Belize IBC vs Seychelles IBC 2026: full comparison

Last updated: April 2026

Belize and Seychelles are the two most commonly pitched "affordable offshore" jurisdictions. Formation services quote low fees, agents describe both as private and tax-neutral, and most comparison guides make them sound nearly identical. That framing is outdated and, in some important ways, wrong.

Both jurisdictions have changed materially since 2019. Belize enacted a full economic substance regime, prohibited IP holding in IBCs, and passed a new Companies Act in 2022. Seychelles enacted IBC Amendment Acts in 2024 and 2025 that introduced nominee disclosure obligations, annual beneficial ownership verification, and a new self-assessment tax system. Neither jurisdiction is the zero-compliance, total-privacy structure that older guides describe.

This comparison covers what both jurisdictions actually look like in 2026 — costs, privacy, banking, compliance requirements, and use cases. It also tells you when neither is the right answer. The goal is to give you what you need to make a well-informed decision, not to push you toward one option.

Belize IBC vs Seychelles IBC: key differences at a glance

FeatureBelize IBCSeychelles IBC
Formation time48–72 hours24–48 hours
Government formation fee$100–$1,000 (capital-based)$150 (flat, all IBCs)
Annual government fee$100–$1,000 (capital-based)$150 (flat)
Typical registered agent fee/year$250–$600$450–$700
First-year all-in (estimated)$500–$1,500$800–$2,000
Annual renewal all-in (estimated)$400–$1,000$590–$900
Minimum directors11
Minimum shareholders11
Public registryNoNo
CRS/AEOI signatoryYesYes
IP holdingProhibited since January 2019Allowed (substance caveats apply)
Bearer sharesProhibited (2022 Companies Act)Prohibited
Economic substance triggerDefined list of relevant activitiesMNE group member + passive foreign income
EU status (2026)Greylist (removed from blacklist February 2024)Greylist (removed from blacklist February 2024)
FATF statusNot listedNot listed
Banking accessNiche Caribbean/offshore banks + EMIsEMIs (HK/SG-based) + niche banks
Legal systemEnglish common lawEnglish common law

The structure of both is similar on paper. The differences that matter are IP holding, economic substance triggers, banking options, and the nominee disclosure rules that Seychelles introduced in 2024–2025. We cover each in detail below.

Cost comparison

Belize IBC costs

Belize government fees are tiered by authorised share capital. A company with share capital up to $50,000 pays $100 per year. No-par-value shares attract a $350 annual fee. Share capital above $50,000 pushes the annual government fee to $1,000. For most simple holding structures, founders opt for low share capital ($50,000 or less) and pay the $100 tier.

Registered agent fees run $250–$600 per year depending on the provider and service level. Add the government fee and a basic formation package comes to roughly $500–$1,500 in year one, and $400–$1,000 for annual renewals.

Seychelles IBC costs

Seychelles uses a flat annual government license fee of $150 regardless of share capital — a small structural advantage over Belize's capital-based tiers if your intended structure needs higher authorised capital. Registered agent fees typically run $450–$700 per year, reflecting the higher compliance burden following the 2024–2025 IBC amendments.

First-year all-in costs range from $800–$2,000 (government registration, registered agent, and formation setup). Annual renewals run $590–$900.

Optional nominees and costs that often go unmentioned

Cost itemBelize IBCSeychelles IBC
Government formation fee$100–$1,000$150
Government annual license$100–$1,000$150
Registered agent (year 1)$250–$600$450–$700
Nominee director (optional)$300–$600/year$300–$800/year
Nominee shareholder (optional)$200–$400/year$200–$500/year
Banking setup assistance$0–$500$200–$600
First-year total (no nominees)~$500–$1,500~$800–$2,000
Annual renewal (no nominees)~$400–$1,000~$590–$900

The practical verdict on cost: Belize is marginally cheaper for ongoing renewals; Seychelles is marginally cheaper for formation if your share capital is high. The actual difference is $200–$400 per year. Cost alone should not drive this decision — the use case and compliance fit matter far more.

Privacy in 2026: what CRS actually means for both jurisdictions

Both Belize and Seychelles participate in the Common Reporting Standard (CRS) and OECD Automatic Exchange of Information (AEOI). Understanding what that actually means — and what it does not mean — is essential before forming either structure.

What CRS reports

CRS requires financial institutions (banks, investment firms) to report financial account information to their local tax authority, which then exchanges it with partner jurisdictions. CRS reports financial account data — balances, income, movements — for accounts held at reporting financial institutions. It does not directly report company ownership records or beneficial ownership registers.

What this means in practice: if your Belize or Seychelles IBC holds a bank account, the bank will report that account information. Your home tax authority will likely receive it. The IBC's existence and ownership structure is reported through the beneficial ownership register — but that register is accessible to regulators, not the general public.

Belize CRS status

Belize has 72+ CRS exchange partners. Germany was added as a reciprocal exchange partner from the 2024 reporting period. South Korea was added in 2025. The Belize Tax Service publishes and updates the exchange partner list. Since the 2022 Companies Act reform, beneficial ownership registers are maintained by registered agents and accessible to the Financial Services Commission (FSC) upon request.

Seychelles CRS status

Seychelles participates through the OECD AEOI framework with approximately 100 exchange partners. Beneficial ownership records are held by the Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) — not publicly searchable but accessible to regulators. The 2024 IBC Amendment Act introduced an important change: nominee shareholders and directors must now disclose who nominated them. Existing companies had until December 18, 2025 to update their registers.

The 2024 amendment also introduced penalties up to $10,000 (USD) for non-compliance with nominee disclosure requirements. Registered agents are required to verify beneficial ownership annually under the updated rules.

The honest position on privacy

Neither jurisdiction offers the confidentiality that pre-2019 offshore guides described. Company ownership records are not on a public registry in either jurisdiction — but regulators can access them, and your bank account data is likely being reported to your home tax authority via CRS. If a counterparty requests proof of beneficial ownership, your registered agent can provide the documentation.

"Private from the general public, not from regulators" is the accurate framing for both in 2026.

Banking: which is more accessible?

Banking is the most important practical consideration for either jurisdiction, and neither answer is encouraging.

Belize banking reality

Belize's correspondent banking relationships have declined by approximately 56% in transaction volume since 2013. De-risking pressure from US government regulators has made Belize a difficult jurisdiction for correspondent banking. UK and EU retail banks will not onboard a Belize IBC in almost all cases.

Options that do work in 2026:

  • Local Belize banks: Caye International Bank, Atlantic Bank — limited correspondent relationships
  • Offshore niche banks: Hamilton Reserve Bank (St. Kitts), DNBC Financial Group, CBiBank, Kingdom Bank
  • Electronic money institutions (EMIs): Wise, Airwallex, Currenxie — fast onboarding, multi-currency, not FDIC-insured

Most founders using a Belize IBC for holding purposes bank outside Belize entirely — typically through an EMI or a Singapore/Hong Kong-based financial institution.

Seychelles banking reality

Barclays exited Seychelles in 2015. That was the turning point. UK, US, and most EU retail banks will not onboard a Seychelles IBC as a standalone account holder. The options available in 2026:

  • Absa Bank Seychelles: Requires a minimum balance of $35,000 USD — not practical for small holding structures
  • Singapore banks: DBS, OCBC, UOB will consider a Seychelles IBC with a strong KYC package (audited accounts, clear beneficial ownership, demonstrated economic nexus)
  • Hong Kong EMIs: Airwallex, Currenxie — the primary practical banking route for Seychelles IBCs in 2026; fast onboarding, multi-currency, widely accepted in Asia, Africa, and Eastern Europe

The best strategy for both

The most reliable approach: separate the incorporation jurisdiction from the banking jurisdiction. Use the IBC as the legal holding wrapper. Open the actual operating account with a Hong Kong EMI or, for larger structures, a Singapore bank with a full KYC package. Neither Belize nor Seychelles should be your banking jurisdiction in 2026.

Banking verdict: Seychelles has marginally wider EMI acceptance — particularly in Asia, Africa, and Eastern Europe. Belize has more Caribbean-adjacent niche banking options and may suit structures with US-adjacent activity. Neither is suitable for EU-based operational banking without significant friction.

