Jurisdictional Overview and Strategic Positioning
Geographic and Economic Context
Seychelles, comprising 115 islands in the Indian Ocean, strategically bridges Africa, Asia, and the Middle East. This positioning makes it ideal for companies serving emerging markets while maintaining offshore status.
Key Jurisdictional Strengths:
- Legal System: English Common Law with modern commercial legislation
- Political Stability: Stable democratic government since 1993
- Currency: Seychellois Rupee (SCR), but IBCs operate in any currency
- Time Zone: GMT+4 (overlaps with Middle East, Asia, and East Africa business hours)
- Language: English is an official language, facilitating international business
When Seychelles Makes Strategic Sense
From a structuring perspective, Seychelles is optimal for:
- International Trading Operations: Companies buying from one jurisdiction and selling to another without Seychelles nexus
- Holding Structures: Owning shares in operating companies across multiple jurisdictions
- Intellectual Property Holding: Licensing patents, trademarks, and copyrights internationally
- E-commerce and Digital Services: Online businesses serving global markets
- Investment Vehicles: Private equity, venture capital, and portfolio investments
- Asset Protection Structures: Legitimate wealth preservation and estate planning
Professional Insight: Seychelles works exceptionally well as a mid-tier holding company in multi-jurisdictional structures, sitting between ultimate beneficial owners and operational entities in high-tax jurisdictions.
Legal Framework and Entity Types
International Business Companies (IBCs)
The International Business Companies Act 2016 governs Seychelles IBCs, replacing the older 1994 Act with enhanced features:
Core Characteristics:
- Cannot conduct business with Seychelles residents (ring-fencing provision)
- Cannot own real property in Seychelles (with limited exceptions)
- Cannot engage in banking, insurance, or fund management without a license
- May be tax-resident elsewhere if managed and controlled outside Seychelles
Share Structure Flexibility:
- Bearer shares: Prohibited (since 2013 amendments)
- Registered shares: Unlimited classes and series permitted
- No-par value shares: Allowed
- Treasury shares: Company may hold its own shares
- Share capital: Can be denominated in any currency
Special License Companies (CSLs)
For businesses requiring Seychelles presence:
- Can trade with residents and own local property
- Subject to 1.5% tax on gross turnover (maximum SCR 200,000 annually)
- Useful for real estate holding or local service provision
Trusts and Foundations
Seychelles International Trusts:
- Asset protection after 1-2 years (creditor challenge period)
- No forced heirship recognition from foreign laws
- Confidential and flexible wealth transfer mechanism
Foundations:
- Hybrid between trust and company
- No beneficiaries required at formation
- Ideal for succession planning and charitable purposes
Taxation Architecture: Understanding the Territorial System
The Zero-Tax Paradigm for IBCs
Seychelles operates a pure territorial tax system for IBCs:
Tax Treatment by Income Type:
| Income Type | IBC Tax Rate | Domestic Company Rate |
| Foreign-sourced trading income | 0% | 25% (if repatriated) |
| Foreign-sourced investment income | 0% | 25% (if repatriated) |
| Foreign-sourced capital gains | 0% | 0% |
| Seychelles-sourced income | Not permitted | 25% |
| Export income (ITZ registered) | N/A | 15% |
Critical Tax Planning Points:
- Source of Income Determination: Income is foreign-sourced if:
- Contracts negotiated and executed outside Seychelles
- Services delivered outside Seychelles
- Goods sourced and delivered outside Seychelles
- Management and control exercised outside Seychelles
- Tax Residency vs. Incorporation: A Seychelles IBC incorporated in Seychelles but managed and controlled elsewhere may be tax-resident in the jurisdiction of management. This creates planning opportunities and compliance obligations.
