Executive Summary: The Evolving Definition of “Tax-Friendly”
The global corporate tax landscape has undergone its most significant transformation in a generation, rendering the traditional “tax-friendly” model, once exemplified by Dubai’s 0% tax environment, obsolete for many international businesses. The United Arab Emirates’ (UAE) own strategic evolution—implementing a 9% federal corporate tax on profits over AED 375,000 1 and aligning with the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) Pillar Two framework via a 15% Domestic Minimum Top-up Tax (DMTT) for large multinationals 2—is indicative of this global shift.
This report provides a strategic analysis of alternative jurisdictions for a company seeking a tax-efficient environment that is compliant with international standards and not considered a “tax avoidance haven” by the OECD or European Union (EU).
The core constraint of avoiding “tax haven” status (i.e., jurisdictions on the OECD or EU “blacklists” 5) necessitates a fundamental shift in strategy. The new paradigm of tax efficiency is not about achieving a 0% tax rate; it is about securing a stable, low (but not zero) tax rate in a jurisdiction with economic substance, robust legal frameworks, and a comprehensive network of double-taxation treaties (DTTs).
This analysis focuses on jurisdictions that have embraced this new reality by implementing the OECD’s Pillar Two framework. For large multinational enterprises (MNEs), the global minimum effective tax rate (ETR) will be 15%. In this context, a “tax-friendly” jurisdiction is one that offers a Qualified Domestic Minimum Top-up Tax (QDMTT) to secure this tax revenue locally, supplemented by substantive, OECD-compliant incentives such as IP (Intellectual Property) Boxes and Qualified Refundable Tax Credits (QRTCs).
For businesses not in scope of Pillar Two (i.e., consolidated revenue below €750 million), a wider array of low-tax, compliant options remains available. This report analyzes both scenarios.
Part I: Understanding the New Global Tax Framework
The OECD Pillar Two Mandate
The OECD/G20’s Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) 2.0 initiative, specifically Pillar Two, establishes a global minimum corporate tax rate of 15% for MNEs with annual consolidated revenues of €750 million or more.2 This is enforced through the Global Anti-Base Erosion (GloBE) rules.
Key Terminology for Strategic Planning
Understanding the following terms is critical for jurisdictional selection:
- Qualified Domestic Minimum Top-up Tax (QDMTT): This is the most important concept for compliant MNEs. A QDMTT is a domestic tax implemented by a jurisdiction to ensure that any MNE operating within its borders pays an ETR of at least 15% on its local profits.8 By implementing a QDMTT, the jurisdiction (e.g., Singapore, Ireland, UAE) collects the “top-up” tax itself. If it did not, that tax revenue could be collected by the MNE’s parent jurisdiction under the Income Inclusion Rule (IIR).
- Income Inclusion Rule (IIR) & Undertaxed Profits Rule (UTPR): These are the primary enforcement mechanisms. The IIR allows a parent company’s home jurisdiction to tax the foreign income of its subsidiaries if that income is taxed below 15%.9 The UTPR acts as a backstop, allowing another jurisdiction in the MNE’s group to collect the top-up tax if the parent jurisdiction has not.11
- Qualified Refundable Tax Credits (QRTCs): In the Pillar Two world, traditional tax incentives that reduce a company’s ETR below 15% are nullified. A QRTC, however, is an OECD-compliant incentive (like a subsidy or grant) that is treated as income rather than a tax reduction, preserving its value for the company.12
Part II: Analysis of OECD-Compliant Jurisdictional Alternatives
The following jurisdictions have been selected for their competitive tax regimes, robust legal systems, and commitment to international compliance, including the adoption of Pillar Two.
1. Singapore
Singapore has repositioned itself as a premier, substance-focused hub fully compliant with Pillar Two.
- Corporate Tax System: Singapore applies a flat 17% corporate tax rate.15 It operates a “modified territorial” system, where foreign-sourced income is taxable only if remitted to Singapore, and even then, exemptions apply if the income was taxed in a jurisdiction with a headline rate of at least 15%.17
- Pillar Two Status: Singapore has implemented its Pillar Two “Domestic Top-up Tax” (DTT, its version of a QDMTT) and the IIR, both effective for financial years starting on or after January 1, 2025.8
- Incentives and Holding Companies: Singapore’s strategy is now built on substantive, Pillar Two-compliant incentives. The Refundable Investment Credit (RIC) is a prime example of a QRTC, offering companies up to 50% credit on qualifying expenditures.12 This is designed to be paid out as cash, thus not reducing the ETR. The jurisdiction also offers various headquarters schemes 13 and has an extensive DTT network.20 Critically, Singapore levies 0% withholding tax (WHT) on dividends, making it an efficient hub for repatriating profits.21
- Compliance: Singapore is a leader in tax transparency, having implemented the Common Reporting Standard (CRS) since 2018.22
2. Hong Kong SAR
Hong Kong maintains its competitiveness through a simple, low-tax regime now fully integrated with global standards.
