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Mauritius has cemented its position as a jurisdiction of choice for trusts for high net worth individuals, but the regulatory landscape trustees must navigate in 2026 is materially more demanding than even two years ago. This comprehensive guide to Mauritius trusts tax and compliance 2026 consolidates the legal framework under the Trusts Act 2001, current MRA practice notes governing trust taxation, residency declaration requirements, annual filing obligations, and the increasingly popular option to redomicile a trust to Mauritius. Whether you are a corporate trustee, a private client adviser, or a family office principal, the sections that follow provide an actionable compliance playbook built around the rules in force today.
The Trusts Act 2001 (the “Act”) is the principal legislation governing setting up a trust in Mauritius, its administration, and the powers and duties of trustees. Mauritius adopted a common-law trust model adapted to its mixed civil-law/common-law heritage. The Act expressly provides that a trust is not a legal person; instead, legal title to trust property vests in the trustee, who administers it according to the terms of the trust instrument and the statutory obligations imposed by the Act. The Foundations Act 2012 offers an alternative vehicle, a foundation, which does have separate legal personality. The two structures coexist, and advisers routinely compare them when structuring wealth for international families.
Under the Trusts Act Mauritius framework, a trustee owes a duty to act honestly, in good faith and in the best interests of beneficiaries. The Act codifies duties of care and skill, prudent investment, impartiality among beneficiaries, proper record keeping and disclosure. Breach of duty exposes a trustee to personal liability for resulting loss, including the power of the court to remove a trustee and order compensation.
| Trust Form | Legal Effect | Typical Use |
|---|---|---|
| Discretionary trust | Trustee holds full discretion over distributions; no beneficiary has a fixed entitlement | Multi-generational family wealth, asset protection, succession planning |
| Fixed-interest trust | Beneficiary entitlements defined in deed; trustee has no allocation discretion | Income distribution structures, employee benefit schemes |
| Charitable trust | Property held for charitable purposes only; subject to regulatory oversight | Philanthropic endowments, educational foundations |
| Purpose trust | No ascertainable beneficiaries; enforcer appointed; must comply with Act safeguards | Structured finance, SPV structures, orphan trusts |
Taxation is the area where Mauritius trusts tax and compliance 2026 rules demand the closest attention from trustees. The Income Tax Act subjects every “person”, a term that includes a trustee in relation to trust income, to income tax. Whether a trust bears a full or limited tax charge depends primarily on whether it is treated as resident or non-resident.
A trust that is resident in Mauritius is liable to income tax on its worldwide chargeable income at the standard corporate rate of 15 %. This rate applies to both Mauritius-sourced and foreign-sourced income, subject to available foreign tax credits and any applicable partial exemption regime. The MRA’s Statement of Practice SP 24/21, which addresses the taxation of trusts and foundations, confirms that a resident trust is assessed in a manner analogous to a company, with income computed after allowable deductions.
Trustees should note that the 2025–2026 Budget introduced certain fiscal measures designed to promote fairness and ease the burden on lower-income earners; while these primarily target individuals, they signal the government’s continued scrutiny of all taxable persons, including trust vehicles.
A non-resident trust is subject to Mauritian income tax only on income derived from sources within Mauritius. Common examples include rental income from Mauritian immovable property, interest from Mauritian financial institutions, and business profits attributable to a permanent establishment on the island. Non-resident trusts with no Mauritius-sourced income have no filing obligation in practice, although trustees are advised to retain documentation evidencing their non-resident status and the foreign source of all income in case of an MRA inquiry.
Income that is accumulated and retained in the trust is taxed at the trust level. Where a resident trust distributes income to a Mauritius-resident beneficiary, the distribution is generally not taxed again in the hands of the beneficiary provided tax has already been paid by the trust. Non-resident beneficiaries receiving distributions from a Mauritius trust will need to consider the tax rules in their own jurisdiction of residence, as well as any applicable double-taxation agreement between Mauritius and that jurisdiction.
Worked example. Assume a discretionary trust resident in Mauritius earns MUR 10,000,000 in investment income (dividends from a Mauritian company and foreign-sourced interest). The trustee pays 15 % on the entire chargeable income, MUR 1,500,000. If the trustee then distributes MUR 5,000,000 to a Mauritius-resident beneficiary, no further income tax arises on that distribution at beneficiary level, because the income has already borne tax in the trust.
| Entity Type | Tax Scope | Typical Tax Rate & Filing Requirement |
|---|---|---|
| Resident trust | Worldwide income (Mauritius-sourced + foreign-sourced) | 15 % on chargeable income; annual income tax return required |
| Non-resident trust | Mauritius-sourced income only | 15 % on Mauritius-sourced chargeable income; return required only if Mauritius-sourced income exists |
| Foundation (resident) | Worldwide income | 15 %; annual return required; subject to SP 24/21 guidance |
Industry observers expect the MRA to continue expanding its guidance notes in this area, particularly on the interaction between partial exemption claims and trust distributions, which means trustees should monitor the MRA’s Statements of Practice page regularly.
