Ireland Company Formation – Complete Tax & Structuring Guide for International Businesses (2025)

Ireland Company Formation – Complete Tax & Structuring Guide for International Businesses (2025)

TL;DR

Ireland stands as Europe's premier tax-efficient jurisdiction, combining a 12.5% corporate tax rate with EU market access, robust IP protection, and a sophisticated DTAA network spanning 75+ countries.
For cross-border structuring, Ireland offers unmatched advantages: no withholding tax on outbound dividends to EU/treaty countries, participation exemption on foreign dividends, and the Knowledge Development Box (KDB) offering 6.25% effective tax on IP income.
Strategic positioning: Ireland serves as the optimal European headquarters, IP holding hub, and gateway to 450+ million EU consumers for Asian, American, and Middle Eastern businesses.

Table of Contents

Ireland Company Formation – Complete Tax & Structuring Guide for International Businesses (2025)

Legal and Regulatory Framework

Ireland operates under English Common Law, ensuring judicial predictability and strong contract enforcement—critical for international investors.

Key Legislations & Authorities

Legislation/Authority Function Relevance
Companies Act 2014 Consolidated company law framework Modernized, simplified compliance
Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 Primary tax legislation Updated regularly for BEPS compliance
Companies Registration Office (CRO) Company registry 2-5 day incorporation timeline
Revenue Commissioners Tax authority Advance ruling system available
Central Bank of Ireland Financial regulation For regulated entities only
Irish Data Protection Commission GDPR enforcement Strictest in EU—critical for tech firms

Practitioner Insight: Ireland’s advance tax ruling system allows certainty on complex structures before implementation—request rulings for transfer pricing, residence status, and treaty benefits.

Business Entity Selection – Strategic Analysis

Comparative Entity Framework

Entity Tax Treatment Compliance Burden Optimal Use Case
Private Company Limited by Shares (LTD) 12.5% trading income; participation exemption available Low—audit exemption possible 90% of cases: operating companies, trading entities
Designated Activity Company (DAC) Same as LTD Higher—constitutional restrictions Regulated activities (funds, insurance, aircraft leasing)
Irish Collective Asset-management Vehicle (ICAV) Tax transparent/exempt High—regulated Investment funds, alternative investments
Unlimited Company (ULC) Tax transparent for US purposes Moderate US tax planning: check-the-box eligible
Limited Partnership (LP) Tax transparent Low Venture capital, private equity fund structures
Section 110 SPV Tax-neutral Moderate Securitization, debt financing structures

Critical Decision Matrix

Choose LTD if:

  • Operating business generating trading income
  • Need limited liability with minimal compliance
  • Planning to use participation exemption or IP box
  • Employees in Ireland (substance requirements)

Choose DAC if:

  • Financial services, insurance, or fund management
  • Regulated activity requiring CBI authorization
  • Constitutional restrictions beneficial (creditor protection)

Choose ULC if:

  • US parent company structure
  • Need tax transparency for US federal purposes
  • Avoiding Subpart F income issues

Choose Section 110 SPV if:

  • Securitization or structured finance
  • Irish Qualifying Investor Alternative Investment Fund (QIAIF)
  • Debt capital markets transactions

Ireland’s Tax Ecosystem – The Complete Picture

Corporate Income Tax – Layered Analysis

Income Type Headline Rate Effective Rate (with planning) Key Exemptions/Reliefs
Trading Income 12.5% 10-12.5% R&D credit, capital allowances
Passive/Investment Income 25% 0-12.5% Participation exemption, KDB
Patent/IP Income 12.5% 6.25% Knowledge Development Box (KDB)
Capital Gains 33% 0-12.5% Substantial shareholding exemption, participation exemption

Game-Changing Tax Features

A. Participation Exemption (Most Underutilized)

Conditions:

  • Irish company holds ≥5% shareholding in foreign subsidiary
  • Investee company is tax resident in EU/treaty country OR
  • Investee company is resident in non-treaty jurisdiction BUT ≥75% of income is trading income

