
2026 prediction: Tax reporting becomes the unexpected differentiator in private banking.
Here's why:
What banks think matters:
→ Investment performance
→ Fee structure
→ Relationship manager quality
→ Brand prestige
What actually drives retention:
All of the above, PLUS:
→ Does my bank make my life easier or harder?
→ Do operations match the premium positioning?
→ Does service quality extend beyond the front office?
Tax season is the annual test.
Two types of banks will emerge in 2026:
Type A: Tax as Strategy
Delivers: January, proactively, advisor-ready
Client experience: "My bank has this handled"
Operations: Efficient, scalable
Competitive position: Differentiated
Type B: Tax as Afterthought
Delivers: March, reactively, figure-it-out-yourself
Client experience: "This is more work than it should be"
Operations: Annual crisis
Competitive position: Vulnerable
The shift is already happening:
5 years ago:
Clients accepted basic tax documentation.
Late delivery was normal.
"Talk to your advisor" was acceptable.
Today:
Clients expect professional reports.
Proactive delivery is appreciated.
"Everything you need is included" is the standard.
Why this matters strategically:
Client acquisition cost: €50K-€150K per HNW relationship
Impact of poor tax support: Hard to quantify, but real
Clients don't leave over one bad tax report.
They leave after:
- Years of operational friction
- Accumulated "this should be easier" moments
- Comparisons with better experiences elsewhere
- Advisors saying "your bank makes my job harder"
2026 will show which banks treat tax as strategy – and which as an afterthought.