The $124 trillion Great Wealth Transfer is already under way. According to Cerulli Associates, an estimated $6 trillion will move from baby boomers to their heirs in 2026 alone — and a significant proportion of that wealth is locked inside real estate. For families who own holiday homes in Europe, the question is no longer whether to pass property down, but how to do it without losing a fortune to inheritance tax.
Here is the good news: Europe’s regional governments have been quietly competing to attract property investment by slashing succession taxes. Andalucía offers 99% inheritance tax relief. The Balearic Islands have gone even further with 100% reductions for direct descendants. France provides generous per-child allowances. And when you combine these regional breaks with the LLC-structured co-ownership model that platforms like Co-Ownership Property use, the result is a genuinely tax-efficient route to passing a luxury holiday home to your children — without the complications, costs, or capital outlay of full ownership.
The Challenge
Why Traditional Holiday Home Inheritance Is So Expensive
Inheriting a holiday home sounds wonderful in theory. In practice, it is one of the most tax-inefficient ways to receive wealth. A property worth €1 million in France could trigger up to €250,000 in succession tax for a single child inheriting from a parent, once allowances are exhausted. In Belgium, rates can reach 80% for distant relatives. Spain’s national scale tops out at a staggering 87.6%, though regional reliefs dramatically reduce this in practice.
Beyond the headline tax rates, there are practical costs that catch families off guard. Probate fees, notary costs, property valuations, and legal translations all add up. If the property sits in a country where the family is non-resident, double-taxation treaties may not fully protect them. And if multiple siblings inherit a single property, disagreements about usage, maintenance, and eventual sale can fracture family relationships — a scenario estate lawyers call the ‘holiday home trap’.
The traditional solution — gifting the property during your lifetime — triggers its own tax liabilities. In France, lifetime gifts above the €100,000 per-child allowance are taxed at the same progressive rates as inheritance, up to 45%. In Germany, rates reach 50% for large transfers to non-close relatives. The system, in short, is designed to extract maximum value from property transfers — unless you know where to look for the exceptions.
The financial difference between inheriting a full holiday home and inheriting a co-ownership share is stark. Consider a family with a €1.5 million villa on the Costa del Sol. Under full ownership, even with Andalucía’s generous 99% relief, the sheer administrative burden — Spanish probate, notary costs, property registration fees, NIE applications for heirs, and legal translations — can easily cost €15,000–€25,000 and take 6–12 months to complete.
Now compare that to a co-ownership share in the same property. The share value is around €190,000. The transfer is an LLC membership change — a single legal document. Administrative costs are typically under €2,000. The process takes weeks, not months. And because the value falls well within regional tax-free thresholds, the inheritance tax liability in Andalucía, Valencia, or the Balearics is effectively zero.
For properties in France, the maths is equally compelling. A family with two children can transfer shares worth up to €400,000 combined without triggering any succession tax at all — enough to cover two co-ownership shares in even the most luxurious French Alps chalets or South of France villas. The same family inheriting a full €2 million property would face a tax bill of approximately €160,000 after allowances.
| Destination | Inheritance Tax Rate (Direct Family) | Co-Ownership Advantage |
|---|---|---|
| Andalucía, Spain | 99% relief + €1M allowance | Share value under €200K = zero effective tax |
| Balearic Islands | 100% reduction since 2023 | Full exemption on all co-ownership transfers |
| France (Alps, Riviera) | 5–45% (€100K/child free) | Share values fall within per-child allowance |
| Italy (Lakes, Coast) | 4% above €1M threshold | Share values never approach €1M threshold |
| Portugal (Algarve) | 0% — no inheritance tax | Complete tax-free transfer of shares |
| USA (Colorado, CA, FL) | $13.99M federal exemption | Share values far below exemption ceiling |
Country Guide
Inheritance Tax Rates Across Europe’s Top Co-Ownership Destinations
Understanding the inheritance tax landscape across Europe’s most desirable holiday home destinations is essential for making informed decisions about where to invest. The variation between countries — and between regions within countries — is enormous, and it directly affects the long-term cost of ownership for your family.
What stands out from this data is that co-ownership’s lower asset values consistently fall beneath the most generous exemption thresholds. Whether you are looking at Spanish coastal properties, Italian Lakes villas, or Colorado ski chalets in the USA (where federal estate tax exemptions remain at $13.99 million per person through 2025), the share structure keeps you in the most tax-efficient zone possible.
