Banking Guide · SearchOffshore

Offshore Banking
in Luxembourg

A guide to offshore and private banking in Luxembourg — Europe's second largest private banking centre, covering CSSF-regulated private banks, account types, minimum deposits, EU passporting advantages and how Luxembourg compares to Switzerland and other European banking centres.

Overview

Luxembourg is Europe's second largest private banking and wealth management centre — a Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier (CSSF)-regulated jurisdiction managing an estimated EUR 300 billion or more in private banking assets, home to over 120 banks from more than 25 countries. Luxembourg's private banking sector is built on EU membership, MiFID II consumer protections, a deep multilingual professional infrastructure and an unparalleled integration with the world's second largest fund industry. Luxembourg banks serve a predominantly European UHNW client base — Belgian, German, French, Italian, Scandinavian and broader international clients — alongside holding company clients whose SOPARFI or fund-related banking needs fit naturally within the Luxembourg ecosystem. Luxembourg participates fully in CRS automatic exchange and EU DAC2 mandatory reporting, and has a FATCA IGA with the United States. It is not a banking secrecy jurisdiction, but provides institutional quality banking within an EU-regulated framework that few offshore or mid-shore jurisdictions can match.

Key Facts

Luxembourg Banking at a Glance

120+

CSSF-licensed banks in Luxembourg

EUR 300bn+

Estimated private banking assets under management in Luxembourg

#2

Luxembourg's ranking as European private banking centre by AUM — second only to Switzerland

EU

Full EU member state — MiFID II, GDPR, EU banking passport for all licensed institutions


Types of Banking Available

Luxembourg Banking Services for International Clients

Account TypeWho It ServesTypical MinimumCurrencyKey Features
Private BankingUHNW European families; Belgian, German and French wealth; internationally mobile professionalsEUR 500,000–2m+ investable assets (varies by institution)EUR primary; USD, CHF, GBP, SGD widely availableDiscretionary and advisory investment management; UCITS and AIF product access; portfolio lending; estate planning; multilingual service (French, German, English)
SOPARFI / Holding Company AccountLuxembourg SOPARFI holding companies; SPE groups; PE-backed corporate structuresRelationship-based — linked to corporate banking relationshipEUR and USD standard; multi-currencyIntercompany lending accounts; dividend receipt and distribution; interest collection; FX; corporate cards; SWIFT
Fund BankingLuxembourg UCITS, RAIF, SIF, SCSp fund vehicles; ManCo and AIFM bankingFund subscription accounts from launchEUR and USD primary; fund base currencyDepositary bank services; subscription and redemption processing; NAV banking; regulatory capital accounts for AIFMs and ManCos
Corporate and CommercialMNEs with Luxembourg holding structures; professional services firms; financial institutionsEUR 5,000–25,000 initial deposit typicallyEUR primary; multi-currencySWIFT; trade finance; payroll; internet banking; FX hedging; letters of credit
Depositary BankingLuxembourg-domiciled AIFs and UCITS requiring a depositary under AIFMD and UCITS DirectiveDepositary fee-based — linked to fund AUMFund base currencyAsset safekeeping; cash flow monitoring; oversight of fund administrator and AIFM; CSSF reporting

Why Luxembourg for Private Banking

Luxembourg's Key Banking Advantages

EU Membership and MiFID II

The onshore European alternative

Luxembourg is a full EU member state — its banks operate under MiFID II consumer protection rules, GDPR data protection, EU banking directives and the full EU single market regulatory framework. For European UHNW clients who want their private banking within the EU framework — rather than in Switzerland (outside EU) or the Channel Islands (Crown Dependencies) — Luxembourg provides institutional quality banking with full EU regulatory protections. MiFID II's client classification, best execution and product governance rules apply to all Luxembourg bank investment services.

Multilingual Professional Services

French, German, English, Luxembourgish

Luxembourg's four official languages and deep multilingual professional culture make it uniquely accessible to the European UHNW client base. Belgian clients bank comfortably in French; German clients in German; international clients in English. Luxembourg private bankers are typically fluent in three or more languages. This linguistic infrastructure — along with deep cultural familiarity with the specific wealth planning needs of Belgian, French and German UHNW families — is a genuine competitive differentiator versus offshore centres and versus Switzerland for specifically European clients.

