Expanding a franchise across borders is exciting—and unforgiving if the corporate plumbing isn’t set up correctly. The offshore entity (or entities) you choose will influence taxes on royalties, how easily you can bank and move cash, whether partners trust you, and how much risk stays off your home balance sheet. I’ve helped franchisors from boutique fitness to QSR chains build workable offshore structures; the winners are always the ones who design for real-world operations, not just “tax efficiency” on paper.
Why offshore entities make sense for franchises
Global franchising is unique: your core assets are the brand and operating system, and your primary income is royalties, initial fees, and sometimes supply-chain margins. Offshore entities help you:
- Ring-fence risk. Keep liabilities from a new region separate from the parent or other markets.
- Centralize and protect IP. A dedicated IP holding company (IPCo) licensing to operating entities maintains control and can streamline enforcement.
- Optimize tax and cash flow. The right jurisdiction can reduce withholding tax (WHT) leakage on royalties and dividends, and simplify repatriation.
- Build regional hubs. A Middle East or Asia hub improves on-the-ground support, hiring, and compliance with local laws.
- Manage currency. Multi-currency accounts and stable jurisdictions reduce FX pain when royalties come in from 10+ countries.
Smart structures also improve your partner pitch. Sophisticated master franchisees expect a professional setup, clean contracts, and a predictable tax and compliance profile.
Choosing the right structure
There’s no one-size-fits-all. The structure should mirror your strategy and the economics of your franchise model.
Common building blocks
- IP HoldCo: Owns trademarks, brand guidelines, proprietary tech. Licenses IP to regional entities or directly to franchisees.
- Regional HoldCo (or HubCo): Owns subsidiaries in a region (e.g., MENA, APAC), employs regional staff, and handles oversight and services.
- ContractCo: Enters into franchise and service agreements; sometimes combined with HubCo.
- SupplyCo: If you control proprietary supplies or equipment, a separate entity handles procurement margins and logistics.
- Local OpCo’s: Country-level companies that market, collect royalties, and comply with local taxes and withholding.
Example structures
1) Lean global model (early expansion):
- Parent Company (home) → IP HoldCo (offshore) → Direct license to master franchisees.
- Pros: Fast, low overhead.
- Cons: Limited substance; may face treaty limitations or WHT exposure.
2) IP-driven model with regional hubs:
- Parent → IP HoldCo → Regional Hub (e.g., Singapore for APAC; UAE for MENA) → Local OpCos.
- Pros: Stronger substance, better banking, cleaner contracts, improved tax outcomes.
- Cons: More cost and governance.
3) Supply chain + franchising:
- Parent → IP HoldCo; SupplyCo (separate entity) → Regional Hubs → Local OpCos.
- Pros: Separates IP and inventory risk, transparent transfer pricing across royalty and supply margins.
- Cons: Most complex; requires robust TP documentation.
Ownership and control
- Keep the IP centralized. If you disperse IP by region, re-consolidating later is messy and taxable.
- Avoid “orphaned” contract entities. Banking, insurance, and KYC become nightmares without clear control lines.
- Ensure mind-and-management aligns. Board meetings, key decisions, and signatories should live where the entity claims residency.
Jurisdiction selection: what actually matters
Don’t start with a “tax haven” list. Start with practical constraints.
- Tax regime on royalties and services: Headline corporate rate is less important than how royalties are taxed and whether the jurisdiction has treaties to reduce WHT in your franchisee countries.
- Treaty network and anti-abuse rules: Many countries have substance and anti-treaty-shopping rules (PPT/LOB). A paper entity won’t qualify.
- Reputation and banking: Can you open accounts, process multi-currency payments, and onboard with PSPs without six months of back-and-forth?
- Economic substance requirements: In zero- or low-tax jurisdictions, you’ll need real activity or face penalties and reporting headaches.
- Legal system and predictability: English-law based frameworks (e.g., Singapore, Hong Kong, ADGM/DIFC, UK) often simplify contracts.
