Book Your Complimentary Consultation

Offshore Company Formation

Exempted company formation

Our Cayman Islands Company Service

Pricing available on application — all government fees included
  • Memorandum and Articles of Association — drafted and filed on your behalf
  • All Cayman government registration fees and first-year registered agent costs — included
  • Nominee director services available where required
  • Offshore bank account introduction at a partner institution — available as an add-on
  • Most common uses: fund vehicles, investment holding, SPVs, and institutional offshore entities

(Pricing)

Fixed-fee formation. No hidden costs. Everything included.

Includes:

  • Memorandum and Articles of Association
  • All Cayman government registration fees
  • First-year Cayman registered agent
  • Apostilled corporate documents
Popular

Includes:

  • Cayman Exempted Company — fully registered and operational
  • Offshore bank account at a partner institution of your choice
  • All company documents
  • All government fees and first-year agent costs

Includes:

  • Exempted Company or ELP — fully registered
  • General partner and investment manager vehicles as required
  • Full constitutional documents
  • Regulatory guidance and ongoing compliance support

Speak to a Specialist. Let's Form Your Cayman Islands Company

What is a Cayman Islands company?

The Cayman Islands Exempted Company is the world’s pre-eminent institutional offshore corporate vehicle — home to over US$8 trillion in fund assets, the global benchmark for hedge funds and private equity, and the jurisdiction of choice for sophisticated offshore structures requiring CIMA regulation, the STAR Trust, or Segregated Portfolio Company capability.

A Cayman Islands Exempted Company is incorporated under the Companies Act (2023 Revision). “Exempted” means the company is exempt from Cayman taxes for 50 years via a statutory undertaking — a renewable tax exemption certificate providing certainty against future Cayman taxation. No minimum share capital. No public register of shareholders or directors. No requirement for Cayman-resident directors. Formation in five to ten business days.

The Cayman’s institutional dominance in fund structuring is not a tax story — it is an ecosystem story. All Big Four audit firms, the world’s leading fund law firms (Walkers, Maples, Ogier), specialist fund administrators, prime brokers, and institutional custodians all operate from the Cayman Islands. Institutional investors — pension funds, endowments, sovereign wealth funds — expect their managers to use Cayman structures. The Cayman Islands is not on any OECD, EU, or FATF blacklist.

The Cayman STAR Trust (Special Trusts — Alternative Regime) is unique globally: a trust that can be established for a specific purpose — charitable or non-charitable — without named beneficiaries. Used for orphan SPV structures, family company governance, and holding arrangements where no beneficiary needs to be identified. Perpetual duration. Requires an “enforcer” with standing to uphold the trust’s purpose.

The Segregated Portfolio Company (SPC) provides legally separated portfolios within a single company — liabilities in one portfolio cannot reach assets in another. Widely used for multi-strategy investment funds, insurance captives, and multi-investor holding arrangements.

Honest caveat: Cayman’s institutional depth comes at a cost. Annual maintenance is higher than BVI, Bahamas, or Crown Dependency alternatives. For clients who do not need CIMA-regulated fund structures, the STAR Trust, or institutional investor compliance, a simpler jurisdiction is likely more cost-effective. We tell clients directly when Cayman’s premium is and is not justified.

US$8 trillion+ AUM · 11,000+ hedge funds · CIMA regulated

The Cayman Islands is the world’s leading jurisdiction for hedge funds, private equity funds, and institutional investment structures. Over US$8 trillion in assets is managed through Cayman structures. More than 11,000 registered mutual funds and over 25,000 registered funds of all types operate from the Cayman Islands. The Cayman Islands Monetary Authority (CIMA) provides world-class regulatory oversight.

No corporate tax · No income tax · 50-year tax exemption certificate

Cayman Exempted Companies pay no Cayman corporate tax, income tax, capital gains tax, or withholding tax. A 50-year tax exemption certificate is available, providing statutory certainty against future Cayman taxation. There is no Cayman tax on distributions to non-resident shareholders. The structure is fully tax-neutral at the Cayman level.

