In this episode, we examine a controversial development in Swiss CRS practice: the extension of look-through obligations for trusts that qualify as Reporting Financial Institutions (FI-trusts).
The issue centers on whether a trust must look through entity account holders—even when those entities themselves qualify as Financial Institutions.
🔎 The Legal BackgroundUnder the Common Reporting Standard (CRS) issued by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, an account holder that qualifies as a Financial Institution (FI) is generally a non-reportable person.
For FI-trusts, equity interest holders are typically:
• The settlor
• The beneficiary
• Any natural person exercising ultimate effective control
Where such persons are themselves Reporting FIs, the traditional interpretation is that reporting stops at that institutional level.
📘 The OECD Implementation Handbook InfluenceThe controversy arose from language in the OECD CRS Implementation Handbook, which states that:
Where an equity interest is held by an entity, the equity interest holders are the controlling persons of that entity.This has been interpreted by some jurisdictions to require trusts to look through entity settlors, trustees, protectors, or beneficiaries to identify natural controlling persons.
🇨🇭 Switzerland’s 2021 RevisionIn 2021, guidance issued by the State Secretariat for International Finance (SIF) and adopted by the Swiss Federal Tax Administration revised Switzerland’s CRS position.
The Revised Swiss CRS Guidance introduced an obligation for FI-trusts to:
• Look through entity account holders
• Identify and report the controlling persons
—even where the entity itself qualifies as a Financial Institution.
This effectively removes the traditional “FI blocker” concept.
⚖️ The Core DebateCritics argue that this approach:
• Conflicts with the text of the CRS itself
• Conflates Financial Institutions with Passive NFEs
• Treats FI equity interest holders similarly to Passive Non-Financial Entities
• Expands reporting obligations beyond the Standard
Supporters contend that:
• The OECD Implementation Handbook clarifies the intended scope
• The FI status of an entity does not eliminate the need to identify natural persons ultimately connected to the trust
• The approach enhances transparency and consistency
🎯 Why This MattersThe question is not merely academic. It affects:
• The scope of reporting by FI-trusts
• The treatment of institutional settlors and beneficiaries
• Whether FI status acts as a reporting “blocker”
• The balance between textual interpretation and administrative guidance
At its core, this debate illustrates a broader tension within CRS implementation:
Does administrative clarification expand obligations, or merely explain them?
🔑 Key TakeawaySwitzerland’s revised approach reflects a broader trend toward substance-over-form transparency. Whether it constitutes a reinterpretation or an expansion of the CRS remains debated among practitioners.
For advisors and trustees, the lesson is clear:
CRS compliance now depends not only on the Standard itself—but also on how individual jurisdictions interpret and implement it.