Glossary · SearchOffshore
Offshore wealth structuring refers to the use of legal entities and arrangements — companies, trusts, foundations, funds and banking relationships — across one or more offshore jurisdictions to hold, manage, protect and transfer wealth. It is an umbrella term covering the full range of international private wealth planning tools available in offshore financial centres.
Overview
Offshore wealth structuring typically brings together several complementary tools and jurisdictions into a coherent architecture designed to address the family's specific objectives — succession, asset protection, tax efficiency, investment flexibility and governance. The most common components are:
Discretionary trusts in Jersey, Guernsey, Cayman or BVI form the most common wealth holding layer — providing succession planning, asset protection and forced heirship mitigation. See What Is a Trust →
Used by civil law clients as alternatives to trusts — separate legal entities established for defined purposes or beneficiaries in Jersey, Guernsey, Cayman, Panama or Liechtenstein. See What Is a Foundation →
BVI, Cayman or Singapore companies holding the family's investment assets, business interests, real estate and other holdings beneath the trust or foundation layer. See Holding Companies →
Cayman ELPs or VCCs for families with significant fund management or co-investment programmes — particularly for PE, hedge fund and alternative investment strategies alongside the trust holding structure.
The banking relationship sits alongside the legal structure — typically with a private bank in Switzerland, Singapore, Jersey or Luxembourg providing custody, investment management and credit services. Browse Wealth Managers →
The jurisdiction(s) where the family members are personally tax resident affects the overall tax efficiency of the structure. Carefully managed residency across low-tax jurisdictions (UAE, Singapore, Monaco) can significantly reduce the overall tax burden on the family. See Tax Residency →
Common Objectives
| Objective | Primary Structure | Key Jurisdictions |
|---|---|---|
| Multi-generational succession | Discretionary trust or foundation | Jersey, Guernsey, Cayman |
| Asset protection from creditors | Discretionary trust with professional trustee | Jersey, Cayman, Nevis |
| Forced heirship protection | Discretionary trust in non-forced-heirship jurisdiction | Jersey, Cayman, Guernsey |
| Tax-efficient investment holding | Holding company with participation exemption | Singapore, Luxembourg, Netherlands |
| Fund co-investment | Cayman ELP or VCC above family trust | Cayman, Singapore |
| Family office administration | MAS-licensed family office entity | Singapore, Jersey |
| Philanthropic giving | Charitable trust or purpose foundation | Jersey, Guernsey, Cayman, Liechtenstein |
| Personal tax efficiency | Tax residency planning | UAE, Singapore, Monaco, Isle of Man |
| Business exit planning | Pre-exit trust / holding structure before sale | Various — depends on jurisdiction |
Compliance Framework
Modern offshore wealth structures operate within an increasingly transparent global compliance framework. Key regulatory requirements that all structures must address include:
Internal Linking Hub
Browse trust companies, wealth managers, law firms and fiduciary providers across all leading offshore wealth structuring jurisdictions.
SearchOffshore is a directory and information platform. It is important to understand what this means:
