With the highest probability in the UK, EMI will work for you.SimpleGuy said:
Hi all,
I opened a company in the Isle of Man. Which is better EMI or bank?
The physical banks on the island refused to open my account.
Sincerely,
Click to expand...
From your input, I get that you've set up the company and its substance yourself?SimpleGuy said:
Sorry for my late reply. It is a holding company, of an e-commerce business group. Finally, I managed to open an account with Currenxie, but I would prefer to have a physical bank.
I went there personally, rented an office in Douglas and hired a local woman paid to do nothing so that I had some substance. But what I saw from the banks was that they always refused to open, without any real reason, if you apply by your own. And the bank introducers (CSP) always classify you as "high-risk" if the shareholder is not a citizen of the Isle of Man, and if you are classed as high-risk, it is £50 per transaction that you have to pay to the CSP, as well as about thirty additional fees from what I understand.
Click to expand...
They're a licensed bank (deposit taking institution), just on a restricted type of license, meaning you're ineligible for deposit compensation scheme if things go south south. There're no EMI's in the IoM.SimpleGuy said:
There is only one bank that agreed but it is in fact an EMI from the Isle of Man called Capital International Bank, £1250 on opening and then annually. They seem nice but I find it expensive, knowing that they don't offer debit cards and that there aren't as many currencies as Currenxie, which is free.
Click to expand...
As far as I see, Revolut claims to support IoM for business account opening purposes. No personal experience, but you may try your luck - via your rented office you'd get your cards, they're within "cheap" definition.SimpleGuy said:
If anyone has any names of EMIs or preferably banks in the UK that accept Isle of Man companies and provide bank cards please let me know.
Click to expand...