FAQ · SearchOffshore
Yes — offshore companies are entirely legal and are used by millions of businesses worldwide for holding assets, managing international operations, investment structures and cross-border transactions. They are subject to AML regulations, beneficial ownership disclosure requirements and economic substance rules in all major jurisdictions.
The Full Answer
An offshore company is simply a company incorporated in a jurisdiction outside the owner's country of residence, typically in a low-tax financial centre such as the British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands or Isle of Man. The BVI Business Company alone has over one million active incorporations — used by businesses from every country in the world for entirely legitimate commercial purposes.
Common legitimate uses of offshore companies include:
Offshore companies are fully subject to AML and KYC obligations — corporate service providers must verify beneficial owners before forming a company. All major offshore jurisdictions have implemented beneficial ownership registers (varying in whether they are public or authority-access only) and economic substance requirements for certain entity types.
Browse corporate service providers and law firms across BVI, Cayman, Isle of Man and all major offshore jurisdictions.
SearchOffshore is a directory and information platform. It is important to understand what this means:
