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Luxembourg Company Formation for Holdings & Funds SOPARFI, SIF, RAIF, SICAR

By Jonathon Richards
– posted 2 hours ago

Introduction: Why Luxembourg Remains the Premier EU Jurisdiction for Holding and Fund Structures

Company formation in Luxembourg continues to attract private equity sponsors, institutional fund managers, family offices, and multinational groups because the jurisdiction offers a rare combination of legal flexibility, fiscal efficiency, and regulatory credibility. Luxembourg’s mature company-law framework supports multiple corporate forms the S.A. (société anonyme), S.à r.l. (société à responsabilité limitée), S.C.A. (société en commandite par actions), and SCSp (société en commandite spéciale) each calibrated to different governance and capital-raising objectives. This structural diversity sits alongside one of Europe’s deepest double-tax treaty and EU-directive networks, underpinned by a well-established participation-exemption regime that shields qualifying dividend income and capital gains from corporate income tax.

On the fund side, Luxembourg offers regulated and non-regulated vehicles SIF, RAIF, and SICAR that have made the Grand Duchy the domicile of choice for alternative-asset strategies across Europe. The RAIF regime (Law of 23 July 2016) in particular has accelerated time-to-market for fund promoters willing to appoint an authorised AIFM, while the CSSF-supervised SIF and SICAR regimes remain trusted options for institutional allocators requiring regulatory oversight.

Who benefits most from Luxembourg company formation?

  • Private equity and venture capital sponsors structuring holding SPVs and carried-interest vehicles.
  • Institutional fund managers launching regulated or reserved-alternative-investment funds.
  • Multinational groups centralising treasury, IP, or regional financing functions.
  • Family offices and private holders seeking efficient cross-border wealth-structuring solutions.
  • Real-estate and infrastructure investors requiring treaty-efficient asset-holding platforms.

Quick Summary: Who Benefits and Which Vehicle to Choose

Selecting the right Luxembourg vehicle requires a clear-eyed assessment of commercial purpose, investor base, regulatory appetite, and tax profile. The decision matrix below provides a starting framework.

  • SOPARFI (ordinary holding company): Best for PE holding SPVs, intra-group financing, and treaty-based dividend/capital-gains routing. No CSSF authorisation required.
  • SCSp (special limited partnership): Preferred for co-investment vehicles, GP/LP structures, and carried-interest arrangements. Tax-transparent, flexible governance.
  • SPF (société de gestion de patrimoine familial): Reserved for private wealth management by individuals and family trusts not available for commercial activities.
  • SIF (specialised investment fund): Regulated, CSSF-authorised fund vehicle with risk-spreading rules suited to institutional investor bases.
  • RAIF (reserved alternative investment fund): Unregulated fund vehicle managed by an authorised AIFM fastest route to market for alternative strategies.
  • SICAR (investment company in risk capital): CSSF-authorised vehicle targeted at venture capital and risk-capital investments with dedicated tax treatment.

SOPARFI Explained Legal Form, Tax Regime, and Substance

What Is a SOPARFI?

The term “SOPARFI” (Société de Participations Financières) is an industry designation, not a distinct legal form. A SOPARFI is simply an ordinary Luxembourg capital company typically an S.A. or S.à r.l. used principally as a financial-holding or investment vehicle. Its tax advantages derive from Luxembourg’s general corporate-tax provisions and the participation-exemption regime, not from any special enabling statute.

Typical Legal Forms and Incorporation Implications

SOPARFIs are most commonly established as one of the following:

  • S.A. (société anonyme): Minimum share capital of €30,000 (fully subscribed); governed by a board of directors or single administrator. Incorporation requires a notarial deed.
  • S.à r.l. (société à responsabilité limitée): Minimum share capital of €12,000; simpler governance (one or more managers). Also requires notarisation.
  • S.C.A. (société en commandite par actions): Used where GP/LP governance is desired with a corporate wrapper; less common for pure holding purposes.
  • SCSp (société en commandite spéciale): Limited partnership without legal personality; tax-transparent, often used for co-investment and fund GP structures. Does not require a notarial deed.

Tax Mechanics Participation Exemption

The centrepiece of the Luxembourg holding regime is the participation exemption, which, subject to conditions, exempts qualifying dividends and capital gains from corporate income tax. The principal conditions include:

  • Minimum holding threshold: The parent must hold at least 10% of the subsidiary’s capital (or an acquisition price of at least €1.2 million for dividend exemption, or €6 million for capital-gains exemption).
  • Minimum holding period: The qualifying participation must be held for an uninterrupted period of at least 12 months.
  • Eligible subsidiary: The subsidiary must be a fully taxable EU-resident company, a company resident in a treaty state subject to comparable tax, or fall within the scope of the EU Parent-Subsidiary Directive.

Substance and Economic-Reality Tests

Post-BEPS and ATAD implementation, Luxembourg tax authorities and international counterparts apply heightened scrutiny to holding structures lacking genuine economic substance. The OECD’s BEPS and Pillar Two guidance has informed Luxembourg’s enforcement posture industry observers expect substance reviews to intensify through 2026 and beyond, with the Administration des Contributions Directes (ACD) increasingly requesting evidence of local decision-making, qualified personnel, and operational presence.

Minimum substance indicators typically include: a physical registered office (not solely a mailbox), locally resident directors or managers who exercise real decision-making authority, regular board meetings held in Luxembourg, dedicated staff or outsourced functions with demonstrable oversight, and Luxembourg-based bank accounts through which core transactions flow.

When SOPARFI Is the Right Choice

The SOPARFI structure is optimal when the primary objective is to hold qualifying participations and benefit from Luxembourg’s participation exemption and treaty network. It is equally effective for intra-group lending, treasury centralisation, and IP-holding activities provided transfer-pricing rules and substance expectations are satisfied. It is not, however, the appropriate vehicle for regulated fund-raising from third-party investors, which requires a SIF, RAIF, or SICAR.

Holding Company Use Cases

Private Equity

Luxembourg SOPARFIs and SCSps serve as the backbone of most European PE deal structures. A typical arrangement involves a Luxembourg SOPARFI as an intermediate holding company sitting between the fund vehicle and portfolio companies, facilitating tax-efficient repatriation of dividends and exit proceeds under the participation exemption. Carried-interest vehicles are frequently structured as SCSps to preserve tax transparency and align GP/LP economics.

Real Estate and Infrastructure

Real-estate fund sponsors regularly use Luxembourg holding vehicles to invest in pan-European property portfolios. Treaty interactions particularly with jurisdictions that impose withholding on rental income or capital gains make Luxembourg’s extensive treaty network a critical variable. Onshore asset-holding SOPARFIs, combined with regulated or unregulated fund wrappers, provide a scalable framework for institutional mandates.

Multinationals IP, Treasury, and Regional Headquarters

Multinational groups deploy Luxembourg entities for regional treasury, IP-licensing, and financing activities. However, transfer-pricing documentation, substance requirements, and the ATAD interest-limitation rules must be rigorously addressed. Industry observers note that structures relying on thin capitalisation or limited local presence increasingly attract challenge from both Luxembourg and counterpart tax authorities.

Illustrative example: A Nordic industrial group restructured its European holding chain through a Luxembourg S.à r.l. SOPARFI, appointing two locally resident managers, establishing a dedicated treasury function with a Luxembourg bank, and documenting all intercompany pricing in line with OECD guidelines. The participation exemption applied to repatriated dividends from five EU subsidiaries, and the group satisfied substance reviews during a routine ACD enquiry.

Fund Vehicle Primer SIF, RAIF, SICAR: When to Use Which

Luxembourg’s fund-vehicle landscape caters to strategies ranging from vanilla long-only to complex alternative-asset mandates. The choice between a CSSF-authorised regime (SIF, SICAR) and the non-authorised RAIF has material implications for time-to-market, ongoing supervision, documentation, and investor reach.

SIF Specialised Investment Fund (Law of 13 February 2007)

The SIF is a regulated vehicle requiring prior CSSF authorisation. It is reserved for “well-informed investors” institutional investors, professional investors, or other investors who confirm in writing that they adhere to the well-informed-investor criteria and invest a minimum of €125,000. SIFs must comply with risk-spreading requirements and are subject to a subscription tax (taxe d’abonnement) of 0.01% per annum on net assets. Typical authorisation timelines range from six to twelve weeks, depending on dossier quality and CSSF workload.

RAIF Reserved Alternative Investment Fund (Law of 23 July 2016)

The RAIF was introduced to offer a faster route to market for fund promoters by eliminating the need for prior CSSF authorisation. Instead, the RAIF must appoint an authorised alternative investment fund manager (AIFM) which is itself CSSF-supervised and the RAIF’s regulatory burden is borne indirectly through the AIFM’s compliance obligations. RAIFs may adopt either SIF-type (risk-spreading) or SICAR-type (risk-capital) sub-regimes, which in turn determine the applicable tax treatment. Time to operational readiness is typically two to six weeks.