- Costs and time to incorporate: Fees matter when you scale to multiple entities.
- Talent pool: If you need regional staff, choose a hub where you can hire and get visas.
- Local sales tax/VAT: Some hubs require VAT registration, which can be an advantage (recovering input VAT) or a compliance burden.
A quick tour of commonly selected jurisdictions
- Singapore: 17% headline CIT; partial exemptions can lower effective rate. No WHT on outbound dividends; no WHT on most service fees; treaty network is strong. Territoriality features help if income is sourced offshore. Banking is reliable; requires a local director and company secretary. Excellent for APAC hubs and ContractCo/HubCo.
- Hong Kong: 16.5% profits tax; territorial. Withholding on royalties typically 4.95% for unrelated parties (deemed 30% of royalty taxed at 16.5%); can be higher for associates. No VAT. Very good banking and contracts. Popular as an APAC hub.
- UAE (ADGM/DIFC/Ras Al Khaimah Free Zones): 9% corporate tax introduced; qualifying free zone income may be 0% if conditions met. No WHT. Substance rules apply. Visa and hiring are straightforward; excellent for MENA hubs and for service entities. Banking has improved but expect enhanced KYC.
- Netherlands: 19%/25.8% CIT tiers. Strong treaties. Conditional WHT (circa 25.8%) applies to interest/royalties to low-tax jurisdictions. Robust legal system and IP protection, excellent for EU holding/finance entities.
- Ireland: 12.5% trading rate; 15% for in-scope large MNEs under Pillar Two. Strong IP regime (KDB at 6.25% for qualifying IP income). Good for EU-focused IP or ContractCo with substance.
- UK: 25% main CIT; Patent Box can reduce to 10% on qualifying profits. Strong legal system, enforcement, and banking.
- Luxembourg/Switzerland: Mature holding and IP frameworks; varied effective tax rates in Switzerland (often 12–21%). Treaty networks are strong, but substance and nexus rules are tight.
- Mauritius (GBL): 15% CIT with 80% partial exemption on certain categories, effective ~3% in many cases; solid treaties with Africa/India; substance and local director required; good for Africa/India corridors.
- Cayman/BVI: 0% corporate tax but heavy substance reporting. Weak treaty access for WHT reduction. Banking can be challenging; best as holding/SPV rather than ContractCo receiving royalties.
If royalty withholding is your biggest leak, lean toward treaty-rich jurisdictions with credible substance (e.g., Singapore, Netherlands, Ireland, UK, Luxembourg, Switzerland). If you need a regional operations hub with visas and hiring, UAE or Singapore often wins.
Tax planning fundamentals for franchises
Royalties, services, and WHT
Royalty income is the lifeblood of franchising—and frequently the most taxed stream. Many countries levy WHT on outbound royalties to non-residents, commonly 5–15% without treaty relief. Treaties can reduce rates, but anti-abuse rules mean your entity must have substance and genuine functions.
Service fees (training, support, audits) may attract WHT or local VAT/GST. Sometimes splitting contracts—royalty vs service—helps manage taxes and align with transfer pricing realities.
BEPS, Pillar Two, and substance
- BEPS and anti-avoidance: Most treaties now include “principal purpose test” language. Shell entities risk denial of treaty benefits.
- Pillar Two 15% minimum tax: Applies to groups with global revenue ≥ €750m. If you’re under that threshold, the minimum tax likely won’t hit you—yet.
- Economic substance: Zero- and low-tax jurisdictions require adequate local activity—qualified employees, premises, board meetings, and core income-generating activities performed locally. Paper boards won’t pass.
Transfer pricing and the “right” royalty rate
Set royalty rates that reflect real value and align with industry norms:
- Quick-service restaurants: 4–8% of gross sales (often 5–6%), plus marketing fund 1–4%.
- Fitness and wellness: 5–10% depending on brand strength and support intensity.
- Education/training: 6–12%, often with higher initial fees.