Benefits:

  • Zero Irish tax on dividends received from qualifying subsidiaries
  • Zero capital gains tax on disposal of qualifying shareholdings
  • No minimum holding period (unlike many EU jurisdictions)

Practical Application:

Indian Parent Co

        ↓

   Ireland HoldCo (LTD) ← Holds IP, collects royalties at 6.25%

        ↓

   EU Operating Subs → Dividends flow tax-free to Ireland

   Asia Operating Subs → Dividends (DTAA protection)

 

B. Knowledge Development Box (KDB) – 6.25% IP Tax

Eligible IP:

  • Patents (pharma, tech, engineering)
  • Computer programs (software, SaaS platforms)
  • Certain copyrighted software

Requirements (OECD nexus compliant):

  • R&D must be substantially conducted in Ireland
  • Transfer pricing documentation mandatory
  • Expenditure tracking for nexus calculation

Effective Rate Calculation:

Qualifying IP Income × (Qualifying Expenditure / Total Expenditure) × 50% = Income taxed at 6.25%

Remainder taxed at 12.5%

 

Practitioner Strategy: Locate actual R&D teams in Ireland (remote work models complicate nexus); maintain detailed cost tracking from day one.

C. R&D Tax Credit – 25% Above-the-Line

Mechanics:

  • 25% tax credit on qualifying R&D expenditure
  • Available as refundable credit over 3 years (critical for startups)
  • Incremental spend not required (unlike many jurisdictions)

Qualifying Activities:

  • Software development (including SaaS)
  • Product prototyping and testing
  • Process innovation
  • Clinical trials (pharma/biotech)

Example:

R&D Spend: €1,000,000

Tax Credit: €250,000

Effective Cost: €750,000

After-tax cost (at 12.5%): €656,250 (34.4% effective subsidy)

 

Key Insight: Combine R&D credit with KDB for IP development → 25% upfront credit + 6.25% ongoing IP tax rate.

The Ireland-India Corridor – Advanced DTAA Strategies

DTAA Rates & Practical Implications

Payment Type India WHT (No Treaty) DTAA Rate Savings Structuring Notes
Dividends 20% 10% (portfolio) / 15% (>25% holding) 5-10% Section 115-O abolished (2020)—double taxation risk managed
Interest 20-40% 10% 10-30% Thin capitalization rules apply
Royalties 10% 10% Nil direct Significant: India taxes gross; deduction benefits Irish recipient
Technical Fees 10% 10% Nil direct Includes software, management fees
Capital Gains (shares) Per Income Tax Act Residence-based Structure-dependent Substantial shareholding exemption in Ireland

Critical Treaty Provisions Often Missed

1. Limitation on Benefits (LOB) – Article 28

Anti-abuse provisions:

  • Irish company must have adequate substance
  • ≥50% beneficial ownership by Irish/Indian residents OR
  • Publicly traded on Irish/Indian exchange OR
  • Active business test (≥50% income from active business)

Practical Compliance:

  • Maintain physical office in Ireland (not just registered address)
  • Local directors with actual decision-making authority
  • Regular board meetings in Ireland (documented minutes)
  • Bank accounts in Ireland with operational transactions

Tax Authority Scrutiny: Indian Revenue increasingly challenges treaty benefits without substance. Document:

  • Employment contracts for Irish staff
  • Lease agreements for Irish premises
  • Evidence of strategic decisions made in Ireland

2. Principal Purpose Test (PPT) – MLI Integration

Ireland and India both signed the Multilateral Instrument (MLI). Key impact:

PPT Standard: Treaty benefit denied if “one of the principal purposes” is obtaining treaty benefit AND granting benefit would be contrary to treaty object/purpose.