SICAR Investment Company in Risk Capital

The SICAR is a CSSF-authorised vehicle designed for investments in risk capital typically venture capital, growth equity, and unlisted-company investments. Investor eligibility is limited to professional or qualified investors. SICARs benefit from a tax regime under which income from qualifying securities is exempt from corporate income tax, while subscription tax does not apply. Authorisation timelines are broadly comparable to SIFs.

Comparison Table: SIF vs RAIF vs SICAR

Feature SIF RAIF SICAR
Authorisation CSSF authorisation required No prior CSSF authorisation; must appoint authorised AIFM CSSF authorisation required
Supervisor CSSF (direct) Indirect AIFM supervised by CSSF (if Luxembourg-based) CSSF (direct)
Investor eligibility Well-informed investors (min. €125,000 or professional/institutional) Reserved to eligible investors (mirrors SIF or SICAR criteria) Professional / qualified investors
AIFM requirement Optional (but typically appointed) Mandatory must be an authorised AIFM Optional
Subscription tax 0.01% p.a. on net assets 0.01% p.a. (SIF sub-regime) or exempt (SICAR sub-regime) Exempt
Risk-spreading rules Yes Yes (SIF sub-regime) or No (SICAR sub-regime) No (risk-capital focus)
Typical time to market 6–12 weeks 2–6 weeks 6–12 weeks
Best use case Institutional funds with risk-spreading mandate Fast-to-market private funds managed by AIFM VC / PE seed and risk-capital strategies

Process: Step-by-Step Incorporation Checklist to Register a Company in Luxembourg

Whether you are establishing a straightforward SOPARFI or launching a regulated fund vehicle, company formation in Luxembourg follows a structured sequence. The process below applies to both holding companies and fund vehicles, with fund-specific steps noted separately.

  1. Choose the legal form and vehicle. Determine whether an S.A., S.à r.l., SCSp, or fund-form SICAV/SICAF is appropriate. Draft initial governance arrangements and, for funds, the investment policy. Refer to the Guichet guidance on Luxembourg corporate forms.
  2. Prepare incorporation documents. Draft articles of association, appoint directors or managers, designate the registered office, and arrange notarisation (required for S.A. and S.à r.l.).
  3. Open a Luxembourg bank account and deposit capital. Banks conduct their own due diligence allow one to three weeks for account opening and capital-deposit certification.
  4. File the incorporation deed with Luxembourg Business Registers (LBR/RCS). Obtain registration and publication via the Recueil Électronique des Sociétés et Associations (RESA).
  5. Fund vehicles only: Prepare the prospectus or private-placement memorandum, appoint the depositary and AIFM (for RAIF, mandatory), and submit the full dossier to the CSSF for SIF or SICAR authorisation. RAIFs file registration formalities with the RCS without prior CSSF approval.
  6. Register for tax. Obtain a tax identification number from the Administration des Contributions Directes (ACD) and register for VAT where applicable.
  7. Implement substance. Secure premises, schedule board meetings, appoint local directors or engage qualified service providers, set up financial reporting and banking operations, and execute management or delegation agreements with documented oversight mechanisms.
  8. Ongoing post-incorporation compliance. File annual accounts with the RCS, prepare and submit annual tax returns with the ACD, maintain transfer-pricing documentation, and comply with DAC/DAC6 reporting obligations where relevant.

Timeline and Costs

Step Typical Timeline Approximate Fee Band
Incorporation (S.A. / S.à r.l.) notarised deed to RCS publication 2–4 weeks €3,000 – €15,000 (varies by form, notary, legal fees)
Bank account opening & capital deposit 1–3 weeks €1,000 – €4,000 (bank due-diligence costs)
SIF / SICAR CSSF authorisation 6–12 weeks €15,000 – €60,000+ (CSSF fees + professional fees)
RAIF AIFM appointment & operational setup 2–6 weeks €10,000 – €40,000+ (AIFM & depositary arrangements)

These are indicative ranges. Actual costs depend on structural complexity, number of sub-funds, service-provider arrangements, and regulatory variables. A tailored quote should be requested before proceeding.

Key Requirements and Eligibility

Non-resident founders: There is no general nationality or residency restriction on forming a Luxembourg company. Foreign individuals and corporate entities may freely incorporate. However, all beneficial owners must be identified and registered with the Registre des Bénéficiaires Effectifs (RBE) maintained by the Luxembourg Business Registers. Know-your-customer (KYC) and anti-money-laundering (AML/CFT) checks apply at multiple levels during bank account opening, engagement of corporate service providers, and (for fund vehicles) investor onboarding.