Support fees should be priced at cost-plus (e.g., 5–10% markup) if you provide real services—training, site selection, audits, tech support. Document your methodology with benchmarking studies. Regulators look for consistency between your contracts and your TP policies.
VAT/GST on franchise fees
Royalties and service fees can be subject to VAT/GST in many jurisdictions. For B2B cross-border supplies, reverse-charge often applies, but local registrations may still be required. In the EU, marketing fund collections and centralized advertising can create VAT implications; structure fund flows and invoices clearly to avoid assessment on gross receipts.
Permanent establishment (PE) risk
If regional staff regularly negotiate and sign contracts in a country, you may create a PE and trigger local taxation. Keep contracting authority in the entity intended to earn the revenue, and align board authority and signatures accordingly. Sales support is fine; contract conclusion authority should follow your entity map.
IP and brand protection strategy
Your trademarks, operating manuals, recipes, software, and training content are the engine of royalties. Treat IP strategy as both legal and tax planning.
- Centralize ownership in an IPCo. Record trademark ownership clearly in major markets. Keep documentation clean for enforcement and for valuation.
- License chains: IPCo → HubCo/ContractCo → Master Franchisee → Subfranchisees. Each step needs a back-to-back license to preserve rights.
- Control quality formally: Ensure franchise agreements include inspection rights, brand standards updates, and termination levers for non-compliance.
- IP boxes and nexus: Prefer IP regimes tied to actual development activity (UK Patent Box, Irish KDB). If your R&D is elsewhere, don’t expect full benefits without nexus.
- Valuation and buy-ins: If moving IP offshore from the parent, expect a taxable transfer or cost-sharing. Get a proper valuation and plan the migration in advance—authorities scrutinize these moves.
Legal and regulatory considerations
Franchise regulations across markets
- United States: The FTC Franchise Rule requires pre-sale disclosure (FDD) and varying state registrations. Even with offshore structures, US activities can trigger these rules.
- European Union: No unified franchise law, but strong pre-contractual duty of information and competition law constraints (pricing, online sales restrictions).
- Middle East: Diverse rules; some countries require local agents or impose foreign ownership caps (lessening in many markets). UAE free zones offer flexibility but do not override onshore laws for onshore activity.
- China: Strict requirements (e.g., “two-store rule” historically), filings, and disclosure obligations. Contracts must be localized carefully.
- Australasia/Canada: Disclosure regimes are robust; penalties for non-compliance can be severe.
Integrate compliance upfront. Local counsel should review your franchise and sub-franchise templates, disclosure documents, and marketing fund mechanics in each target country.
Competition law and vertical restraints
Territorial grant clauses, resale price maintenance, online sales limitations, and exclusivity provisions are hot buttons. Draft with local competition law in mind—block exemptions in the EU, for example, have specific guardrails. Overly restrictive clauses can void parts of your agreements or invite fines.
Data protection and technology
If your franchise tech stack collects personal data, map data flows. GDPR, UK GDPR, DIFC DP Law, and others impose cross-border transfer obligations and vendor controls. Subprocessors (POS, CRM, LMS) should be under data processing agreements, and your ICP or HubCo likely needs to be the controller with clear roles downstream.
Step-by-step: registering an offshore entity
This is the practical map I use with franchisors. Adjust for your jurisdiction.
1) Define your objectives and map flows
- What income sits where (royalties, initial fees, training, supply margins)?
- Which markets first? Identify WHT issues via a high-level matrix.
- What substance do you need (headcount, director, office, board cadence)?
Deliverable: One-page structure map with revenue flows and responsibilities.
2) Choose jurisdiction(s) and entities
- Select IPCo location based on IP protection, nexus, and treaty access.
- Choose HubCo/ContractCo in a place where you can hire and bank efficiently.
- If supply margins matter, consider a dedicated SupplyCo close to logistics.
Deliverable: Entity list with purposes and substance plan per entity.