Defensive Structuring:

  • Demonstrate commercial rationale beyond tax (EU market access, IP protection, skilled workforce)
  • Maintain proportionate substance to income flows
  • Avoid “round-tripping” structures (Indian assets controlled via Ireland without genuine business)

3. Mutual Agreement Procedure (MAP) – Article 27

Underutilized benefit:

  • Taxpayer can request MAP within 3 years of first notification of non-treaty-compliant action
  • Competent authorities must endeavor to resolve disputes
  • Arbitration clause available under MLI

When to invoke:

  • Transfer pricing disputes (especially IP licensing)
  • Residence determination conflicts
  • Permanent establishment challenges

Company Formation – Practical Roadmap

Enhanced Requirements Table

Requirement Minimum Legal Substance Best Practice Cost Implication
Shareholders 1 (any nationality) Structure for treaty benefits
Directors 1 (EEA resident) OR bond 2+ locally resident with expertise €25,000 bond (non-EEA)
Secretary 1 (mandatory) Professional service provider €1,500-3,000/year
Registered Office Irish address Physical presence, not mailbox €2,000-10,000/year
Share Capital €1 Adequate for intended activities Variable
Employees None (legal minimum) 2-5 for substance (depends on revenue) €40,000-200,000/year
Bank Account Irish or EEA bank Operational account with real transactions Account fees vary

Formation Timeline & Process

Phase 1: Pre-Incorporation (2-4 weeks)

  1. Name Reservation: Check availability via CRO (€20)
  2. Structure Design: Entity selection, shareholding structure
  3. Substance Planning: Office, directors, employees
  4. Banking Relationship: Pre-application (increasingly difficult—start early)

Phase 2: Incorporation (3-10 days)

  1. File Constitution (Form A1) with CRO
  2. Pay registration fee (€50 online / €100 paper)
  3. Receive Certificate of Incorporation
  4. Register for taxes (ROS system)

Phase 3: Post-Incorporation (2-4 weeks)

  1. Tax Registrations:
    • Corporation Tax (CT)
    • VAT (if applicable—mandatory if EU supplies)
    • PAYE (if employees)
    • RCT (if subcontractors)
  2. Statutory Registers: Maintain at registered office:
    • Register of Members
    • Register of Directors
    • Register of Beneficial Owners (private, not public)
  3. Banking: Open corporate account (requires:
    • Certificate of Incorporation
    • Tax registration certificates
    • Director ID verification
    • Business plan
    • Source of funds documentation

Banking Reality Check: Irish banks (AIB, Bank of Ireland) increasingly stringent. Alternative: Revolut Business, Wise, or EU banks (N26, Bunq) accept Irish companies but with limitations.

Transfer Pricing – Ireland’s Strict Regime

Ireland adopted OECD Transfer Pricing Guidelines and BEPS Actions 8-10 fully.

Documentation Requirements

Revenue Threshold Documentation Deadline
≥€250M (group) Master File + Local File Annual tax return filing
<€250M but related party transactions Local File Upon Revenue request (21 days)
Any threshold CbC Reporting (if parent) 12 months after year-end

High-Risk Transactions (Automatic Scrutiny)

  1. IP Migration to Ireland
    • Requires buy-in payment for transferred functions/risks
    • Valuation report mandatory
    • Exit taxation in source country likely
  2. Intra-group Royalties
    • Must reflect DEMPE functions (Development, Enhancement, Maintenance, Protection, Exploitation)
    • Substance requirements: R&D team, IP management staff
    • Documentation: Intercompany agreements, functional analysis
  3. Management Fees/Cost Recharges
    • 5% markup typically insufficient—Revenue seeks 8-15%
    • Must demonstrate actual services rendered
    • Time-tracking systems recommended
  4. Financing Arrangements
    • Thin capitalization: 70:30 debt-to-equity safe harbor (not rule)
    • Interest rates: EURIBOR + 2-4% (depends on credit profile)
    • Interest limitation: 30% of EBITDA (per ATAD)

Advance Pricing Agreements (APAs)

Unilateral APAs: €20,000-50,000 fee; 18-24 months processing Bilateral APAs (with India): Recommended for IP structures; 24-36 months Small Cases: Revenue offers “Small Cases” fast-track for <€3M intercompany transactions

