Our valued sponsor

Malta or Bulgaria?

Cabbage500

New member
Sep 7, 2017
39
13
8
54
Visit site
Hello, currently we have a Seychelles IBC, but are thinking of moving to EU as banking is getting harder, and having an IBAN is important.

I am thinking Malta or Bulgaria.

I need, accountant, company formation agent, and help to open bank account.

The business is Software design and rental, we issue around 2000 invoices per year.

I like the sound of Malta with 5% tax... but in reality is it difficult to achieve that? would Bulgaria be better? What sort of accounting costs should we expect?

Who can advise this stuff?

thanks
 
I have clients that are in the field of software development, licensing etc. If you can get an eligible IP (intellectual property) tax exemption declaration in Cyprus - you'd effectively only pay ~2% tax there. Cyprus is one of the best EU countries for IP tax regimes etc, however they are changing their IP regime in the coming year or so, so maybe have an accountant comment on that. Can't say much re: Malta or Bulgaria though, however you'll run into accounting, legal and corporate fees no matter the country you incorporate in if EU.
 
  • Like
Reactions: JohnLocke
You will need to have a budget at least at €4000 for accounting and tax filing including audited accounts each year! This may not differ much regardless of Bulgaria, Cyprus or Malta.
 
I must mention that in Bulgaria, since you have 2000 transactions, it will cost a significant amount of money in accounting because 1/ every invoice has to be translated in bulgarian 2/ invoices has to be converted in BGN. You will not set up the BGN currency on your website for sure.


Thats the local bulgarian law.
 
I like the sound of Malta with 5% tax... but in reality is it difficult to achieve that?

If you are not going to live in Malta then forget Malta. You will end up paying 35% corporate tax rate and will not get the tax refund eek¤%&. Tax refund requires having a local Malta iban to get it. Plus to open a corporate account you really need to be resident in Malta. All Malta banks are closing the doors to non-residents so if your not a resident of Malta then forget it long term. Satabank was last hope among the international banks in Malta but has compliance issues. So does the other bank I don't want to mention that has issues with U.S also.
 
  • Like
Reactions: LisaSimpson
If you are not going to live in Malta then forget Malta. You will end up paying 35% corporate tax rate and will not get the tax refund eek¤%&. Tax refund requires having a local Malta iban to get it. Plus to open a corporate account you really need to be resident in Malta. All Malta banks are closing the doors to non-residents so if your not a resident of Malta then forget it long term. Satabank was last hope among the international banks in Malta but has compliance issues. So does the other bank I don't want to mention that has issues with U.S also.

I d like to second Marin Everson, the setup that I heard about Malta was about people who decided to move to Malta and be resident there in order to get the Tax refund. I know for sure that the administrative process for Malta is much more complicated than in Cyprus.
 
what about romania ? they have 3% turnover tax - which is really good for owning IP as you dont really have any expenses.

also hungary is having 9% tax and 4.5% for IP but they are little bit strict with what they consider IP.

Also i strongly suggest paying some local guy to find you local accountants. Anything you find in english in these countries is terrible. I got quoted 150eur/mo for one invoice a month accounting in romania which is ridiculous. When you have proper accounting company, you dont even need to have invoices, just give them csv in format they can import into their accounting software and you are sorted.
 
If you are not going to live in Malta then forget Malta. You will end up paying 35% corporate tax rate and will not get the tax refund eek¤%&. Tax refund requires having a local Malta iban to get it. Plus to open a corporate account you really need to be resident in Malta. All Malta banks are closing the doors to non-residents so if your not a resident of Malta then forget it long term. Satabank was last hope among the international banks in Malta but has compliance issues. So does the other bank I don't want to mention that has issues with U.S also.

Only foreign shareholders are eligible for a 30% tax refund
 
Only foreign shareholders are eligible for a 30% tax refund

That's WRONG information and I must correct you.

Anyone that is not a resident and anyone that is resident in Malta but is not Maltese can claim the 6/7 full imputation refund. This is done by a resident setting up a Maltese company with a foreign company as shareholder to reclaim the tax paid.

P.s Knowledge is power ;)
 
I must mention that in Bulgaria, since you have 2000 transactions, it will cost a significant amount of money in accounting because 1/ every invoice has to be translated in bulgarian 2/ invoices has to be converted in BGN. You will not set up the BGN currency on your website for sure.


Thats the local bulgarian law.

Is this a problem though? My accounting program does all of that automatically, and I'm not even in Bulgaria. I mean, accounting systems download fx data, and the items have an English and local name. Problem solved? This seems made out to be a bigger problem than it should be.

What I do like about Bulgaria is that accounting services seems to be pretty cheap.
 
I have clients that are in the field of software development, licensing etc. If you can get an eligible IP (intellectual property) tax exemption declaration in Cyprus - you'd effectively only pay ~2% tax there. Cyprus is one of the best EU countries for IP tax regimes etc, however they are changing their IP regime in the coming year or so, so maybe have an accountant comment on that. Can't say much re: Malta or Bulgaria though, however you'll run into accounting, legal and corporate fees no matter the country you incorporate in if EU.

I forgot about this in Cyprus! What does the paperwork look like for this option? Any experience on the process you can share?

Though, in Bulgaria it's easy to get the money paid out - 14.4% total tax and then you have access to the money - not in your company but in your private bank account.
 
I forgot about this in Cyprus! What does the paperwork look like for this option? Any experience on the process you can share?

Though, in Bulgaria it's easy to get the money paid out - 14.4% total tax and then you have access to the money - not in your company but in your private bank account.

I'm unsure what the paperwork looks like and what the process exactly was for applying for an IP exemption in Cyprus, that was before my time with this particular company. By the sounds of it though, with help of a local lawyer and accounting firm (one of the big 4), we were able to get the proper IP status, and are now currently enjoying the tax break. Can't comment re: Bulgaria either, never worked there. Currently in the process of incorporating in Malta though (holding company purposes).
 
  • Like
Reactions: JohnLocke
for Bulgarian invoices, I never had this issue. I even sent invoices in german/french to my accountants and never heard back from the governement.
if you want to incroporate a company in BG, it will cost around 500-700€ for a full set-up (company, bank, etc.) without nominees.

Taxes:
10% on profit
10% on salary
then special % for dividends (more expensive if outside EU or without double threaty)
 
  • Like
Reactions: Maolaoadviser
I'm unsure what the paperwork looks like and what the process exactly was for applying for an IP exemption in Cyprus, that was before my time with this particular company. By the sounds of it though, with help of a local lawyer and accounting firm (one of the big 4), we were able to get the proper IP status, and are now currently enjoying the tax break. Can't comment re: Bulgaria either, never worked there. Currently in the process of incorporating in Malta though (holding company purposes).
Congrats with the good result. It must have cost you are fortune to get this done by these professionals?
 
@c4labs Who did you use to get this setup and do they speak English? I am interested.
 
for Bulgarian invoices, I never had this issue. I even sent invoices in german/french to my accountants and never heard back from the governement.
if you want to incroporate a company in BG, it will cost around 500-700€ for a full set-up (company, bank, etc.) without nominees.

Taxes:
10% on profit
10% on salary
then special % for dividends (more expensive if outside EU or without double threaty)
Yes same here. Never had any issue with Bulgaria.
regarding Dividends, as far as I know, it's 5%
 

Latest Threads