Spain’s 4% Canary Islands Special Zone vs Portugal’s 5% Madeira International Business Centre — a complete legal comparison for operating businesses, holdings, IP structures and international entrepreneurs.
Spain’s Canary Islands ZEC offers 4% corporate tax for real operating businesses with substance in the islands, while Portugal’s Madeira IBC offers 5% for international holdings, IP structures and services companies. The lower rate does not automatically win — for wealth structures, Madeira often provides the better fit due to lower entry costs, participation exemption treatment and more flexible substance requirements.
Round 1: The Headline Rate — Spain Scores
The comparison begins with numbers. Spain’s Canary Islands Special Zone allows qualifying companies to apply a 4% corporate tax rate to income from eligible activities carried out materially and effectively within the ZEC. Portugal’s Madeira International Business Centre allows qualifying companies to apply a 5% corporate tax rate to eligible income derived from authorised international activities.
On paper, Spain wins. A 4% rate is lower than 5%. For a company generating substantial taxable profits, that one percentage point appears material.
In practice, however, this opening position rarely decides the structure. In tax planning, the lowest number is never the final answer — a 4% regime that does not fit the business model can be more expensive than a 5% regime properly aligned with the company’s actual functions, management, assets and income flows.
A structure theoretically tax-efficient but weak on substance creates reassessment risk, penalties, reputational damage and future exit problems. These costs can easily exceed the tax savings of one percentage point.
Round 2: Cost of Entry — Portugal Scores
The second comparison is the cost and difficulty of entry.
The ZEC typically requires a more demanding initial setup. In the main Canary Islands (Gran Canaria, Tenerife), a company must:
- Create at least 5 full-time jobs on the islands
- Invest at least €100,000 in fixed assets
- Obtain prior authorisation from the relevant authority
- Maintain real operational presence and activity
For an operating company that genuinely needs a local team, this is reasonable. For a lean international structure — a holding company, IP owner or digital asset group — the threshold is heavy.
Madeira often allows a lower entry point. Depending on expected taxable income and structure type:
- Potentially as few as 1 job in certain cases
- Investment of approximately €75,000
- More proportionate substance tied to actual business size
Score: Spain 1 – 1 Portugal. The cost of entry and the ratio of jobs to investment favours Madeira for smaller, leaner international structures.
Round 3: Holdings, IP & Dividends — Portugal Scores
This is where the analysis shifts dramatically.
The ZEC is not generally designed for pure holding companies. It is intended for active business activities. While some group functions may be compatible if they involve real services, management and personnel, a passive holding whose main function is to own shares and receive dividends is unlikely to fit the ZEC framework.
Madeira, by contrast, is often stronger for holding-style structures. Portuguese tax law includes a participation exemption regime that may exempt qualifying dividends and capital gains on shareholdings, provided relevant conditions are met:
- Minimum shareholding percentage and holding period
- The investee company must be subject to regular taxation
- Anti-blacklist and tax-substance conditions
For international groups, this matters significantly. The reduced corporate tax rate is only one layer. The treatment of dividends, capital gains, withholding taxes and exit flows can be more important than the difference between 4% and 5%.
Consider a family office or international group:
- Can the company receive dividends from subsidiaries without withholding tax?
- Can profits be distributed to non-resident shareholders efficiently?
- Can the structure hold IP and group assets?
- Can it be defended as a genuine management platform?
Madeira typically has the advantage. It is naturally aligned with international holding, IP and services structures. The ZEC is stronger when the company is genuinely operating from the Canary Islands.
Score: Spain 1 – 2 Portugal.
Round 4: Substance & Built for Wealth — Portugal Scores
The fourth round is about structural fit and long-term audit defensibility.
The ZEC is built for real operating businesses. Technology companies, service providers, logistics, audiovisual production, back-office operations — any active business that can establish genuine functions in the Canary Islands can thrive under the ZEC framework.
