Structure Guide · SearchOffshore

Offshore Company vs Trust vs Foundation
Which Structure Is Right for You?

The three primary offshore structures used for wealth holding, asset protection and international business — companies, trusts and foundations — each serve different purposes and suit different client circumstances. This guide explains each structure, compares them across key dimensions and helps identify which is appropriate for common use cases.

Company

Best for business operations, holding assets and commercial transactions

Trust

Best for succession planning, wealth protection and discretionary family arrangements

Foundation

Best for civil law clients seeking a trust-like structure with separate legal personality

The Three Structures

Company, Trust and Foundation — What Each Is

Offshore Company

Corporate vehicle

  • Separate legal personality — can own assets, enter contracts, sue and be sued
  • Owned by shareholders; managed by directors
  • Shares can be transferred; ownership is flexible
  • Most widely used: BVI Business Company, Cayman Exempted Company
  • Used for: holding assets, operating businesses, SPVs, joint ventures, M&A
  • Relatively simple to establish and maintain
  • Does not have built-in succession mechanism
  • Beneficial ownership tracked by regulators

Trust

Fiduciary arrangement

  • Not a separate legal entity in most common law systems — trustee holds assets as fiduciary
  • Settlor transfers assets to trustee; trustee manages for beneficiaries
  • Discretionary trusts give trustee power over distributions
  • Strongest tool for succession planning and asset protection
  • Used for: multi-generational wealth, family succession, asset protection, philanthropy
  • Requires qualified professional trustee in offshore jurisdictions
  • Ongoing trustee fees; trust deed required
  • Less familiar to civil law clients than foundations

Foundation

Hybrid structure

  • Has separate legal personality (unlike most trusts) — can own assets in its own name
  • No shareholders — established by founder for defined purposes or beneficiaries
  • Council manages the foundation (equivalent to board of directors)
  • Available in: Jersey, Guernsey, Cayman, BVI, Panama, Liechtenstein
  • Used for: civil law clients, philanthropy, purpose vehicles, family wealth
  • More familiar to European, Latin American and Middle Eastern clients
  • Combines features of company and trust
  • Beneficiaries have no automatic legal claim to assets

Full Comparison

Company vs Trust vs Foundation — Side by Side

DimensionOffshore CompanyTrustFoundation
Legal Structure
Legal Personality✓ Separate legal entityNot typically (trustee holds assets)✓ Separate legal entity
Who Owns ItShareholdersNo owner — trustee holds in fiduciary capacityNobody — self-owning entity for defined purposes
Who Controls ItDirectors (appointed by shareholders)Trustee (fiduciary duty to beneficiaries)Council / Board of Foundation
BeneficiariesShareholders benefit through dividends/distributionsNamed or class of beneficiariesNamed beneficiaries or purpose
Governing DocumentMemorandum & Articles of AssociationTrust DeedFoundation Charter / By-Laws
Use Cases
Business Operations✓ Primary useNot suitableLimited use
Asset Holding✓ Widely used✓ Very common✓ Common
Succession PlanningPossible but requires planning✓ Primary tool✓ Strong
Asset ProtectionGood (holding layer)✓ Strongest tool✓ Strong
Civil Law Clients✓ FamiliarLess familiar — common law concept✓ More familiar than trusts
PhilanthropyPossible via charitable company✓ Charitable trusts available✓ Primary use in some jurisdictions
Practical Considerations
Setup ComplexityLow — fastest to establishMedium — trust deed, trustee appointmentMedium — charter, council appointment
Ongoing CostLowest — registered agent, annual feesHigher — ongoing trustee feesMedium — foundation council, admin
PrivacyBeneficial owner registered; not public in most jurisdictionsTrust deed generally private; no public register in most jurisdictionsGenerally private; charter may be registered
Forced Heirship ProtectionLimited without additional planning✓ Strong in most trust jurisdictions✓ Strong in most foundation jurisdictions
Common JurisdictionsBVI, Cayman, Isle of Man, SeychellesJersey, Guernsey, Cayman, BVI, NevisJersey, Guernsey, Cayman, BVI, Panama, Liechtenstein

Which Structure for Which Need?

Use Case Guide

Holding Operating Business Interests

→ Company — primary choice

An offshore holding company (typically BVI or Cayman) is the standard vehicle for holding shares in operating businesses, as an M&A acquisition vehicle or for joint venture structures. Companies are fast to establish, simple to transfer and universally understood by counterparties. A trust or foundation can own the holding company shares to add a succession and protection layer above.

Multi-Generational Family Succession

→ Trust — primary tool in common law

Discretionary trusts are the most widely used vehicle for passing wealth across generations while protecting assets from forced heirship, creditors and family disputes. The trustee exercises discretion over distributions, preventing any single beneficiary from having a fixed entitlement that could be attacked. Jersey and Guernsey are leading trust jurisdictions for this purpose.