Big Four audit firms · Global law firms · World-class fund admin

The Cayman Islands hosts a complete institutional ecosystem: all four of the Big Four audit firms, the world’s leading law firms, specialist fund administrators, institutional custodians, and prime brokers. For fund managers requiring institutional-grade service providers, this depth is unmatched by any other offshore jurisdiction.

Why Choose Offshore Broker

  • Direct relationships with Cayman registered agents and licensed service providers
  • Honest guidance — we tell you when BVI or another jurisdiction is more cost-effective
  • Fund structuring expertise across Cayman exempted companies, ELPs, and STAR trusts
  • Fixed-fee or quoted formation with all government fees included
  • Operate across 20+ jurisdictions — Cayman, BVI, Cook Islands, Nevis and more

The Cayman Exempted Company — the world's benchmark offshore corporate vehicle.

A Cayman Islands Exempted Company is incorporated under the Companies Act (2023 Revision). It is the most widely used offshore corporate vehicle in the world for fund structuring, investment holding, SPVs, and institutional offshore entities. “Exempted” means the company is exempt from Cayman income and capital gains taxes for 50 years (renewable) via an undertaking from the Cayman government — a statutory tax exemption certificate that provides certainty against future Cayman taxation.

Key features: no minimum share capital; shareholders may be of any nationality and are not required to reside in the Cayman Islands; a single shareholder and single director are permitted; bearer shares are not permitted; directors and shareholders are not in a public register — only the company name, registered office, and registration date are public. Annual audit is not required for most companies (unlike regulated funds). A register of directors must be maintained and filed with CIMA — not publicly accessible.

The Exempted Company can be structured as a standard company limited by shares, a company limited by guarantee, an unlimited company, or a segregated portfolio company (SPC). The SPC is particularly powerful for fund structuring: it allows multiple segregated portfolios under a single legal entity, each with legally separated assets and liabilities — meaning a liability in one portfolio cannot affect the assets of another.

For private wealth holding purposes, the Exempted Company is the standard vehicle — used for investment holding, asset holding, and as a general partner or management company in fund structures. Annual requirements include a registered agent, registered office, filing of an annual return (not publicly disclosed), and payment of the annual registration fee (based on authorised share capital). The Cayman Islands are not on any OECD, EU, or FATF blacklist.

The Exempted Limited Partnership — the institutional fund vehicle of choice.

The Cayman Exempted Limited Partnership (ELP) is established under the Exempted Limited Partnership Act (2021 Revision). It is the standard vehicle for private equity funds, venture capital funds, and institutional investment funds worldwide. An ELP has at least one general partner (which manages the fund and bears unlimited liability) and one or more limited partners (who provide capital and have limited liability). The general partner is typically a Cayman Exempted Company.

Key advantages of the ELP structure: it is tax-transparent for US and international tax purposes — income passes through directly to the partners without entity-level taxation; it is flexible in terms of governance, profit sharing, and management arrangements; it is the expected vehicle for institutional investors including pension funds, endowments, and sovereign wealth funds who require LP-based fund structures.

The ELP does not maintain a public register of limited partners. The general partner’s identity must be filed with the Registrar. ELPs must be registered with the Cayman Islands Monetary Authority (CIMA) if they are regulated funds (open-ended mutual funds or specified investment funds). Registration with CIMA triggers ongoing regulatory obligations including annual audited accounts, registered office, administrator, and compliance requirements.

For family offices and sophisticated investors establishing investment vehicles without a regulated fund structure, an ELP can be operated as a private investment vehicle without CIMA registration, provided it does not constitute a mutual fund under Cayman law. This is an important distinction that requires legal advice specific to the intended investor base and fund activities.

The STAR Trust — Cayman's unique non-charitable purpose trust.