Substance Requirements – Post-BEPS Reality

Substance Framework by Business Model

Business Model Minimum Substance Enhanced Substance (Audit-Proof)
Holding Company 1 resident director; quarterly board meetings 2 directors; Investment committee; Professional advisors
IP Holding/Licensing 2-3 staff (IP management); Irish R&D activities Full R&D team; DEMPE functions; Legal/commercial teams
Trading/Operating Proportionate to revenue; real office Full operations: sales, support, logistics
Treasury/Financing Treasury specialist; Risk management Treasury team; Documented policies; Real decision-making

Red Flags (Revenue Audit Triggers)

❌ No employees but significant revenue/profits ❌ Registered address at service provider with no physical presence
❌ Directors resident outside Ireland with all meetings abroad
❌ Bank accounts outside Ireland with no Irish transactions
❌ Email domains not @company.ie
❌ IP owned but no R&D/DEMPE activities
❌ Profits disproportionate to functions/risks

Substance Budget (Annual)

Minimal Structure: €80,000-150,000

  • 1 part-time executive + 1 administrative staff
  • Serviced office space
  • Professional services (accounting, legal, compliance)

Robust Structure: €250,000-500,000+

  • 2-3 full-time staff (director-level + support)
  • Dedicated office space
  • Board meetings, legal, tax advisory, audit

IP/R&D Structure: €500,000-2,000,000+

  • R&D team (5-15 staff depending on IP scope)
  • Engineers, product managers, legal
  • Lab/office space
  • Ongoing R&D expenditure for KDB

VAT & Indirect Tax Considerations

VAT Registration Thresholds

Activity Threshold Notes
Goods supply €75,000 Intra-EU B2B supplies often require registration regardless
Services supply €40,000 B2B services to EU: reverse charge (no Irish VAT)
Intra-EU acquisitions €41,000 Trigger for VAT registration

Strategic VAT Structures

SaaS Companies (Critical)

Place of Supply Rules:

  • B2B (business customers): Customer’s location (reverse charge—no Irish VAT)
  • B2C (consumers):
    • EU consumers: Ireland or customer country (depends on threshold: €10,000)
    • Non-EU consumers: Outside scope of EU VAT

OSS (One-Stop Shop): Register in Ireland for all EU B2C sales—simplified returns.

Input VAT Recovery:

  • Irish VAT on expenses (office, services): Fully recoverable if making taxable supplies
  • Watch out: Non-deductible VAT on certain items (cars >50%, entertainment)

E-commerce/Dropshipping

IOSS (Import One-Stop Shop): For goods <€150 from non-EU suppliers. Distance Selling: €10,000 threshold for intra-EU sales before local registration required.

Annual Compliance Calendar – Actionable Timeline

Month-by-Month Obligations

Period Obligation Form/Deadline Penalty for Late Filing
Monthly PAYE/PRSI (if employees) 14th of following month 10% + interest
Bi-Monthly VAT Return 19th or 23rd (ROS) €4,000
March 31 Company Tax Return Deadline (if Form CT1 filed online + year-end 31 Dec) Form CT1 €500-1,500 + interest
June 30 Financial Statements (if 31 Dec year-end) CRO Form B1 + accounts Late filing fees escalate
September Preliminary Tax Payment 90% of current/100% of prior year liability Interest on underpayment
October 31 Annual Return of Trading Details (Form 11, if required) ROS Penalties apply
November 1 Corporation Tax Balance Due (if Dec 31 year-end) Interest 8-10% p.a.