- No Withholding Taxes: Seychelles does not impose withholding tax on:
- Dividends paid by IBCs
- Interest payments (except on Seychelles government securities)
- Royalty payments
- Management fees
Substance Requirements and Economic Nexus
Post-BEPS Environment:
While Seychelles does not mandate extensive substance for IBCs, international best practices now require:
- Adequate Substance Test: For certain income types (IP, financing, distribution), maintaining proportionate:
- Physical presence (office, if needed)
- Qualified employees or outsourced management
- Adequate expenditure relative to activities
- Core Income-Generating Activities (CIGA) performed locally or through service providers
Practical Implementation:
- Seychelles registered agent can provide basic substance services
- Director services can be local or international
- Bank accounts should show genuine commercial activity
- Minutes and resolutions should document strategic decisions
Professional Recommendation: Even though not legally required, maintaining defensible substance prevents challenges in:
- Ultimate beneficial owner’s residence jurisdiction
- Jurisdictions where the company operates
- Banking relationships requiring CRS/FATCA compliance
Corporate Governance and Structural Requirements
Directorship and Management
Minimum Requirements:
- Directors: Minimum 1 (no maximum limit)
- Residency: No requirement for local directors
- Corporate Directors: Permitted (useful for nominee arrangements)
- Nationality: Any nationality acceptable
Best Practice Governance Structure:
For credible international operations:
- Appoint at least 2-3 directors for substantive decision-making
- Hold regular board meetings (quarterly recommended)
- Maintain comprehensive minutes documenting strategic decisions
- Consider advisory board for specialized guidance
Director Duties and Liabilities:
- Fiduciary duty to act in company’s best interest
- Duty of care and skill
- Avoid conflicts of interest
- Proper accounting and record maintenance
- Personal liability for fraudulent or wrongful trading
Shareholder Structure
Minimum Requirements:
- Shareholders: Minimum 1 (no maximum)
- Corporate Shareholders: Permitted (common in multi-tier structures)
- Nominee Shareholders: Allowed with proper disclosure to registered agent
Ownership Planning Considerations:
- Single vs. Multiple Shareholders:
- Single shareholder simplifies decision-making but concentrates control
- Multiple shareholders may be required for substance or partnership arrangements
- Direct vs. Nominee Holding:
- Direct ownership: Transparent but disclosed to agent
- Nominee ownership: Additional privacy layer but requires trust deed
- Declaration of trust documenting beneficial ownership essential
- Multi-Tier Structures:
Individual/Family Trust (Jurisdiction A) - ↓
- Seychelles IBC (Holding Company)
- ↓
- Operating Companies (Jurisdictions B, C, D)
Professional Insight: For significant international operations, consider hybrid structures with operational substance in one jurisdiction (e.g., UAE, Singapore) and holding company in Seychelles for tax efficiency.
Confidentiality, Privacy, and Transparency Obligations
Privacy Protections
Information NOT Publicly Available:
- Beneficial owners and ultimate beneficial owners (UBOs)
- Shareholder register
- Director details
- Financial statements
- Company accounts and banking information
Information Publicly Available:
- Company name and registration number
- Date of incorporation
- Registered office address
- Registered agent details
- Company status (active/dissolved)
Beneficial Ownership Disclosure
Who Must Know:
- Registered Agent: Must maintain register of beneficial owners (persons holding >25% shares or control)
- Seychelles Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU): Can request information for AML/CFT investigations
- Foreign Tax Authorities: Under TIEA or EOI agreements (explained below)
- Banks and Financial Institutions: Under KYC/CDD requirements
NOT Required to Disclose:
- General public
- Competitors
- Casual inquirers
International Reporting Standards
Common Reporting Standard (CRS):
- Seychelles implemented CRS in 2017
- Financial institutions report account information to Seychelles Revenue Commission
- Information exchanged automatically with 100+ jurisdictions
- Covers bank accounts, investment accounts, and certain insurance products
FATCA Compliance:
- Seychelles has Intergovernmental Agreement (IGA) Model 1 with USA
- Seychelles financial institutions report US persons’ accounts to SRC
- SRC transmits to IRS annually
- Non-compliance can result in 30% withholding on US-source income
Practical Implications:
- Bank accounts in Seychelles (or anywhere) will be reported to tax residence country
- Passive income structures receive heightened scrutiny
- Transparent disclosure to tax authorities in residence country often mandatory
- Professional advice essential for legitimate tax planning vs. evasion
Tax Treaties and Information Exchange
Double Taxation Avoidance Agreements (DTAAs)
Current Status: Seychelles has signed limited DTAAs:
- Comprehensive DTAAs: Botswana, Cyprus, Indonesia, Malaysia, Mauritius, Qatar, San Marino, United Arab Emirates, Vietnam, Zambia, Barbados, Bermuda, China, Oman, Zimbabwe (some in negotiation/ratification)
- Shipping/Air Transport Agreements: Several additional countries
India-Seychelles Relationship:
- No DTAA currently in force (previous protocol terminated)
- Replacement treaty negotiated but not yet ratified
- Indian residents using Seychelles structures face:
- No treaty relief on withholding taxes
- Potential application of General Anti-Avoidance Rules (GAAR)
- Increased scrutiny under Place of Effective Management (POEM) rules
Tax Information Exchange Framework
Tax Information Exchange Agreement (TIEA):
- Seychelles has TIEA with multiple jurisdictions including India
- Allows exchange of tax information upon specific request
- NOT automatic exchange (different from CRS)
- Requires reasonable grounds and specific taxpayer details
Multilateral Convention on Mutual Administrative Assistance:
- Seychelles is signatory since 2020
- Enables exchange of information for tax purposes
- Covers administrative assistance, simultaneous examinations, assistance in recovery
What This Means Practically:
- Confidentiality is NOT Tax Evasion Shield: Information can be obtained by tax authorities through proper channels
- Legitimate Planning Protected: Compliant structures with business substance remain respected
- Aggressive Avoidance Exposed: Purely tax-motivated structures without substance face challenges
- Documentation Critical: Proper documentation of commercial rationale essential
Compliance, Accounting, and Regulatory Requirements
Annual Filing and Reporting
For International Business Companies (IBCs):
| Requirement | Frequency | Filing Location | Public Access |
| Annual Return | Annually (by anniversary date) | Registered Agent | No |
| Financial Statements | Prepared annually | Maintained by company | No |
| Audited Accounts | Not required (unless licensed activity) | N/A | No |
| Beneficial Ownership Register | Maintained continuously, updated within 14 days of changes | Registered Agent | No |
| Directors/Officers Register | Maintained continuously | Company records | No |
Renewal Fees:
- Annual government fee: Approximately USD 100-350 (varies by share capital tiers, though IBCs typically pay flat rate)
- Registered agent fee: USD 500-1,200 annually (market rates)
Accounting and Record-Keeping
Mandatory Records (maintained for 7 years):
- Accounting records showing income and expenditure
- Assets and liabilities statements
- Goods purchased and sold records
- Register of shareholders
- Register of directors and officers
- Minutes of shareholders and directors meetings
- Copies of written resolutions
Location of Records:
- May be kept anywhere in the world
- Must be accessible to directors
- Registered agent should have copies or access
- Accounting currency can be any currency
Audit Requirements:
IBCs are NOT required to conduct statutory audits unless:
- Articles of Association mandate it
- Shareholders request it by resolution
- Conducting licensed activities (banking, insurance, fund management)
- Required by banks or investors
Professional Recommendation: Even though not mandatory, annual internal management accounts and periodic reviews by qualified accountants strengthen structure’s credibility for:
- Banking relationships
- Investor due diligence
- Regulatory scrutiny in operating jurisdictions
- Succession planning and valuation
Banking and Financial Infrastructure
Bank Account Opening Landscape
Traditional Banking Challenges:
Post-financial crisis and increased compliance burden has made banking for offshore companies more challenging:
Factors Affecting Bank Account Opening:
- Nature of Business: E-commerce, consulting, holding companies generally easier than high-risk industries
- Economic Substance: Banks increasingly require evidence of real operations
- Transaction Volumes: Expected monthly turnover and transaction patterns
- Source of Funds: Clear documentation of capital sources
- Business Relationships: Contracts, invoices, and counterparty details
Recommended Banking Jurisdictions for Seychelles IBCs:
| Jurisdiction | Suitability | Opening Difficulty | Notes |
| Mauritius | High | Moderate | Good for Africa/Asia trade, familiar with Seychelles entities |
| Singapore | High | Difficult | Tier-1 banking, requires substance and strong documentation |
| UAE (Dubai) | High | Moderate-Difficult | Growing acceptance, requires business license and economic substance certificate |
| Cyprus | Moderate | Moderate | EU banking access, familiar with offshore structures |
| Latvia/Lithuania | Moderate | Moderate | EMI and fintech options, crypto-friendly |
| Seychelles Local Banks | Low | Easy | Limited international capabilities, higher costs |
| Fintech/EMIs | Moderate | Easy-Moderate | Wise, Payoneer, Stripe (subject to restrictions), good for e-commerce |
Documentation Typically Required:
- Certificate of incorporation and good standing
- Memorandum and Articles of Association
- Register of directors and shareholders
- Proof of registered office address
- Board resolution for account opening
- Business plan and financial projections
- Source of wealth and source of funds documentation
- Due diligence on beneficial owners (passport, address proof)
- Reference letters from banks or professional advisors
Professional Strategy:
- Prepare comprehensive business documentation before approaching banks
- Consider hybrid structures: Operating company in banking-friendly jurisdiction, Seychelles as holding company
- Use professional introducers: Registered agents or corporate service providers with banking relationships
- Diversify banking: Multiple accounts across jurisdictions reduces concentration risk
- Maintain transaction transparency: Clear narrations, supporting invoices, avoid cash transactions
Strategic Structuring: Practical Cross-Border Applications
Case Study 1: International Trading Structure
Scenario: Indian entrepreneur trading electronics from China to Middle East and Africa.
Suboptimal Structure:
- Indian Resident → Indian Company
- (40% tax on profits + GST compliance + complex FEMA regulations)
Optimized Structure:
Indian Resident (UBO)
↓
Seychelles IBC (Trading Company)
↓
UAE Branch/Distributor (for GCC market substance)
Benefits:
- 0% tax on profits in Seychelles IBC
- UAE distributor pays 0-9% corporate tax (post-2023 reforms with exemptions)
- Efficient repatriation to India through dividends (foreign company dividends may qualify for exemptions under specific conditions)
- No GST on international transactions
- Foreign exchange flexibility
Substance Requirements:
- Directors meetings held outside India (UAE/other)
- Bank account in UAE or international jurisdiction
- Contracts executed outside India
- Management and strategic decisions made by UAE-based or international directors
Case Study 2: Intellectual Property Holding
Scenario: Software company with development in India, sales globally.
Optimized Structure:
Founder (India/Singapore Tax Resident)
↓
Seychelles IBC (IP Holding Company)
↓ (License Agreement)
Indian Pvt Ltd (Development & Ops) → Pays royalty to Seychelles IBC
Tax Efficiency:
- Royalty paid by Indian company is tax-deductible expense (subject to India’s withholding tax on royalties)
- India charges 10% withholding tax on royalty to Seychelles (no treaty)
- Seychelles IBC pays 0% tax on royalty income (foreign-sourced)
- IP protected in separate entity from operational risks
- Valuation of IP company independent of operating company
Critical Compliance:
- Transfer Pricing: Royalty rate must be arm’s length (typically 2-10% of sales depending on functionality)
- Indian GAAR/POEM: Structure must have commercial substance, not solely tax-motivated
- Substance in Seychelles: While minimal, consider appointing qualified director, maintaining evidence of strategic IP management decisions
Alternative Enhancement: Add intermediate jurisdiction with DTAA benefits:
- Seychelles IBC → Cyprus/Mauritius Company → Indian Company
Cyprus or Mauritius may offer lower withholding tax under DTAA with India.