The Cayman STAR Trust (Special Trusts — Alternative Regime) is established under the Special Trusts (Alternative Regime) Law 1997. It is one of the Cayman Islands’ most distinctive and powerful trust structures: a trust that can be established for a specific purpose — not for identifiable beneficiaries — and that can be either charitable or non-charitable. This makes it a uniquely flexible vehicle for holding special assets, maintaining corporate governance arrangements, or providing a trust-level holding structure without named beneficiaries.

Common uses: holding shares in an orphan SPV for securitisation transactions; maintaining control of family companies where no specific beneficiary is identified; charitable and philanthropic arrangements; and holding arrangements for assets that do not fit cleanly into beneficiary-based trust structures.

A STAR Trust requires an “enforcer” — a person with standing to enforce the trust on behalf of the purpose, since there are no beneficiaries to enforce it. The enforcer can be a professional adviser, family member, or corporate entity. The trust deed defines the purpose and gives the trustee powers to administer the trust in furtherance of that purpose.

For family wealth planning, the STAR Trust is sometimes used alongside a conventional Cayman Trust: the STAR Trust holds shares in a family company or investment vehicle, and the conventional trust holds the beneficial interest in the STAR Trust’s assets for identified family beneficiaries. This arrangement provides flexible governance of the underlying assets while maintaining the estate planning and succession benefits of a traditional trust structure. The Cayman STAR Trust is perpetual — it is not subject to the rule against perpetuities.

The world's leading fund jurisdiction — why institutions choose Cayman.

The Cayman Islands’ dominance in fund structuring is not primarily a tax story — it is an ecosystem story. Over decades, the Cayman Islands has assembled the world’s most complete institutional fund infrastructure: all Big Four audit firms operate Cayman offices; the world’s leading law firms (Walkers, Maples, Ogier, Carey Olsen) have established specialist Cayman funds practices; specialist fund administrators, prime brokers, and custodians with deep Cayman expertise are all locally present.

This ecosystem creates a self-reinforcing network effect: institutional investors (pension funds, endowments, sovereign wealth funds, fund of funds) expect their managers to use Cayman structures. Their legal and compliance teams are familiar with Cayman documentation. Their audit firms are experienced with Cayman accounting. Their regulatory frameworks recognise Cayman structures. Using a non-Cayman alternative introduces unfamiliarity and friction at precisely the point where fund managers need institutional comfort.

The CIMA (Cayman Islands Monetary Authority) provides the regulatory framework for registered and licensed funds. CIMA-registered funds are required to have an auditor, administrator, and registered office in the Cayman Islands, and must file annual audited accounts. For open-ended funds, registration with CIMA typically takes two to four weeks. CIMA’s regulatory framework is well understood and accepted by institutional investors globally.

For smaller fund managers and family offices who do not need a CIMA-regulated structure, the Cayman Islands still offers the Exempted Company and unregistered ELP as private investment vehicles. These carry lower regulatory overhead while still providing the institutional credibility of a Cayman domicile. We advise on whether a regulated or unregistered structure is appropriate based on the investor base, investment strategy, and domicile requirements.

Tax-neutral, but OECD-compliant — what Cayman's tax position means.

The Cayman Islands imposes no corporate income tax, personal income tax, capital gains tax, inheritance tax, estate duty, or withholding tax. A 50-year tax exemption certificate provides statutory certainty against future Cayman taxation for Exempted Companies. This tax neutrality is the primary reason institutional fund structures route through the Cayman Islands — it allows funds to aggregate capital from investors in different tax jurisdictions without creating an additional layer of entity-level tax.

The Cayman Islands is not on the OECD’s list of harmful tax practices, is not on the EU’s list of non-cooperative jurisdictions, and is a member of the OECD’s Common Reporting Standard (CRS) framework. The Cayman Islands automatically exchanges financial account information with over 100 countries under CRS, and is FATCA-compliant.

