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What Are the World’s Best Tax Havens?

PhillipMinnis / Getty Images/iStockphoto
PhillipMinnis / Getty Images/iStockphoto

Due to the level of taxation in much of the industrialized world, many turn to tax havens. Tax havens are places where individuals and companies go to avoid paying higher taxes.

Find Out: Common Reasons Why You Might Owe Taxes This Year
Read: 3 Signs You're Serious About Raising Your Credit Score

The International Monetary Fund estimates that tax havens cost governments between $500 billion and $600 billion every year -- mostly in corporate tax revenue that they couldn't collect. Moreover, at least 366 companies in the Fortune 500 base at least one subsidiary in a tax haven. According to the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy (ITEP), Apple had booked $252 billion offshore by 2018. Apple began to repatriate that cash after President Trump reduced the tax on this cash from 35% to 15.5%. However, the tax cut will likely not completely disincentivize companies from routing money into other tax-friendly jurisdictions.

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Find out the best places to go if you want to avoid paying high tax rates.

Shutterstock.com
Shutterstock.com

The Bahamas

The Bahamas is a former British colony that gained independence in 1973. This Caribbean island nation attracts tax avoiders due to its lack of withholding or corporate taxes. Instead, it derives its revenue from taxes such as import duties, value-added taxes and license fees. This and its proximity to the U.S. makes it an attractive tax haven.

It has become a center for banking activities. Companies also benefit from secrecy laws that do not require submission of accounting records to the government. For this reason, one can see why the likes of Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase operate subsidiaries there. However, companies outside of banking, such as Viacom, have also chosen to operate in this country.

Take Our Poll: How Much of a Tax Refund Do You Expect in 2023?

Roman Stetsyk / Shutterstock.com
Roman Stetsyk / Shutterstock.com

Bermuda

Situated between the United States and Europe, Bermuda has become a popular tax haven. Like in the Bahamas, it imposes no taxes on corporate income, interest, dividends or royalties. Corporations such as Nabors Industries and Signet Jewelers have chosen to base their operations in the British Overseas Territory.

Bermuda has also found itself in the middle of prominent tax avoidance schemes. The Paradise Papers reported that Nike shifted some of its European profits from the Netherlands through Bermuda tax-free. Google also sheltered $23 billion from overseas to Bermuda in 2017. Regulators have pressured countries to close some of the loopholes that make such income shifting possible. However, given the territory's policies and proximity to both the U.S. and Europe, it will likely remain a popular financial and business center.

Guido Amrein Switzerland / Shutterstock.com
Guido Amrein Switzerland / Shutterstock.com

British Virgin Islands

The British Virgin Islands, like Bermuda, remains a British overseas possession. However, also like Bermuda, the benign neglect of British rule has enabled its tax haven status. Despite a population of less than 36,000, the BVI is home to over 400,000 companies and holds an estimated $1.5 trillion in assets.

Deloitte's international tax guide states that the islands levy no tax on interest, dividends or corporate income. However, they do impose payroll taxes totaling 10% or 14% on all income above $10,000. Financial services also account for 62% of the government's revenue.

Officials insist that the BVI is not a tax haven country. However, few seem fooled as it faces a continuous threat of being placed on the EU's tax haven blacklist.

Jo Ann Snover / Shutterstock.com
Jo Ann Snover / Shutterstock.com

Cayman Islands

Like other British Overseas Territories, the Cayman Islands has become one of the more prominent tax havens. Despite a population of just over 67,000, more than 117,000 companies base themselves in the territory. These include the American depository receipts, or holding companies that make it possible for Alibaba, Baidu and other China-based operations to trade on U.S. stock exchanges.

Crystal Stranger, lead accountant at Greenback Business Services, considers the Caymans "probably the biggest (tax) loophole now for individuals as well as the multinational corporations." One area where it stands out is banking. Despite its small size, it accounts for almost 1/15 of the world's $30 trillion in banking assets, according to The Guardian.

Arndale / Shutterstock.com
Arndale / Shutterstock.com

Channel Islands

The Channel Islands is an archipelago off the coast of Normandy. Despite its location, the islands belong to neither France nor the U.K. However, English is one of the official languages, and Britain is responsible for defending the islands. The islands are actually two British Crown dependencies, the Bailiwick of Jersey and the Bailiwick of Guernsey.

However, the Channel Islands have become best known as a tax haven. Corporate taxes are 0% for most companies, though they rise to 10% if an entity is labeled a "financial services company" and can go as high as 20% for other types of companies. It also does not levy capital gains tax or inheritance taxes. According to the Paradise Papers, Apple moved its tax residency to Jersey in 2014 and stored as much as $252 billion in offshore cash in Jersey.

Kisov Boris / Shutterstock.com
Kisov Boris / Shutterstock.com

The Isle of Man

The Isle of Man is a self-governing British Crown dependency located in the Irish Sea between England and Ireland. Aside from being known as the birthplace of the Bee Gees, it has also developed a following as a place to shelter wealth.