- Corporate Tax System: Hong Kong operates a territorial tax system, taxing only profits sourced in Hong Kong.23 It uses a two-tiered profits tax rate: 8.25% on the first HKD 2 million of assessable profits and 16.5% on the remainder.23
- Pillar Two Status: Hong Kong enacted its Pillar Two legislation on June 6, 2025, implementing the Hong Kong Minimum Top-Up Tax (HKMTT, its QDMTT) and the IIR, retroactively effective from January 1, 2025.11
- Incentives and Holding Companies: The key feature is the territorial system itself. However, in response to EU and OECD pressure, the Foreign Sourced Income Exemption (FSIE) regime was refined.23 This means foreign-sourced dividends, interest, and gains are no longer automatically exempt; they must meet an economic substance requirement to qualify for exemption, bringing Hong Kong in line with global standards.23 Like Singapore, Hong Kong levies 0% WHT on dividends and interest.30
3. Switzerland
Switzerland offers a unique, high-value proposition based on cantonal competition, legal stability, and substantive incentives.
- Corporate Tax System: The tax system is multi-layered. The federal corporate tax rate is a flat 8.5% on after-tax profits (effectively 7.83% on pre-tax profits).31 However, each of the 26 cantons levies its own income and capital taxes, resulting in wide variations.31
- Cantonal Competition: The choice of canton is the primary strategic decision. For example, the Canton of Zug offers a combined effective rate of approximately 11.9% 33, while Zurich is higher at 19.6%.35
- Pillar Two Status: Switzerland has fully implemented Pillar Two, introducing a QDMTT (national top-up tax) effective January 1, 2024, and the IIR from January 1, 2025.37
- Incentives and Holding Companies: Switzerland is an ideal holding company jurisdiction due to its Participation Exemption, which provides 0% tax on dividends and capital gains from qualifying participations.39 It also offers OECD-compliant incentives like a Patent Box and R&D super-deductions.41 Cantons are now introducing QRTCs to provide direct subsidies for innovation.14
- Withholding Tax: Switzerland’s 35% WHT on dividends 42 is often misunderstood. It is a compliance-forcing mechanism. For treaty-partner corporations, this rate is reduced to 0%, 5%, or 15% at source, and for Swiss/EU parent companies, the tax can be entirely avoided through a notification procedure.44
4. Ireland
Ireland remains a premier EU hub, having shifted its model from low rates alone to a focus on substantive, high-value IP and R&D.
- Corporate Tax System: Ireland maintains its well-known two-rate system: 12.5% for active trading income and a 25% rate for passive or non-trading income.45
- Pillar Two Status: Ireland was an early adopter and has fully implemented a QDTT, effective for accounting periods beginning on or after December 31, 2023.9
- Incentives and Holding Companies: Ireland’s strength lies in its incentives for active businesses. These include a 25% R&D Tax Credit 51 and the Knowledge Development Box (KDB). The KDB provides a reduced effective tax rate (recently increased to 10%) on profits from qualifying IP, a move designed to ensure its robustness under Pillar Two.52 For holding companies, WHT on dividends is 0% for recipients in EU or DTT partner countries.45 However, unlike pure holding regimes, foreign dividends received in Ireland are typically taxed (at 12.5% or 25%), making it less ideal for passive holding than Luxembourg.45
5. Luxembourg
Luxembourg is the world’s leading jurisdiction for pure holding company structures, a status it has maintained by fully aligning with OECD standards.
- Corporate Tax System: The aggregate headline corporate tax rate (including municipal business tax) in Luxembourg City is approximately 23.87% as of 2025.55 This high rate is, however, irrelevant for the jurisdiction’s primary function.
- Incentives and Holding Companies: Luxembourg’s core product is its Participation Exemption (PEX).40 Under the PEX, dividends and capital gains from qualifying subsidiaries are 100% tax-exempt. This is complemented by a 0% WHT on dividends paid to qualifying parent companies in treaty or EU jurisdictions.59 This combination makes it possible to move capital and realize gains within a corporate group with virtually zero tax friction.
- Pillar Two Status: Luxembourg has fully implemented Pillar Two, and its PEX regime has been structured to work in concert with the new rules.60
6. Malta
For companies not in scope of Pillar Two, Malta offers the lowest effective tax rate within the EU.
- Corporate Tax System: Malta’s headline tax rate is 35%.61 This is reduced via a full imputation and refund system. A non-resident shareholder, upon receiving a dividend, can claim a refund of the tax paid by the Maltese company. The most common refund is 6/7ths, resulting in an effective tax rate of 5%.62
- Pillar Two Status: As an EU member, Malta is bound by the Pillar Two directive but has exercised its option to defer implementation.64 This makes it a uniquely attractive and compliant hub for non-MNEs (sub-€750M revenue) who wish to operate in the EU at a 5% ETR.
- Compliance: Malta is a full EU member and levies 0% WHT on outbound dividends, interest, and royalties.65
7. Cyprus
Cyprus combines a low statutory rate with the EU’s most attractive, OECD-compliant IP regime.
- Corporate Tax System: The headline corporate tax rate is a flat 12.5%.66 (Note: A tax reform has been proposed that may increase this to 15% in 2026 to align with the Pillar Two rate, though this would retain all existing exemptions and deductions 68).
- Incentives and Holding Companies: Cyprus’s key incentives are:
- IP Box Regime: A fully nexus-compliant regime that allows an 80% deduction on qualifying profits from IP. This results in an effective tax rate as low as 2.5% on IP-related income.69
- Notional Interest Deduction (NID): An incentive on new equity, allowing a notional deduction that can reduce the ETR on financed projects.67
As a holding location, Cyprus exempts dividend income and capital gains on the sale of shares, and applies 0% WHT on outbound dividends, interest, and (in most cases) royalties.70
8. Hungary
Hungary offers the lowest simple statutory corporate tax rate in the EU, ideal for operations.
- Corporate Tax System: A flat 9% corporate tax rate.75
- Pillar Two Status: Hungary has implemented Pillar Two, meaning MNEs will be topped up to 15%. However, for all non-MNEs, the 9% rate remains fully available.
- Incentives and Holding Companies: Hungary has a generous participation exemption for holding companies, exempting foreign dividends and capital gains from tax.78 It also applies 0% WHT on dividend, interest, and royalty payments to other companies.30 This makes it an extremely simple and cost-effective EU holding and operational location for non-MNEs.
9. Estonia
Estonia offers a unique model focused on radical tax deferral, making it the world’s most competitive jurisdiction for high-growth, reinvestment-focused companies.
- Corporate Tax System: Estonia is ranked #1 for tax competitiveness.79 It levies 0% corporate tax on all retained and reinvested profits.80
- Tax on Distribution: Tax is paid only when profits are distributed to shareholders. The distributed profit is taxed at a rate of 22%.81
- Strategic Fit: This system is a powerful cash-flow tool. It allows a company to compound its growth entirely tax-free, year after year, by reinvesting 100% of its earnings. This is an ideal, OECD-compliant structure for high-growth startups or corporate subsidiaries that will not be distributing dividends for the foreseeable future.
Part III: Comparative Analysis and Strategic Recommendations
The selection of a new jurisdiction is not a “one-size-fits-all” decision. The optimal choice depends entirely on the company’s revenue (MNE vs. Non-MNE) and its primary business function (e.g., holding, IP, trading).
Table 1: Jurisdictional Comparison (2025)
| Jurisdiction | Headline CIT Rate | Pillar Two (QDMTT) Status | Key Holding Co. Regime (Dividends In) | Key Incentive (Active Biz) | WHT on Dividends (Out) |
| UAE (Baseline) | 0% (QFZP) / 9% / 15% (MNE) | Implemented (DMTT) [4] | N/A (0% QFZP) / 9% (Mainland) | 0% QFZP (if compliant) [84] | 0% [85] |
| Singapore | 17% [16] | Implemented (DTT) [10] | Exemption (if taxed abroad) [17] | Refundable Investment Credit (RIC) 13 | 0% 21 |
| Hong Kong SAR | 8.25% / 16.5% [26] | Implemented (HKMTT) 11 | Exemption (if FSIE/Substance met) 23 | Territorial System (offshore trade) 23 | 0% 30 |
| Switzerland (Zug) | 11.9% [34] | Implemented (QDMTT) [37] | Participation Exemption (0%) [39] | Cantonal QRTCs / Patent Box [14, 41] | 35% (0% via treaty/notification) 44 |
| Ireland | 12.5% (Trading) / 25% (Passive) [46] | Implemented (QDTT) [9] | Taxable (12.5% – 25%) 45 | Knowledge Dev. Box (KDB) / R&D Credit [51, 54] | 0% (to EU/Treaty) 45 |
| Luxembourg | 23.87% [56] | Implemented | Participation Exemption (0%) [40] | N/A (Pure Holding Co. Hub) | 0% (to EU/Treaty Parent) 59 |