For US persons investing in or managing Cayman structures, US tax obligations apply in full. Cayman funds with US investors must comply with FATCA. US fund managers operating through Cayman general partner vehicles must carefully consider the US tax treatment of their carried interest, management fees, and co-investment arrangements. Specialist US tax advice is essential.

For non-US investors, the Cayman structure’s tax neutrality allows investors to receive returns in their home jurisdiction and pay applicable home-country taxes without an additional Cayman tax layer. This is the core institutional appeal: a Cayman fund structure does not compete with home-country tax regimes — it simply does not add a Cayman layer on top of them. The Cayman Islands’ economic substance requirements (introduced 2019) require that certain Cayman entities demonstrate substance in the Cayman Islands for specific activities — legal advice on substance requirements is recommended for complex structures.

Who should use a Cayman Islands structure?

Fund managers establishing institutional investment funds. The Cayman Exempted Company and ELP are the world’s most widely used fund vehicles. Hedge funds, private equity funds, venture capital funds, real estate funds, and credit funds that need to attract institutional investors — pension funds, endowments, sovereign wealth funds, family offices — should use Cayman structures because institutional investors expect them. Any fund manager pitching to institutional capital who uses a non-Cayman structure faces unnecessary friction.

Family offices managing complex, multi-asset portfolios across multiple jurisdictions. The Cayman’s institutional ecosystem, STAR Trust capability, and deep professional services network make it a natural choice for ultra-high-net-worth families managing large, diverse portfolios where institutional-grade governance and structuring depth are required.

SPV and securitisation structures. The Cayman Exempted Company and SPC (Segregated Portfolio Company) are the most widely used vehicles for structured finance, securitisation, and debt issuance transactions. Investment banks, asset managers, and corporates routinely use Cayman SPVs for these purposes.

Honest caveat: for clients who do not have institutional investors, do not need CIMA registration, and whose primary need is a simple offshore holding or trading structure, the Cayman Islands’ higher costs and more complex regulatory environment may be unnecessary. BVI, Bahamas, or other jurisdictions offer comparable tax neutrality and holding company functionality at lower cost. Cayman’s premium is appropriate when the institutional ecosystem, fund regulation, or STAR trust capabilities are actually needed. We will tell you directly when a simpler alternative is more appropriate for your situation.

Cayman vs BVI vs Bahamas — which offshore corporate jurisdiction is right for you?

The Cayman Islands is the right choice when institutional credibility, fund regulation, or the STAR Trust’s unique capabilities are required. It is not the right choice for clients who simply need a cost-effective offshore holding company and do not have institutional investor requirements.

The BVI is the most widely used offshore corporate vehicle in the world by volume — 400,000+ registered companies. BVI Business Companies are significantly cheaper than Cayman Exempted Companies for annual maintenance. BVI is the standard choice for holding companies, M&A structuring, joint venture vehicles, and corporate structuring where the BVI’s vast volume creates institutional familiarity without the premium of a Cayman structure. BVI does not have Cayman’s fund regulation ecosystem but is well-suited to non-fund institutional use.

The Bahamas is cheaper than both Cayman and BVI in many cases, and offers a deep USD-denominated banking ecosystem. For clients whose primary need is an offshore holding vehicle with straightforward banking access, the Bahamas IBC is a cost-effective and well-recognised alternative. It lacks the fund structuring sophistication of the Cayman and the sheer volume of BVI.

A Cook Islands LLC + Trust or Nevis Company is not a corporate holding vehicle — it is an adversarial asset protection structure. It serves a fundamentally different purpose from a Cayman Exempted Company and should not be compared on the same axis. Offshore Broker structures entities in all these jurisdictions and will recommend the right combination for your specific circumstances. We never push a more expensive or complex jurisdiction when a simpler alternative is appropriate.

How to set up a Cayman Islands company — the process.

1. Initial consultation. We discuss your objectives — fund vehicle, holding company, SPV, STAR trust, or ELP — and advise on the most appropriate Cayman structure. For fund structures, we also advise on CIMA registration requirements and institutional service provider selection.

