Set up your business in Belize.
Benefit from tax minimization offered by the Belize tax regime. Enjoy the favorable business environment and strong asset protection laws.
Belize companies from the source
Belize corporations, Limited Liability Companies (LLC), Trusts and Foundations.
Other Belize services we offer
If you need further information about Belize offshore companies and services –
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Why choose Fidelity
We are physically located in Belize City and we are the “source providers” – not resellers!
Competence
We are physically located in Belize City. In terms of Belize business companies, we are the "source" - not a reseller. We are widely specialized in the services of our home jurisdiction. This means competent service, quick turnaround and competitive fees.
Unlike many "web-only" sellers of offshore incorporations, we are a real, bricks-and-mortar firm on the ground. Our senior members of staff have decades of experience in offshore formation services.
Experience
We are part of the Fidelity Overseas / Fidelity Corporate Services group, having ground offices in several other reputable offshore financial centres, with more than 20 years experience in the offshore financial services business.
Expertise
Our clientele comprises private entrepreneurs, high-net-worth individuals, professional clients, such as other offshore company agents (retailers), tax consultants, accountants and attorneys from all around the globe.
Through our group partners we can provide a unique blend of local expertise in conjunction with a global perspective on the offshore services industry.
How to Register?
From company order, name check and reservation, documentary requirements guidelines, feedback and timing. Step by step guide how a new company registration normally happens in Belize.
We are humans. We are professionals. We are here to help!
We have answers to pretty much every questions you may have! If you still don’t find what you are looking for contact us!
Countries, which offer substantial tax benefits, are generally referred to as tax havens or fiscal havens. A "tax haven" is not a legal or scientific term. Whether a country is or is not a tax haven is, of course, in the eye of the observer. As compared to a 35% income tax in one country, a neighbouring country with 12% tax would pretty much qualify as a tax haven. At the same time, a country with zero income tax would cleary be a better tax haven than the one with just 10% tax.
The most traditional understanding of a tax haven is that it`s a country where one can register a business (an IBC or another type of corporation) which will remain completely tax-free in that country, for as long as it does not do business within the territory of that country. Some tax haven states have gone a step further. In some tax havens (for instance, BVI) corporate and income tax has been abolished for all businesses, regardless whether they are domestic or offshore. Of course, even in a tax haven country such businesses are supposed to pay some fixed annual government fees in lieu of tax.
A proper tax haven would usually have a whole bundle of laws, regulations and precedents aimed to attract international entrepreneurs and investors. Along the absence of tax on business profits, such attractions may also include extremely fast incorporation, simple registration procedures for IBC`s, no requirement to file financial accounts to the government, no personal data of shareholders and directors on public file, no minimum paid-up capital required, flexible corporate regulations, a developed financial system, exemption from exchange controls, simple accounting and book-keeping requirements.
Therefore a tax haven or an "offshore financial centre" (as is the more formal term) is generally a country that features an extremely appealing business environment, aimed at attracting international business.
Offshore corporations, like onshore corporations, use shares to reflect their ownership. Generally, shares are units representing a participation of a person in the company. Taking (or buying) a share in a company means simply that a person has agreed to invest some of his personal money or assets into the company. As soon as he has done so, he acquires the right to participate in the profits and the decision-making process of that company in proportion to his share as in the total amount of the capital of the company.
There are a few different types of capital.
First, there is the authorized share capital. That is the total amount of money that the company has been allowed (by its Memorandum) to take in from the prospective shareholders in return for giving out its shares. Theoretically the authorized capital is supposed to be the total amount of money that the principals of the company have decided to be sufficient to get the company`s business going until the company makes its own revenue. Most jurisdictions have a minimum required authorized share capital, and the amount of share capital selected usually affects the government fees payable.
At this time and age the offshore jurisdictions have been first to recognize that some new businesses might not need any capital at all, for example, if they have a super-original business idea. At the same time, other companies may need to be highly capitalized for a cash-intensive project. A comprehensive International Business Companies Act should prescribe both of these cases easily and without discrimination.