Critical Compliance Notes

Corporation Tax:

  • Preliminary tax: Due 6 months before year-end OR 1 month before year-end (if >90%)
  • Return: 9 months after year-end (online filing)
  • Payment: 9 months after year-end

Annual Return:

  • Due 28 days before AGM OR 56 days after financial year-end (whichever later)
  • Financial statements attached

Beneficial Ownership Register:

  • Maintained at registered office (not filed publicly)
  • Updated within 14 days of change
  • Accessible by Revenue, Gardaí, legal orders

Ireland-India Structuring Playbooks

Scenario 1: Indian SaaS Company Expanding to Europe

Objective: Sell to EU customers, optimize tax, comply with GDPR.

Optimal Structure:

India Parent (OpCo) — R&D, support, back-office

         ↓ (License IP)

Ireland HoldCo/LicenseCo (LTD) — Owns IP, licenses to distributors

         ↓ (Distribute/Resell)

EU Customers — Direct sales or local distributors

 

Tax Flow:

  1. India develops software → Transfers IP to Ireland (buy-in payment—negotiate with Indian tax authority)
  2. Ireland entity:
    • Collects royalties/license fees from EU distributors
    • Income taxed at 6.25% (KDB) or 12.5% (if not KDB-eligible)
  3. Ireland pays India for ongoing R&D services (arm’s length—8-15% markup)
  4. Dividends from Ireland to India: 10% WHT (DTAA)

Substance in Ireland:

  • 2-3 staff: Product manager, customer success, legal/compliance
  • Office in Dublin/Cork (tech hubs)
  • European sales/marketing handled from Ireland or local reps

Key Advantages:

  • EU VAT compliance simplified (one registration)
  • GDPR: Irish Data Protection Commissioner (experienced with tech firms)
  • Transfer pricing alignment with actual functions

Scenario 2: Irish Holding Company for Indian Manufacturing Group

Objective: Expand manufacturing to Southeast Asia, Africa; centralize treasury.

Structure:

Indian Founders (Individuals)

         ↓ (Hold shares)

Ireland HoldCo (LTD) — Strategic headquarters, treasury

         ↓

India ManufacturingCo + Vietnam ManufacturingCo + Kenya ManufacturingCo

Tax Benefits:

  1. Participation Exemption: Dividends from India, Vietnam, Kenya → Ireland tax-free (if >5% stake + trading company test met)
  2. Capital Gains: Sale of subsidiary shares → Zero tax (substantial shareholding exemption)
  3. Treasury Centralization: Ireland HoldCo provides inter-company loans:
    • Interest from subsidiaries: 10% WHT (India DTAA)
    • Interest taxed in Ireland: 12.5%
    • Net cost: 10% + 12.5% = 22.5% vs. higher local rates

Exit Planning:

  • Private equity/strategic sale: Ireland HoldCo sells subsidiary shares
  • No Irish CGT (participation exemption applies)
  • No Indian CGT (treaty: taxable in residence state—Ireland)
  • Founders’ capital gains: Personal tax planning (Irish non-dom regime, if relocated)

Compliance Keys:

  • Substance: Treasury manager in Ireland (can be part-time initially)
  • Board meetings: Quarterly in Ireland; document major decisions
  • Funding: Adequate equity in Ireland HoldCo (avoid thin cap issues)

Scenario 3: Pharmaceutical IP Holding Structure

Objective: Develop patented drugs in India, commercialize globally via Ireland.

Structure:

India R&D Co — Clinical trials, drug development

         ↓ (Transfer patents)

Ireland IP HoldCo (LTD) — Patent ownership

         ↓ (License to)

Global Marketing Cos (US, EU, Asia) — Manufacture, distribute, sell

Tax Optimization:

  1. Patent Transfer: India to Ireland (negotiate advance ruling on exit tax)
  2. Royalty Income: Global licensees pay Ireland:
    • 6.25% tax (KDB—patents qualify)
    • DTAA benefits: Reduced WHT in licensee countries
  3. Ongoing R&D: Ireland pays India for continued R&D services
  4. Dividends: Ireland → India (or ultimate shareholders): 10-15% WHT

Substance Requirements (Critical for Pharma):

  • Patent management team in Ireland
  • Regulatory affairs expertise (EMA filings)
  • Commercial team negotiating licenses
  • Budget: €800,000-1,500,000/year minimum

Regulatory Note: If Ireland entity manufactures (unlikely), requires Health Products Regulatory Authority (HPRA) approval. Most structures: Ireland as IP owner/licensor only.