3) Reserve names, appoint directors/shareholders, and prepare KYC
- Most jurisdictions require certified passports, proof of address, business plan.
- For Singapore/HK/UAE, prepare local director/authorised signatory arrangements.
- Plan the board composition to pass residency tests in the chosen jurisdiction.
Timeline: 1–2 weeks for document prep.
4) Draft constitutional documents and authorize share issuance
- Articles/bylaws tailored for IP licensing and financing flexibility.
- Shareholder agreements if multiple owners or investors.
- UBO disclosures and registries where applicable.
Timeline: 1 week with a good corporate secretary and counsel.
5) Incorporate and obtain necessary identifiers
- File incorporation with the registry (e.g., ACRA in Singapore, ADGM Registrar, HK Companies Registry).
- Obtain tax IDs, VAT/GST registrations if needed.
- Some free zones issue commercial licenses aligned to your business activity.
Timeline: 3–10 business days in most efficient jurisdictions.
6) Open bank accounts and PSPs
- Traditional banks: Expect enhanced KYC. Provide franchise agreements pipeline, financial projections, and org chart.
- EMIs/fintech: Wise, Airwallex, Revolut Business can speed up collections and FX, often before a legacy bank onboards you.
- Multi-currency: Set up USD, EUR, GBP, AED/SGD as relevant. Integrate with your invoicing and royalty management tools.
Timeline: EMIs 1–2 weeks; banks 4–12 weeks depending on jurisdiction and group profile.
7) Build economic substance
- Lease office space (or serviced office with dedicated facilities where acceptable), hire core staff (legal, franchise support, finance).
- Schedule quarterly board meetings in the jurisdiction; maintain minutes and resolutions.
- Document decision-making and risk control—especially around IP and contracts.
Timeline: 1–3 months to assemble.
8) Register and protect IP
- Record trademarks to IPCo; file in priority markets via Madrid Protocol or national filings.
- Record license agreements in countries that require it for enforceability or to remit royalties.
- Maintain a central IP register and brand standards manual.
Timeline: Filing immediately; registrations vary by country.
9) Paper the franchise ecosystem
- Master Franchise Agreement (MFA): Royalty, territory, development schedule, QA audits, tech stack, training, marketing fund, and termination.
- Sub-franchise templates and operations manuals aligned to IPCo rights.
- Service agreements (training, audits, marketing) priced at cost-plus where appropriate.
Deliverable: Contract suite aligned to transfer pricing and tax strategy.
10) Tax and accounting setup
- Transfer pricing policy: Royalty range, services markup, supply chain margins. Commission a benchmarking study.
- WHT and VAT/GST workflows: Who files? Calendar of returns per country.
- Accounting: IFRS or local GAAP as required; plan for external audits when thresholds or local laws require.
11) Go-live, invoice, and monitor
- Invoice format with tax IDs, WHT clauses, and gross-up provisions if negotiated.
- Cash repatriation: Dividends vs service fees; manage WHT and foreign tax credits.
- Compliance calendar: Board meetings, filings, license renewals, audit dates.
Jurisdiction playbooks
Singapore: APAC hub and ContractCo standout
- Incorporation: Private company limited by shares (Pte. Ltd.). Requires one resident director, local company secretary, and registered office.
- Tax: 17% headline; partial exemptions can reduce effective rate for SMEs. No WHT on outbound dividends; no WHT on service fees; treaties help reduce inbound WHT from franchisee countries.
- Substance: Straightforward to hire; Employment Pass options for staff. Real offices improve banking and treaty access.
- Banking: Strong options, but provide a robust business case and KYC pack. EMIs are widely used initially.
- Timeline and cost: 1–2 weeks to incorporate; professional fees typically USD 5k–10k setup plus USD 5k–15k annually for compliance (excluding staff and office).
Best for: Regional hub, ContractCo, or combined IP+Contract if you have R&D or marketing substance in Singapore.
