World Watch/Bahamas/Starting a Business

Starting a Business · Bahamas

Starting a Business - Bahamas

ModerateInternational Business Companies Act (Ch. 309); Companies Act 1992 (Ch. 308); Bahamas Investment Authority Act — administered by the Registrar General's Department and the Bahamas Investment Authority (BIA)

The Bahamas operates a two-track system: foreign-owned International Business Companies (IBCs) are incorporated with minimal friction, 100% foreign ownership, no minimum capital, and no BIA approval required for purely offshore operations. Foreigners wishing to operate locally (domestic companies) must submit a project proposal to the BIA, meet a minimum investment threshold of BS$500,000, and receive National Economic Council approval, with certain sectors reserved exclusively for Bahamians. A 2025 amendment to the IBC Act tightened beneficial-ownership transparency rules in line with FATF Recommendation 24 but left foreign-ownership rights intact.

Two-track structure

Foreigners may incorporate an IBC (offshore/international operations) or a domestic company under the Companies Act 1992. IBCs are self-contained, tax-neutral vehicles not permitted to trade within The Bahamas; domestic companies may conduct local business but face additional regulatory hurdles for non-Bahamians.

100% foreign ownership (IBC)

The IBC Act imposes no requirement for Bahamian shareholders or directors. Non-residents may hold 100% of shares; one shareholder and one director suffice (same person allowed). A licensed registered agent in The Bahamas is mandatory.

BIA approval for local operations

Non-Bahamians or non-Permanent-Residents wishing to operate a business locally must submit a Project Proposal to the Bahamas Investment Authority. The BIA forwards it to the National Economic Council (which meets bimonthly); approval is communicated in writing and is valid for 12–18 months.

Minimum investment threshold (local)

Foreign investors in locally-operating businesses must demonstrate a minimum capital investment of BS$500,000. The proposed activity must also fall outside sectors reserved exclusively for 100% Bahamian participation (e.g., certain retail and service industries).

No minimum capital for IBCs; fast timeline

IBCs have no statutory minimum issued capital requirement; the standard authorized share capital is BS$50,000 but is not mandatory. Once documents are submitted to the Registrar General's Department, incorporation typically completes within 2–5 business days.

2025 IBC Amendment — beneficial ownership

The International Business Companies (Amendment) Act, 2025 was enacted to align with FATF Recommendation 24, restricting nominee director/shareholder arrangements and requiring enhanced beneficial-ownership disclosure. Foreign-ownership rights themselves remain unrestricted.

Machine-assisted translation · verified 5/24/2026 · orientation, not legal advice. English version →