# BVI Company: BC Act, Economic Substance and Beneficial Ownership Register 2025 > BVI Business Company under BC Act 2004: zero tax, Economic Substance Act 2018, beneficial ownership register reform from January 2025 and legitimate interest access from April 2026. Author: Алёна Дунаева — юрист, Family Office (https://wiki.private.law/authors/dunaeva) Last modified: 2026-07-16T10:09:00.000Z Canonical: https://wiki.private.law/en/bvi-company Topics: structures Jurisdictions: bvi Semantic tags: substance --- ## Concept The British Virgin Islands is the world's most popular offshore jurisdiction. The BVI Business Company has become the standard "building block" of international structures: holding companies, real estate ownership, joint ventures, and transaction SPVs. Its appeal rests on simplicity, flexible corporate law, and zero tax. ## Brief History: How the British Virgin Islands Became Offshore Jurisdiction #1 The modern history of BVI began with the termination of a tax treaty. In 1981, the United States unilaterally terminated its double taxation agreement with the islands—Washington was then unwinding treaties with jurisdictions used for tax avoidance. The territory's previous business model collapsed, and in response, local authorities together with private lawyers drafted a new law. The International Business Companies Act 1984 was adopted on August 15, 1984; it was developed by Attorney General Lewis Hunte, partners at Harneys, and an invited lawyer from the American firm Shearman & Sterling. The result was an extremely simple and inexpensive tax-free company. The structure proved so successful that it was copied worldwide, and the islands themselves became the largest company factory within a couple of decades. By 2000, according to a KPMG estimate in a report for the British government, approximately 45% of all offshore companies in the world were registered in BVI. Investment flows from Asia were particularly dense through the islands: the BVI holding became the standard top tier for Chinese and Hong Kong capital. This scale explains why any change in the local regime is immediately felt throughout the international structuring industry. ## BC Act 2004 The main law is the BVI Business Companies Act 2004. A company is created quickly, pays no corporate tax, capital gains tax, or withholding tax; a licensed registered agent in the islands is mandatory. Corporate law is flexible: one person can be both the sole shareholder and director, and different classes of shares are permitted. > 💡 BC Act 2004 came into force on January 1, 2005, and replaced two laws at once—the old Companies Act and the IBC Act. Under pressure from the OECD, the islands abandoned ring-fencing, i.e., the division of companies into "local" and "offshore" with different taxation. Now all companies operate under one law and are equally taxed at zero; this is precisely what allowed BVI to exit the OECD's list of uncooperative jurisdictions. BC Act provided predictable and flexible corporate law. There is no minimum capital requirement, different classes of shares are permitted, mergers, share buybacks, and continuation are simplified—a company can be re-registered from the islands to another jurisdiction and back. A licensed registered agent in BVI is mandatory, through whom all registration actions are processed and reporting is filed. There is no public register of directors and shareholders; the register of directors is filed with the Registrar in closed form, and information about beneficial owners has been collected separately since 2025. ## Economic Substance (2018) The Economic Substance (Companies and Limited Partnerships) Act 2018 has been in effect since January 1, 2019. Companies conducting "relevant activities"—finance and leasing, banking, insurance, headquarters, shipping, intellectual property, distribution, fund business, pure holding—are required to demonstrate real presence in the islands. For pure holding companies, the substance test is relaxed, but annual reporting is mandatory for all. The substance test is built around the concept of CIGA—core income-generating activities. A company must show that these are performed in the islands: a sufficient number of employees, adequate expenses and physical presence, management and decision-making on site. For businesses with intellectual property, the bar is higher, and the presumption works against the taxpayer. Pure holdings are exempt from the full test and undergo a simplified check, but everyone files annual reports. Information goes to the International Tax Authority and is then automatically transmitted to EU countries and jurisdictions of parent companies; non-compliance is subject to fines up to strike-off from the register. Requirements and forms are published by the [BVI Financial Services Commission](https://www.bvifsc.vg/). ## Beneficial Ownership Register Reform (2025) BVI has substantially restructured its beneficial ownership regime. Amendments to BC Act that came into force on January 2, 2025, transferred the collection of beneficial owner data to the government VIRRGIN system and completed the work of the previous BOSS mechanism. New companies file beneficial owner information within 30 days of registration; companies existing as of January 2, 2025, had a transition period until January 1, 2026. > ⚙️ Access to beneficial owner data does not become fully public: from April 1, 