| Malta | 35% (5% Effective Rate) 62 | Deferred 64 | 5% ETR (via refund) [63] | 5% ETR (via refund) [63] | 0% 65 |
| Cyprus | 12.5% (Proposed 15%) [66, 68] | Implemented | Exemption (0%) [70] | IP Box (2.5% ETR) / NID [69, 72] | 0% [74] |
| Hungary | 9% 76 | Implemented | Exemption (0%) 78 | 9% Flat Rate | 0% (to companies) 30 |
| Estonia | 0% (Retained) / 22% (Distributed) 80 | Implemented | 0% (if retained) | 0% on Reinvested Profits 80 | 0% (if corp tax paid) / 22% |
Table 2: Strategic Fit by Business Model (2025)
| Business Model | Recommended (MNE >€750M) | Recommended (Non-MNE <€750M) | Rationale & Justification |
| Global/Regional Holding Co. | Luxembourg or Switzerland | Hungary or Cyprus | MNEs require the stability and robust Participation Exemptions (PEX) of Luxembourg [40] or Switzerland.[39] Non-MNEs can achieve 0% on dividends/gains with greater simplicity and a lower cost base in Hungary 78 or Cyprus.[66, 70] |
| IP-Heavy / R&D Hub | Ireland or Singapore | Cyprus | MNEs must use Pillar Two-compliant incentives. Ireland’s KDB 54 and R&D Credit 51 or Singapore’s RIC 12 are premier, substantive options. Non-MNEs can achieve a 2.5% ETR via the highly competitive Cyprus IP Box.[69, 71] |
| Active Trading / Sourcing | Singapore or Hong Kong | Hong Kong or Malta | MNEs will use Singapore [86] or Hong Kong 23 for their infrastructure, legal systems, and 0% WHT. Non-MNEs can use Hong Kong’s 8.25% two-tier rate [26] for simple offshore trade, or benefit from Malta’s 5% ETR for a substantive EU trading hub.62 |
| EU Operational Base (Services / Mfg.) | Ireland | Hungary or Bulgaria | MNEs will choose Ireland to co-locate an active trade (12.5% base [46]) with IP (KDB [52]). Non-MNEs seeking the lowest, simplest cost base in the EU Single Market should opt for the 9% (Hungary 76) or 10% (Bulgaria 87) flat rates. |
| High-Growth / Reinvestment | Estonia | Estonia | This model is size-agnostic. Any company (MNE or not) that intends to reinvest 100% of profits for expansion will benefit from Estonia’s 0% tax on retained profits, maximizing cash flow for growth.80 |
Final Recommendations: A Strategic Decision Framework
This analysis confirms that no single “tax-friendly” jurisdiction has replaced the former Dubai model. The optimal choice is now a sophisticated matrix balancing corporate revenue, business function, and administrative substance.
1. For MNEs (Consolidated Revenue >€750 Million):
Your company’s global ETR will be 15%. The strategic objective must shift from tax rate reduction to tax-base management and incentive optimization.
- Prioritize QDMTT Jurisdictions: Select a jurisdiction that has implemented a QDMTT (e.g., Singapore, Ireland, Switzerland, Hong Kong). This ensures your company pays its 15% minimum tax locally, funding substantive operations, rather than ceding that tax revenue to a foreign parent jurisdiction.
- Build Operations Around Compliant Incentives: Your business case must be built on tangible, Pillar Two-compliant incentives. The most valuable are Qualified Refundable Tax Credits (QRTCs), such as Singapore’s Refundable Investment Credit 12, and substantive IP regimes like Ireland’s KDB.54
2. For Non-MNEs (Consolidated Revenue <€750 Million):
Your company is not in scope of Pillar Two. The “traditional” world of tax efficiency remains fully open, provided you select OECD-compliant jurisdictions and maintain the required economic substance.
- For the Lowest EU-based ETR: Malta (5% effective rate 62) and Cyprus (12.5% headline rate with a 2.5% ETR on IP 69) are the premier choices.
- For the Lowest Simple EU Rate: Hungary (9% flat rate 76) and Bulgaria (10% flat rate 87) are ideal for straightforward operational, service, or manufacturing hubs.
- For Pure Reinvestment: Estonia (0% on retained profits 80) is unmatched for any high-growth business that intends to compound its earnings tax-free.
Final Consideration:
The catalyst for this query was the UAE’s shift away from 0% simplicity, notably in the Free Zones, which now require careful management to maintain a 0% rate on “qualifying income”.84 When selecting an alternative, be aware that these OECD-compliant jurisdictions achieve their low effective rates through rules that also demand substance and careful management. A 9% simple rate in Hungary may be strategically superior for your firm than a 5% complex refund system in Malta, or a “substance-heavy” territorial system in Hong Kong.23 The final choice must align with the company’s operational reality and administrative capacity.
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