Since 2010, the Global Law Experts annual awards have been celebrating excellence, innovation and performance across the legal communities from around the world.
posted 2 hours ago
This lawyer-reviewed guide covers everything SMEs, founders, and advisers need to know about company formation in the BVI. Whether you are structuring a cross-border holding company, launching a trading vehicle, or exploring a compliant path for a virtual-assets business, the British Virgin Islands remains one of the world’s most established corporate domiciles with more than 400,000 active companies on the register. Below you will find step-by-step incorporation instructions, timelines, typical costs, compliance obligations (economic substance, beneficial ownership), and pragmatic bank-account options all grounded in the jurisdiction’s primary legislation and the BVI Financial Services Commission (BVIFSC) guidance.
Explore Company Formation services across 140+ jurisdictions through the Global Law Experts network and local counsel.
The BVI does not impose corporate income tax, capital gains tax, or withholding tax on most BVI Business Companies. This tax-neutral framework makes the jurisdiction particularly attractive for international holding, IP, and trading structures where profits are sourced outside the islands.
Under the Beneficial Ownership Secure Search System (BOSSs) Act 2017, beneficial ownership information is collected and maintained in a secure, verified register. Access is restricted to BVI competent authorities and approved foreign regulators the register is not publicly searchable. This balanced approach satisfies international transparency standards while preserving legitimate commercial confidentiality.
The BVI Business Companies Act provides a modern, investor-friendly statutory framework. Companies benefit from permissive articles (customisable share classes, no mandatory audit for most companies, written resolutions in lieu of meetings), making the BVI Business Company one of the most adaptable corporate vehicles in the offshore world.
The BVI has a deep ecosystem of licensed registered agents, trust companies, and corporate service providers, together with mature fund administration and increasingly VASP registration regimes. This infrastructure reduces onboarding time and provides credible service-provider support from incorporation through to ongoing compliance.
The following seven steps outline how to complete company formation in the BVI efficiently and compliantly.
The standard vehicle is the BVI Business Company (BC), governed by the BVI Business Companies Act. Choose a proposed company name that is not identical or confusingly similar to an existing registered name. Permitted suffixes include “Limited,” “Corporation,” “Incorporated,” or their abbreviations. Certain words (e.g., “Bank,” “Insurance,” “Trust”) are restricted and require prior regulatory consent. Your registered agent will conduct a name availability check through the Registrar’s VIRRGIN system before filing.
BVI law mandates that every company appoint and maintain a licensed registered agent (RA). The RA serves as the company’s compliance gateway conducting customer due diligence, filing incorporation documents with the Registrar, and maintaining corporate records. Only entities licensed by the BVIFSC under the Banks and Trust Companies Act may act as registered agents. Choosing a reputable, well-resourced RA is one of the most consequential decisions in the incorporation process, as the RA’s KYC standards directly affect banking introductions and ongoing compliance.
The core filing documents are the Memorandum of Association and Articles of Association (or the statutory model articles if no custom provisions are needed). You will also provide:
Anti-money-laundering regulations require the RA to verify the identity of all beneficial owners, directors, and authorised signatories before filing. Standard KYC requirements are detailed in the “Required Documents” section below. Incomplete or unclear KYC documentation is the most common cause of incorporation delays.
Once KYC is cleared, the RA lodges the Memorandum and Articles and pays the government registration fees through the VIRRGIN electronic filing system. Upon approval, the Registrar issues a Certificate of Incorporation confirming the company’s legal existence. Standard processing typically takes one to two business days; expedited (same-day) service is available for an additional fee.
After incorporation, the RA assists with:
Complete the corporate housekeeping that underpins a “bankable” company:
Tips: Expedited incorporation is available for an additional government fee, but the practical bottleneck is almost always KYC. Complex ownership chains (multiple corporate layers, high-risk jurisdictions, PEP involvement) can add one to three weeks. Preparing a thorough KYC dossier before engaging the RA dramatically shortens the timeline.
A complete KYC pack for each beneficial owner, director, and authorised signatory typically includes:
Notarisation vs apostille: Documents originating from Hague Convention countries generally require an apostille. For non-Convention countries, consular legalisation is the norm. The RA will specify requirements and may accept reliance letters from regulated professionals in the beneficial owner’s home jurisdiction.
Certified translations: Required for any document not in English.
The RA has a continuing obligation to keep KYC and beneficial ownership information current under the Beneficial Ownership Secure Search System Act and the BVI Business Companies Act. Changes in directors, shareholders, or beneficial owners must be notified promptly.