Second, there is the subscribed capital. That is the amount of money that the prospective shareholders actually agree to invest in return for their shares. The subscribed capital can fairly often be less than the authorised capital. This would basically mean that the company has actually issued (or sold) only a part of its shares to the shareholders, whereby the other part remains unissued. Thus, if company ZYX has an authorized share capital of 50,000 shares and George agrees to take 1000 shares, then the company`s subscribed share capital is 1000 shares. George would own 100 percent of the company. If the company also issues 1000 shares to Mary, the company´s subscribed share capital is 2000, and each of George and Mary would own 50 percent of the company (1000 shares each of the total issued 2000).
There is also the matter of the paid-up capital. The subscribed capital becomes paid-up capital when the subscriber (the prospective shareholder) in fact honors his part of the deal and pays for his shares to the company. In the most trivial case it would simply mean that the shareholder has made a payment into the company. Generally, only from this moment the shareholder acquires the right to take part in the decision-making process of the company, that is, to vote in the shareholders meeting. The dependence of the voting powers on the fact of paying-up for the shares would usually be set forth in company`s Articles of Association.
There is a substantial difference in how the a range of aspects of share capital are treated in most high-tax countries and in the offshore financial centres. In the "first world" countries, especially in Europe, the legal requirements for minimum authorised, subscribed and paid-up capitals for a domestic company are quite high, often in tens of thousands of Euros. There are also strict rules that these capitals should all be paid-up at or shortly after the registration of the company. The sense behind those rules is apparently that a company in, say, France, can not realistically commence any business without a substantial money available for this purpose.
In most offshore jurisdictions it`s fundamentally different. Mostly, the size of the authorised capital of an offshore company does not have a legally prescribed minimum. If it does, the minimum is really small - think 2 US dollars or equivalent. As a result, there are no requirements to have a substantial amount of paid-up capital. Thereafter, the law does not require that the subscribed capital be paid-up in a certain timeframe. Therefore an offshore company can have an authorised capital of 10 US dollars, of which the amount of 2 US dollars is subscribed for (by a nominee company), but remains unpaid. At the same time, this flexibility allows the owners of the company to opt any amount of capital they wish, and to be very flexible with the rules of how and when the capital has to be subscribed for and paid up. Flexibility is the keyword here.
In most offshore jurisdictions there is a government duty payable at incorporation (and often annually thereafter) of the offshore company. The amount of this duty depends on the size of the authorised capital of the company. However, usually there is a pre-set minimum of the government duty. As in Belize, the government duty for an IBC (International Business Company) with an authorised capital of $50`000 or less is $100 at the company registration and $150 yearly starting from the second calendar year after the IBC incorporation. The $50`000 is therefore the maximum possible authorised capital that you can get registered by still paying the minimum duty. Therefore this amount will usually be registered as "standard" by the offshore service provider. Going to higher capital is possible but will involve higher duty. Going lower is also possible, but needless, as the duty will remain the same anyway. This concept of "maximum authorised capital to which minimum duty applies" is repeating itself virtually throughout all offshore jurisdictions. It is sometimes also called "optimum authorized capital".
Another specific feature of offshore companies is registration of shareholders on the public file, in the Registrar of Companies. Many offshore jurisdictions, like Belize, do not register the shareholders of offshore companies in the Registrar. Therefore the ownership structure or a company is remains an internal matter of the company. In such case the shareholder information (Register of Shareholders) will usually be kept on file with the company secretary or the registered agent, or by the director of the IBC. In such event each individual shareholder certainly should take care to receive appropriate proof from the company confirming his shareholding interest in the company. Such proof can be a share certificate.
Some offshore jurisdictions do keep shareholder information on the Registrar`s file. It does not influence shareholder confidentiality very much, because the shares can be registered in the names of nominees, or left registered in the name of the initial Subscriber. In this case, again, it is up to the shareholder to keep the proper proof that he is the actual owner of the company. Such proof can be an appropriately drafted declaration or an agreement between the nominee and the actual owner.
