Just a quick note from someone who works in this space: if you're setting up an offshore structure to interact with your Canadian operating company, especially for income shifting or wealth planning, you need to speak with a qualified tax lawyer in Canada first. The intent matters just as much as the structure itself , and even legal offshore setups can trigger GAAR, CFC rules, or transfer pricing scrutiny if not implemented properly.
Also, while people still casually use the term “offshore tax haven,” it's worth noting that it's outdated and doesn't reflect how modern international compliance works. What you’re likely looking for is a︀ low or zero-tax jurisdiction with light reporting and no CRS exchange, for asset protection or︁ investment purposes , which is a very different goal from aggressive tax evasion structures of︂ the past.
That said, if you’re just setting up a holding or investment company (not︃ directly billing your Canadian entity), St. Vincent and the Grenadines is one of the most︄ straightforward jurisdictions out there. No annual reporting, no public registry, and no automatic exchange of︅ information for now , plus a solid legal system and cost-effective maintenance. It’s one of︆ the last few clean, quiet jurisdictions still suitable for privacy-focused structures.
But again , set︇ it up right. Don’t skip the legal input. The line between optimization and exposure can︈ be thinner than it looks.
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Eli Carter
Legal Affairs