Venture Capital Tax Specialist

Hong Kong Venture Capital Tax — VC Fund Exemption & Startup Investor Guide

Venture capital investors in Hong Kong benefit from a dedicated tax exemption framework under the Venture Capital Investments Fund (VCIF) regime. Understanding the qualifying conditions, eligible investments, and fund manager tax obligations enables VC managers to operate efficiently from Hong Kong.

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S.20AO IRO — Venture Capital Investments Fund regime
0% Tax on qualifying VCIF profits
2021 Year VCIF regime introduced

Venture Capital Tax Specialist

Venture capital investors in Hong Kong benefit from a dedicated tax exemption framework under the Venture Capital Investments Fund (VCIF) regime. Understanding the qualifying conditions, eligible investments, and fund manager tax obligations enables VC managers to operate efficiently from Hong Kong.

⚠️

⚠ VCIF Regime Has Specific Qualifying Investment Criteria

The VC Investments Fund (VCIF) regime under s.20AO requires investments to be in "innovative technology companies" that meet specific criteria including: not listed at time of investment, under 10 years old, with limited asset size. Late-stage VC or growth equity investments may not qualify — careful pre-investment analysis is essential.

Common Challenges

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VCIF Qualifying Investment Tests

The VCIF regime requires investee companies to be unlisted, less than 10 years old (at time of investment), and to derive income primarily from innovative technology activities. Each investment must be tested pre-investment.

⚠ Risk: Non-qualifying investment → gains subject to profits tax at 16.5%

Portfolio Company Monitoring

The VCIF conditions must be met at the time of investment. However, subsequent listing of a portfolio company and the timing of exit can affect the exemption analysis.

⚠ Risk: IPO event mismanaged → exemption on exit proceeds unclear

VC Manager Tax Obligations

The VC management company pays profits tax on management fees. Performance carry on VC returns has specific tax treatment considerations distinct from PE and hedge funds.

⚠ Risk: Manager return errors → underpaid tax, IRD assessment

Co-Investment Structures

VC managers often co-invest alongside the fund. The tax treatment of direct co-investments by the GP/manager may differ from investments made through the fund.

⚠ Risk: Co-investment gains fully taxable if not structured correctly
Who It's For

Who This Service Is For

VC fund managers

HK-based VC managers investing in early and growth stage technology companies.

Corporate venture capital arms

Corporate venture units making strategic startup investments from Hong Kong.

Angel investors

High-net-worth individuals making direct startup investments needing tax clarity.

VC LPs

Institutional and family office investors in HK-based VC funds.

Our Services

What We Cover

Pre-Investment VCIF Eligibility Analysis

Test each proposed investment against the VCIF qualifying criteria before committing capital.

Innovative technology company test, age, listing status

Fund Exemption Compliance

Annual review of fund-level compliance with VCIF or offshore fund exemption conditions.

Portfolio-level testing and ongoing monitoring

VC Manager Tax Returns

Management company profits tax return with management fee and performance income treatment.

Including co-investment and GP stake tax positions

Fund Set-Up Advisory

Tax structuring for new VC fund launches including vehicle selection and manager structure.

HK LPF, Cayman LP, or OFC analysis for VC mandates
How It Works

Simple, efficient, professional

1

Fund & Portfolio Review

Review fund structure, investment mandate, and current portfolio against VCIF conditions.

2-3 days
2

Investment-by-Investment Testing

Test each portfolio investment against qualifying criteria.

Per investment
3

Return Preparation

Prepare management company profits tax return with full supporting schedules.

5-10 days
4

Annual Monitoring

Annual fund compliance review and pre-investment testing for new deals.

Annually
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Client Success Stories

Real results for real clients

Case Study

Tech-focused VC fund — VCIF exemption established

HKD 6,800,000 on 3 exits Saved
  • HKD 500M HK LPF VC fund
  • 3 portfolio company exits in 2025
  • All tested pre-investment as VCIF qualifying
  • Total exit gains of HKD 41M exempted
"Pre-investment testing meant we entered each deal knowing the exit would be clean."
C
Verified Client Case Study
Case Study

Corporate VC — non-qualifying investment identified

HKD 2,200,000 (restructuring cost avoided) Saved
  • CVC unit planning logistics tech investment
  • Pre-investment analysis: investee more than 10 years old
  • Investment restructured via qualifying subsidiary
  • Avoided HKD 2.2M profits tax on projected exit
"The pre-deal check identified the problem before capital was committed."
C
Verified Client Case Study
★★★★★ 2,400+ clients trust our team
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FAQs

Frequently Asked Questions

Quick answers to your questions

The Venture Capital Investments Fund (VCIF) regime under s.20AO IRO (introduced in 2021) provides a profits tax exemption for qualifying VC investments made through eligible fund vehicles. To qualify, the investee company must be: (a) not listed at the time of investment; (b) less than 10 years old; (c) principally engaged in innovative technology activities; and (d) incorporated in Hong Kong or a qualifying jurisdiction. Profits from disposal of qualifying investments are exempt from HK profits tax.
The VCIF definition requires the investee company to be principally engaged in innovative technology activities, including: software development, biotechnology, new materials, advanced manufacturing, clean energy technology, AI, and similar sectors. Traditional businesses — even if they use technology — generally do not qualify. A consumer retail company using e-commerce, for example, would not qualify; a biotech drug development company would. Pre-investment analysis of each target is essential.
Yes. The VCIF regime sits alongside the existing offshore fund exemption framework. A VC fund may qualify for the offshore fund exemption for some investments (e.g., listed securities) and use the VCIF exemption for qualifying private company startup investments. Some VC funds rely solely on the offshore fund exemption — the VCIF regime provides an additional pathway specifically designed for early-stage innovative company investments.
When a portfolio company conducts an IPO, it ceases to be a private company. Under the VCIF regime, the qualifying status is tested at the time of investment — so a company that was private and qualifying when the investment was made may generate exempt proceeds on sale after IPO, provided the other conditions continue to be met. However, the interaction between the post-IPO holding period and the applicable exemption test should be carefully reviewed before the exit is executed.
Direct startup investments by individuals are not covered by the VCIF fund exemption regime, which applies to qualifying fund structures. Individual angel investors must assess their investment gains under the general profits tax principles: if they are carrying on a business of investment, gains may be taxable; if they are passive investors, gains are generally not subject to HK profits tax (since there is no capital gains tax). The line between active investing and passive investment is fact-dependent.
Yes. The VC management company based in Hong Kong pays profits tax at 16.5% on its management fee income (typically 2% of AUM annually). Performance fees or carried interest received by the management company may also be taxable as business income. The fund vehicle itself (Cayman LP or similar) may qualify for the VCIF or offshore fund exemption — but this exemption does not extend to the management company's own income.

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This page provides general information only. For advice specific to your situation, please consult a qualified Hong Kong tax professional.