2026, access by "legitimate interest" is provided with a limited set of fields and a 25% ownership threshold. This is a step toward FATF standards while preserving some privacy. ## Regulation and Automatic Exchange In addition to substance, BVI is integrated into the global transparency system. Since 2017, the islands have participated in automatic exchange under the CRS (AEOI) standard and comply with FATCA through an intergovernmental agreement with the United States, so information about accounts and structures regularly goes to the tax authorities of the countries of residence of the owners. Relations with the European Union have been volatile: in February 2023, BVI was placed on the "black" list of non-cooperative jurisdictions due to complaints about information exchange, but on October 17, 2023, [ECOFIN removed the islands from Annex I](https://www.consilium.europa.eu/en/policies/eu-list-of-non-cooperative-jurisdictions/) after legislative amendments. Currently, BVI remains in Annex II—the watchlist—until the completion of the OECD reassessment. The islands did not introduce fully public beneficial ownership registers: after the 2022 EU Court decision on the inadmissibility of open access, a "legitimate interest" access model was chosen. > 🧭 In practice, a BVI company today is accompanied by three things: confirmation of substance, filed beneficial owner information, and CRS reporting. Banks ask for all of this immediately when opening an account, and the absence of any element most often means refusal. ## Reputation and Compliance Under pressure from the EU and FATF, BVI has consistently strengthened requirements for substance and beneficial owner transparency. For users, this means stricter KYC when opening bank accounts and the need to maintain documentary presence, especially for relevant activities. ## Application > 🔗 **Related** > [Offshore Companies](https://wiki.private.law/en/offshore-companies) · [Economic Substance](https://wiki.private.law/en/economic-substance) · [Beneficial Ownership Registers (UBO)](https://wiki.private.law/en/ubo-registers) · [Holding Structures](https://wiki.private.law/en/holding-structures) · [SPV](https://wiki.private.law/en/spv) · [Seychelles (IBC)](https://wiki.private.law/en/seychelles-company) · [Cayman Islands Company](https://wiki.private.law/en/company-cayman) BVI companies are most often used as top-tier holdings, holders of shares in operating companies, SPVs for transactions and joint ventures, and owners of vessels and real estate. In family structures, a BVI company often becomes a subsidiary to a trust or foundation. The typical roles of BVI companies remain the same, but new accents have been added. This is a top-level holding over operating assets, a holder of shares in joint ventures, an SPV for a specific M&A transaction or debt issuance, an owner of ships and aircraft, as well as a general partner or feeder in a fund structure alongside the [Cayman Islands](https://wiki.private.law/en/cayman-fund). For long-term ownership of real estate and shares, the BVI level is convenient for its neutrality: it does not add tax by itself, and confidentiality is ensured by closed but regulated disclosure. Neighboring solutions are chosen according to the task. For classic [offshore companies](https://wiki.private.law/en/offshore-companies), BVI is compared with [Seychelles](https://wiki.private.law/en/seychelles-company); for long-term ownership of family assets, [holding structures](https://wiki.private.law/en/holding-structures) are considered. Technical requirements for the islands are conveniently studied by separate topics—[economic substance](https://wiki.private.law/en/economic-substance), [beneficial ownership registers](https://wiki.private.law/en/ubo-registers), and [automatic CRS exchange](https://wiki.private.law/en/crs-overview)—and the function that a BVI company most often fulfills is described by the [SPV](https://wiki.private.law/en/spv) format. ## Evolution of the Regime and Conclusions Over forty years, BVI has evolved from a pure tax haven to a regulated but still light jurisdiction. Zero tax has been preserved, but mandatory infrastructure has grown around the company: substance, beneficial owner disclosure, automatic exchange, and regular reporting. Maintaining a "paper" company has become more expensive and troublesome, and this has cut off purely nominal structures. For real tasks—holding, SPV, joint ventures—the islands maintain strong positions: predictable English-style law, a developed support industry, and a neutral tax level. In the field of view for the coming years, pressure toward more open registers and the general context of the global minimum tax should be kept in mind, although for passive holding structures its direct effect is still limited. > 🍓 BVI remains a convenient and inexpensive tool for holding and SPV. At the same time, a "paper" company without substance and without current beneficial owner disclosure no longer fulfills its functions—maintaining a structure requires real presence and reporting. This material is for expert informational purposes and does not constitute individual tax or legal advice. --- --- ## Factual claims - The main law is the BVI Business Companies Act 2004. - BC Act provided predictable and flexible corporate law. - The Economic Substance (Companies and Limited Partnerships) Act 2018 has been in effect since January 1, 2019.