Our Expert in Mauritius
The subsidiary vs branch Mauritius 2026 decision confronts every multinational, fund manager and founder preparing to enter or restructure operations on the island. The choice has always turned on tax efficiency, liability ring-fencing and compliance cost, but the Finance Act 2025 rewrote the calculus by introducing a Qualified Domestic Minimum Top-up Tax (QDMTT) effective 1 July 2025, aligning Mauritius with the OECD Pillar Two global minimum tax framework. This article sets out both options, compares them dimension by dimension, models the QDMTT impact, and delivers a clear “choose when” decision framework so you can act before engaging counsel.
A branch is not a separate legal entity. It is an extension of the foreign parent company, registered locally under the Mauritius Companies Act 2001 as a “foreign company” carrying on business in Mauritius. The parent bears full legal and financial liability for branch obligations. Tax is levied only on income attributable to the branch’s Mauritius permanent establishment (PE), guided by the Mauritius Revenue Authority’s Practice Statement TR29.
The foreign parent must register the branch with the Registrar of Companies, filing certified copies of its constitutional documents, a list of directors, and the name and address of at least one local authorised representative. The branch must maintain local accounting records sufficient to determine income attributable to its Mauritius operations and file an annual return.
The Companies Act requires at least one person resident in Mauritius who is authorised to accept service of process and act on behalf of the foreign company. This can be a local employee, a management company or a professional services firm.
Branch registration generally takes two to four weeks once documents are notarised and apostilled. There is no minimum capital requirement for a branch.
A subsidiary is a separate Mauritius-incorporated company, most commonly a private company limited by shares, or a Global Business Company (GBC) if the entity holds a Financial Services Commission licence. It has its own legal personality, its own board of directors, and stands as an independent taxpayer at the Mauritius corporate income tax rate of 15%.
Incorporation requires filing a constitution (articles) with the Registrar of Companies, appointing at least one director, a secretary and a registered agent (for GBCs), and paying the prescribed registration fee. A GBC must additionally obtain a licence from the Financial Services Commission and satisfy substance requirements including employing at least one full-time employee in Mauritius, maintaining a local registered office, and holding board meetings in Mauritius.
A domestic company must have at least one director. A GBC must have at least two directors, and a proportion of board meetings must take place in Mauritius to support tax residence claims. At least one director must be ordinarily resident in Mauritius for a GBC to satisfy substance criteria under the Financial Services Act.
Every subsidiary must prepare financial statements in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS). An annual statutory audit is mandatory for most companies above small-company thresholds, and a GBC must file audited accounts with both the FSC and the MRA. Annual filing includes a tax return, an annual report to the Registrar and, for GBCs, a substance return.
The table below is the centrepiece of the subsidiary vs branch Mauritius 2026 analysis. Each dimension is stated in short declarative terms; the detailed commentary follows in the next section.
| Dimension | Branch | Subsidiary |
|---|---|---|
| Legal status | Extension of foreign parent; no separate legal personality | Separate Mauritius-incorporated company with own legal personality |
| Taxation basis | Taxed at 15% on income attributable to Mauritius PE | Taxed at 15% on worldwide income (resident company); foreign tax credits available |
| QDMTT / Pillar Two, likely impact | Branch treated as PE constituent entity; QDMTT top-up calculated on branch’s jurisdictional effective tax rate, top-up collected in Mauritius if ETR falls below 15% | Subsidiary is a standalone constituent entity; QDMTT top-up assessed locally on subsidiary’s ETR, Mauritius collects any shortfall, pre-empting parent-jurisdiction IIR |
| PE risk | Inherently creates a PE; MRA TR29 applies to attribute profits | Separate taxpayer; PE analysis not required for subsidiary itself |
| Liability (creditors) | Parent fully liable for all branch obligations | Liability limited to subsidiary’s assets; parent shielded by corporate veil |
| Audit and filing | Local accounts for attributable income; audit only if thresholds met | Full IFRS financial statements; statutory audit generally mandatory |
| Capital and funding | No minimum capital; funded by parent directly | Stated capital on incorporation; can raise third-party equity or debt locally |
| Setup cost and timeline | Lower cost; 2–4 weeks typical | Higher cost; 4–8 weeks (longer for GBC with FSC licence) |
| Profit repatriation | No withholding tax on branch profit remittance | Dividends may attract withholding tax (reduced under treaties) |
| Dispute resolution and enforcement | Claims against branch are claims against parent, enforced in parent jurisdiction | Claims against subsidiary resolved under Mauritius law; LCIA-MIAC arbitration available |
| Reversibility | Can be converted to a subsidiary by incorporating locally and transferring assets, triggers transfer-pricing and potential capital-gains review | Can be wound up or sold; converting to a branch is rare and commercially unusual |
Tax is the primary driver of the subsidiary vs branch Mauritius 2026 decision for most multinational groups. Both structures face the same headline corporate income tax rate, but the mechanics of QDMTT exposure, withholding tax and foreign tax credits differ materially.