2. Confirm the structure and engage service providers. We confirm the entity type, engage the relevant Cayman registered agent, and where required, coordinate with Cayman legal counsel for constitutional documentation. For CIMA-regulated funds, we coordinate administrator and auditor appointment.

3. KYC and AML documentation. Cayman entities are subject to strict AML/KYC requirements. We provide a comprehensive KYC checklist and manage the documentation process.

4. Prepare and register. We coordinate the preparation of all constitutional documents — M&A, shareholder register, director consents — and file with the Registrar of Companies. Formation typically completes within five to ten business days of KYC clearance. CIMA registration for regulated funds takes an additional two to four weeks.

5. Post-incorporation compliance. Cayman entities require ongoing compliance: registered office maintenance, annual return filing, annual registration fee payment, and where applicable, CIMA regulatory requirements. We provide ongoing compliance support or can introduce you to specialist Cayman compliance providers.

6. Banking and operational setup. We manage bank introductions for entities requiring offshore banking infrastructure and coordinate with institutional service providers for fund structures.

Meet the team

“I can vouch for the professionalism and integrity of both John and his team, who have helped me set up a number of entities for clients.”

AnonymousSenior Partner
Founder

John Evans

Location | Rarotonga, Cook Islands

John Evans is a highly experienced executive with over two decades in offshore finance. He served as CEO of Capital Security Bank Limited in the Cook Islands and as Director of the Cook Islands Financial Services Development Agency. His expertise spans offshore trusts, companies, LLCs, banking, and international partnerships. John leads Wealth Web’s Cook Islands operations, providing direct on-the-ground guidance to clients establishing offshore structures.
Founder

Connor Steens

Location | Sydney, Australia

Connor Steens leads business development and marketing at Wealth Web. With over seven years of industry experience, he connects high-net-worth individuals, trust companies, and legal professionals with offshore solutions. Connor developed the Offshore Broker and Offshore Companies Online platforms, and focuses on building strategic partnerships and expanding access to quality offshore structures across jurisdictions.
Sales Manager

Atinata Hosking

Location | Rarotonga, Cook Islands

Atinata Hosking brings over two decades of offshore banking and compliance experience to Wealth Web. She spent 17 years at Capital Security Bank Limited — progressing from Banking Supervisor to Compliance and Risk Manager — and began her career at Southpac Trust. In her current role, Ati leads client acquisition, manages the full sales cycle from enquiry to onboarding, and ensures every client receives a high standard of service from day one.

Offshore Company Insights

Trust Protectors ExplainedOffshore Trusts

Trust Protectors Explained

Connor SteensConnor SteensJuly 4, 2026
Beneficial Owners vs. Ultimate Beneficial Owners: Key Differences ExplainedOffshore Trusts

Beneficial Owners vs. Ultimate Beneficial Owners: Key Differences Explained

Connor SteensConnor SteensJuly 4, 2026
Why the Cook Islands Trust Remains the World’s Strongest Asset ShieldOffshore TrustsThe Cook Islands

Why the Cook Islands Trust Remains the World’s Strongest Asset Shield

Connor SteensConnor SteensJuly 4, 2026
UAE Structures ComparedOffshore TrustsUAE

UAE Structures Compared

Connor SteensConnor SteensJuly 4, 2026

A Cayman Islands Exempted Company is incorporated under the Companies Act (2023 Revision). It is exempt from Cayman income and capital gains taxes for 50 years via a statutory tax exemption certificate, is not required to file public financial statements, does not maintain a public register of shareholders or directors, and is the world’s most widely used vehicle for offshore fund structuring, investment holding, and institutional offshore entities.

No. Cayman Exempted Companies do not maintain a public register of shareholders or directors. Only the company name, registered office, and registration date are publicly available. Beneficial ownership information is maintained in a private register accessible to the Cayman Islands Monetary Authority and law enforcement authorities — not to the public or civil litigants. The Cayman Islands has committed to beneficial ownership transparency under international frameworks but has not implemented a publicly accessible register.