Once a complete KYC pack and signed incorporation documents are submitted, standard BVI company formation takes 24–72 hours. Complex ownership structures or enhanced due-diligence requirements (PEPs, high-risk jurisdictions, multi-layered corporate chains) can extend the timeline by one to three weeks.
| Item | Typical Range (USD) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Government registration fee (up to 50,000 authorised shares) | $550 – $1,350* | Tiered by number of authorised shares; confirm current schedule on the BVIFSC Fees page |
| Registered Agent professional fee (initial + annual) | $700 – $2,500 | Varies by provider and service level; nominee services are extra |
| Notarisation / apostille | $20 – $200 | Per document; depends on originating country |
| Nominee director / shareholder (optional) | $500 – $2,000 pa | Only via regulated providers; must disclose for BO filings |
| Corporate bank-account opening (service fees vary) | $0 – $2,000+ | Many banks charge onboarding fees; see banking section below |
| VASP registration (if applicable) | Regulatory fees + set-up costs (varies) | Compliance costs may be material; see crypto section below |
* Government fee orders are updated periodically by the BVIFSC always confirm the latest schedule before committing to a budget.
Indicative market packages: Starter incorporation packages (government fees + RA first-year fee + basic documents) typically range from approximately USD 1,200–2,000. Packages that include compliance planning, substance advisory, and banking dossier preparation start from approximately USD 3,000 upward. These are market ranges based on industry observation, not regulated prices.
A licensed registered agent is a statutory requirement under the BVI Business Companies Act. The RA maintains the company’s registered office, holds corporate records, and acts as the interface between the company and the Registrar. Core RA responsibilities include:
Nominee services where a licensed provider acts as the named director or shareholder are used for privacy, restructuring, or administrative convenience. Under the BVIFSC’s supervisory framework, only licensed trust or corporate service providers may offer nominee services. Full disclosure of the underlying beneficial owner remains mandatory for BO filings. Industry observers recommend using nominee structures only where there is a clear commercial rationale, and only through regulated, reputable providers.
The Economic Substance (Companies and Limited Partnerships) Act requires BVI entities carrying on relevant activities including holding, distribution and service-centre, banking, insurance, fund management, finance and leasing, headquarters, IP, and shipping to demonstrate adequate economic substance in the BVI.
Practical checklist for a small holding company:
Beneficial ownership obligations: The RA must collect and maintain current BO information and file it with the ROBO. This information is accessible to BVI competent authorities through BOSSs it is not publicly available. Penalties for non-compliance with substance or BO requirements can include fines and, ultimately, striking off. Companies have a statutory right of appeal against substance assessments.
Opening a bank account for a BVI offshore company remains achievable but requires meticulous preparation. International banks have significantly increased AML/KYC friction, and onboarding timelines of four to twelve weeks are common for new BVI entities.
Practical steps:
Alternatives to traditional banking: Payment service providers (PSPs), corporate fintech accounts (e.g., multi-currency e-wallets), and multi-jurisdictional banking arrangements (opening accounts in the EU, UK, Caribbean, or Asia under the BVI entity’s name) offer faster onboarding but come with their own compliance trade-offs typically higher transaction fees, lower deposit protection, and more limited credit facilities. Registered agents with strong banking relationships can provide introductions and assist with dossier preparation, which materially improves the probability of successful account opening. The Banks and Trust Companies Act provides the regulatory backdrop for banking supervision in the BVI.
Any entity providing virtual-asset services in or from the BVI including exchange, transfer, custody, or financial services related to virtual assets must register with the BVIFSC under the Virtual Assets Service Providers Act. The BVIFSC VASP guidance sets out registration requirements, including AML/CFT controls, governance standards, and ongoing reporting obligations.
Practical guidance for token projects and crypto firms:
| Feature | BVI Business Company | Cayman (Exempt Co) | Delaware LLC |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tax regime | Tax neutral no local corporate tax for most companies | Tax neutral | No state corporate tax on LLC income for non-US activities; US federal tax considerations apply |
| Privacy | Controlled BO via BOSSs access restricted to competent authorities | Limited BO transparency (evolving) | Variable state filings and federal beneficial ownership reporting |
| Substance rules | Economic substance requirements for relevant activities (2018/2020 legislation) | Substance rules for certain activities | US nexus / multistate tax considerations |
| Banking | International banking available; increased onboarding friction | Similar friction profile | Generally simpler for US-centric businesses |
When the BVI is preferable: Cross-border holding structures, investor-facing vehicles (private equity, venture capital), asset-protection planning, and structures where a tax-neutral, privacy-respecting jurisdiction is valued by counterparties. When a Delaware LLC makes more sense: US operating businesses, US-sourced revenue, or where US investors require domestic pass-through tax treatment. For a deeper analysis, visit the BVI legal hub.
Structure: A BVI Business Company was incorporated as a holding entity (“HoldCo”) owned by two individual EU shareholders. HoldCo owns 100% of an operational Cyprus subsidiary delivering SaaS products across the EU.
Process: The registered agent handled incorporation and BO filing within 48 hours. Substance was achieved through quarterly board meetings with documented minutes, a licensed BVI-resident director, outsourced accounting, and a proportionate management-services agreement. Banking was secured through an EU corporate account after the RA prepared a comprehensive dossier including a business plan, substance documentation, and certified corporate records.
Outcome and learning points:
posted 2 hours ago
posted 6 hours ago
posted 10 hours ago
posted 16 hours ago
posted 18 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest advisor briefings and news within Global Advisory Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Advisory Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional advisory services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced advisors, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.