Will in Switzerland: template, forced-share calculator and your freely disposable portion

Without a will, the law decides, and it distributes differently than you think. Since 2023 you can freely dispose of at least half of your estate (the children's forced share dropped from three quarters to half, the parents' share is gone entirely). But only if your will holds up on form: handwritten, dated, signed (Art. 505 CC).

Key takeaway
With a valid will, in Switzerland since 2023 you can freely dispose of at least half of your estate, because the descendants' forced share is now only half (Art. 471 CC) and the parents' forced share was abolished. The handwritten will must be entirely written by hand, dated and signed (Art. 505 CC), otherwise it is void.
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Swiss will as a template with handwritten last wishes, fountain pen, Civil Code and franc notes, symbol of the forced share, the freely disposable portion and the forms under Art. 505
1/2
descendants' forced share
since 2023 (was 3/4)
≥ 50%
freely disposable portion
more than half (Art. 470)
0
parents' forced share
abolished since 2023
Art. 505
by hand + date
+ signature, else void

📜 Why a will changes everything: the law distributes differently than you think

Without a will, statutory succession applies, and it does not know your wishes. It distributes by fixed quotas: if you leave a spouse and children, each side inherits half (Art. 462 CC), the children dividing their half among themselves. Anyone who wants to better protect their partner, favour a child, a godchild or a foundation cannot avoid a will. That is exactly what the Civil Code (CC) created the disposition upon death for.

The will is your lever, but it has a limit: the forced share. You freely dispose of everything that is not a forced share, that is the freely disposable portion. And this is exactly where the 2023 Civil Code revision noticeably widened your room to manoeuvre. Anyone planning their estate often also thinks about lifetime gifts; for that, see the advance-on-inheritance guide with its equalisation calculator.

The will at a glance
Decide freely
You decide on the disposable portion
Forced share as limit
Descendants and spouse are protected
Form is mandatory
Handwritten or notarial, else void
Changeable anytime
A new will replaces the old one

⚖️ The forced share since 2023: what changed for your room to manoeuvre

This is the most important change. Since 1 January 2023, the descendants' forced share is only half of their statutory share, down from three quarters (Art. 471 CC). The parents' forced share was abolished entirely. The forced share of the spouse or registered partner stays at half. In short: you can now freely dispose of at least half of your estate, considerably more than before.

HeirForced share since 2023Basis (CC)
Descendants (children)1/2 of the sharesince 1.1.2023, was 3/4 (Art. 471)
Spouse / registered partner1/2 of the shareunchanged (Art. 471)
Parentsabolishedno forced share since 2023
Freely disposable portionat least 50%increased, was min. 25% (Art. 470)
Context
What many overlook: the forced share is not calculated on the whole estate, but on the statutory share. Example spouse plus two children: the children jointly inherit half by law, their forced share is half of that, so one eighth of the estate each. The spouse's forced share is one quarter. Together that is exactly half, the other half is free. How high the final inheritance tax is depends heavily on the canton of residence, as the tax comparison of the 26 cantons shows.

The 2023 succession reform: your room before and now

Disposable until 2022
25%
Disposable since 2023
50%
Children's share until 2022
75%
Children's share since 2023
50%

Source: CC Art. 470 ff., 2023 revision, per ConvivaPlus analysis

After succession comes the tax, and here Switzerland is generous: 23 of 26 cantons fully exempt direct descendants from inheritance tax. Only three tax your child, per the ConvivaPlus analysis of FTA data: Appenzell Innerrhoden (1%), Neuchâtel (3%) and Vaud (3.5%).

Inheritance tax for direct descendants by canton

steuerfrei3.5 %

Source: ESTV / kantonale Erbschaftssteuer, Stand 1.1.2025, laut ConvivaPlus-Auswertung

🧮 How much can you freely dispose of? The forced-share calculator

Now to the figure that really matters. With CHF 800,000 of estate, a wife and two children, you can freely decide on CHF 400,000, the other half is a forced share. Enter your estate value below, tell us whether you have a spouse and how many children, and you'll instantly see the statutory shares, the forced shares per heir and your freely disposable portion. Anyone who gives during their lifetime also checks the equalisation in the advance-on-inheritance calculator.

🧮 ConvivaPlus forced-share calculator: how much can you freely dispose of?

Enter the estate value, spouse and number of children, we compute the statutory shares, the forced shares and your freely disposable portion under the 2023 Civil Code

Example value: change estate, spouse and children above for your figures.

Distribution under the 2023 Civil Code
SpouseStatutory share: CHF 400'000Forced share per heir (CHF): CHF 200'000
Child 1Statutory share: CHF 200'000Forced share per heir (CHF): CHF 100'000
Child 2Statutory share: CHF 200'000Forced share per heir (CHF): CHF 100'000
Total forced shareCHF 400'000
Freely disposable portion
CHF 400'000 (50%)
Total forced shareCHF 400'000
Freely disposable portionCHF 400'000

Simplified ConvivaPlus calculation under the revised 2023 Civil Code (Art. 462, 470 ff.): descendants' forced share 1/2, spouse 1/2, parents' forced share abolished. Without guarantee, does not replace legal advice.