Substance minimums: As noted above, OECD and EU-level requirements have made substance a commercially enforced standard. Physical premises, local management with genuine decision-making authority, properly documented board proceedings, and proportionate staffing (or outsourced functions with demonstrable oversight) are essential. Structures without substance risk denial of treaty benefits, reclassification of tax residence, and potential penalties.

Sectoral licences: While no general business licence is required to incorporate, specific activities financial services, insurance, payment services, fund management require authorisation from the CSSF or the Commissariat aux Assurances. Formation advisers should confirm licensing requirements early in the structuring process.

Compliance and Reporting Obligations

Luxembourg company formation is the beginning not the end of the compliance journey. Ongoing obligations are substantial, and failure to meet them can jeopardise the tax and regulatory benefits that justified the structure.

Substance reporting: The ACD expects companies to maintain evidence of genuine economic activity in Luxembourg. This includes documented board and committee minutes, contracts with local service providers, evidence of premises and personnel, and records of decision-making processes. Industry observers note that the tax administration has moved from a principally paper-based review process to more data-driven and cross-border-intelligence-supported assessments.

Transfer pricing: Luxembourg follows OECD transfer-pricing guidelines. Companies exceeding applicable thresholds must prepare and maintain a master file and local file. Intercompany loans, management fees, and IP-licensing arrangements are areas of heightened scrutiny, particularly for holding structures with limited operational functions.

ATAD and DAC implications: The Anti-Tax Avoidance Directive (ATAD Council Directive (EU) 2016/1164) and its successive amendments have been transposed into Luxembourg law, introducing interest-limitation rules, exit-taxation provisions, controlled-foreign-company rules, and anti-hybrid-mismatch provisions. The DAC series (DAC6, DAC7, DAC8 and ongoing expansions) requires mandatory disclosure of certain cross-border arrangements and platform reporting these obligations fall directly on intermediaries and, in some cases, on taxpayers themselves.

Annual filings: All Luxembourg commercial companies must file annual accounts with the RCS and submit annual tax returns (corporate income tax, municipal business tax, and net wealth tax) to the ACD.

Client Case Studies

Case Study A: Private Equity Acquisition SOPARFI Holding SPV

A mid-market European private equity fund established a Luxembourg S.à r.l. SOPARFI as the intermediate holding vehicle for a leveraged acquisition of a Benelux-based industrial group. Substance was implemented from day one: two locally resident managers were appointed, a dedicated registered office with operational capability was secured, and quarterly board meetings were held in Luxembourg. Intercompany financing was documented in compliance with OECD transfer-pricing guidelines. Upon exit three years later, the capital gain qualified for the participation exemption, and the proceeds were repatriated to the fund vehicle with no Luxembourg withholding tax under the applicable treaty framework.

Case Study B: Institutional Fund RAIF with External AIFM

An international real-estate fund manager launched a pan-European logistics fund using the Luxembourg RAIF structure. An authorised Luxembourg-based AIFM was appointed under a third-party management model, and a Luxembourg credit institution served as depositary. The private-placement memorandum, subscription agreement, and AIFM delegation arrangements were finalised within four weeks. First investor closings occurred within six weeks of the engagement substantially faster than a SIF authorisation would have permitted. Ongoing compliance was managed through the AIFM’s regulatory reporting framework, with annual accounts filed with the RCS on schedule.

Pricing Bands: Indicative Service Tiers for Company Formation in Luxembourg

The following tiers illustrate typical pricing ranges for Luxembourg formation projects. Exact costs depend on structural complexity, fund-specific requirements, and service-provider arrangements. A tailored proposal should be requested in all cases.

Tier Scope Indicative Fee Range
Starter Basic SOPARFI Formation Legal-form selection, articles of association, notarisation, RCS filing, tax registration €3,000 – €8,000
Standard SOPARFI + Substance Setup All Starter items plus: substance implementation (registered office, local directors, bank account), initial tax-filing setup, transfer-pricing framework €8,000 – €20,000
Fund RAIF / SIF Setup with AIFM Coordination Vehicle structuring, PPM / prospectus drafting, AIFM / depositary appointment, CSSF authorisation (SIF/SICAR) or RCS filing (RAIF), operational readiness €15,000 – €60,000+

Local Trust Signals and Resources

Global Law Experts works with established Luxembourg-based legal and tax practitioners who advise on holding-company and fund-vehicle structuring, substance implementation, and ongoing regulatory compliance. Our network maintains a presence in Luxembourg City and coordinates with notaries, depositaries, and AIFMs to deliver end-to-end formation support.