Cayman Islands formation costs are quoted on application, as they depend on the type of structure (Exempted Company, ELP, SPC, STAR Trust), the level of legal documentation required, and whether CIMA registration is needed. Cayman structures are generally more expensive than BVI, Bahamas, or other comparable offshore jurisdictions — reflecting the institutional service provider ecosystem and regulatory depth. Annual maintenance costs are also higher. Contact us for a detailed quote based on your specific requirements.

Both provide tax neutrality and offshore holding functionality. The key differences: the Cayman Islands has a deeper institutional fund ecosystem (CIMA regulation, Big Four audit firms, institutional prime brokers) — BVI does not. BVI is significantly cheaper for annual maintenance. BVI is the most widely used offshore corporate vehicle globally (400,000+ companies) — Cayman’s volume is substantially lower but its institutional credibility for fund structures is higher. For fund managers requiring institutional investor acceptance, Cayman is the standard. For general holding companies, BVI is more cost-effective.

A STAR Trust (Special Trusts — Alternative Regime) is a Cayman trust established for a specific purpose rather than for named beneficiaries. It can be charitable or non-charitable. Common uses include holding shares in SPVs for securitisation, maintaining orphan structures for corporate governance, and providing a trust-level holding layer for assets that do not fit conventional beneficiary-based trust structures. The STAR Trust requires an “enforcer” with standing to enforce the trust. It is perpetual — not subject to the rule against perpetuities.

Yes. The Cayman Islands participates in the OECD Common Reporting Standard (CRS) and is FATCA-compliant. Financial institutions in the Cayman Islands automatically report account information to their customers’ home-country tax authorities under CRS. For US persons, FATCA reporting applies. The Cayman Islands is not a secrecy jurisdiction — it cooperates fully with international tax transparency standards. The Cayman’s tax-neutral status refers to the absence of Cayman-level taxation, not to secrecy or non-reporting.

CIMA is the financial services regulator for the Cayman Islands. It licenses and regulates banks, trust companies, insurance companies, and investment funds operating in the Cayman Islands. For fund managers, CIMA registration is typically required for open-ended mutual funds and certain investment vehicles. CIMA is a well-respected regulator with high international standards — CIMA-registered funds are accepted by institutional investors globally without the scepticism that attaches to unregulated offshore fund vehicles.

Yes. There is no requirement for the beneficial owner, directors, or shareholders of a Cayman Exempted Company to be resident in the Cayman Islands. A local registered agent and registered office are required. Directors may be of any nationality and located anywhere. For regulated funds, certain roles (administrator, auditor) must be performed by CIMA-licensed entities, which are located in the Cayman Islands.

The Cayman Islands implemented economic substance requirements in 2019 under the International Tax Co-operation (Economic Substance) Act. Certain entity types that conduct specified activities (banking, insurance, fund management, finance and leasing, headquarters, distribution and service centres, intellectual property, shipping) must demonstrate adequate economic substance in the Cayman Islands. This typically requires local employees, adequate expenditure, and physical presence. Not all Cayman entities are subject to substance requirements — holding companies with passive income generally have a reduced substance test. Legal advice on substance requirements is recommended for all new Cayman structures.

No. The Cayman Islands is not on the OECD’s list of harmful tax practices, the EU’s list of non-cooperative jurisdictions (it has been removed following reforms), or the FATF grey list. The Cayman Islands meets international standards for tax transparency, beneficial ownership, AML/CFT, and regulatory co-operation. It is a compliant, well-regulated jurisdiction that happens to impose no direct taxes — which is a legal policy choice recognised as legitimate under international frameworks.

Get in touch

Leave us a message and a member of our team will respond shortly. Alternatively, book a convenient time to speak directly with one of our Cayman Islands company specialists — free, confidential, and with no obligation.
Name
=