Glossary · SearchOffshore

What Is a Controlled Foreign Corporation (CFC)?

A Controlled Foreign Corporation (CFC) is a foreign company that is controlled by tax residents of a higher-tax country. Most major developed economies have CFC rules that can attribute the undistributed profits of such offshore companies to the controlling resident shareholders — requiring them to pay home-country tax on those profits even without a dividend distribution.

Topic: International Tax / Anti-AvoidanceRelevant to: Offshore company owners tax resident in high-tax countriesKey countries with CFC rules: US, UK, Germany, Australia, Japan, France

Why CFC Rules Exist

The Purpose of CFC Legislation

CFC rules are anti-avoidance provisions designed to prevent high-tax country residents from using offshore companies to indefinitely defer home-country tax on passive income — interest, dividends, royalties — by accumulating those profits in an offshore structure rather than distributing them. Without CFC rules, a UK-resident shareholder could receive dividends in a BVI company, invest the returns, and never pay UK tax unless and until the money was repatriated.

CFC rules typically operate by:

  • Identifying offshore companies "controlled" by residents of the high-tax country (typically more than 50% ownership or voting control)
  • Assessing whether the company earns "passive" or "mobile" income (interest, royalties, dividends from non-trading activities)
  • Attributing a proportionate share of that undistributed income to the controlling shareholders
  • Taxing the attributed income in the hands of the resident shareholders as if it had been distributed

By Country

CFC Rules by Jurisdiction

CountryCFC RegimeControl ThresholdKey FeaturesExemptions
United StatesSubpart F / GILTIMore than 50% (US shareholders owning 10%+)Subpart F taxes passive foreign income; GILTI taxes global intangible low-taxed income of CFCs with effective rate below 10.5%Active business income; high-tax exceptions
United KingdomUK CFC Rules (ICTA/TIOPA)More than 50%Applies to UK companies with CFC subsidiaries. "Gateway" tests determine applicability; finance company exemptions availableExempt period; excluded territories; low-profit exemption
GermanyAußensteuergesetz (AStG)More than 50%Applies to passive income in low-tax jurisdictions (below 25% effective rate)Active income; EU/EEA substance exemptions
AustraliaAustralian CFC RulesMore than 50%Attributable income rules for CFCs in unlisted country companies; complex passive income testsActive income; comparable tax exemption
FranceArticle 209B CGIMore than 50%Applies to entities in low-tax jurisdictions with passive income; rebuttable by demonstrating genuine activityGenuine commercial activity; EU substance
JapanForeign Subsidiary Company (FSC) rules50%+ including related partiesPassive income attribution; paper company rules; tainted income conceptActive business; deemed dividends

Implications for Offshore Structures

CFC Rules and Offshore Companies

CFC rules are among the most important tax considerations for individuals and corporations from high-tax jurisdictions who use offshore companies. Key practical implications include:

No Deferral of Passive Income

For US persons, GILTI and Subpart F effectively eliminate the ability to defer tax on passive income accumulated in offshore CFCs. The zero-tax environment of Cayman or BVI may provide little benefit for US-controlled passive income vehicles.

Active Business Exception

Most CFC regimes exclude genuinely active business income — trading companies with real operations typically are not subject to CFC attribution. This is why genuine economic substance in the offshore jurisdiction is important.

Interaction with Economic Substance

Entities that have genuine economic substance in their offshore jurisdiction are better positioned to qualify for active business exemptions from CFC rules — another reason why substance requirements and CFC planning interact.

US Citizens Particularly Affected

The US taxes citizens on worldwide income regardless of residency, and the US CFC rules (Subpart F and GILTI) are among the most extensive globally. US-connected offshore structures require specialist US tax advice.

CFC rules are complex, highly jurisdiction-specific and subject to frequent legislative change. The interaction between CFC rules, economic substance requirements, CRS reporting and BEPS anti-avoidance provisions requires specialist international tax advice for any cross-border structure involving offshore entities.

FAQ

It depends on whether the company falls within the UK CFC gateway tests and whether any exemptions apply. A BVI company owned by a UK resident individual (as opposed to a UK company) is generally treated differently — the UK CFC rules primarily target UK resident companies that have CFC subsidiaries, not UK resident individuals who own foreign companies directly. Individual UK residents may face different anti-avoidance provisions — including transfer of assets abroad rules and the settlements legislation — rather than the formal CFC rules. UK tax advice is essential for UK-resident individuals owning BVI or Cayman companies.
GILTI (Global Intangible Low-Taxed Income) is a US CFC provision introduced by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act 2017 that taxes US shareholders of controlled foreign corporations on a deemed inclusion of the CFC's "global intangible low-taxed income" — broadly, income that has not been subject to sufficient foreign tax. GILTI applies to US shareholders (10%+ in a CFC) and requires them to include their proportionate share of the CFC's GILTI in US taxable income annually. The effective GILTI rate for C corporations was intended to be approximately 10.5% (rising to 13.125% in 2026); individual US shareholders face a higher effective rate. GILTI represents a significant departure from traditional territorial tax planning for US multinationals.

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