In the CRS framework, identifying whether an entity is a Financial Institution (FI) is only half the story. The next critical step is determining where that FI is located, because this defines which jurisdiction is responsible for reporting.
In this episode, we break down how CRS determines FI location—and why the answer isn’t always obvious.
🌍 1️⃣ Why Location Matters in CRSOnly Financial Institutions located in a CRS-participating jurisdiction are treated as reporting FIs.
This determines:
• Which country receives and transmits information
• Which rules apply to due diligence and reporting
• Whether accounts are reported at all
🏛️ 2️⃣ Tax Resident EntitiesFor most entities, the rule is straightforward:
👉 The FI is located where it is tax resident.
This means:
• The jurisdiction that treats the entity as a tax resident
• Typically where it is incorporated or effectively managed
This is the primary rule under CRS.
⚖️ 3️⃣ Non-Tax Resident Entities (Except Trusts)Where an entity is not tax resident in any jurisdiction, CRS looks to other connections.
Location is determined based on:
• Place of incorporation
• Place of management
• Jurisdiction of financial supervision
This ensures that entities cannot fall outside the system simply by lacking formal tax residence.
🌐 4️⃣ Multiple-Resident Entities (Except Trusts)Where an entity is tax resident in more than one jurisdiction:
👉 The relevant CRS jurisdiction is generally where the financial accounts are maintained.
This determines:
• Which jurisdiction has the reporting obligation
• Which authority exchanges the information
🏦 5️⃣ Special Rule for TrustsTrusts follow a different approach.
👉 A trust is generally located where one or more trustees are resident.
This reflects the fact that:
• Trustees control the trust
• Trustees are responsible for compliance and reporting
🔁 Exception: When Reporting Occurs ElsewhereThe trustee-based rule does not apply if:
• The trust is already treated as tax resident in another jurisdiction, and
• The required information is being reported there
Example scenarios may include:
• Certain cross-border trust structures
• Trusts with mixed residency elements (e.g., U.S. connections with non-U.S. fiduciaries)
This avoids duplicate reporting.
⚠️ Why This MattersDetermining FI location affects:
• Whether an entity is a reporting FI
• Which jurisdiction performs reporting
• Whether CRS obligations apply at all
Incorrect analysis can result in:
• Reporting gaps
• Duplicate reporting
• Compliance failures
🎯 Key TakeawayUnder CRS, FI location depends on:
• Tax residence (primary rule)
• Operational connections (if no tax residence)
• Account location (for multi-resident entities)
• Trustee residence (for trusts)
Understanding these rules is essential for correctly applying CRS reporting obligations across jurisdictions.