Pitfalls, Risks & Mitigation Strategies

Common Structuring Mistakes

Mistake Consequence Mitigation
Inadequate substance Treaty benefits denied; Irish Revenue challenges Invest in genuine presence from Day 1
No transfer pricing documentation Adjustments + penalties (10-20%) Prepare docs contemporaneously
Ignoring MLI/PPT Treaty shopping allegations Demonstrate commercial rationale
Over-leveraging (thin cap) Interest deduction denied Maintain 70:30 debt-equity ratio
No advance rulings Uncertainty; audit risk File for APA, tax rulings proactively
Director nominees without control Substance failure Use local directors with real authority
IP transfer without valuation Exit tax + TP disputes Engage valuation experts (Big 4)

Audit Risk Management

Revenue Compliance Interventions:

  • Aspect Query: Specific question (respond within 21 days)
  • Risk Review: Desk-based audit (may escalate)
  • Comprehensive Audit: Full investigation (provide all records)

Defensive Measures:

  1. File on time: Late filing = automatic scrutiny
  2. Professional advisors: Engage Irish-qualified accountants/lawyers
  3. Contemporaneous documentation: Transfer pricing, board minutes, substance evidence
  4. Voluntary disclosure: If errors found, disclose before audit (reduced penalties)

Post-Brexit Considerations

UK-Ireland Trade & Tax Implications:

Positives:

  • Ireland = only English-speaking EU member post-Brexit
  • Common Travel Area (CTA): Irish-UK mobility preserved (not for companies)
  • Many UK companies relocating operations/HQ to Ireland

Challenges:

  • Customs formalities: UK now third country for VAT/customs
  • Tariffs: Eliminated under Trade & Cooperation Agreement (goods complying with rules of origin)
  • Services: Financial services passporting lost (firms need Irish authorization)

Structuring Adaptation:

  • UK companies: Set up Irish subsidiary for EU market access
  • Dual structure: Ireland (EU) + UK (non-EU) entities for global coverage

Emerging Trends & 2025 Outlook

OECD Pillar Two – 15% Global Minimum Tax

Effective: Fiscal years starting after December 31, 2023 (Ireland implementing 2024-2025).

Impact on Ireland Structures:

  • Large MNEs (€750M+ revenue): May face “top-up tax” if effective rate <15%
  • Calculation: Complex—country-by-country, with substance-based carve-outs
  • Ireland’s 12.5% rate: Still attractive (substance carve-out = 5% of payroll + 5% of tangible assets)

Strategy: Even with Pillar Two, Ireland remains competitive:

  • Substance-based carve-out rewards genuine activity
  • R&D credits, KDB still valuable (enhance substance, reduce top-up)
  • Administrative ease, legal certainty vs. higher-rate complex jurisdictions

Digital Services & Remote Work

Permanent Establishment (PE) Risk:

  • Employees working from home abroad → PE risk in that country
  • Solution: Clear remote work policies; substance in Ireland primary

Digital Nomad Visa (proposed): Ireland considering visa for remote workers—watch space.

Practical Cost Structure (Realistic Budget)

Year 1: Formation + Setup

Item Cost (EUR) Notes
Company Formation 500-2,000 DIY vs. agent
Legal Fees 3,000-10,000 Shareholder agreements, IP assignments
Tax Structuring Advisory 10,000-50,000 Critical for complex structures
Registered Office (Year 1) 2,000-10,000 Serviced office vs. dedicated
Accounting Setup 2,000-5,000 System implementation
Transfer Pricing Study 15,000-50,000 If intercompany transactions
Banking Application 1,000-3,000 Documentation, travel
Total Formation 33,500-130,000 Mid-range: ~€50,000

