Brussels/EU): Switzerland is not an EU member; however, EU citizens with Swiss ties often combine an EU law choice with Swiss practice—coordination is key.
  • Immovables abroad: Local situs law often controls conveyance/registration—obtain local counsel early.
  • Company shares, bank assets, IP: Gather corporate registers, bank domicile confirmations, and valuation reports to avoid delays.

Short note on inheritance/gift taxes

Switzerland levies inheritance/gift taxes at the cantonal level (no federal inheritance tax). Spouses are generally exempt; many cantons also broadly exempt children, while transfers to more distant relatives or unrelated persons may be taxed. For cross-border cases, see:

Tax outcomes depend on the canton, the heir’s relationship, and any applicable treaty/credit rules abroad.

Document checklist

Identity & authority

  • Death certificate; family record excerpts
  • Will/Erbvertrag originals; codicils; marriage/partnership contracts
  • Executor appointment; contact of the competent authority/notary
  • Applications for Erbbescheinigung (certificate of inheritance)

Assets & liabilities

  • Bank/brokerage statements; bank domicile letters
  • Land register extracts; real estate appraisals
  • Company registers; shareholder lists; partnership agreements
  • Insurance policies; pension/2nd-pillar statements
  • Debt schedule; creditor notices

FAQ

Can spouses/partners make a joint will in Switzerland?

No. Joint wills are not admitted. Use an inheritance agreement (Erbvertrag) executed by public deed with two witnesses.

What are the current compulsory portions?

Since 1 Jan 2023: descendants: 1/2 of their statutory share; parents: none; spouse/registered partner: 1/2 of statutory share (typical).

How long do I have to disclaim?

Generally 3 months from learning of your entitlement. The authority may extend deadlines for heirs abroad; ask promptly.

Is there “probate” like in common law jurisdictions?

No. The cantonal inheritance authority/notary supervises; an Erbbescheinigung serves to prove representation of the estate.

Do children always pay Swiss inheritance tax?

Often no. Many cantons exempt descendants; always verify the specific canton.


Talk to us

We coordinate Swiss estate administration (executor support, inventories), cross-border law choices, and cantonal tax exposure. For complex estates, we work with notaries and local counsel.

Disclaimer: This page provides general information and is not legal or tax advice. Outcomes depend on facts, canton practice and current law. Obtain advice before you act.