Economic substance and tax compliance

The "zero tax" framing for offshore IBCs requires a more careful reading in 2026. Both Belize and Seychelles operate on a territorial tax principle — foreign-sourced income is not subject to local income tax. But neither jurisdiction is zero-compliance anymore.

Belize economic substance requirements

Belize introduced economic substance requirements effective January 1, 2019, through the Income and Business Tax (Amendment) Act. IBCs that conduct "relevant activities" — banking, insurance, fund management, financing and leasing, headquarters activities, shipping, holding company activities in certain contexts, intellectual property activities, and distribution/service center activities — must demonstrate local substance.

For a pure equity holding vehicle (holding shares in subsidiaries, not conducting a listed relevant activity), substance requirements are lighter. But the IBC must:

  • Obtain a Belize Tax Identification Number (TIN)
  • File annual Economic Substance reports with the International Financial Services Commission (IFSC)
  • File annual tax returns regardless of activity level

IP holding is prohibited in Belize IBCs since January 2019. The grandfathering window for existing IP-holding IBCs closed in June 2021. This is not a technicality — it is a categorical restriction. Any founder evaluating Belize for an IP holding structure should rule it out immediately.

Seychelles economic substance requirements

Seychelles introduced economic substance rules in 2019 and refined them through the 2024 and 2025 IBC Amendment Acts. The trigger is narrower than Belize's: a "covered company" is an IBC that is a member of a multinational enterprise (MNE) group and earns passive foreign income (interest, dividends, royalties, leasing income) within that group.

A pure equity holding IBC — one that only holds shares and does not earn passive income within a group — has light substance requirements: a registered office, a registered agent, and statutory filings. Full substance (local management, adequate employees, facilities) applies to IBCs earning group-level passive income from IP, interest, royalties, or leasing activities.

The 2025 reporting year introduced a new self-assessment system for covered companies. Accounting records must be retained for seven years under the 2024 amendments. Penalties for non-compliance run up to $50,000 for persistent failures.

The practical difference: Seychelles is slightly lighter for a pure equity holding vehicle within an MNE group because its substance trigger is explicitly limited to passive income within that group structure. Belize is lighter for standalone non-MNE structures where no relevant activity is being conducted.

Reputation and regulatory standing

EU blacklist and greylist status

Both Belize and Seychelles were added to the EU list of non-cooperative jurisdictions for tax purposes in October 2023. Both were removed from the blacklist in February 2024 following commitments to address identified deficiencies. As of April 2026, both remain on the EU greylist — meaning they have committed to reforms but those commitments are still being monitored.

The practical consequence: counterparty KYC teams in EU-regulated businesses — banks, law firms, fund administrators, investment platforms — may flag entities from either jurisdiction, requesting enhanced documentation. This is not a theoretical risk. If your structure needs to interact regularly with EU-regulated counterparties, expect additional compliance friction.

FATF status

Neither Belize nor Seychelles is currently on the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) grey list or black list. Belize was removed from the FATF grey list in 2024 following its action plan on anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing reforms. This is a meaningful improvement but does not eliminate the EU greylist dynamic.

Neither jurisdiction carries the clean reputational profile of a BVI, Cayman Islands, or Malta structure. Both are budget offshore options — capable, but not without trade-offs in counterparty perceptions.

Which is better for offshore holding?

For asset protection

Both IBCs provide corporate veil separation between the company and its beneficial owner. Neither, on its own, is a robust asset protection structure. For asset protection as a primary goal, a Belize LLC (limited liability company — a separate legal vehicle from the IBC) paired with a Belize trust offers stronger protection. Belize LLC charging order protection is a meaningful differentiator — a creditor obtaining a charging order against a Belize LLC interest cannot seize or liquidate the underlying assets; they can only receive distributions if and when made. No equivalent exists for a Belize IBC.

A standalone Seychelles IBC provides corporate veil protection. The IBC cannot be sued in Seychelles courts for activities conducted outside Seychelles — but asset protection at the level of a Belize LLC/trust structure is not available through the Seychelles IBC alone.