Correctly determining and declaring trust residency rules Mauritius is a prerequisite for every other compliance obligation. A trust is treated as resident in Mauritius if its trustee is resident in Mauritius, or if the central management and control of the trust is exercised in Mauritius. Where there are multiple trustees, the test looks to the place where the majority of trustees are resident or, where applicable, where key decisions regarding the trust are effectively made.
Trustees should apply the following sequence of tests when assessing residency status:
The consequences of misdeclaration are significant. Trustees who incorrectly treat a trust as non-resident may face back-assessments on worldwide income, surcharges and personal liability. For Mauritius trusts tax and compliance 2026 purposes, maintaining a clear, documented residence analysis is therefore one of the single most important governance steps.
This section constitutes the core compliance playbook for anyone managing trustee obligations Mauritius. Obligations arise under three principal regulatory streams: the MRA (tax), the FSC (licensing and prudential supervision of trust service providers), and the AML/CFT framework (anti-money-laundering and counter-terrorism financing).
Trustees should maintain a rolling calendar. The critical dates in the 2026 compliance year include:
Trustees, whether individual or corporate, must maintain comprehensive records demonstrating compliance with their KYC and AML obligations. This includes:
The MRA may impose penalties for late filing, under-declaration of income and failure to maintain proper records. These include surcharges on unpaid tax, daily penalties for late returns, and interest on outstanding amounts. In serious cases, criminal prosecution is possible under the Income Tax Act and FIAMLA. The FSC has the power to suspend or revoke the licence of a corporate trustee that fails to meet its regulatory obligations, effectively preventing that entity from providing trust services in or from Mauritius.
| Obligation | Resident Trust | Non-Resident Trust |
|---|---|---|
| Income tax return | Required annually on worldwide income | Required only if Mauritius-sourced income exists |
| Annual financial statements | Required; audited accounts for FSC-licensed trustees | Not required unless filing a tax return |
| Beneficial ownership disclosure | Required for underlying Mauritian entities | Required for underlying Mauritian entities |
| AML/KYC updates | Annual CDD review; ongoing monitoring; SAR filing | Applicable if trustee is Mauritius-based |
| CRS/FATCA filings | Required where trust qualifies as a Reporting Financial Institution | Generally not applicable unless Mauritius nexus exists |
A downloadable 2026 Trustee Compliance Checklist (PDF) and a printable 2026 Key Dates Calendar for Mauritius trusts are available to help trustees track every deadline referenced above.
An increasing number of families and trust companies are considering whether to redomicile a trust to Mauritius, that is, to change the governing law (or “proper law”) of an existing trust from another jurisdiction to Mauritius. The Trusts Act 2001 does not contain a dedicated redomiciliation mechanism in the way that some corporate statutes permit company migration. Instead, the process depends on the terms of the trust deed, the law of the originating jurisdiction, and compliance with Mauritian requirements on formation.
In practice, there are two routes. The first is a change-of-proper-law approach: if the trust deed contains an express power to change the governing law, the trustee (with any required consents) can execute a deed of variation changing the proper law to Mauritius. The second is the resettle-and-migrate approach: a new Mauritius trust is constituted, and the assets of the original trust are transferred into it, usually coupled with the winding up of the original structure.
Common pitfalls include overlooking exit-tax exposure in the departing jurisdiction, failing to obtain all required consents under the original deed, and underestimating the lead time for MRA and FSC registrations. Industry observers note that the typical timeline from initial review to completed redomiciliation is three to six months, depending on complexity. Given the stakes involved, bespoke legal and tax advice is essential, a detailed companion guide on how to redomicile a trust to Mauritius covers the full procedural and documentary requirements.
For families and trustees evaluating Mauritius as the proper law for an existing or new trust, the following action plan brings together the key steps discussed throughout this guide:
A template Trustee Onboarding Checklist is available as a downloadable PDF to help trustees and family offices systematise this process.
The Mauritius trusts tax and compliance 2026 landscape demands rigorous, well-documented governance from every trustee, whether a professional service provider, a family member or a corporate fiduciary. The combination of a 15 % tax rate on resident trust income, a flexible statutory framework under the Trusts Act 2001, and Mauritius’s extensive network of double-taxation agreements makes the jurisdiction highly attractive for trusts for high net worth individuals. However, the compliance obligations are substantial and the penalties for getting them wrong are real.
Trustees should take three immediate steps: conduct a full residence analysis and document it, review their annual compliance calendar against the deadlines and obligations set out above, and engage qualified Mauritian legal and tax counsel to address any gaps. For bespoke guidance on setting up a trust in Mauritius, redomiciliation or ongoing compliance, contact a Global Law Experts specialist through our directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jonathan L.M. Shaw at Corporate & Chancery Group Limited, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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