Glossary · SearchOffshore

What Is a Double Tax Treaty?

A double tax treaty (DTA) is a bilateral agreement between two countries that determines how income and gains arising in one country and received by a tax resident of the other are taxed — typically to prevent the same income being taxed in both countries and to reduce withholding taxes on cross-border payments of dividends, interest and royalties.

Topic: International TaxAlso known as: Tax treaty, DTA, double taxation agreementBased on: OECD Model Tax Convention

How DTAs Work

The Mechanics of Double Tax Treaties

Without a DTA, a company paying a dividend to a foreign shareholder might withhold tax at the full domestic rate, and the recipient might also be subject to tax in their own country on the same dividend — resulting in double taxation that is economically inefficient and discourages cross-border investment. DTAs address this by:

  • Allocating taxing rights — determining which country has the primary right to tax specific types of income (business profits, dividends, interest, royalties, capital gains, employment income)
  • Reducing withholding taxes — capping the rate of withholding tax on dividends, interest and royalties to agreed treaty rates (often 5–15%, reduced from domestic rates of 20–30%)
  • Providing relief from double taxation — either exempting treaty-country income from domestic tax (exemption method) or providing a credit for foreign taxes paid (credit method)
  • Tie-breaker rules for residency — determining which country a dual-resident individual or entity is treated as resident in for treaty purposes
  • Exchange of information — most modern DTAs include provisions for tax authorities to exchange information to prevent evasion

Withholding Tax Rates

How Treaties Reduce Withholding Tax

Payment TypeTypical Domestic WHT (Non-Treaty)Typical Treaty RateImpact
Dividends15–30%5–15%Significant reduction on dividend flows between treaty partners
Interest15–30%0–10%Major reduction for cross-border loan interest; often 0% between treaty partners
Royalties15–30%0–10%Critical for IP licensing structures; zero-rate royalty flows in many treaties
Capital GainsVaries widelyOften exempt in source country under treatyCapital gains from property-rich companies may still be taxable at source
Service Fees0–20% depending on jurisdictionOften 0% (no WHT on service fees in OECD model)Cross-border management fees generally not subject to WHT under modern treaties

Treaty Networks

Jurisdictions with the Largest DTA Networks

JurisdictionNumber of DTAs (approx.)Key Treaty PartnersSignificance for Offshore
UK130+US, EU, India, China, JapanUK intermediate holdcos widely used for treaty access
Netherlands90+US, EU, India, Brazil, RussiaMajor European treaty holding jurisdiction
Luxembourg80+EU, US, China, SingaporeEU fund holding, parent-subsidiary directive access
Singapore80+India, China, Indonesia, ASEAN, UK, USPremier Asian holding jurisdiction for treaty access
UAE130+India, GCC, Africa, EuropeUAE treaties accessed by UAE companies; DIFC entity access varies
Ireland74+US, EU, India, ChinaUS-Europe holding structures, IP holding
Cayman IslandsVery limitedNo DTA network — used for tax-neutral structures without treaty reliance
BVIVery limitedNo DTA network — used for holding without cross-border income flows requiring treaty protection

FAQ

Treaty shopping refers to structuring a transaction to route income through a jurisdiction specifically to access favourable treaty rates — even when the entity in that jurisdiction has no real economic substance or business rationale. The OECD BEPS project specifically targeted treaty shopping, introducing Principal Purpose Tests (PPT) and Limitation on Benefits (LOB) provisions into the Multilateral Instrument (MLI) and model tax convention. Modern DTAs include anti-abuse provisions that deny treaty benefits where the principal purpose of a structure or transaction was to obtain those benefits. Treaty holding companies must have genuine economic substance and commercial rationale beyond the treaty benefit itself.
Generally no — Cayman Islands and BVI do not have extensive DTA networks and entities in these jurisdictions cannot typically access double tax treaties. This is why many complex international structures use intermediate holding companies in treaty-efficient jurisdictions (Singapore, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Ireland) above the Cayman or BVI vehicle. The intermediate holdco accesses treaty benefits on income flowing up from operating subsidiaries, while the Cayman or BVI entity provides the ultimate holding structure with zero tax on dividends and capital gains received from the intermediate holdco.

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