Two or more partners create a TK tokumei kumiai using a contractual agreement, one partner is the ‘proprietor’ or ‘operator’, and the other partners are ‘silent’ or ‘limited’ partners. The silent partners contribute cash or other assets to the operator who then manages the assets for the business designated in the partnership agreement. The silent partners have:
- No operating or voting rights.
- No involvement in the conduct of the business.
- No co-ownership interest or legal exposure with respect to any of the business assets or liabilities of the operator.
- If a silent partner is not a Japanese resident, then participation in a TK tokumei kumiai does not usually result in such partner creating a permanent establishment in Japan.
The TK tokumei kumiai does not file annual tax-returns but distributes its profits (and potentially its losses) to the partners based on the ratio agreed in the partnership agreement. The only Japanese tax liability of a non-resident partner of a TK tokumei kumiai is a 20% withholding tax on the income distribution received. Until the past decade, that 20% was often cut to zero by a loophole in many of Japan’s tax-treaties that allowed income distributions from TK tokumei kumiais as tax-free ‘other income’. The tax benefit of the infamous ‘Dutch TK’ arose because under the 1970 Japan-Netherlands tax treaty, ‘other income’ was exempt from Japanese income tax. The revised Japan-Netherlands tax treaty closed that loophole in 2010 and imposed a 20% withholding tax on TK tokumei kumiai distributions to Dutch silent partners.
DISCLAIMER: This section is here only for reference and provided as-is, free of charge, and without warranty. Japan has 45 or more tax treaties in place, each of which is different and all of which are constantly being challenged and reinterpreted. BEFORE SETTING-UP IN JAPAN, YOU MUST GET INDEPENDENT TAX ACCOUNTING AND LEGAL ADVICE!