UAE (ADGM/DIFC/other free zones): MENA anchor
- Incorporation: Free zone companies with English-law frameworks in ADGM/DIFC; others (RAKEZ, DMCC) for lower-cost options. You’ll need a license matched to activities.
- Tax: 9% federal CIT; qualifying free zone income can be 0% subject to conditions. No WHT. Economic substance tests apply.
- Substance: Office lease, local director/authorized signatory, and employees. Visa sponsorship simplifies staffing.
- Banking: Improving; choose banks familiar with your markets and free zone. EMIs can bridge the gap.
- Timeline and cost: 2–6 weeks. Setup USD 8k–20k depending on free zone and license; annual running USD 10k–25k excluding office/staff.
Best for: Regional HubCo for MENA, service centers, sometimes ContractCo when franchisees are concentrated in GCC.
Netherlands: Treaty powerhouse for Europe
- Incorporation: BV (private limited), notary required; minimum share capital is token.
- Tax: 19%/25.8% tiers. Conditional WHT on interest/royalties to low-tax jurisdictions; strong treaties reduce inbound WHT. 15% dividend WHT with exemptions/treaties available.
- Substance: Board presence, office, and employees recommended for treaty access.
- Banking: Good but careful KYC. Expect 6–12 weeks.
- Timeline and cost: 2–4 weeks to incorporate; notary and advisory costs USD 8k–15k; annual compliance USD 10k–20k unless audit required.
Best for: EU HoldCo/ContractCo with robust treaty access and substance.
Hong Kong: Efficient and territorial
- Incorporation: Limited company with local company secretary; no requirement for local director.
- Tax: 16.5% profits tax; two-tiered rates for SMEs. WHT on royalties is effectively 4.95% in many cases (higher for associated parties depending on IP history). No VAT.
- Substance: Territorial system requires careful source analysis; a genuine office and staff help defend positions.
- Banking: Generally strong; provide detailed operations proof.
- Timeline and cost: 1–2 weeks incorporation; USD 5k–10k setup; USD 5k–12k annual compliance.
Best for: APAC ContractCo; sometimes IPCo if your IP use and R&D alignment suit HK.
Ireland: IP-friendly within the EU
- Incorporation: Private company limited by shares (LTD).
- Tax: 12.5% trading income (15% for large MNEs under Pillar Two). KDB at 6.25% for qualifying IP profits.
- Substance: Essential, especially for IP benefits; real development or management functions needed.
- Banking: Strong; EU market access.
- Timeline and cost: 2–4 weeks; USD 8k–15k setup; USD 10k–20k annual compliance.
Best for: EU IPCo or ContractCo when you can align real IP management or development activities.
Mauritius: Gateway to Africa and India
- Incorporation: Global Business Company (GBL) with local director and management in Mauritius.
- Tax: 15% with 80% partial exemption for certain income streams, resulting in ~3% effective. Treaty network can help.
- Substance: Board meetings in Mauritius, qualified staff, and local expenses expected.
- Banking: Available but slower; careful KYC.
- Timeline and cost: 3–6 weeks; setup USD 10k–20k; annual USD 12k–25k.
Best for: Africa/India regional holding and ContractCo when treaty outcomes are favorable.
Cayman/BVI: Use selectively
- Incorporation: Fast and simple; no corporate tax.
- Substance: Economic Substance Regulations require real activity for relevant income. Treaty access is limited.
- Banking: Often difficult unless tied to onshore banking relationships.
- Use case: Passive holding or investment SPVs; avoid as ContractCo receiving royalties if you need treaty relief.
Banking and payments that actually work
- Mix banks and EMIs: Start with EMIs for speed (Wise/Airwallex/Revolut), then add a traditional bank for credibility and larger transactions.
- Currency strategy: Collect in local currency when it improves acceptance but convert to a major currency (USD/EUR) via your EMI for better rates.
- Payment terms: Bake WHT handling into invoices. Provide clear gross/net instructions and proof-of-WHT requirements for credit.