SOPARFI and Fund Integration

Banking within the holding ecosystem

Luxembourg's dominance in European holding company structures (SOPARFI) and fund vehicles (SCSp, RAIF, UCITS) means that Luxembourg private banks operate within the same professional ecosystem as the law firms, tax advisors and fund administrators that manage the client's Luxembourg corporate structures. A Luxembourg private bank can seamlessly service both the client's personal wealth portfolio and the banking of the SOPARFI holding group or SCSp fund through which the family's PE interests are held.

UCITS and AIF Investment Access

Full fund product range

Luxembourg is the world's second largest fund centre — Luxembourg private banking clients have access to the full range of UCITS and AIF products domiciled in Luxembourg, covering virtually every global asset class. This means a Luxembourg private bank client can access institutional-quality global investment strategies through Luxembourg-domiciled fund wrappers directly within their banking relationship, often with preferential pricing on Luxembourg-managed fund products.


Account Opening Requirements

What Luxembourg Banks Typically Require

Client TypeKey DocumentsPractical Note
Individual (private banking)Valid passport; proof of address; source of wealth documentation (comprehensive narrative and supporting evidence — inheritance, business sale, professional earnings); source of funds for initial deposit; tax identification number for CRS and FATCA; professional reference in some casesLuxembourg private banking is relationship-driven. Most leading private banks require a minimum investable asset threshold and prefer client introductions through established intermediaries — law firms, tax advisors, family offices or independent asset managers. Walk-in accounts are not typical at private bank level.
Luxembourg company (SOPARFI etc.)Certificate of incorporation; M&A; shareholder register; identification for all directors and UBOs; corporate structure chart; business description and purpose; source of fundsLuxembourg-incorporated entities are typically efficient to bank with Luxembourg institutions — the bank and the company share a Luxembourg connection and the compliance teams are familiar with standard Luxembourg corporate structures. Account opening typically takes 2–4 weeks for well-documented Luxembourg companies.
Luxembourg fund (RAIF, UCITS, SCSp)Fund constitutional documents; CSSF authorisation or AIFM appointment confirmation; prospectus or placement memorandum; identification for all directors and management; investment manager and ManCo detailsFund banking — particularly depositary appointment — is usually arranged by the fund's law firm and fund administrator as part of the fund launch process. Depositary appointments for Luxembourg funds are made at fund formation and are a regulatory requirement under AIFMD and UCITS.
Non-resident individualAs for resident individual plus additional KYC for non-Luxembourg tax residency; home country tax residency certificate; explanation of reason for Luxembourg bankingNon-residents are accepted at Luxembourg private banks, particularly those with a Luxembourg investment, a Luxembourg holding company or family connection. EU residents from Belgium, France and Germany have historically been Luxembourg's core non-resident private banking market. Non-EU non-residents require a more compelling rationale for Luxembourg banking.

Luxembourg vs Other European Banking Centres

How Luxembourg Compares

FactorLuxembourgSwitzerlandJerseyLiechtenstein
EU membershipYes — full EU member; MiFID II; EU banking passportNo — EEA associate; bilateral agreements with EUNo — Crown Dependency; no EU passportingYes — EEA member; EU financial services passporting
Private banking AUM (Europe)#2 in Europe#1 globallySignificant — top 10 globallyCHF 300bn+ — specialist high-end
Primary client languageFrench, German, English equallyFrench (Geneva), German (Zurich), English internationallyEnglish primaryGerman primary; English available
Primary client baseBelgium, France, Germany, Italy, broader EU and internationalLatin America, Middle East, Europe, globalUK, Africa, Middle EastGerman-speaking Europe; EEA clients
Fund integrationDeep — world's second largest fund centreGood — Swiss fund marketStrong — particularly PE and real estateGood — Liechtenstein fund market with EEA passporting
CRS / automatic exchangeYes — CRS and EU DAC2Yes — CRSYes — CRSYes — CRS and EEA
Civil law structures alongside bankingSOPARFI, SCSp, RAIF nativelySwiss foundations and AG structuresCommon law trusts and JPUTsFoundation (Stiftung), Anstalt — richest civil law toolkit

Compliance and Transparency

CRS, DAC and Luxembourg Banking

Luxembourg is a full participant in the OECD Common Reporting Standard (CRS) and additionally subject to the EU's own automatic exchange framework — the Directive on Administrative Cooperation (DAC2 and subsequent iterations) — which mandates CRS-equivalent reporting within the EU on a mandatory basis. Luxembourg financial institutions report non-Luxembourg-resident account holder information to the Luxembourg tax authority annually, which exchanges this information with the account holder's home tax authority automatically. Luxembourg also has a FATCA IGA with the United States.

