Nidwalden Inheritance Tax Nonresident Guide Nidwalden Inheritance Tax Nonresident Guide

Nidwalden Inheritance Tax Nonresident Guide

Nidwalden Inheritance Tax — Nonresident Guide (2025)

Last updated: 14 Nov 2025

Nidwalden Inheritance Tax — Nonresident Guide

How the Canton of Nidwalden (Kanton Nidwalden) taxes nonresidents on Nidwalden-situs assets: who is taxed, what’s in scope, common cross-border issues, filing mechanics, documents, examples, and FAQs.

Service notice: Swiss inheritance tax services are delivered by Sesch TaxRep GmbH, Buchs SG (Switzerland).

At a Glance — Nonresident Exposure

Who is taxed?
Nonresident estates/beneficiaries are typically taxed in Nidwalden on NW-situs assets only, primarily immovable property (real estate) located in Nidwalden.
What’s outside scope?
Most intangibles (e.g., bank accounts, portfolio shares) follow the decedent’s domicile and are generally not NW-situs for nonresidents, unless functionally tied to a NW permanent establishment.
Debt allocation
Deduct only debts allocable to NW-situs assets (e.g., a mortgage on NW real estate). Keep evidence.
Double taxation
Relief usually relies on inter-cantonal allocation and foreign credits. Align valuation dates and documentation across jurisdictions.

What Counts as Nidwalden-Situs Property

Asset typeNonresident NW treatmentNotes
Real estate in NidwaldenIncludedPrimary trigger; valuation at date of death. Land register extract required.
Tangible movables kept in NWIncludedArtwork, vehicles, valuables physically in the canton (storage proof helpful).
Business assets tied to NW PEPotentially includedFunctional allocation may attach assets to NW even if title sits elsewhere.
Bank deposits / portfolio sharesGenerally excludedTypically follow domicile of decedent; check for PE/functional nexus exceptions.
Non-NW propertyExcludedHandled by the competent canton/foreign state per allocation rules.

Tip: Keep a clear NW schedule listing only assets and debts that belong in the Nidwalden base to avoid double counting.

Cross-Border Examples

Germany domicile + NW chalet

Scope: NW taxes the chalet and allocable mortgage; Germany taxes the worldwide estate.

Action: Use date-of-death appraisal; align FX rates and claim credits; file a limited NW return for the chalet only.

UK domicile + NW-stored art

Scope: Tangible art physically stored in NW is included; portfolio shares remain outside NW scope.

Action: Provide storage/insurance evidence; exclude UK-held intangibles from the NW base.

FR company with NW workshop (PE)

Scope: Assets functionally tied to the NW facility may be allocated to NW.

Action: Document nexus (leases, payroll, photos); provide an allocation methodology.

US domicile + NW apartment (no mortgage)

Scope: Apartment fully included; no debt deduction.

Action: Plan liquidity; consider instalment options with the tax office if needed.

Filing Mechanics (Nonresident Cases)

  • Who files: Executor/administrator or local representative; beneficiaries may be addressed directly for their share.
  • When to file: The tax office sets a due date by notice. Request extensions before the deadline if appraisals or foreign clearances are pending.
  • Where to file/pay: See Forms & Deadlines for the latest official links, addresses, and portals.
  • Computation model: NW-situs assets minus allocable debts and exemptions; rate class depends on relationship to decedent.
  • Payments: Interest may accrue after the payment due date on the assessment letter; instalments may be possible on request.

Documents & Evidence Checklist

  • Death certificate; will; succession certificate (Erbbescheinigung).
  • NW land register extract; date-of-death appraisal; photos and floor plan.
  • Mortgage statement as of date of death; bank proof of payoff/interest if applicable.
  • Inventory of NW-held movables (storage/insurance contracts).
  • Proof of beneficiary relationships (marriage/birth certificates; translations as needed).
  • Foreign estate/inheritance returns and proof of tax paid for credit claims.
  • Power of attorney for Swiss representative.

Need a quick estimate? Use the Nidwalden Calculator.

FAQs

Do nonresidents pay NW tax on Swiss bank accounts?

Typically no — most intangibles follow the decedent’s domicile unless tied to a NW permanent establishment.

Can I deduct general estate debts?

Only debts allocable to NW-situs assets (e.g., a mortgage on a NW apartment). Keep allocation evidence.

How do I avoid double taxation?

Coordinate valuation dates and FX rates; claim credits where available; keep consistent asset lists across jurisdictions.

Who receives the assessment?

Usually the estate representative; beneficiaries may receive share-based assessments depending on case setup.

Get help with a nonresident case

We prepare limited NW returns, coordinate cross-border relief, and manage valuations and filings.

Talk to an advisor — Fixed-fee packages Contact

Related pages: Overview · Forms & Deadlines · Planning · Cases · Calculator · Service Packages (Sesch TaxRep GmbH)