Why Small Business Owners Need to Rethink the Way They Pass On Their Companies
For many small business owners, the idea of passing the torch, whether to children or trusted partners, comes with a daunting set of questions. How do you ensure continuity, avoid family disputes, and safeguard the company’s future? Enter the Stichting Administratiekantoor (STAK), a legal structure that promises to separate economic ownership from control. But is it the silver bullet for business transfers, or just another layer of complexity?
The STAK: More Than a Technical Tool
A STAK is a foundation that holds legal ownership of company shares and issues certificates to the real economic stakeholders. These certificates entitle holders to dividends and capital appreciation, but not necessarily to a seat at the decision-making table. Unless the rules say otherwise, voting rights stay with the STAK’s board.
This isn’t just a tool for large corporations. For family businesses and micro-enterprises, the STAK can be transformative, if wielded with care.
Why Use a STAK in Business Transfers?
Let’s get practical. Here’s why small companies turn to the STAK:
- Continuity and Control
When succession is at stake, especially within families, the STAK can help keep the business on course, even if not all heirs are active in daily operations. - Separation of Powers
Economic interest (who benefits financially) can be split from control (who makes decisions). That means non-active children can inherit value without interfering with the company’s direction. - Protection Against Fragmentation
Multiple heirs? The STAK prevents the company from splintering into rival factions, keeping control consolidated. - Tax Optimization
Used properly, the STAK can help minimize tax liabilities during transfers, provided all regulations are followed.
How Does It Work?
The STAK is created by notarial deed, with articles spelling out its role as share manager. Administrative regulations govern how certificates are issued, who votes, and how records are kept. While certificates aren’t regulated by statute, private law fills the gap, transparency is key.
In family transfers, Dutch tax law provides relief if certain conditions are met. For instance, transferring shares via a STAK may be tax-neutral if the economic interest doesn’t change hands. The Dutch Tax Authority generally accepts this—so long as the structure isn’t just a fiscal trick.
A Real-World Example
Consider Karel, age 58, preparing to hand over his metalworks company to his son Hans. He sets up a STAK, which issues certificates of the company’s real estate holding. Hans gets control as STAK board member, while Karel retains economic interest. By distributing certificates among all three children, some active, some not, Karel ensures fairness and flexibility. Annual gifts up to the tax-free threshold allow him to transfer wealth gradually, without triggering excessive taxes.
What to Watch Out For
- Legal Advice Is Essential
Clear rules on voting, distributions, and transferability are a must. - Fiscal Neutrality Can Be Fragile
Changes in the certificate-holding structure may trigger taxes if not handled correctly. - Avoid Abuse
The Tax Authority scrutinizes STAKs used solely for tax savings without real business purpose. - Family Governance Matters
Consider family charters or governance agreements to prevent disputes between active and passive heirs.
The Bottom Line
For small business owners, the STAK offers a powerful way to manage succession, preserve control, and optimize taxes. But it’s no panacea. The devil is in the details: compliance, transparency, and clear governance are non-negotiable.
Much like directors’ liability for unpaid taxes, the STAK requires discipline and foresight. Ignore the rules, and you risk turning a promising succession into a costly mistake. Get it right, and you’ll safeguard both the company’s future, and your family’s legacy.
Co-Founder of Xtroverso | Head of Ledger and Tax Compliance
Linda Pavan brings disciplined precision to Xtroverso, anchoring its financial, fiscal, and operational integrity. As a ZENTRIQ™ Certified Auditor, she translates complexity into clarity, ensuring every decision is traceable, compliant, and strategically sound. Her quiet rigor empowers businesses to act with confidence and accountability.