- Controls: Segregate duties—invoice, collections, reconciliation. Use a treasury policy for hedging when monthly royalties exceed your risk threshold (e.g., forward hedges at 50% of 90-day exposure).
Contracts and franchise economics alignment
- Royalty clause: Define base (gross sales), exclusions, audit rights, late fees, WHT handling, and gross-up if permitted.
- Initial fees and development fees: Recognize revenue according to performance obligations; avoid mismatches across entities that create tax issues.
- Marketing fund: Keep collections in a dedicated account. Transparency reduces disputes. Consider whether the fund is part of HubCo or a separate trust account.
- Services: Price at cost-plus with SLA detail. Show real deliverables—training hours, audits, tech support.
- Supply chain: If using SupplyCo, integrate terms that enforce approved vendors and quality standards without crossing competition-law lines.
Compliance and substance done right
- Board cadence: Quarterly meetings in the jurisdiction. Record major IP and contract decisions. Keep travel logs for directors.
- Premises and staff: Dedicated office and employees performing core functions. Avoid “seat warmers”; regulators know the difference.
- Registrations: Corporate tax, VAT/GST where required, UBO registers, economic substance filings, and, if needed, franchise registrations or disclosures.
- Recordkeeping: Transfer pricing master file and local files; intercompany agreements; WHT certificates; IP registers; brand audits.
Case examples
1) QSR brand scaling to MENA and South Asia
- Structure: IPCo in Ireland (aligning with EU trademarks and partial R&D), MENA HubCo in UAE free zone as qualifying free zone person, SupplyCo in UAE onshore for equipment.
- Outcome: Royalties routed IPCo → UAE HubCo → Franchisees; services billed from HubCo. Treaties reduced WHT from several countries to 5% or less. Banking established in UAE within six weeks using EMI-first strategy, then two local banks.
- Lesson: Regional substance in UAE plus EU IPCo delivered both operational support and acceptable tax outcomes.
2) Boutique fitness franchisor entering APAC
- Structure: Singapore ContractCo/HubCo, IPCo kept onshore initially due to domestic tax credits and R&D. Plan to migrate IP later via cost-sharing.
- Outcome: GST registered in Singapore due to services; reverse charge handled by franchisees. Royalty rates 7% with cost-plus 8% services. Clean TP documentation avoided audits in two jurisdictions.
- Lesson: Don’t rush IP migration—align with real development and marketing capabilities first.
3) Education franchise with heavy content licensing
- Structure: HK ContractCo for APAC royalties; local content licensing rules required filing in several markets. Marketing fund centralized in HK with separate accounting.
- Outcome: WHT of 4.95% in HK manageable; banking robust. Tight content QA and digital rights tracking reduced leakage and improved renewals.
- Lesson: Territorial tax and practical banking often beat hypothetical 0% regimes.
Cost, timeline, and team: a realistic view
- Incorporation per entity: USD 5k–20k depending on jurisdiction; timeline 2–6 weeks.
- Banking: EMIs 1–2 weeks; legacy banks 6–12 weeks.
- Annual compliance: USD 5k–25k per entity (company secretarial, filings, tax returns, audits).
- Substance: Office USD 12k–40k/year (serviced office); staff from USD 60k–200k/year depending on role and location.
- Advisors: Budget USD 30k–100k for initial structuring, tax opinions, and TP studies; more if migrating IP.
Core team:
- International tax advisor and transfer pricing specialist.
- Corporate lawyer with franchise experience in target markets.
- Local company secretary/corporate services provider.
- IP counsel for filings and enforcement strategy.
- Banking/treasury lead; finance controller for consolidation and compliance.
90-day launch plan
- Days 1–10: Objectives, jurisdiction shortlist, structure map, advisor mandates.
- Days 11–25: KYC pack, constitutional documents, incorporation filings.
- Days 26–40: EMI accounts live; begin bank onboarding; office search; first hires initiated.