| Tax item | Branch | Subsidiary |
|---|---|---|
| Headline CIT rate | 15% on attributable Mauritius-source income | 15% on worldwide income (resident company) |
| QDMTT (Finance Act 2025, effective 1 July 2025) | Branch is a PE constituent entity; QDMTT top-up collected in Mauritius if jurisdictional ETR < 15% | Subsidiary is a constituent entity; QDMTT top-up collected locally, absorbs Pillar Two liability before parent-jurisdiction IIR applies |
| Withholding tax on profit repatriation | Generally nil, branch remittance is not a dividend | Dividends to non-residents subject to WHT (rate depends on treaty; many Mauritius treaties reduce to 5%–10%) |
| Partial exemption system | Not typically available to branches | GBC subsidiaries historically accessed an 80% partial exemption on specified foreign-source income, now subject to QDMTT adjustment if it pushes ETR below 15% |
| Foreign tax credit | Branch profits taxed in Mauritius; parent claims credit in home jurisdiction for Mauritius CIT paid | Subsidiary claims credit in Mauritius for foreign taxes paid; parent separately claims credit or exemption for dividend income |
The critical post-2025 change: where a Mauritius GBC subsidiary previously achieved an effective tax rate well below 15% through the partial exemption system, the QDMTT now collects a top-up to bring the jurisdictional ETR to at least 15%. Industry observers expect this to significantly narrow the after-tax gap between a branch and a subsidiary for in-scope multinational groups, while simultaneously making the subsidiary’s ability to absorb the top-up domestically, rather than ceding it to the parent-jurisdiction IIR, a strategic advantage.
A branch inherently creates a PE in Mauritius. The MRA’s Practice Statement TR29 sets out the criteria for determining when a foreign company has a PE and how profits are attributed to it. Key factors include having a fixed place of business, dependent agents concluding contracts, and performing core business activities in Mauritius.
For groups with complex value chains, a subsidiary often simplifies the transfer-pricing analysis because transactions are between separate legal entities rather than between a head office and its own PE.
This is the clearest dimension. A branch offers no liability insulation, every contract, tort claim or regulatory penalty incurred by the branch is a direct obligation of the foreign parent. A subsidiary limits the parent’s exposure to its equity investment. Where significant operational, employment or product-liability risk exists in Mauritius, the subsidiary structure is strongly preferred.
Compliance burden is a direct cost comparison that favours the branch for small operations but reverses as activity scales.
Setup and ongoing costs diverge substantially. The table below provides indicative ranges based on publicly available local practitioner fee guides.
| Cost item | Branch (indicative) | Subsidiary (indicative) |
|---|---|---|
| Registration / incorporation fee | USD 500–1,500 | USD 1,500–5,000 (higher for GBC with FSC licence) |
| Setup timeline | 2–4 weeks | 4–8 weeks (GBC with FSC licence may take longer) |
| Annual compliance (accounting, tax return, secretarial) | USD 3,000–8,000 | USD 8,000–25,000 depending on size and GBC status |
| Statutory audit | Only if thresholds met | Generally mandatory; cost included in annual compliance estimate |
Note: these are indicative estimates. Actual fees vary by service provider, entity size and complexity.
