Overview
Deep Advisory Group assists international investors in structuring access to U.S. real estate while preserving global tax efficiency. Two leading jurisdictions—the Cayman Islands and the British Virgin Islands (BVI)—offer distinct advantages depending on investor goals.
1. Strategic Objective
Our goal is to provide exposure to U.S. real estate without U.S. estate or income tax exposure. This is achieved through the use of foreign corporate vehicles and U.S. blocker entities, ensuring the investor holds only non-U.S.-situs assets.
2. Jurisdictional Comparison
| Criteria | Cayman Islands | British Virgin Islands (BVI) |
| Reputation | Globally recognized, institutional-grade domicile | Simple, efficient, but viewed as traditional offshore |
| Tax Regime | No local income, capital gains, or estate tax | No local income, capital gains, or estate tax |
| U.S. Treaty Benefits | None directly; compatible with U.S. blocker structures | None directly; identical tax mechanics |
| Regulation | CIMA-regulated, respected globally | Lightly regulated, minimal compliance |
| Administration Cost | Moderate (USD 15k–30k/year) | Low (USD 8k–15k/year) |
| Investor Appeal | Preferred by funds, institutions, and private banks | Suitable for smaller, private vehicles |
3. Structure Diagram
Investor (Mexico)
↓
Cayman/BVI Fund (Foreign Corporation)
↓
U.S. Blocker Corporation
↓
U.S. Real Estate / REITs
4. Deep Advisory Group Recommendation
For clients seeking credibility, scalability, and long-term compliance, Deep Advisory recommends the Cayman Islands. It offers the optimal balance between global perception, regulatory soundness, and administrative efficiency.
BVI remains appropriate for single-family or limited-scope vehicles, where cost and simplicity outweigh institutional branding.
5. Summary
Both Cayman and BVI achieve the same core tax results: – No U.S. estate-tax exposure (foreign corporate ownership) – No direct U.S. income tax (via U.S. blocker)
The difference lies in investor optics, governance credibility, and scale. Cayman stands as the preferred jurisdiction for most Deep Advisory Group structures involving foreign investors accessing U.S. real-estate markets.