- Days 41–60: TP benchmarking; draft suite (MFA, sub-franchise, services); IP filing strategy; VAT/GST decisions.
- Days 61–75: Board meetings scheduled; substance build-out; register licenses; test invoicing and WHT workflows.
- Days 76–90: First franchise contracts executed; invoices issued; compliance calendar set; cash repatriation policy approved.
Common mistakes and how to avoid them
- Chasing 0% tax without substance: Leads to denied treaty benefits and banking failures. Choose credible jurisdictions and build real presence.
- Mixing IP and operations recklessly: Keep IP in an entity designed to protect and enforce it; use proper back-to-back licenses.
- Ignoring WHT at the contract stage: Negotiate gross-up where feasible and plan treaty relief with residence certificates and filings.
- Underestimating banking KYC: Provide forecasts, contract pipeline, and compliance policies up front to speed onboarding.
- Weak transfer pricing: Unsupported royalty rates and service markups are audit magnets. Get a study and keep consistent intercompany agreements.
- One-entity-for-everything approach: Cheap now, expensive later. Separate roles (IP, hub, supply) when material volumes start.
- No board discipline: Residency and mind-and-management can be lost with sloppy governance. Keep minutes, agendas, and local decision-making.
- Forgetting VAT/GST: Cross-border services and marketing funds often trigger obligations. Map indirect taxes early.
- Poor franchisee onboarding: Weak financial vetting and development schedules lead to territory underperformance and disputes that ripple into tax and cash flow issues.
Frequently asked specifics
- Do I need a local director? In many hubs (Singapore, Mauritius), yes. In others, it’s optional but often helpful for banking and substance.
- Can I keep IP onshore and still use an offshore ContractCo? Yes. License from onshore IPCo to offshore ContractCo, then to franchisees. Price intercompany royalties carefully.
- How do I handle EU VAT on royalties? Typically outside the scope for non-EU suppliers to EU businesses with reverse charge, but marketing funds and local services can pull you into registrations. Get local VAT advice per country.
- Can I receive royalties in USD from everywhere? Often yes, but franchise law or foreign exchange regulations in some countries may require local currency payments. Use EMIs and FX policies to manage spreads.
- How quickly can we start signing franchisees? If you need FDD or local disclosures, build those in parallel. In many markets, you can sign within 60–90 days of entity setup if banking is ready.
- What royalty rate should we use? Benchmark by sector and brand stage, then validate with TP analysis. Adjust for support intensity and territory economics.
Practical tools and templates
- One-page structure map: Entities, roles, and revenue flows.
- WHT matrix: For your top 10 countries with statutory rates, treaty status, documentation needed, and expected net leakage.
- Intercompany agreement suite: IP license, services, and cost-sharing where applicable.
- TP documentation: Master file, local files, benchmarking tables, and tested party analysis.
- Compliance calendar: Corporate filings, VAT returns, WHT submissions, audit deadlines, IP renewals.
- Bank/EMI KYC pack: Org chart, UBO declarations, franchise pipeline, sample agreements, financial projections, AML policies.
When to revisit and adapt
- New region with different WHT profile: You may need a second HubCo.
- Significant R&D shift: Consider aligning IPCo to where development genuinely occurs to access IP regimes.
- Scale trigger (10+ countries, >USD 10m annual royalties): Split functions (IP, contract, supply) and tighten board and TP governance.
- Regulatory changes (e.g., Pillar Two or local anti-avoidance): Re-run your effective tax rate model and treaty access tests annually.
Final thoughts and next steps
Start from operations, not just tax. Sketch where the people and decisions will live, then choose jurisdictions that support that reality. Build substance methodically, price intercompany flows with defendable data, and lock your franchise contracts to the structure you’ve chosen. With a crisp plan and disciplined execution, your offshore entities become a quiet competitive advantage—royalties arrive on time, cash moves where you need it, regulators nod, and your brand scales without drama.