The numbers behind the Great Wealth Transfer are extraordinary. Cerulli Associates projects that $124 trillion in assets will move between generations by 2048, with approximately $25 trillion flowing into real estate according to Federal Reserve data. Baby boomers currently own 41% of all US property, and this massive portfolio is beginning to change hands.
For the receiving generation — predominantly millennials and Gen X — the challenge is not just inheriting property, but inheriting it efficiently. A 2026 Belli International Real Estate report noted that an estimated $6 trillion is transferring this year alone. Many heirs are discovering that the properties they inherit come with maintenance burdens, running costs, and tax liabilities they cannot afford. The result is a growing wave of forced property sales — families selling holiday homes they love because the cost of keeping them is unsustainable.
Co-ownership solves this problem elegantly. Instead of inheriting a full property with 100% of the running costs, the next generation inherits a share — with proportional costs split between all co-owners. A one-eighth share means one-eighth of the maintenance, insurance, taxes, and management fees. The property is fully managed, so heirs do not need to coordinate with strangers or organise repairs from another country. They simply inherit a luxury asset with minimal ongoing financial burden.
Practical Steps
How to Structure Your Co-Ownership Purchase for Maximum Tax Efficiency
If you are considering co-ownership with an eye to future inheritance, there are several practical steps that can maximise your tax efficiency. First, choose your destination strategically. Regions with the most generous inheritance tax reliefs — Andalucía, Valencia, the Balearics, and countries like Portugal and Italy — offer the lowest transfer costs for your heirs. Co-Ownership Property’s team can help you match your lifestyle preferences with the most tax-efficient locations through a free consultation.
Second, consider gifting shares during your lifetime rather than leaving them in your estate. In France, the €100,000 per-child allowance resets every 15 years, so early transfers lock in today’s values and allowances. In Spain’s reformed regions, lifetime gifts now enjoy the same 99–100% reliefs as inheritances. In the USA, annual gift exclusions of $18,000 per recipient (2024 figure) allow gradual transfer of LLC interests without touching your lifetime exemption.
Third, work with advisors who understand cross-border structures. The LLC model used in co-ownership is specifically designed by specialist tax and legal firms to optimise for international property holding. Each property’s structure accounts for the relevant domestic tax treaties, corporate tax treatment, and succession law. Co-Ownership Property connects buyers with these specialists as part of the buying process, ensuring your purchase is structured correctly from day one.
Common Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I transfer my co-ownership share to my children during my lifetime?
Yes. Because you own an LLC membership interest rather than a direct property share, transferring to your children is a straightforward corporate transaction. In many European jurisdictions, this can be done with minimal documentation and attracts the same generous tax reliefs as inheritance — and in some cases, even better terms for lifetime gifts.
Do my children need to be residents of the country where the property is located?
No. Since 2014, a landmark EU Court of Justice ruling has ensured that non-residents can access the same regional tax benefits as residents in EU countries. Your children can inherit or receive a gift of a co-ownership share regardless of where they live, and benefit from local reliefs like Andalucía’s 99% reduction or the Balearic Islands’ 100% exemption.
What happens to the other co-owners if I transfer my share?
Nothing changes for them. The property management continues exactly as before. The management company handles all coordination between owners, so your children step into your usage rights, booking access, and proportional cost share without any disruption to other co-owners.
How is a co-ownership share valued for inheritance tax purposes?
The share is valued based on the proportional property value, but professional valuers can apply minority interest and lack-of-marketability discounts — typically reducing the taxable value by 15–35%. This means a one-eighth share of a €2 million property might be valued at under €200,000 for tax purposes, falling within most European tax-free allowances.
Is co-ownership inheritance different from timeshare inheritance?
Completely different. A timeshare is a usage right with no real asset value — it cannot appreciate, cannot be freely sold, and often comes with perpetual maintenance obligations that heirs are stuck with. A co-ownership share is deeded real estate ownership through an LLC. It appreciates with the property market, can be sold at market price, and comes with proportional — not perpetual — costs.
What if my children don’t want to keep the share?
They can sell it at any time. The management company first offers the share to existing co-owners in the property, then lists it for sale if needed. Average resale time is around one month — significantly faster than selling a full property. Your children receive market value for the share, making it a liquid inheritance rather than a burden.
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