Civil Law Client (European / Middle Eastern)

→ Foundation — more familiar

Clients from civil law traditions — continental Europe, Latin America, the Middle East — often find trusts conceptually unfamiliar because trusts do not exist in most civil law systems. Foundations, which have separate legal personality and a more company-like governance structure, are typically more comfortable for these clients while providing similar succession and protection benefits.

Asset Protection from Future Creditors

→ Trust (or Foundation) above a Company

The strongest asset protection structure typically layers a discretionary trust or foundation at the top, with one or more holding companies below holding the actual assets. The trust/foundation provides the protection against creditor claims (subject to fraudulent transfer rules); the company provides the corporate holding layer for each asset class. Cayman, Jersey and Nevis are preferred for the trust layer; BVI for the holding company layer.

Philanthropic or Charitable Purpose

→ Foundation or Charitable Trust

Foundations are widely used for philanthropic and charitable purposes — particularly in Liechtenstein, Jersey and Guernsey. The foundation's charter can specify charitable objects and governance rules for perpetual charitable giving. Charitable trusts are also available in trust jurisdictions. Private Trust Companies (PTCs) are used by some families to hold charitable and family interests in a single vehicle.

SPV for Transaction or Structured Finance

→ Company — only viable option

Special purpose vehicles in structured finance, M&A and capital markets transactions are always corporate entities — typically Cayman exempted companies or BVI Business Companies. Trusts and foundations are not used as transaction SPVs because counterparties, lenders and rating agencies require a corporate entity with defined shareholders and directors. Cayman STAR purpose trusts are used for the orphan SPV structure within certain securitisation transactions but this is highly specialised.

Common Combinations

How These Structures Work Together

In practice, the most effective offshore wealth structures typically layer two or three of these vehicles together rather than using any single structure in isolation. Common combinations include:

Trust → Company

Most common private wealth structure

A Jersey or Cayman discretionary trust sits at the top, owning shares in one or more BVI or Cayman holding companies, which in turn hold the family's assets — property, investments, business interests. The trust provides succession and protection; the companies provide the asset-holding and operational layer.

Foundation → Company

Civil law equivalent

Structurally similar to trust + company but using a foundation (Jersey, Guernsey, Cayman or Panama) instead of a trust at the top. Preferred by civil law background clients. The foundation holds shares in holding companies below. Used extensively for Middle Eastern, European and Latin American family wealth.

Trust → Fund → Company

Family office with investment focus

For families with significant fund and private equity exposure, a three-layer structure places a discretionary trust at the top, with a Cayman fund vehicle in the middle (through which fund investments are made), and BVI companies as portfolio holdcos at the bottom. This is a common Singapore and Cayman family office architecture.

The appropriate structure depends entirely on the family's specific circumstances — domicile, nationality, asset location, family dynamics, succession objectives and risk profile. Always obtain qualified legal, tax and fiduciary advice before establishing any offshore structure.

FAQ

Company vs Trust vs Foundation — Common Questions

The fundamental legal difference is that a foundation has separate legal personality — it exists as a legal entity in its own right and can own assets, enter contracts and sue in its own name. A trust in most common law systems does not have separate legal personality; instead, the trustee holds the assets personally in a fiduciary capacity. Practically, both can achieve very similar outcomes for wealth structuring and succession planning. The choice between them is often driven by the client's familiarity and background — common law clients from the UK, US or British Commonwealth are typically comfortable with trusts; civil law clients from continental Europe, Latin America or the Middle East often prefer foundations.
A company cannot own a trust — but a company can be the trustee of a trust. This arrangement is called a Private Trust Company (PTC): a company incorporated specifically to act as the trustee of a family trust. PTCs allow the family to have greater involvement in the governance of the trust while maintaining the legal structure of a trust. They are used by families who want to retain some control or oversight over trustee decisions without being the trustee themselves. Jersey, Guernsey, BVI and Cayman all have PTC frameworks. The PTC typically sits within a purpose trust or foundation to hold its shares.
For offshore or international property, a company (typically a BVI Business Company or Cayman Exempted Company) is the most common holding vehicle because it simplifies transfer of ownership (you sell the shares rather than the property), can provide limited liability protection and is familiar to banks and counterparties. A trust can own property directly or through a company — the trust adds succession planning and asset protection benefits above the corporate holding layer. For UK real estate specifically, the Jersey Property Unit Trust (JPUT) is a widely used institutional structure. The tax treatment in the country where the property is located is always a critical factor.
A Private Trust Company is a company incorporated specifically to act as the trustee of a particular family's trust or trusts. Rather than appointing a professional trust company as trustee, the family establishes their own company — the PTC — which acts as trustee. The PTC can have family members or trusted advisors on its board, giving the family greater involvement in trustee decisions. PTCs are used by very wealthy families who want the legal protection of a trust structure but wish to retain governance influence over key decisions. The PTC's own shares are typically held in a purpose trust or foundation to ensure there is no individual beneficial ownership of the PTC that could compromise the trust's asset protection.

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