A claim against a branch is a claim against the parent, enforceable wherever the parent has assets. A claim against a subsidiary is resolved under Mauritius law and limited to the subsidiary’s assets. Mauritius offers robust dispute-resolution infrastructure, including the LCIA-MIAC Arbitration Centre and a well-regarded Commercial Division of the Supreme Court. For foreign investors concerned about jurisdictional risk, the subsidiary’s Mauritius-law governance framework provides a clear, self-contained enforcement environment.
The QDMTT (formally the Domestic Minimum Top-up Tax, or DMTT, introduced by the Finance Act 2025 and effective 1 July 2025) is Mauritius’ implementation of the OECD/G20 Pillar Two global minimum tax. It applies to multinational enterprise (MNE) groups with consolidated revenue of at least €750 million in at least two of the four preceding fiscal years.
The mechanism is straightforward: if a constituent entity’s (subsidiary or branch PE) jurisdictional effective tax rate in Mauritius falls below 15%, the QDMTT imposes a top-up tax equal to the difference. Because the QDMTT is a qualified domestic top-up, it is credited against any IIR top-up the parent jurisdiction would otherwise collect, meaning Mauritius retains the taxing right rather than ceding it to the parent’s home country.
The numbers below are illustrative only, actual top-up depends on group-specific facts and final regulatory guidance.
| Item | Branch PE | Subsidiary (GBC) |
|---|---|---|
| GloBE income (Mauritius jurisdiction) | USD 10,000,000 | USD 10,000,000 |
| Mauritius CIT at 15% | USD 1,500,000 | USD 1,500,000 |
| Adjusted covered taxes (after partial exemption or credits reduce cash tax) | USD 1,500,000 (no partial exemption available) | USD 300,000 (historic 80% partial exemption applied, reducing cash tax) |
| Jurisdictional ETR | 15.0% | 3.0% |
| QDMTT top-up (15% minus ETR × GloBE income) | Nil | USD 1,200,000 |
| Total Mauritius tax | USD 1,500,000 | USD 1,500,000 (CIT + QDMTT top-up) |
The likely practical effect: for in-scope groups that previously benefited from the partial exemption to achieve sub-15% effective rates, the QDMTT eliminates that advantage and equalises the Mauritius tax burden at 15%. The subsidiary’s strategic benefit is that the top-up stays in Mauritius rather than being collected by the parent jurisdiction’s IIR, and the subsidiary retains access to treaty benefits, limited liability and local fundraising. For groups below the €750 million threshold, the QDMTT does not apply and the traditional analysis, where the partial exemption could reduce the subsidiary’s effective tax, remains relevant.
The decision is not abstract. Match your business profile to the triggers below.
| If your priority is… | Choose… |
|---|---|
| Minimum cost and compliance for a time-limited presence | Branch |
| Liability ring-fencing from Mauritius operations | Subsidiary |
| Access to Mauritius’ double taxation treaty network | Subsidiary (resident company status required) |
| Holding an FSC-regulated licence | Subsidiary (mandatory) |
| Retaining Pillar Two top-up revenue in Mauritius (QDMTT advantage) | Subsidiary |
| Avoiding withholding tax on profit repatriation | Branch |
| Raising third-party equity at the Mauritius level | Subsidiary |
| Testing the market before committing | Branch |
Many aspects of the subsidiary vs branch decision can be assessed using the framework above. However, certain situations require immediate professional engagement:
For specialist advice on Mauritius entity selection, QDMTT modelling and tax compliance, find accounting and tax lawyers in Mauritius or explore our Accounting Services practice area.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Mohamed Reshad Sadool at Accounting & Consulting Group / Comprehensive Financial Services, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 7 minutes ago
posted 23 minutes ago
posted 46 minutes 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 5 hours ago
posted 5 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