World Watch/Dominica/Starting a Business

Starting a Business · Dominica

Starting a business in Dominica: foreigner's guide (2026)

EasyCompanies Act No. 21 of 1994 (domestic companies); International Business Companies Act 1996 (IBCs); administered by the Companies & Intellectual Properties Office (CIPO) under the Ministry of TradeCountry index 63 · C+

Dominica shaded by its starting a business status

Dominica permits 100% foreign ownership of locally registered companies and International Business Companies (IBCs) with no minimum share capital requirement. The Companies & Intellectual Properties Office (CIPO) operates an e-filing system and company incorporation typically completes within 1–5 working days. The Invest Dominica Authority (IDA) provides a one-stop facilitation service to guide foreign investors through each stage of setup.

Key points

Foreign Ownership

Foreign nationals may own 100% of a company registered in Dominica — both domestic companies and IBCs — with no nationality or residency restrictions on directors or shareholders.

Official Registration Steps

The Invest Dominica Authority lists 8 steps: (1) register/incorporate with CIPO, (2) register with Inland Revenue Division, (3) obtain VAT number, (4) register with Dominica Social Security, (5) obtain Alien Land Holding Licence if acquiring land above thresholds, (6) seek Physical Planning Division approval if required, (7) obtain other agency approvals as needed, (8) apply for work permits for foreign staff.

Minimum Capital

There is no statutory minimum paid-up capital for domestic companies or IBCs. The standard authorised share capital for an IBC is US$100, with a minimum issuance of one share, but this is a nominal default, not a mandated minimum.

Timeline & E-Filing

CIPO offers an e-filing system allowing immediate review of applications upon data entry. IBC incorporation typically takes 1–5 working days; domestic company registration follows a comparable timeline once signed forms and fees are submitted in person.

Automatic Tax Registration

Upon CIPO incorporation, company information is automatically shared with the Inland Revenue Division, and the entity is registered as a taxpayer; tax registration confirmation is issued alongside the incorporation certificate.

Land Holding Restriction

Foreigners may hold up to 1 acre for residential or 3 acres for commercial purposes without a licence. Larger holdings require an Alien Land Holding Licence, with a fee equal to 10% of the land's market value — a restriction on property only, not on company formation itself.

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Last verified 5/24/2026 · Orientation, not legal advice - verify against the primary sources linked above. Explore the full world map →