CARF Confidentiality: Why Svalbard & UK Trusts Work
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In this episode, we explore how certain jurisdictions remain outside the reach of CARF (Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework) — and why Svalbard and UK non-resident trusts continue to offer unique confidentiality advantages.
Key Insights:
- Svalbard’s Unique Legal Shield
- Under Article 8 of the 1925 Treaty of Svalbard, no signatory nation may receive tax benefits or preferential treatment related to Svalbard activities.
- This means Svalbard cannot enter into tax treaties without breaching the principle of equal treatment among its 48 signatories — a list that includes Russia, China, and North Korea.
- The result: Svalbard sits outside global tax-sharing agreements, including those underpinning CARF and CRS frameworks.
- The UK’s Non-Resident Trust Advantage
- The United Kingdom will not abolish its non-resident trust structure, a longstanding tool in international tax and estate planning.
- A non-resident trust is governed by UK law but has trustees based outside the UK.
- This allows for continued privacy and tax efficiency under UK rules — making such trusts valuable for asset protection and wealth transfer planning, even in an era of global transparency.
Why It Matters:
While CARF expands global financial reporting, legal structures in Svalbard and the UK illustrate how specific jurisdictions remain beyond its direct reach — offering insights into the future of confidentiality and tax-neutral planning.
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