— International Structuring · Reputable jurisdictions only

Cross-border structures
engineered for substance.

International structuring done well is unglamorous — it is reputable jurisdictions, real substance, treaty-aware flow of capital, and architecture that survives the next decade of regulation. We avoid the brittle shortcuts and design structures that withstand scrutiny by the ATO, your bank and your eventual acquirer.

— 01 · Begin with the map

Jurisdiction selection
on first principles.

There is no universally correct international jurisdiction — only the right one for a defined purpose. Singapore, Hong Kong, the UK, the Netherlands, Ireland, Luxembourg, the UAE and others each have a profile of treaty network, withholding rates, substance requirements and reputational standing. We choose deliberately.

Drivers we evaluate

  • Australia tax treaty position and withholding rates.
  • Substance and economic-presence requirements.
  • Banking, audit and regulatory credibility.
  • Local talent, time-zone and operating reality.

Common landing zones

  • Singapore — APAC trading hub, treaty-rich.
  • United Kingdom — IP and holding company workhorse.
  • Netherlands / Ireland — IP and licensing royalty flows.
  • UAE — regional substance with sensible governance.
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— 02 · Where the value lives

Holding and IP structures
engineered for ownership.

For most modern businesses, the long-term value is in the IP — the brand, the platform, the algorithms, the customer data, the protocols. Where IP is owned, and how it is licensed downstream, dictates where the profit lands and how the eventual exit is taxed.

  • International holding company above the operating businesses, in a credible jurisdiction.
  • IP-holding subsidiary with real substance — engineers, decision-makers, board.
  • Arms-length licensing of IP to operating subsidiaries with transfer-pricing support.
  • Royalty flows aligned to treaty network to limit withholding leakage.
  • Migration of legacy IP from Australian entities, with tax-efficient transition.
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— 03 · The rules of the network

Treaty and tax alignment
that holds up under audit.

Treaty benefits are not automatic. They depend on residency, beneficial ownership, principal-purpose tests and substance. A poorly designed international structure may technically claim a treaty benefit and lose it in practice — when an audit or an acquirer's diligence team starts asking questions.

  • Map the actual treaty network between source, intermediate and home jurisdictions.
  • Position entities so beneficial ownership and management are genuine, not nominal.
  • Avoid principal-purpose-test failures by tying structure to commercial logic.
  • Plan for CFC, hybrid mismatch and Pillar Two implications, not against them.
  • Document the rationale at the time of structuring — not retrospectively.
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— 04 · Real substance, real governance

Substance and governance
that pass the smell test.

The era of brass-plate offshore is over. Reputable jurisdictions, banks and acquirers all expect to see real substance — directors who decide, premises where decisions are taken, board minutes that reflect real meetings, audited financials that stand up. We build the substance from day one.

  • Resident directors with genuine authority — not nominees on a register.
  • Local premises, staff or service arrangements proportionate to the activity.
  • Board meetings held in jurisdiction, minuted properly, with real agenda items.
  • Audited financial statements, banking and compliance lifecycle managed locally.
  • Documented management-and-control evidence ready for any audit or diligence.
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— 05 · Capital in both directions

Inbound and outbound
investment vehicles.

Whether you are an Australian family investing offshore, an Australian operator with international customers, or an offshore family with Australian operations, the investment vehicle is what determines the tax, the privacy and the eventual liquidity of the position. The right vehicle is rarely the obvious one.

We design the holding architecture, the funding instrument and the repatriation path together — so capital can come in, be deployed, and come out again without unnecessary friction or tax leakage.

  • Outbound holding companies for Australian families investing in offshore equity, debt and property.
  • Inbound holding structures for non-resident capital entering Australian businesses and real estate.
  • Limited partnerships and corporate-limited partnerships for institutional-grade investment.
  • Co-investment SPVs aligned to club deals and family-office mandates.
  • Withholding-tax-efficient repatriation through dividends, royalties and capital returns.
  • Exit architecture so a future sale or recapitalisation is clean from day one.
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— 06 · A different international approach

Cross-border, done with restraint.

We do not promote aggressive offshore. We design structures Australian owners and family offices can use openly — with their bank, their accountant, the ATO and an eventual acquirer all comfortable in the room. That restraint is what makes the architecture durable.

“The best international structures look boring on paper and quietly do their job for thirty years.”
— Why us

Three reasons
private owners retain us.

1 / 3

Reputable jurisdictions only

We work in jurisdictions that an Australian bank, the ATO and an institutional acquirer all recognise. That ruled-out list is as important as the ruled-in one — it is how we protect the long-term value of the business.

2 / 3

Substance is the strategy

Substance is not a compliance afterthought. It is the strategy. We design directors, governance and operating presence as deliberately as the entity itself, so the structure stands up to any audit or diligence process.

3 / 3

Coordination, not silos

International work touches three disciplines at once — Australian tax, foreign tax and foreign corporate law. We sit between them and translate, so nothing falls between the cracks where the cost of error is highest.

— Questions

What owners ask us
before they engage.

Is international structuring still legitimate under Pillar Two and modern tax law?

Yes — when done in reputable jurisdictions with real substance and genuine commercial purpose. What is no longer viable is brass-plate offshore, principal-purpose-test failures and synthetic IP migration. Modern international structuring is about credibility and substance, and used properly it remains a powerful tool for Australian businesses with cross-border operations or international investors.

Which jurisdictions do you typically use?

It depends entirely on the purpose. Singapore is our default APAC trading hub. The UK and Netherlands serve well for European-facing IP and holding work. Ireland and Luxembourg appear for IP and fund structures. The UAE is increasingly viable for regional substance. We rule out jurisdictions with weak treaty networks, poor banking or reputational headwinds, regardless of headline tax.

How much substance do I actually need?

Enough that the structure works on the day of an audit or a sale. That means resident directors with real authority, board meetings held in jurisdiction with genuine agenda items, financial decisions taken locally, and operating presence proportionate to the activity. We scale substance to the size of the business — there is a meaningful difference between substance for a $5M IP-holding vehicle and a $300M operating subsidiary.

Can an Australian family invest offshore through a structure?

Yes — and increasingly should, when international diversification matters. We design outbound investment vehicles that hold offshore equity, debt and property tax-efficiently, with clean reporting back to Australia, controlled foreign company compliance handled properly, and a defined repatriation path. The structure is openly disclosed and works within Australian tax rules.

What if I want offshore IP for an Australian business?

It can be done — but only with genuine substance offshore, transfer-pricing-supported royalty flows, and acceptance that Australia's diverted profits and hybrid-mismatch rules apply. Most owners overestimate the tax benefit and underestimate the cost of substance. We model both honestly before recommending anything.

Will Australian banks and partners accept an offshore structure?

Reputable banks and partners accept reputable structures. Singapore, UK, Netherlands, Ireland and similar jurisdictions are well-recognised. Banking will require documentation — beneficial ownership, source-of-funds, substance — but it works. The structures that struggle are the ones that try to be invisible; we do not build those.

— Begin

Most engagements begin with a quiet conversation.

Whether you are planning a capital raise, contemplating sale, or simply re-thinking how the business is held — start with a confidential introduction. There is no obligation, and no second party in the room.