The ConvivaPlus forced-share calculator computes the forced shares under the revised 2023 Civil Code (descendants 1/2, spouse 1/2, parents' forced share abolished) and shows your freely disposable portion in francs, according to ConvivaPlus's analysis of the Civil Code sources.

✍️ Handwritten or notarial: which form of will to choose

Swiss law knows two practical forms. The handwritten (holographic) will (Art. 505 CC) you write entirely by hand, with place, date and signature, free and without a notary. The public will (Art. 499 ff. CC) you draw up before a public official, usually a notary, with two witnesses; it costs money but is particularly secure and probative. For most people the handwritten will is enough, as long as the form is correct. Anyone with complex circumstances rests easier with the notarial version.

FormHow it is validBasis (CC)
Handwritten willby hand + date + signatureArt. 505, free, no notary
Public willbefore a notary, two witnessesArt. 499 ff., paid, very secure
Oral willemergency onlyArt. 506, e.g. danger of death
Safekeepingsecure and findabledeposit with the canton possible
Warning
The golden rule for the handwritten will: it must come entirely from your hand. A sheet typed on a computer and only signed is void, as is a will without a date. So write the whole text yourself, add place and date, and sign at the end. The template below drafts the sample text that you then copy out by hand.

⚠️ These mistakes make a will void

A will rarely fails on content, almost always on form. These four mistakes are the most common in practice, and each can topple your last wishes:

📝 Drawing up a will correctly in 5 steps

Five steps, and your handwritten will is legally sound, formally valid and does exactly what you want.

  1. 1
    Clarify estate and heirsGet an overview of your assets and of who is protected by a forced share (descendants, spouse). From this follows your freely disposable portion, which the calculator above gives you.
  2. 2
    Set your wishesDecide who gets what: who becomes an heir, who receives a specific legacy (an object or a sum of money), who should be favoured within the free portion.
  3. 3
    Write the whole text by handDraft the will entirely by hand. Typing on a computer makes a handwritten will void (Art. 505 CC). Phrase it clearly and unambiguously.
  4. 4
    Place, date and signatureAt the end, add the place and the full date (day, month, year) and sign by hand. Without these three elements the will is contestable.
  5. 5
    Store safelyKeep the will so that it is found after your death, but safe from loss. In many cantons you can deposit it officially. Tell a trusted person where it is.

Note: journalistic orientation based on the current Civil Code rules, not legal advice. With larger assets, blended families, businesses or real estate, a visit to a notary or specialist is advisable. The applicable version of the Civil Code (SR 210) prevails.

✉️ Will generator (handwritten will, Art. 505 CC)

Fill in, get a sample text for your handwritten will. Copy or as PDF. Then copy it out by hand, date and sign. Free.

Handwritten will

I, …, residing in …, of sound mind and of my own free will, hereby make my will and dispose as follows: I appoint … as my heir and bequeath to this person …. I hereby revoke all my earlier dispositions upon death. {ort}, on … (Handwritten signature)

Important (Art. 505 CC): for this handwritten will to be valid, you must copy out the WHOLE text by hand, add the place and full date and sign it by hand at the end. A typed or undated will is void.

Sample text based on the current Civil Code rules, without guarantee. Does not replace legal advice. For a legally secure public will, consult a notary.

A will is not a sign of distrust towards your family, but a gift to them: clarity instead of a dispute at the open grave. And since 2023 you have more room for it than ever.

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What you really need to know about wills in Switzerland

Based on the Civil Code in its revised 2023 version and the information from ch.ch

🔍

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🏆 The ConvivaPlus verdict

We have reviewed the Civil Code in its revised 2023 version. The ConvivaPlus verdict: a will is simpler and more powerful than most people think. Since 2023 more than half of your estate is yours to give freely, you don't need a notary, and a sheet of paper is enough. The two real risks are not legal but practical: a formal flaw when writing, and a will that nobody finds. Write by hand, date it, sign it, and tell someone where it is. Your last wishes will then do exactly what you want.

ConvivaPlus Editorial

Templates

Researched and verified. Facts, not opinions.

Last updated:

Sources & methodology
As of: 19 June 2026
01
ch.ch – Will and succession agreement (Confederation)Forms of will, forced share, statutory succession
02
Civil Code – Swiss Civil Code (Fedlex)Art. 462 (shares), 470 ff. (forced share), 499 ff. + 505 (forms)
03
Federal Office of Justice – Succession law revision 2023Reform of the forced share, in force since 1.1.2023

All information without guarantee. Found an error? → support@conviva-plus.ch

💡Did you know?

Since 1 January 2023, the descendants' forced share is only half (down from three quarters), and the parents' forced share was abolished. You can now freely dispose of at least half of your estate, considerably more than before the revision.

Source: ZGB / ch.ch

Discussion

3 voices from the community

C
Carlafrom Chur

That the children's forced share dropped from three quarters to half in 2023 I had no idea. It gives me much more room for my godchild. Thanks for the clear explanation.

H
Hansuelifrom Burgdorf

Important note about the typed will. I had written mine on the computer and only signed it. Good thing I'm redoing it by hand now, otherwise it would have been void.

B
Brigittefrom Winterthur

I always thought I had to go to a notary. That a handwritten sheet is enough if the form is right was new to me. The calculator showed me I can freely dispose of more than I thought.

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Templates · 06/30/2026