Luxembourg banking ended its era of banking discretion definitively in 2015 when it joined the CRS automatic exchange framework. Before 2015, Luxembourg operated an EU Savings Tax Directive withholding tax regime that some clients used to defer disclosure of Luxembourg interest income. That regime no longer exists. Contemporary Luxembourg banking is built entirely on transparency — all account information of non-resident clients is routinely shared with their home tax authorities.

Luxembourg banks apply MiFID II-compliant client classification, suitability assessment and product governance rules to all investment services — providing a level of consumer protection broadly comparable to FCA-regulated UK investment services. Luxembourg's deposit guarantee scheme (FGDL) protects deposits up to EUR 100,000 per depositor per bank.

See also: CRS · FATCA · Private Banking · Offshore Wealth Structuring


Browse all wealth managers and banking providers listed in Luxembourg — CSSF-regulated private banks, investment managers and fiduciary services.

Browse Luxembourg Banking Providers

FAQ

Luxembourg Banking — Common Questions

No — Luxembourg banking is fully transparent to EU tax authorities. Luxembourg participates in both OECD CRS and the EU's own DAC2 mandatory exchange framework, which requires automatic exchange of financial account information with all EU member state tax authorities. Luxembourg banks report all non-resident EU account holder information to the Luxembourg tax authority annually, which exchanges it with the account holder's home EU member state automatically. French, Belgian, German and other EU-resident account holders in Luxembourg have their account information — balances, interest, dividends and proceeds — reported to their national tax authorities each year. Luxembourg ended banking secrecy in 2015 when it joined the CRS framework. Non-EU account holders in CRS participating jurisdictions are similarly reported to their home authorities. Luxembourg banking provides institutional quality and service, not secrecy.
Switzerland remains the world's largest private banking centre by AUM, with more private banks, more private banking professionals and a longer historical tradition. Luxembourg is Europe's second largest and has grown significantly, particularly for specifically European clients who value EU membership, MiFID II consumer protection, and integration with Luxembourg's UCITS and SOPARFI holding company ecosystem. Key practical differences: Switzerland is not an EU member state and Swiss banks do not benefit from EU passporting — a Swiss bank serving a German or French client is operating across jurisdictions without EU single market rights, whereas a Luxembourg bank has full EU passporting. Luxembourg is multilingual in French, German and English, making it naturally comfortable for Belgian, German and French clients in a way that Swiss German-centric Zurich or Franco-centric Geneva may not match for all. Many UHNW European families maintain private banking relationships in both Luxembourg and Switzerland for different purposes.
Luxembourg's deposit guarantee scheme — the Fonds de Garantie des Dépôts Luxembourg (FGDL) — protects deposits up to EUR 100,000 per depositor per bank. This is the EU standard under the EU Deposit Guarantee Schemes Directive. For deposits above EUR 100,000 in a specific bank, the guarantee does not apply — the financial strength of the specific institution is the relevant protection factor. Some categories of deposits receive temporary enhanced protection (up to EUR 2.5 million for life events such as property transactions, divorce, marriage, retirement) for up to three months. Luxembourg's strong fiscal position, AAA sovereign credit rating and status as a systemically important EU financial centre provide additional systemic stability around its banking sector. Practically, Luxembourg bank clients at major international private banks are typically benefiting from the financial strength of a well-capitalised global banking group rather than relying primarily on the EUR 100,000 state guarantee.
Yes — Brexit did not prevent UK residents from banking in Luxembourg. UK residents are non-EU persons for CRS purposes, so their Luxembourg account information is reported to HMRC via the CRS framework. They are not entitled to EU citizens' freedom of movement, but there is no legal restriction on UK residents holding Luxembourg bank accounts. Luxembourg private banks that previously served UK clients under EU passporting arrangements have adapted their operating models — most have obtained UK regulatory permissions, established UK branches, or restructured their UK client relationships to comply with FCA requirements for serving UK residents post-Brexit. For UK-resident UHNW clients seeking European private banking in an EU-regulated, multilingual centre, Luxembourg remains accessible and actively serves UK-origin wealth.

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