Verdict for asset protection: if asset protection is your primary goal, a Belize LLC or trust combination outperforms either IBC. A Seychelles IBC and a Belize IBC are comparable on this point — neither is designed primarily as an asset protection vehicle.

For holding investments (equity and securities)

Both jurisdictions work for a simple equity holding structure — an entity that holds shares in other companies or passive investment portfolios. The Seychelles IBC has light substance requirements for pure equity holding within an MNE group. The Belize IBC is similarly manageable for standalone non-MNE structures.

Seychelles IBCs have somewhat broader acceptance with counterparties in Asia-Pacific — relevant if the subsidiaries or investment accounts being held are in that region. Belize IBCs may fit better if the ultimate beneficial owner needs a US-adjacent structure or wants to pair the holding vehicle with a Belize LLC for structural reasons.

Verdict for equity holding: both work. Seychelles has a marginal edge for Asia-Pacific counterparty acceptance. Belize works better paired with a Belize LLC.

For IP holding

This is where the comparison becomes decisive. Belize IBCs cannot hold intellectual property assets. The prohibition has been in force since January 2019. The grandfathering window closed June 2021. This is not a gray area, a compliance complexity, or a risk to manage — it is a categorical prohibition under Belize law. If you need an IP holding structure, Belize is categorically out.

Seychelles IBCs can hold IP assets. Foreign-sourced royalty income is generally exempt from local income tax under the territorial principle. For an IBC in an MNE group earning royalties, full economic substance requirements apply — but the structure is legally permissible and actively used.

Verdict for IP holding: Seychelles only. Belize is not an option.

Who this is NOT for

Some use cases are a poor fit for either jurisdiction, regardless of cost or ease of formation.

Anyone needing reliable EU or US operational banking: Neither Belize nor Seychelles delivers this. Correspondent banking de-risking and EU regulatory scrutiny make both jurisdictions unsuitable as primary banking hubs for operations with EU or US counterparties. If your business runs payroll, makes supplier payments, or receives client payments in EUR or USD at any meaningful volume, plan your banking before you incorporate — and plan it around an EMI or substance jurisdiction, not Belize or Seychelles.

Anyone whose counterparties conduct strict FATF/EU-list due diligence: Both jurisdictions sit on the EU greylist. Fund administrators, PE firms, institutional investors, and EU-regulated banks will ask for enhanced documentation — and in some cases will decline to onboard entities from either jurisdiction. If your structure needs to pass institutional-grade KYC without friction, look at BVI or Cayman.

Anyone needing fund structure credibility or institutional investor acceptance: BVI, Cayman Islands, or Luxembourg are the standard for institutional fund structures. Neither Belize nor Seychelles IBCs are designed for this purpose or accepted as standard in this context. If you're weighing Belize against a premium offshore jurisdiction for a more demanding structure, our Belize IBC vs Cayman Islands comparison covers that trade-off in depth.

Anyone in a heavily regulated sector: Fintech, banking, insurance, and payments require regulated entity structures with specific licenses. An IBC in either jurisdiction cannot substitute for a licensed entity in a regulated jurisdiction.

Anyone who believes "offshore" still means zero compliance: Both jurisdictions require annual filings, registered agent maintenance, beneficial ownership registers, and in many cases economic substance reports. The compliance costs are lower than in premium jurisdictions but they are not zero — and the penalties for non-compliance have increased materially under recent reforms.

US citizens and US-connected persons: A Belize or Seychelles IBC owned or controlled by a US person triggers FBAR (FinCEN 114) filing obligations if the IBC holds a foreign bank account with a balance over $10,000 USD at any point in the year. FATCA reporting applies separately. Subpart F or GILTI rules under the US tax code likely apply to passive income earned through the IBC. This is an area where a US international tax attorney is essential — not optional.

Belize IBC vs Seychelles IBC: the verdict

Both are affordable, English-law, low-cost offshore holding vehicles. Neither is anonymous. Neither is zero-compliance. Both have changed significantly since 2019 and most guides still describing them in older terms are misleading their readers.