Madeira is built for international structures. Holdings, IP ownership, intra-group services, dividend flows, cross-border wealth planning — the regime is designed to accommodate these functions.
For wealth planning specifically — a holding company, IP owner, international services platform or family office — Madeira is the natural fit. The ZEC forces you to create 5 jobs and invest €100,000 to benefit from 4%. Madeira allows you to benefit from 5% with 1 job and €75,000.
The practical math on a €500,000 annual taxable income structure:
- ZEC (4%): €20,000 annual tax + €100,000 investment + €250,000+ annual employment costs = inefficient
- Madeira (5%): €25,000 annual tax + €75,000 investment + €50,000 annual employment costs = aligned
The 1% difference in tax rate disappears into the cost of maintaining 4 unnecessary jobs.
Full time: Portugal 3 – 1 Spain.
For a wealth structure — a holding, IP, international services, digital assets — Madeira wins, and it isn’t close. The 5% rate is almost beside the point. The real advantage is that Madeira is built for holdings and IP, while the ZEC is built for operating businesses.
The Exception: Operating Business Run by Spanish Tax Resident
There is one scenario where Spain flips the result entirely.
If the founder, directors, management team and employees are naturally linked to Spain — and the business is a real operating company — the Canary Islands ZEC can be far more defensible than Madeira.
Here’s why: if you create a Madeira company but the directors make decisions from Madrid, employees work from Barcelona, clients are managed from Málaga and the real management is in Spain, the Spanish tax authorities may challenge the company’s tax residency. They will argue it should be taxed in Spain.
By contrast, if you use the ZEC and the company is genuinely operating from the islands with real employees, premises and activity there, the structure is cleaner, more defensible and your audit position stronger.
This is relevant for:
- Spanish entrepreneurs who will continue living and managing the business from Spain
- Companies with real employees in the Canary Islands
- Businesses needing premises, operations or infrastructure in Spain
- Companies seeking a strong Spanish audit defence
- Operating businesses rather than passive structures
The Madeira Precedent: Substance Has a Cost Floor
In 2020, the European Commission ordered 311 companies operating under Madeira’s tax regime to pay back approximately €1 billion in unpaid taxes, interest and penalties.
The reason: their jobs and activities were not genuinely on the island.
This is the most important lesson from both regimes: substance decides. If the company claims tax benefits because it is operating in a specific region, it must prove the activity is actually there.
Documentation should include:
- Employment contracts and social security registrations
- Local office lease or premises evidence
- Board minutes and management decisions
- Invoices, contracts and operational records
- Evidence of work performed by local employees
- Banking records and payment flows
- Transfer pricing documentation if related-party transactions exist
- Proof that profits allocated correspond to eligible local activity
The number on the shirt never decides. What you actually do does.
Spain ZEC vs Madeira IBC: Full Comparison Table
| Factor | Canary Islands ZEC | Madeira IBC | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| Headline corporate tax rate | 4% on qualifying ZEC income | 5% on qualifying IBC income | Spain |
| Initial job requirement | Typically 5 jobs in main islands | Potentially 1 job depending on structure | Portugal |
| Initial investment | Typically €100,000 in main islands | Often €75,000 in qualifying cases | Portugal |
| Pure holding companies | Generally not the natural fit | More suitable, subject to conditions | Portugal |
| IP and international services | Possible if active and authorised | More flexible and naturally aligned | Portugal |
| Dividend withholding tax | Standard Spanish rules apply to outbound dividends | May benefit from participation exemption | Portugal |
| Operating business in Spain | Very strong if substance is genuine | Potential Spanish management risk | Spain |
| Audit defensibility | Strong when operations are real in islands | Strong only with real Madeira substance | Depends on facts |
Practical Decision Framework
Choose the Canary Islands ZEC when:
- The business is genuinely operational with real commercial activity
- The founder or management team is based in Spain
- The company can create and sustain real jobs in the Canary Islands
- The activity requires personnel, premises or infrastructure
- You want to combine the ZEC with other Canary Islands incentives
Choose Madeira IBC when:
- The structure is international by nature
- The group needs a holding, IP ownership or services platform
- You need efficient dividend and capital gains treatment for shareholders
- The required substance is compatible with a smaller local team (1–2 people)
- The activity is not primarily a Spanish operating business
- Your shareholders are non-resident
- The company will provide international services or hold IP
In some cases, the correct answer may be neither. If the business cannot support real substance in either location, the best recommendation may be to use a normal operating company where management and activity actually occur — even if the tax rate is higher.