Case Study 3: Investment Holding Structure
Scenario: Family office holding investments across multiple countries.
Multi-Tier Structure:
Family Trust (New Zealand/Singapore)
↓
Seychelles IBC (Master Holding)
↓
├── Dubai Company (Real Estate)
├── Singapore Pte Ltd (Portfolio Management)
├── US LLC (Intellectual Property)
└── Mauritius Company (African Investments)
Strategic Advantages:
- Centralized Control: Single Seychelles entity owns all investments
- Tax Efficiency: Dividends flow up to Seychelles tax-free (subject to underlying jurisdictions)
- Asset Protection: Trust owns Seychelles IBC, providing creditor protection
- Succession Planning: Trust structure facilitates generational wealth transfer
- Flexibility: Easy to add/remove underlying investments without restructuring entire group
Substance Considerations:
- Trust should be in jurisdiction with strong trust law (New Zealand, Singapore, Jersey)
- Seychelles IBC should have non-resident directors making genuine investment decisions
- Underlying operating companies should have full substance in their jurisdictions
- Document investment rationale and strategic oversight by Seychelles company
Case Study 4: E-Commerce and Digital Services
Scenario: Drop-shipping business serving global markets.
Structure:
Entrepreneur (Indian Tax Resident)
↓
Seychelles IBC (E-commerce Trading Company)
↓
Payment Processors: Stripe, PayPal, Wise
↓
Supplier Payments: China/Vietnam manufacturers
Operational Setup:
- Seychelles IBC owns website domain, brand, and customer relationships
- Contracts with suppliers negotiated through IBC
- Payment processors in name of Seychelles IBC
- Fulfillment directly from manufacturer to end customer
- Customer service outsourced or handled remotely
Tax Outcome:
- Trading profits taxed at 0% in Seychelles (no Seychelles nexus)
- Entrepreneur may take salary or dividends (subject to personal tax in India)
- No GST/VAT obligations in Seychelles
- May need to register for VAT in destination countries if thresholds exceeded (EU, UK, etc.)
Compliance Priorities:
- Maintain bank/payment processor accounts in Seychelles IBC name
- Document substance: where are management decisions made?
- Indian tax residence: if controlled from India, may be deemed Indian tax resident under POEM
- Consider appointing non-Indian director or relocating to lower-tax jurisdiction personally
Incorporation Process: Step-by-Step
Phase 1: Pre-Incorporation Planning (1-2 weeks)
Step 1: Structure Design
- Define business objectives and income sources
- Determine optimal shareholding and directorship structure
- Assess substance requirements based on activity type
- Plan banking and operational jurisdiction
Step 2: Compliance Analysis
- Review tax implications in all relevant jurisdictions
- Assess reporting obligations (CRS, FATCA, local disclosures)
- Evaluate BEPS and anti-avoidance rules in residence country
- Confirm Seychelles suitability vs. alternative jurisdictions
Step 3: Select Service Providers
- Choose reputable registered agent in Seychelles
- Engage tax advisor familiar with cross-border structuring
- Identify banking relationship manager or introducer
- Consider legal counsel for complex structures
Phase 2: Incorporation Execution (1-3 days)
Required Information:
- Company Details:
- Proposed company name (3 alternatives recommended)
- Business activity description
- Registered office address (provided by agent)
- Financial year-end date
- Shareholder Information:
- Full name, address, nationality, date of birth
- Passport copy and proof of address (utility bill, bank statement)
- Source of funds declaration
- % shareholding and class of shares
- Director Information:
- Same KYC as shareholders above
- Curriculum vitae/resume
- Professional references (if required by agent)
- Beneficial Owner Information:
- Ultimate beneficial owners (>25% ownership or control)
- Complete KYC documentation
- Source of wealth documentation
Incorporation Documents Provided:
- Certificate of Incorporation
- Memorandum and Articles of Association
- Register of Directors
- Register of Shareholders
- First Board Resolution
- Share Certificates
- Certificate of Good Standing (upon request)
- Registered Office Address Confirmation
Costs:
- Government registration fee: ~USD 200
- Registered agent incorporation fee: USD 800-1,500
- Courier and document certification: USD 100-200
- Total typical cost: USD 1,100-1,900
Phase 3: Post-Incorporation Setup (2-8 weeks)
Step 1: Corporate Governance
- Execute shareholders’ agreement (if multiple shareholders)
- Adopt internal policies (AML, conflict of interest)
- Appoint officers (secretary, treasurer if needed)
- Establish meeting schedule for board and shareholders
Step 2: Banking and Financial Setup
- Prepare comprehensive bank account documentation
- Submit applications to 2-3 preferred banks
- Follow up on due diligence queries
- Activate payment processors (Stripe, PayPal, etc.)
