Jersey remains one of the world’s most respected international finance centres, offering a sophisticated legal framework, political stability, and a mature ecosystem of professional service providers. For high-net-worth individuals, family offices, and fund managers considering company formation in Jersey, the jurisdiction delivers a compelling combination of flexible company law, regulatory credibility, and access to global banking relationships. This guide provides the practical, step-by-step detail needed to navigate the incorporation process, meet economic substance and beneficial ownership requirements, and open a corporate bank account all grounded in the latest regulatory guidance from the Jersey Financial Services Commission (JFSC) and the Government of Jersey.
This page covers:
Jersey is a Crown Dependency with its own legislature, independent judiciary, and a legal system rooted in both customary Norman law and English common law principles. The island enjoys political stability, a AA+ credit rating, and a well-established rule of law that provides certainty for international investors and their advisors. The Companies (Jersey) Law 1991 and its subsequent amendments offers a modern, internationally recognised corporate framework.
Jersey company law provides a range of vehicles suited to different purposes: exempt companies for non-resident holding structures, private limited companies for operating businesses, and limited partnerships or collective investment vehicles for fund structures. The law permits single-director companies, allows shares with no par value, and offers broad constitutional flexibility through bespoke memoranda and articles of association.
Jersey hosts a deep bench of trust companies, fund administrators, corporate service providers, legal firms, and banking institutions experienced in serving international private clients and institutional investors. The island’s private client & trusts infrastructure is among the most developed globally, while its fund domiciliation expertise makes it a natural choice for European and global fund managers seeking a well-regulated, tax-neutral platform.
Regulation & Registry: The Jersey Financial Services Commission (JFSC) operates the island’s company registry and supervises financial services businesses, ensuring alignment with international standards. The Government of Jersey sets policy on beneficial ownership, economic substance, and tax transparency.
A Jersey exempt company is designed for non-resident use. Its shareholders must be non-resident in Jersey, and it must not carry on business within the island (except with other exempt companies or Jersey-resident financial services businesses). This vehicle is widely used by HNWIs establishing holding companies, family offices structuring international assets, and fund managers creating special purpose vehicles (SPVs). Advantages include simplified reporting and favourable treatment under Jersey’s 0% corporate tax regime for non-resident income streams. The trade-off is that the company cannot trade locally.
The private limited company is Jersey’s default corporate vehicle. It is suitable for operating businesses, resident structures, and scenarios where Jersey-based trading activity is required. A private company may have up to 30 shareholders and restricts the transfer of shares. It can serve as the operational entity in structures where economic substance must be demonstrated on-island.
Public companies are used for listed vehicles, large fund structures requiring broad share distribution, or entities that need to offer securities to the public. They carry additional regulatory and disclosure obligations, including the potential requirement for a prospectus. Most HNW and family office structures will not need a public company unless pursuing a listing or large-scale capital raise.
Jersey also offers limited liability companies (LLCs), limited partnerships (including separate limited partnerships favoured by private equity), and a range of regulated and unregulated collective investment fund structures. For detailed guidance on fund vehicles, see the dedicated fund formation page.
| Vehicle | Typical Use-Case | Non-Resident Friendly? | Directors Required | Annual Filings | Typical Timeline | Illustrative Year-1 Cost (excl. bank) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exempt Company | Non-resident holding co, fund SPV, family office vehicle | Yes shareholders must be non-resident | Minimum 1 | Annual confirmation statement via myRegistry | 2–7 business days (standard) | £3,000–£8,000 (depending on complexity) |
| Private Limited Company | Operating business, resident structure, trading entity | Yes (with substance considerations) | Minimum 1 | Annual confirmation statement & financial statements where required | 2–7 business days (standard) | £3,000–£10,000 (depending on complexity) |
| Public Company | Listed vehicle, large fund, public offering | Yes (with regulatory approvals) | Minimum 2 | Annual confirmation, audited financial statements, prospectus (if applicable) | Variable depends on regulatory approvals | £10,000+ (significant additional regulatory costs) |
Figures are illustrative only and should be confirmed within a bespoke incorporation plan. Costs exclude bank account onboarding and ongoing substance expenditure.
Before engaging with the registry, prospective incorporators should resolve several foundational questions:
Select the appropriate vehicle (exempt, private limited, or other) and instruct Jersey counsel to prepare or review the memorandum and articles of association. Bespoke drafting is advisable for family office and fund structures to address governance, succession, and investor rights.
Appoint the required officers and shareholders. While Jersey law permits a single director, structures intended to demonstrate economic substance will typically require at least two directors with genuine decision-making authority, at least one of whom is resident or meets in Jersey. A company secretary is not mandatory for all company types but is best practice for corporate governance. Crucially, you must appoint a nominated person a regulated Jersey entity authorised to submit filings on myRegistry, the JFSC’s online registry platform.
Jersey company registration is handled electronically through myRegistry. The nominated person will:
The nominated person submits the completed application and pays the applicable JFSC registry fees. Upon acceptance, the JFSC issues a certificate of incorporation, and the company is entered on the public register.
