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This article explores how Vanuatu is emerging as a crypto-friendly tax haven in 2025 and shows how HNWIs can legally protect digital assets offshore. |
Is Vanuatu the Next Dubai for Digital Asset Protection?
In 2025, as regulatory scrutiny on crypto intensifies globally, Vanuatu—a tiny Pacific island nation—is quietly becoming a digital asset protection powerhouse. With pro-blockchain policies, zero capital gains tax, and bank secrecy laws intact, some experts are calling it “the next Dubai” for digital wealth.
Why Vanuatu?
- No income or capital gains tax on foreign-sourced crypto assets
- No CRS enforcement for many digital asset accounts
- Easy second residency via investment programs
- Crypto licensing schemes with minimal reporting
In short, Vanuatu offers the three things HNWIs and crypto entrepreneurs want: privacy, sovereignty, and structure.
Who’s Moving There?
Crypto hedge funds, DAOs, and founders of blockchain startups seeking global tax relief have begun moving operations—or at least ownership structures—to Vanuatu. Asset flows from regions like Hong Kong and Singapore are quietly shifting.
How to Structure It Legally
To replicate this digital fortress model, many set up:
- Offshore holding companies via StartGlobal or doola
- Remote operations using Deel for team hiring without borders
- Multi-currency crypto ramp-outs through Wise
Still Comparing Jurisdictions?
Before committing to Vanuatu, it helps to understand how it stacks up against other digital asset havens. See our deep dive on Tax Havens vs. Trusts in 2025 and how digital asset protection is reshaping offshore strategy.
The Bottom Line
Dubai may have the towers, but Vanuatu has the stealth. For those holding large crypto positions, NFTs, tokenized assets, or DeFi profits, this tiny island might be your last legal frontier for asset invisibility in a hyper-surveilled world.
Feeling overwhelmed by the pressure to protect digital wealth in an age of total transparency? The new book “Your Thoughts Are Yours: Understanding and Healing Thought Broadcasting” explores the psychological toll of being highly visible and highly targeted. Available soon on Google Books and Amazon.