Introduction
Many families in Singapore consider a family investment company to consolidate assets, centralise investment decisions and plan succession. Setting up a family investment company in Singapore requires consideration of corporate, tax and regulatory obligations under ACRA, IRAS and other authorities.
This article, Setting Up a Family Investment Company in Singapore: What You Should Consider, outlines who typically uses this structure, the key rules and requirements, a step-by-step incorporation checklist, common pitfalls and practical examples. It explains general rules and encourages readers to seek tailored advice from Raffles Corporate Services for filings, compliance, accounting, tax and payroll support.
Who this applies to
This applies to individuals and families who want to use a private company in Singapore to hold investments such as listed securities, private equity, trusts, or property (directly or through SPVs). It is relevant for:
- Families seeking centralised investment management and structured distributions.
- Individuals planning intergenerational wealth transfer and governance.
- Existing family offices considering corporate structures for tax and compliance efficiency.
Key rules and requirements in Singapore
When establishing a family investment company in Singapore you must comply with corporate and tax obligations under the Companies Act, ACRA, IRAS and other regulators.
Incorporation and registration: Incorporate a private limited company with ACRA via the BizFile+ portal. The company receives a UEN and must maintain a registered office in Singapore.
Corporate officers: Appoint at least one director who is ordinarily resident in Singapore, a company secretary within six months of incorporation, and a registered address. Directors must meet statutory eligibility requirements under the Companies Act.
Corporate governance: Adopt a constitution (previously called memorandum and articles) and consider shareholder agreements, dividend policies and buy-sell provisions to manage family governance and succession.
Tax: Singapore adopts a territorial tax system and a one-tier corporate tax system—tax is payable on income sourced in Singapore or remitted income in specific circumstances. Dividends paid from taxed profits are generally tax-exempt in recipient hands. Capital gains are typically not taxed in Singapore, but the tax treatment depends on the facts. Companies must register for corporate tax with IRAS and file annual tax returns. Consider start-up tax exemptions or partial tax exemptions where relevant.
GST registration: Register for GST if taxable supplies exceed S$1 million in the preceding 12 months or if you expect to exceed this threshold in the next 12 months.
Employment and payroll: If the company employs staff (e.g. investment managers), ensure compliance with CPF contributions, the Employment Act, and work passes such as Employment Pass, S Pass or Work Permit where applicable.
Accounts, audit and annual filing: Maintain accounting records and prepare financial statements. Audit exemptions may apply for small companies subject to ACRA/IRAS thresholds—check current criteria. Annual returns and any required AGM or resolutions must be filed through BizFile+.
Regulatory considerations for certain investments: Holding or trading in property, collective investment schemes or regulated financial products can trigger additional licensing, stamp duty (for property or share transfers) and regulatory requirements under MAS or IRAS. Seek specific advice for regulated activities.
Step-by-step process
The following steps provide a practical incorporation and setup roadmap.
1. Define objectives and governance: Clarify investment objectives, distribution policy, succession plans and who will control decision-making.
2. Choose company details: Select company name, share structure, classes of shares and initial shareholders. Consider protective share classes for minority family members.
3. Prepare constitutional documents and shareholder agreements: Draft a constitution and a shareholder agreement addressing voting rights, transfer restrictions, deadlock resolution and dividend policy.
4. Incorporate with ACRA: File incorporation documents via BizFile+, appoint directors, company secretary and registered office. Obtain the UEN.
5. Open a bank account and establish accounting systems: Open corporate bank accounts, set up accounting and reporting processes, and appoint auditors or confirm audit exemption eligibility.
6. Register for tax and other schemes: Register for corporate tax, consider GST registration if relevant, and register for CPF and payroll systems if hiring employees.
7. Implement compliance calendar: Maintain timelines for annual returns, tax filings (ECI and Form C/C-S), GST filings, and payroll submissions. Keep registers of members, directors and share transfers updated.
8. Ongoing management: Hold board meetings, document investment decisions, and review governance arrangements periodically.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Failing to document family governance and shareholder agreements, leading to disputes on succession or distributions.
- Misunderstanding tax consequences—assuming dividends or gains are automatically tax-free without reviewing the nature of income and sourcing rules.
- Ignoring GST registration thresholds or late registration obligations.
- Poor bookkeeping and inadequate accounting systems, which complicate annual filings and audits.
- Overlooking stamp duty or property-related taxes when acquiring real estate or shares in property-holding companies.
- Using nominee arrangements without clear legal documentation and professional advice.
Practical examples
Example 1: A Singapore family sets up a private company to hold listed securities and private equity. The company centralises investment decisions, pays dividends to family shareholders and engages a professional investment manager. The family adopts a shareholder agreement to set distribution rules and appoints a corporate secretary to handle ACRA filings and minutes.
Example 2: A family forms a company that invests in residential property. Apart from corporate registration and tax filings, the company must consider stamp duty on property purchase, potential GST issues if supplies are taxable, and whether property ownership through a company meets the family’s succession and tax objectives. Professional advice is essential before acquisition.
How a corporate secretary can help
A corporate secretary plays a central role in ensuring statutory compliance and good governance.
- Manage incorporation filings with ACRA and maintain the company’s statutory registers via BizFile+.
- Prepare and file annual returns, coordinate audit and accounting deadlines, and arrange AGMs or written resolutions as required.
- Draft and update constitutional documents and assist with shareholder communications and meetings.
- Liaise with tax and accounting teams to ensure timely ECI filing, corporate tax returns and GST compliance.
- Coordinate payroll and CPF processes when the company employs staff.
Raffles Corporate Services can assist with filings, compliance, accounting, tax and payroll support to help implement and maintain a family investment company structure.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do dividends from a family investment company attract further tax?
Under Singapore’s one-tier corporate tax system, dividends paid out of taxed profits are generally tax-exempt in the hands of shareholders. The tax treatment depends on the company’s tax position and the nature of income—seek professional advice for specific circumstances.
Is GST applicable to a family investment company?
GST registration is required if taxable supplies exceed S$1 million in the preceding 12 months or are expected to exceed this threshold. Pure investment activities (e.g. investment in securities) are typically exempt from GST, but this depends on the activity—check IRAS guidance or consult an adviser.
Can a family investment company own property in Singapore?
Yes, a company can own property. However, property ownership may trigger stamp duty, buyer’s stamp duty, additional buyer’s stamp duty (for non-residents) and other taxes. Regulatory and financing implications should be carefully considered before acquisition.
Is an audit mandatory for a family investment company?
Audit requirements depend on company size and statutory thresholds. Small company audit exemptions may apply; however, the company must still prepare financial statements and file tax returns. Verify current ACRA/IRAS thresholds with a professional adviser.
Key takeaways
- A family investment company can centralise investments, support succession planning and provide governance benefits.
- Comply with Companies Act obligations—appoint directors, a corporate secretary and maintain statutory registers via BizFile+.
- Understand tax consequences with IRAS: corporate tax, dividend treatment, GST thresholds and possible property-related duties.
- Document governance through a constitution and shareholder agreement to manage distributions and succession.
- Engage professional advisers, including a corporate secretary and tax/accounting specialists, to ensure ongoing compliance.
If you would like to find out more about how Raffles Corporate Services can assist with your company’s compliance and corporate secretarial requirements, please get in touch with the team at [email protected].
Yours sincerely,
The editorial team at Raffles Corporate Services
Requirements may change, so always check the latest guidance from ACRA, IRAS or MOM, or consult a professional adviser.
Disclaimer: This does not constitute legal advice. If you require legal advice, please contact a lawyer.