For practical guidance, the following resources provide deeper analysis on key topics:

  • What is a SOPARFI? Tax regime, substance and compliance a detailed guide to the participation exemption, substance checklists, and practical compliance steps.
  • Luxembourg fund vehicles: SIF, RAIF, SICAR a comprehensive legal comparison of authorisation processes, documentation requirements, and investor-eligibility criteria.
  • Timeline, costs and practical checklist for registering a Luxembourg company a step-by-step downloadable checklist covering notarial procedures, RCS filing, and tax registration.
  • Luxembourg corporate tax & participation-exemption brief a technical overview of holding-company taxation, withholding relief, and net wealth tax.
  • Transfer pricing, substance and reporting obligations guidance on TP documentation, local-file preparation, and DAC reporting requirements.

Conclusion: Navigating Luxembourg Company Formation with Confidence

Luxembourg’s combination of legal flexibility, tax efficiency, and regulatory credibility makes it a jurisdiction of choice for cross-border holding and fund structures. However, the compliance landscape is evolving rapidly substance requirements, transfer-pricing scrutiny, and DAC/ATAD reporting obligations demand careful planning from the outset. Whether the objective is a straightforward SOPARFI holding vehicle or a complex multi-compartment RAIF, the structuring decisions made at formation stage have lasting implications for tax efficiency, regulatory standing, and operational cost.

Successful company formation in Luxembourg requires more than filing documents with the RCS. It requires a considered approach to vehicle selection, governance design, substance implementation, and ongoing compliance grounded in a thorough understanding of both Luxembourg law and the international regulatory environment in which these structures operate. Engaging advisers with deep jurisdictional expertise at the earliest stage is the most reliable way to protect the integrity of the structure and the interests of all stakeholders.

Sources

FAQs

How much does it cost to set up a company in Luxembourg?
For a standard commercial company (S.A. or S.à r.l.), total formation costs — including notary fees, legal drafting, and RCS registration — typically range from €3,000 to €15,000. Regulated fund vehicles (SIF, SICAR) carry substantially higher setup costs, generally €15,000 to €60,000 or more, reflecting CSSF authorisation fees and professional advisory costs. RAIFs fall between these ranges at approximately €10,000 to €40,000. All figures are indicative; a tailored quote based on the specific structure is essential.
A SOPARFI (Société de Participations Financières) is not a separate legal entity type. It is an ordinary Luxembourg capital company — usually an S.A. or S.à r.l. — used principally for financial-holding and investment purposes. Its attractiveness lies in the Luxembourg participation-exemption regime, which can exempt qualifying dividend income and capital gains from corporate income tax, subject to holding-threshold, holding-period, and eligible-subsidiary tests.
The principal advantages include: exemption of qualifying dividends and capital gains under the participation-exemption regime; access to Luxembourg’s extensive network of double-tax treaties and EU directives (Parent-Subsidiary Directive, Interest and Royalties Directive); potential reduction or elimination of withholding tax on distributions; and no subscription tax for ordinary holding companies (as distinct from regulated funds). All benefits are conditional on meeting substance, minimum-holding, and eligible-subsidiary requirements.
A standard S.A. or S.à r.l. can be incorporated and registered with the RCS within two to four weeks, assuming documentation and bank due diligence are prepared in advance. CSSF-authorised fund vehicles (SIF, SICAR) typically require six to twelve weeks from submission of a complete dossier. RAIFs, which do not require prior CSSF authorisation, can reach operational readiness in two to six weeks.
Yes. Luxembourg imposes no general nationality or residency restriction on company formation. Non-resident individuals and foreign corporate entities may serve as founders and shareholders. However, all beneficial owners must be registered with the RBE (beneficial-ownership register), and KYC/AML compliance applies throughout the formation and operational lifecycle. Certain regulated activities require sectoral licences from the CSSF or other supervisory authorities.
No. A SOPARFI is an ordinary commercial company conducting holding and financing activities. It does not require CSSF authorisation unless it carries out activities that fall within a regulated perimeter — such as managing third-party assets, offering fund units to the public, or providing payment services. Fund vehicles (SIF, SICAR) require CSSF authorisation; the RAIF does not, but must appoint an authorised AIFM.

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