Direct registration of the shares on public file can still be attractive to those company owners who wish to be completely sure that their private holdings remain protected by being properly registered. This especially might become important when the company is owned by several owners.
All in all, the corporate characteristics and structural elements of an offshore company are just the same as they would be for a typical business company in any country. The difference remains in the fact that with offshore companies, all these elements are made extremely simple and flexible, with minimum government regulation and red tape involved. This in turn makes an average offshore company just a more practical instrument in order to transact business, in particular, a business spanning over several countries and being international by nature. On top of that there are, of course, the significant tax benefits that offshore companies enjoy and domestic companies only dream of.
The annual renewal fees are the government and professional fees that You (that is, your IBC) will have to pay every year in order to maintain the company in continued existence. These costs are usually fixed. They are known and can be quoted in advance. The annual renewal fees essentially replace the taxes and some of the administration costs that would normally be payable by any regular "domestic" company. Obviously, the total maintenance costs for an offshore company are usually much less than for a business company based in any high-tax country.
Every IBC files a copy of its Memorandum of Association and Articles of Association, or "M&A" with the Registrar of Companies upon incorporation. These documents can be brief or very detailed, this depends on the law in the particular jurisdiction and on the practices of the particular incorporation agent. In these documents general information about the company is laid out. Usually these documents describe the type of company, its address, operational objects, authorised capital, the procedure for appointing and dismissing directors and officers and their scope of competence and responsibility, the procedure of share allocation, how shareholder`s meetings are called and the competence of such meetings and how it should be executed, the procedures of keeping accounts, liquidation and similar administrative matters that are characteristic to any corporate entity. The Memorandum and Articles of an offshore company are usually signed by a person called "Subscriber" or "Incorporator". The Subscriber is simply a person (or, more often, a dedicated offshore services firm) closely associated with your offshore service provider. The Subscriber essentially incorporates the company for you and acts as the first shareholder on your behalf. Otherwise you would have to travel to the offshore jurisdiction and sign the documentation personally. The Subscriber usually subscribes for the legally acceptable minimum amount of shares in the company. After the registration of the company, the initial Subscriber may remain registered on public file as the (nominee) shareholder, or the minimum amount of shares that he initially holds can be transferred to the actual client.
You do use them. More exactly, your IBC does. Apart from lending his office address to be represented as the legal address of your IBC, the Registered Agent is also legally responsible for safe custody and update of certain corporate documents - namely, the Memorandum and Articles of Association of the IBC, the Register of Members, the Register of Directors, copies of all Resolutions, notices and filings produced by the company during its existence. Furthermore, unless the directors of the company have resolved otherwise, the Registered Agent is also the custodian for all Minutes of the meetings and Resolutions of Shareholders, and all Minutes of meetings and Resolutions of Directors. It is the duty of the Registered Agent to keep these documents up-to-date and available for inspection by the directors, shareholders and owners of the IBC. Finally, the Registered Agent acts as the official intermediary between the IBC and the Belize Government, in particular what concerns timely payment of the Government renewal fees. All in all, the Registered Agent performs several important legal functions, which are essential for the IBC to legally exist.
All offshore jurisdictions require that all international business companies (non-resident companies, offshore companies, etc.) have an address in that country. This is called the Registered Address. The formal reason of this address is to have an exact location of the company for the purpose of official correspondence or inquiries from the government. Most often these are just some annual report forms and the annual government fee notices that get sent to the Registered Address. Yet, all companies must have such address, in their country of registration.
Most offshore jurisdictions also require a company to have a Registered Agent within their territory. Usually the Registered Agent is located in the Registered Address of the company. The reason is again the same, to have some person (or, usually, a professional services firm) who acts as an "intermediary" linking the government and the particular offshore company. The name and address of the Registered Agent are on public file in the Registrar of Companies, so this information is accessible to anyone who needs to ask.
Provision of the Registered Address and Registered Agent are standard domiciliation services, provided to all clients of Fidelity Overseas Ltd at a competitive fixed annual fee.