Year 1: Operational Costs

Item Cost (EUR) Notes
Salaries (2 staff) 80,000-200,000 Director + admin/operational
Office Rent 15,000-40,000 Dublin vs. Cork/Galway
Accounting/Bookkeeping 10,000-25,000 Monthly + year-end
Tax Compliance 5,000-15,000 CT returns, VAT, PAYE
Audit (if required) 5,000-15,000 Depends on size
Legal/Advisory (retainer) 10,000-30,000 Ongoing compliance
Insurance 3,000-10,000 Directors, professional indemnity
IT/Software 5,000-15,000 Accounting, CRM, cybersecurity
Total Operational 133,000-350,000 Mid-range: ~€200,000

Total Year 1: €250,000-500,000 (includes substance, compliance, setup)

Ongoing (Years 2+): €150,000-300,000/year

Cost-Saving Tips:

  • Remote-first: Hire outside Dublin (Cork, Galway 20-30% cheaper)
  • Shared services: Use group accountants/HR in India for non-core functions
  • Tech stack: Leverage automation (Xero, Stripe, Deel for payroll)

Action Plan – 90-Day Implementation Roadmap

Days 1-30: Planning & Design

  • [ ] Define business model and revenue projections
  • [ ] Select entity type (LTD vs. DAC vs. ULC)
  • [ ] Design shareholding structure (direct vs. holding company)
  • [ ] Identify substance requirements (office, directors, employees)
  • [ ] Engage Irish tax advisor (Big 4 or specialized boutique)
  • [ ] Draft intercompany agreements (IP license, services, loans)
  • [ ] Initiate transfer pricing study (if applicable)

Days 31-60: Formation & Setup

  • [ ] Reserve company name with CRO
  • [ ] Incorporate company (Form A1)
  • [ ] Appoint directors and secretary
  • [ ] Allot shares and issue share certificates
  • [ ] Register for taxes (Corporation Tax, VAT, PAYE)
  • [ ] Open bank account (start application early—4-8 weeks)
  • [ ] Secure office space (lease or serviced office)
  • [ ] Set up accounting system (Xero, QuickBooks, or SAP)
  • [ ] Draft employment contracts for Irish staff
  • [ ] File for tax rulings (if complex structure—add 3-6 months)

Days 61-90: Operationalization

  • [ ] First board meeting (document key decisions)
  • [ ] Execute intercompany agreements
  • [ ] Commence operations (invoice customers, pay suppliers)
  • [ ] Implement transfer pricing policies
  • [ ] Set up payroll (outsource to provider like Mazars, Grant Thornton)
  • [ ] Register for statutory deductions (PAYE, USC, PRSI)
  • [ ] File beneficial ownership information (private register)
  • [ ] Establish compliance calendar and responsibilities
  • [ ] Quarterly review: Substance, transactions, documentation

FAQs – Expert Answers

Q1: Can a 100% Indian-owned company claim Ireland-India DTAA benefits?

A: Yes, IF adequate substance in Ireland. Post-MLI, demonstrate:

  • Commercial rationale (not just tax)
  • Proportionate substance (staff, office, decision-making)
  • Active business operations (not just passive IP holding)

Expect scrutiny—document thoroughly.

Q2: Is the Irish ULC still useful for US tax planning post-TCJA?

A: Yes, but diminished. Key uses:

  • Check-the-box election: Transparent for US purposes (avoid Subpart F)
  • Interest deductibility: US parent pays interest to Irish ULC (deductible in US)
  • Caution: GILTI may still apply; BEAT considerations

References and verified Sources Links

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Reviewed By:

Founder – MKW Advisors and Legal Suvidha | Corporate Finance & Compliance

CA, CS, CMA, Lawyer, Registered Valuer and Insolvency Professional, Certified ESG and CSR Expert with 14+ years of experience across finance, law, strategy, and technology.

Disclaimer: This article provides general educational information and is not financial, legal, or tax advice. Consult professionals for tailored advice.

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