Pre-Structuring Checklist
Before selecting either regime, prepare a real-cost analysis including not only taxes, but also people, governance, compliance and legal risk:
- Where will directors actually make decisions and hold board meetings?
- Where will employees physically work and reside?
- What specific functions will be performed locally?
- Which contracts and client relationships generate the income?
- Is the activity eligible under the regime’s approved list?
- What is the realistic total investment required?
- How many jobs are realistically needed and can they be sustained?
- What documentation will be required during a tax audit?
- Are dividends, capital gains or royalties part of the structure?
- Are there related-party transactions requiring transfer pricing documentation?
- Is the founder or beneficial owner tax resident in Spain, Portugal or elsewhere?
- Does the structure create permanent establishment risk?
- What is the annual cost of maintaining compliance?
Frequently Asked Questions
Not necessarily. The ZEC has the lower headline rate, but it is generally better suited for real operating businesses with substance in the Canary Islands. Madeira may be more suitable for holdings, IP structures, international services and wealth structures. The 1% difference in tax rate can easily disappear into the cost of maintaining 4 unnecessary jobs in a ZEC if the business doesn’t naturally need them.
The ZEC is not generally designed for pure passive holding companies. It requires eligible activity and real substance in the Canary Islands. If the company’s main function is to own shares and receive dividends, the ZEC framework is unlikely to be the natural fit. Any holding-style structure should be carefully analysed before assuming it can benefit from the 4% rate.
Madeira can combine the 5% IBC corporate tax rate with Portugal’s participation exemption framework. This may allow more efficient treatment of dividends and capital gains on shareholdings, subject to conditions. Additionally, Madeira requires lower substance thresholds (potentially 1 job vs 5 for ZEC) and is naturally aligned with international services, IP ownership and cross-border group functions.
Yes, but carefully. If the company is effectively managed from Spain, Spanish authorities may challenge its tax residency. For Spanish-managed operating businesses, the ZEC may be more defensible. Madeira works best when real functions are genuinely in Madeira, or when the structure is a holding/services company with international shareholders.
Both regimes operate within EU-approved regional aid frameworks under State aid rules. However, EU approval does not mean automatic eligibility for every company. Each company must comply with the specific requirements of its regime, maintain real substance, and meet authorisation conditions. The EU’s 2020 Madeira precedent shows that approval does not protect companies with artificial structures.
The biggest risk is insufficient substance. If the company claims a reduced tax rate but cannot prove that the relevant activity, employees, management and operations are genuinely located in the region, the tax benefit may be challenged and back taxes, interest and penalties assessed. The Madeira precedent is a clear warning: substance documentation must be prepared from the beginning and maintained throughout.
It depends on the activity. A real Web3 operating company with developers, compliance staff and infrastructure in the Canary Islands may fit the ZEC well. A crypto or digital asset group requiring international services, holding, IP or treasury functions may find Madeira more suitable. Regulatory analysis under MiCA, AML and financial services law is essential.
No. The best structure is the one that matches the real activity, management location, shareholder profile, regulatory position and long-term audit defence. A 4% regime that does not fit the business may cost more in compliance, unnecessary jobs and audit risk than a 5% regime that is properly aligned. The number on the tax rate is only one part of the analysis.
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Vicox Legal advises international entrepreneurs, family offices and crypto investors on comparing EU corporate tax regimes, designing defensible substance models and coordinating implementation across Spain, Portugal and Luxembourg.
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