Step 3: Operational Infrastructure
- Register domain names in company name
- Set up corporate email and communication tools
- Establish accounting software and bookkeeping system
- Engage accountant for ongoing record-keeping
Step 4: Compliance Framework
- Calendar annual renewal dates
- Set up reminder system for filings
- Establish document retention protocols
- Coordinate with tax advisors in all relevant jurisdictions
Ongoing Maintenance and Compliance Calendar
Annual Obligations
Seychelles Obligations:
- Annual Return Filing: By anniversary of incorporation (penalty for late filing: USD 50-500 depending on delay)
- Annual Government Fee: USD 100-350 paid with annual return
- Registered Agent Fee: USD 500-1,200 annually (varies by service level)
- Beneficial Ownership Update: Within 14 days of any change (penalty: USD 5,000-10,000 for non-compliance)
Accounting and Record-Keeping:
- Prepare management accounts annually (minimum)
- Update registers of directors and shareholders
- Maintain minute books with all resolutions and meetings
- Preserve accounting records and supporting documents (7 years)
- Update bank mandates and signatories as needed
Tax Compliance in Relevant Jurisdictions:
For Indian tax residents using Seychelles IBC:
- Disclose foreign company directorship in ITR (Schedule FA)
- Report foreign bank accounts if signing authority
- File Form 67 for foreign tax credit if applicable
- Disclose foreign assets exceeding INR 50 lakhs (if acquired after 2015)
- Potentially file transfer pricing documentation if related party transactions
For UAE tax residents (post-2023 corporate tax):
- Determine if Seychelles IBC is UAE tax resident (place of effective management)
- Register for corporate tax if UAE tax resident
- File annual corporate tax return (even if 0% rate applies)
- Maintain transfer pricing documentation for related party transactions
For Beneficiaries of Singapore Family Office:
- No disclosure required for foreign companies if through trust
- Report foreign sourced income only if remitted to Singapore
- Maintain substance to support non-Singapore tax residence
Multi-Year Events
Every 3 Years:
- Review and update corporate structure for tax law changes
- Reassess substance requirements based on evolving BEPS guidelines
- Update service provider relationships and fee structures
Every 5 Years:
- Comprehensive structure review with fresh tax analysis
- Consider migration or restructuring based on business evolution
- Evaluate alternative jurisdictions for improved efficiency
Every 10 Years:
- Major strategic review for generational wealth transfer
- Assess trust structure or foundation for succession planning
- Review asset protection adequacy and legal changes
Common Pitfalls and Risk Mitigation
Pitfall 1: Insufficient Substance
Problem: Seychelles IBC incorporated but all management from tax residence country.
Risk: Company deemed tax resident where managed and controlled (Place of Effective Management).
Mitigation:
- Appoint at least one non-resident director with real authority
- Hold board meetings outside residence country (documented with minutes)
- Execute significant contracts through authorized non-resident directors
- Maintain evidence of strategic decisions made outside residence country
- Consider substance package from registered agent (office, local director services)
Pitfall 2: Inadequate Documentation
Problem: Lack of proper board minutes, resolutions, and business rationale documentation.