Choose Seychelles if:

  • Your use case involves IP holding (Belize prohibits this)
  • Your counterparties, subsidiaries, or banking relationships are in Asia, Africa, or Eastern Europe
  • You need a flat government fee regardless of share capital
  • You want slightly lighter substance requirements for a pure equity holding IBC within an MNE group

Choose Belize if:

  • Your use case is a standalone holding structure with no MNE group implications
  • You want to pair the IBC with a Belize LLC for enhanced asset protection
  • Your structure has US-adjacent elements or Caribbean-adjacent banking relationships
  • Your authorised share capital will be low (making Belize's fee tier cheapest)

Consider neither if:

  • You need institutional investor acceptance without friction
  • You need reliable EU or US operational banking
  • Your primary goal is asset protection (use a Belize LLC/trust structure instead)
  • You are a US person who has not consulted a US international tax attorney

The right choice between these two comes down to a single question: what does the structure actually need to do? IP holding sends you to Seychelles. Most other holding use cases can go either way, with the decision turning on banking relationships and counterparty geography rather than costs — because the costs are nearly equivalent.

Next steps

Before engaging a formation service, work through these four questions:

  1. Define the use case precisely: IP holding, equity holding, asset protection, active trading? This determines which jurisdiction is permissible, not just preferable.
  2. Build your banking strategy before you incorporate: Opening an account is the hard part for both jurisdictions. Know your banking solution — EMI, Singapore bank, offshore niche bank — before you pay a formation fee.
  3. Get tax advice in your home country: Offshore holding structures do not eliminate home-country tax obligations. Whether you're in Germany, the UK, South Korea, or the UAE, your home jurisdiction's CFC, GILTI, or equivalent rules apply to income earned through your IBC.
  4. Research the full picture on both jurisdictions: Our Belize company formation guide covers the IBC structure in detail. For a broader view of offshore company options beyond these two jurisdictions, our offshore company comparison covers the full competitive landscape including BVI, Cayman, and Panama.

If you're evaluating whether to switch from an existing Belize IBC to a Seychelles IBC — or vice versa — the migration costs and compliance reset involved rarely justify the move unless your use case has fundamentally changed. Structure migration is a professional advisory conversation, not a formation service decision.

Conclusion

Belize and Seychelles IBCs are similar in price, structure, and jurisdiction-level compliance posture. Both sit on the EU greylist. Both participate in CRS. Both require annual filings. Both face significant banking challenges that push most serious operators toward Hong Kong EMIs or Singapore banking.

The decisive differences are specific and important. Seychelles allows IP holding; Belize prohibits it. Seychelles has slightly broader EMI acceptance in Asia-Pacific. Belize pairs more naturally with a Belize LLC for asset protection structures and US-adjacent arrangements. Seychelles' 2024–2025 IBC Amendment Acts introduced nominee disclosure obligations that add compliance complexity but also signal a jurisdiction actively tightening its standards to meet OECD expectations.

For a simple equity holding structure, either jurisdiction works — and the choice turns on banking geography and counterparty relationships rather than formation cost. For IP holding, Seychelles is the only answer between these two.

Neither is the right foundation for anyone expecting to avoid compliance obligations, access EU banking frictionlessly, or satisfy institutional investor KYC without enhanced documentation. If those are your requirements, this is the comparison to read before you discover it the expensive way.

Professional disclaimer: The information in this article is for research and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Offshore company laws, tax regulations, and CRS exchange partner lists change frequently — verify current requirements with a qualified advisor before incorporating or restructuring. This article does not address your specific tax obligations in your home jurisdiction. US persons must consult a US international tax attorney before establishing any offshore structure.

Sources referenced in this article: EU Council list of non-cooperative jurisdictions (February 2024 update); Seychelles IBC Amendment Acts 2024/2025 — nominee disclosure requirements; Belize Financial Services Commission — Economic Substance Requirements; Belize 2022 Companies Act unified registry reform; Seychelles Financial Services Authority (FSA) beneficial ownership register framework.

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The information in this article is for research and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal or tax advice. Program rules, investment thresholds, and government fees change frequently — always verify current requirements with a licensed advisor before taking action.