The Isle of Man does not tax capital gains or inheritances, and it levies no taxes on companies. Many companies also hold pension benefits there as some beneficiaries can collect benefits as early as age 50. However, they like to keep a low profile. When the Paradise Papers shed light on how wealthy individuals sheltered assets in the dependency, a local politician described the revelation as an "orchestrated attack from the international media."

Shutterstock.com
Shutterstock.com

Ireland

As late as the 1990s, Ireland was considered one of the poorest countries in Europe. However, joining the EU and reducing corporate taxes to 12.5% seemed to transform the country overnight. It would go on to attract more than 700 multinationals into the country, among them Airbnb, Facebook and LinkedIn.

While Irish officials may shy away from the "tax haven" label, the Republic has come under scrutiny. In 2013, Apple had to pay a record fine of 13 billion euros ($14.4 billion) after finding that a deal between Apple and Ireland broke EU tax laws. According to the Paradise Papers, this led to Apple shifting its overseas cash to the Channel Islands.

Marcin Krzyzak / Shutterstock.com
Marcin Krzyzak / Shutterstock.com

Luxembourg

Luxembourg is a tiny EU country nestled between France, Germany and Belgium. This country of about 650,000 people has managed to attract capital with its business-friendly tax laws. However, the policies seemed too friendly for the EU, who said it was one of the countries which "displayed traits of a tax haven and facilitate aggressive tax planning." However, the EU credited it for taking steps to limit those practices.

Still, Luxembourg remains a favored location among the Fortune 500. Goodyear, Dupont, Amazon, KPMG, Deloitte, EY (Ernst & Young), and PWC (PricewaterhouseCoopers) all have made Luxembourg their headquarters.

Shutterstock.com
Shutterstock.com

Malta

Malta is a sovereign country off the coast of Sicily. It is one of the smallest members of the EU. Once a British colony, this tiny island nation of just under 450,000 people became independent in 1964.

Some journalists have labeled Malta a "pirate base" for tax avoidance. The Paradise Papers have also cited Malta among a list of tax havens. However, officials insist that they have complied with EU laws.

Though local companies pay a corporate tax rate of 35%, some outside entities pay 0-6.25%. Morgan Stanley, Marriott International and Abbott Laboratories are among these corporations.

leoks / Shutterstock.com
leoks / Shutterstock.com

Mauritius

A tiny island nation situated off the coast of Madagascar seems like an unlikely location for a tax haven. However, the corporate tax rate has attracted a large percentage of the Fortune 500 to Mauritius. Companies pay a 15% tax on their income. Individuals pay no capital gains tax, and the country levies a 3% tax on dividend income from abroad.

Despite its remote location, it has attracted significant interest from U.S. corporations. Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Citigroup and JPMorgan Chase are among the 78 Fortune 500 companies that operate there, according to the ITEP.

OSTILL / iStock.com
OSTILL / iStock.com

Monaco

The Principality of Monaco is a 0.85-square-mile city-state situated on the French Riviera. Long a favored destination of the world's wealthy, it has also become an attractive locale for wealth itself. Individuals do not pay income tax, and businesses do not face direct taxation in most cases.

Despite low taxes, operating in Monaco does not come cheap, as it boasts some of the world's most expensive real estate. Despite its costs, seven Fortune 500 companies operate subsidiaries in the principality, according to the ITEP.

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Shutterstock.com

Netherlands

Officials in the Netherlands, like those in other tax havens, shy away from this labeling. Jan Kees de Jager, the former finance minister in the Netherlands and now-CFO of KPN, called any association with the likes of the Cayman Islands or Switzerland a "profound insult."

However, according to the ITEP report, the Netherlands is the world's most popular tax haven among the Fortune 500. The Dutch have long allowed corporations to reduce their tax burden by moving money through Dutch subsidiaries. Moreover, tech giants such as Google and IBM have a significant presence in the country, and Fiat Chrysler chose the country as its corporate headquarters.

bennymarty / Getty Images
bennymarty / Getty Images

Singapore

Many consider Singapore one of the best countries in the world for taxes. Situated at the southern tip of the Malay Peninsula, it was once mired in poverty. In 1965, it had attained a per capita GDP of only $516. It was then that the government began to improve education, clamp down on corruption and cut tax rates. Little wonder it has grown to a population of around 6 million and boasts a per capita GDP of $72,794.

Singapore assesses a 17% corporate income tax, not including tax incentives, and the city-state does not tax dividends.

Shutterstock.com
Shutterstock.com

Switzerland

Switzerland has long served as a European financial hub. Its low taxes and reputation for secrecy have made it a tax haven of choice. While some of the secrecy laws are now gone, its reputation for reasonable taxation remains. Switzerland levies a corporate tax rate of just 8.5%.

While the Global Financial Centres Index from Long Finance no longer considers Zurich a "top 10" financial center, it remains a popular tax haven. Marriott International, Morgan Stanley and PepsiCo are some of the top companies that operate there.

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This article originally appeared on GOBankingRates.com: What Are the World’s Best Tax Havens?