Risk: Structure challenged as sham or tax avoidance scheme under GAAR/anti-avoidance rules.
Mitigation:
- Maintain detailed minutes for all board meetings and shareholder resolutions
- Document commercial rationale for structure (not solely tax savings)
- Preserve correspondence, contracts, and transaction records
- Annual certification by directors of company activities and tax residency
- Engage professionals to review documentation adequacy
Pitfall 3: Banking Relationship Failure
Problem: Unable to open or maintain bank account, causing operational paralysis.
Risk: Business cannot function; forced to use personal accounts (piercing corporate veil risk).
Mitigation:
- Open multiple accounts across different banks/jurisdictions
- Maintain transparent transaction records with clear business purpose
- Avoid cash transactions and cryptocurrency if possible
- Respond promptly to bank compliance queries with comprehensive documentation
- Consider hybrid structure with operating entity in banking-friendly jurisdiction
Pitfall 4: Non-Disclosure to Tax Authorities
Problem: Failing to disclose foreign company, directorship, or bank accounts to residence country tax authority.
Risk: Criminal penalties for tax evasion, substantial fines, and structure unwinding.
Mitigation:
- Full disclosure in annual tax returns of all foreign entities, roles, and accounts
- Engage tax advisor familiar with foreign disclosure requirements
- File FinCEN (US), Schedule FA (India), or equivalent forms as required
- Voluntary disclosure if past non-compliance discovered
- Understand CRS reporting will expose accounts automatically to residence country
Pitfall 5: Treaty Shopping and Anti-Avoidance
Problem: Using Seychelles IBC purely to access treaty benefits without real substance.
Risk: Treaty benefits denied under Limitation of Benefits (LOB) or Principal Purpose Test (PPT) rules.
Mitigation:
- Ensure genuine commercial purpose beyond tax savings
- Adequate substance in treaty jurisdiction (if using intermediate company)
- Avoid circular structures with no business rationale
- Document business evolution and strategic considerations
- Engage experienced tax counsel before implementing treaty-based structures
Alternatives to Seychelles: Comparative Analysis
When to Consider Alternative Jurisdictions
| Factor | Seychelles Best | Consider Alternative |
| Privacy | High privacy, minimal disclosure | UAE, Singapore (strong privacy with substance) |
| Cost | Low-cost structure needed | Seychelles ideal |
| Banking | Challenging banking landscape | Singapore, UAE, Mauritius (better banking access) |
| Tax Treaties | Limited treaty network | Cyprus, Mauritius, UAE (extensive DTAAs) |
| Reputation | Offshore holding, trading | Switzerland, Luxembourg (institutional investors) |
| Substance Requirements | Minimal substance acceptable | Jurisdictions requiring full operations |
| Regulatory Compliance | Simple compliance preferred | Seychelles ideal |
Jurisdiction Comparison Matrix
| Jurisdiction | Corp Tax | Setup Cost | Annual Cost | Substance Needed | Banking | Best For |
| Seychelles | 0% (IBC) | Low | Low | Minimal | Challenging | Cost-conscious entrepreneurs, holding companies |
| BVI | 0% | High | High | Minimal | Difficult | Funds, high-net-worth structures |
| Cayman Islands | 0% | Very High | Very High | Minimal-Moderate | Moderate | Institutional funds, large corporate structures |
| Singapore | 17% (0-5% effective) | Moderate | Moderate | High | Excellent | Operating companies, regional HQs, fintech |
| UAE (DIFC/ADGM) | 0% (9% coming) | High | High | High | Excellent | Middle East operations, trading |
| Mauritius | 15% (3% effective) | Moderate | Moderate | Moderate | Good | Africa/India focus, treaty benefits |
| Cyprus | 12.5% | Moderate | Moderate | Moderate | Good | EU access, IP holding, treaty network |
| Hong Kong | 16.5% (8.25% first HKD 2M) | Moderate | Moderate | High | Excellent | Asia operations, trading, legitimate business |