Cayman Islands fund structures — registered funds, licensed funds, and limited partnerships — represent the global standard for hedge fund, private equity, and alternative investment vehicles.
Over 80% of the world's offshore hedge funds are domiciled in the Cayman Islands — a reflection of CIMA's well-understood regulatory framework, flexible corporate vehicles (Exempted Company, SPC, LLC, LP), and zero-tax environment. Institutional investors globally are familiar with Cayman fund structures, reducing friction in fundraising.
Marensa Advisory advises on Cayman fund structuring — from CIMA registration through fund documentation, service provider coordination, and ongoing compliance — as part of an integrated offshore fund management setup.
Discuss Cayman Fund StructuringCIMA regulates Cayman funds across several categories. The right fund type depends on the investor base and minimum investment threshold.
Cayman fund structures are the global institutional standard — but CIMA compliance, FATCA/CRS reporting, and economic substance requirements create ongoing obligations that must be actively managed.
Marensa Advisory provides Cayman fund structuring advisory as part of an integrated fund management setup — covering the Cayman vehicle, the management company (often UK, Singapore, or UAE-based), and the distribution strategy.
Start the ConversationNo. Cayman Islands funds pay no income tax, capital gains tax, or withholding tax. Investors may be subject to tax in their home jurisdictions on fund income and gains.
CIMA registered funds must file annual audited accounts with CIMA — but these are not publicly available. Cayman funds are not required to file accounts at a public registry.
Cayman Islands Monetary Authority registration is required for most regulated fund vehicles. Certain exemptions apply for very small funds (under 15 investors) or funds operating as private arrangements, but these are limited. Regulatory advice should be sought before assuming an exemption applies.
Yes. The fund manager (investment manager) can be located in any jurisdiction — UAE, Singapore, UK, etc. — and manages the Cayman fund under an investment management agreement. The Cayman fund itself is not required to have Cayman-based management.