Once incorporated, the following actions are required:
Practical tip: Engage your local corporate service provider early. They will manage the myRegistry submission, advise on naming restrictions, and coordinate the assembly of KYC documentation. For high-volume incorporations (e.g., fund platforms establishing multiple SPVs), API integration with myRegistry can streamline the process significantly.
The total cost of company formation in Jersey varies with the complexity of the structure, the level of nominee and fiduciary services required, and the scope of substance arrangements. The table below provides illustrative ranges for a typical HNWI/family office holding vehicle and a fund SPV. All figures should be confirmed in a bespoke incorporation plan.
| Cost Item | Year 1 (One-Off + Annual) | Ongoing Annual |
|---|---|---|
| JFSC registry / incorporation fee | £200–£500 | £200–£300 (annual confirmation fee) |
| Legal drafting (articles, shareholder agreements) | £1,500–£5,000+ | Ad hoc (amendments) |
| Corporate service provider (registered office, company secretary, nominated person) | £2,000–£6,000 | £2,000–£6,000 |
| Nominee services (nominee directors/shareholders where used) | £1,000–£4,000 | £1,000–£4,000 |
| Bank account onboarding (documentation, due diligence support) | £500–£2,000 | |
| Substance costs (office, local staff or outsourced management, board meetings) | £2,000–£15,000+ | £2,000–£15,000+ |
| Accounting / audit | £1,500–£5,000 | £1,500–£5,000 |
Ranges are illustrative and depend heavily on structure complexity, asset class, and service provider. Fund SPVs with multiple investors and regulated structures will sit at the higher end. Figures exclude Jersey Goods and Services Tax (GST) where applicable.
| Service Level | Typical Registry Processing Time | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Standard incorporation | 2–7 business days | Subject to completeness of application and JFSC workload |
| Expedited incorporation | Same day to 48 hours | Available in certain circumstances; additional fees may apply |
| Bank account onboarding | 2–8 weeks (additional) | Depends on structure complexity, AML checks, and bank capacity |
Important: While jersey company registration through myRegistry can be completed within days, the overall onboarding timeline including bank account opening and substance set-up typically takes several weeks. Plan accordingly.
Securing a corporate bank account is often the most time-intensive element of setting up a company in Jersey. Banks in the jurisdiction operate rigorous KYC/AML procedures aligned with FATF standards and JFSC supervisory expectations. The typical onboarding process involves:
In 2026, Jersey banks place significant emphasis on the quality and credibility of a company’s economic substance. Industry observers expect that banks will scrutinise the following when evaluating applications:
Non-resident directors and UBOs should expect enhanced due diligence, including video identification interviews, notarised documentation, and potentially additional reference requirements. Introduction via a regulated local partner such as a trust company or licensed CSP materially improves the speed and success rate of bank onboarding. Realistic expectations on timing: budget 2–8 weeks from initial submission to account activation for HNW and fund structures.
Jersey requires all companies to maintain accurate beneficial ownership information, which is held by the company’s nominated person and accessible to the JFSC. The Government of Jersey’s beneficial ownership policy ensures that BO data is available to law enforcement and tax authorities under controlled access arrangements. While Jersey does not currently operate a fully public BO register, the information is maintained to international standards and is shared pursuant to bilateral and multilateral agreements. The JFSC provides guidance on the protection and handling of beneficial ownership information, which companies and their nominated persons must follow.
Jersey’s economic substance regime requires companies that are tax-resident in the island and carry on relevant activities to demonstrate adequate substance. The practical compliance checklist includes:
For further detail on current substance obligations, consult Jersey substance requirements 2026 guidance.
Jersey has committed to full alignment with the OECD’s Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) framework. The island participates in automatic exchange of tax information (CRS), maintains a wide network of tax information exchange agreements, and has enacted legislation to meet BEPS minimum standards. HNWIs and fund managers should ensure that Jersey vehicles are used within a structure that reflects genuine economic rationale and compliance with the tax rules of all relevant jurisdictions.
Jersey’s AML/CFT regime is aligned with FATF standards. Trust and company service providers (TCSPs), fund administrators, and other financial services businesses operating in Jersey are supervised by the JFSC and must apply risk-based customer due diligence, ongoing monitoring, and suspicious transaction reporting. Clients of Jersey corporate services should expect thorough AML onboarding both at the CSP level and when opening bank accounts.
Every Jersey incorporation is shaped by the specific objectives, tax position, and governance requirements of the individuals and institutions behind it. A bespoke incorporation plan prepared in collaboration with regulated local partners ensures that the chosen vehicle, substance arrangements, and banking relationships are optimised from day one.
To support your planning, the downloadable Jersey Incorporation Year 1 Cost & Onboarding Checklist provides a structured overview of the documents, decisions, and budget items required at each stage of the process.
Guidance informed by JFSC processes and Government of Jersey policy. Commercial formation, substance, and banking services delivered via regulated local partners.
posted 8 minutes ago
posted 50 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message