Combining many of the features of the SIF and SICAR regimes, the RAIF (reserved alternative investment fund or fonds d’investissement alternatif réservé) is Luxembourg’s investment vehicle that offers legal structuring and investment flexibility.
Luxembourg introduced the RAIF in July 2016, in order to increase its attractiveness for investment funds and asset management, and since, it has lived up to expectations.
Features of the RAIF
| Luxembourg RAIF | Luxembourg’s investment vehicle that can invest in all asset classes and investment strategies. |
| Applicable legislation | RAIFs are subject to the Luxembourg Law of 23 July 2016 (the RAIF Law) |
| Eligible investors | The RAIF is restricted to “well-informed” investors who can assess the risks associated with it (These are institutional investors, professional investors and investors who have confirmed in writing that they grasp the “well-informed” investor status). |
| Eligible assets | The RAIF can invest in any eligible alternative asset. |
| Risk diversification requirements | The RAIF must respect a 30% diversification threshold. There are, however, no risk diversification rules for RAIFs that invest exclusively in ‘risk capital’ investments. |
| Legal Form | A RAIF may be created under either 1. a contractual ‘common fund’ form (FCP), 2. a corporate legal form like a public or private limited liability company (S.A. or S.à. r.l.), 3. a corporate partnership restricted by shares (SCA) or 4. a partnership form (SCS or SCSp/Special Limited Partnership), either with variable or fixed capital (SICAV or SICAF). |
| Segregated compartments | Yes (RAIF allows for diversification, consisting in an “umbrella” fund with several compartments) |
| Capital requirements | The RAIF Law states that the RAIF’s net assets should reach a minimum of EUR 1,250,000 within twelve months after its establishment |
| Net asset value (NAV) calculation and redemption policy | At least once a year for reporting purposes. |
| Tax regime | RAIF is subject to an annual subscription tax of 0.01% on the Net Asset Value of the fund (with some exemptions available) and are exempted from Municipal Business taxes, wealth tax, Corporate Income taxes, and Net Income taxes. |
| Authorisation and supervision by the CSSF | No. RAIF is an unregulated fund and is not subject to the initial approval nor the supervision of the Luxembourg Financial Supervisory Authority (CSSF) |
| European passport | RAIF benefits from the European Passport, enabling all businesses invested in the fund to be marketed in all EU-countries; |
| Possibility of listing | Yes |
| Double Tax Treaties | RAIFs organised under a SICAV or SICAF may have access to the Double Tax Treaties concluded by Luxembourg. RAIFs established as FCPs or partnerships have no access to Double Tax Treaties. But, investors might claim the benefits of tax treaties. |
| Required Luxembourg service providers | – Management Company – a duly authorised AIFM – a depositary (subject to the AIFMD liability regime) – a statutory auditor – Registrar and Transfer Agent |
Up to now, the RAIF tops the list of the most prominent investment fund among investors and savers in Luxembourg. And its popularity depends on the benefits listed below.
- It can be formed in a very short time
- RAIF does not need the approval of CSSF for being established.
- It has the same flexibility proposed by Special Investment Funds (SIF) and Capital Risk Funds (SICAR).
- It has access to an EU marketing passport.
- It comes with structuring flexibility in addition to the AIFMD quality seal (transparency, risk management, and independent valuation).
Luxembourg is the world’s second-largest fund domicile after the USA, and in respect of this, there are numerous structures available for different types of investment fields.
To set up your investment fund in Luxembourg, let’s go ahead and contact your Damalion expert now.
Know more about: Luxembourg parallel funds, Luxembourg feeder funds.
Use Luxembourg’s Reserved Alternative Investment Fund (RAIF) — clear rules, investor eligibility, forms, governance, providers, diversification, tax and timings.
For professional and institutional strategies across private equity, venture capital, private credit, real assets and funds of funds. This page explains the legal and practical points in simple terms so counsel, managers and investors can work efficiently.
Last updated:What is a RAIF?
A RAIF is a Luxembourg alternative investment fund governed by the Law of 23 July 2016. It must be managed by an external authorised AIFM under the AIFM Law of 12 July 2013. There is no CSSF product authorisation, but the AIFM and core providers are regulated. The vehicle suits cross-border professional capital with short setup times.
Key facts at a glance
| Topic | Summary |
|---|---|
| Legal basis | RAIF Law of 23 July 2016; AIFM Law of 12 July 2013; where relevant, EU MMF Regulation for money-market strategies. |
| Investors | “Well-informed” investors: institutional or professional investors, or other investors confirming status and meeting legal suitability conditions (including the minimum investment threshold applicable at law). |
| Asset scope | All alternative assets and strategies. Risk-capital RAIFs follow specific rules. |
| Diversification | General 30% risk-spread rule (exceptions for pure risk-capital strategies apply). |
| Forms | FCP (contractual fund), corporate forms (S.A., S.à r.l., S.C.A.), or partnerships (SCS / SCSp). Variable (SICAV) or fixed (SICAF) capital possible. |
| Umbrella | Yes. Multiple compartments with segregated assets and liabilities. |
| Minimum capital | EUR 1,250,000 net assets within 12 months from launch. |
| Regulatory status | No CSSF product approval; the AIFM is authorised and supervised. Depositary is subject to AIFMD liability regime. |
| Passporting | EU AIFMD marketing passport via the authorised AIFM to professional investors, subject to conditions. |
| Listing | Possible to list units/shares on a stock exchange if desired. |
| Valuation & NAV | At least annually for reporting, more frequently per documents; independent valuation rules under AIFMD. |
| Tax | Subscription tax at 0.01% of NAV (with exemptions in defined cases). Generally exempt from Luxembourg income, municipal business and net wealth taxes. |
| Service providers | AIFM, depositary, auditor, central administration/transfer agent; legal counsel and tax advisers as needed. |
| Timing | Documentation and provider onboarding drive timing; once complete, launch can be rapid compared to fully regulated products. |
Legal forms and governance
- FCP: no legal personality; managed by a management company.
- Corporate forms: S.A., S.à r.l., S.C.A. with board or general meeting oversight according to form.
- Partnerships: SCS or SCSp with general partner and limited partners; partnership agreement defines rights.
- Umbrella/compartments: ring-fenced assets and liabilities; separate policies and fee schedules per compartment.
- Policies: valuation, conflicts, liquidity, risk management and remuneration per AIFMD standards.
Tax outline
- Subscription tax: 0.01% of NAV, typically calculated and paid quarterly. Certain strategies or assets may qualify for exemptions under specific conditions.
- Income/wealth taxes: generally not levied at fund level. No withholding on distributions under Luxembourg law.
- Treaties: access depends on legal form and substance (e.g., SICAV/SICAF forms may access double tax treaties, partnerships/FCPs typically do not at fund level).
- Investor taxation: depends on investor residence and profile; seek local advice.


