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Limited Partnership in Mauritius

Mauritius Limited Partnership structures offer an internationally familiar LP wrapper that's flexible, simple to run, and widely accepted by global investors. These structures allow you to tailor governance and distributions to your specific strategy, while maintaining clear separation between managing partners and passive investors.

Additionally, you can operate in major currencies and benefit from a deep ecosystem of experienced administrators, auditors, and advisors. With an English/French business environment, efficient digital processes, and strong commercial reliability, Mauritius helps you launch and operate cross-border Limited Partnerships smoothly—so you can focus on deploying capital and creating value.

How Renesis Financial Services can help?
Renesis designs and launches your Mauritius Limited Partnership end-to-end: we blueprint the structure and draft a practical partnership agreement. Furthermore, we coordinate banking and reporting while implementing investor onboarding with clean, professional workflows.

Post-launch, we handle day-to-day administration and governance cadence—board packs, financials, and investor communications. Ultimately, this ensures your team stays focused on deals, exits, and performance. Let's align the Mauritius Limited Partnership setup to your fund thesis and timeline.
Book a meeting now to learn more

Why have a Limited Partnership in Mauritius?

Structuring flexibility

Elect for or against separate legal personality; tailor rights and waterfall via partnership agreement.

Investor‑friendly liability

Limited partners enjoy limited liability when they refrain from management.

Fund‑ready

Fund managers widely use LPs for private equity, VC, and other alternative investments in Mauritius.

Attractive tax framework

Default tax transparency with the option to be taxed at entity level (e.g., to access treaty benefits), subject to conditions.

Stable, reputable jurisdiction

Robust legal system, experienced service providers and a mature fund ecosystem.

Global Business Licence (GBL) compatibility

Limited Partnerships can hold a Global Business Licence, making them eligible for double taxation treaties, access to investment protection agreements, and facilitation of cross-border investments into Africa, Asia, and beyond.

Recognised fund structure by institutional investors

DFIs, PE firms, and international fund managers commonly use Mauritian LPs because they provide a familiar and accepted legal framework that supports fundraising efforts globally.

Multi‑currency operations

Mauritius allows LPs to operate in multiple currencies (USD, EUR, GBP, etc.), reducing exchange rate exposure and aligning well with international investment strategies.

Confidentiality

While not secrecy-based, Mauritius does not publicly disclose the identity of limited partners, offering privacy protections for passive investors.

Substance‑friendly jurisdiction

Mauritius has evolved into a substance-compliant jurisdiction post‑BEPS, with affordable office space, professionals, and administration services, helping LPs meet OECD and EU requirements without excessive cost.

Political and legal stability

A strong Common Law framework, independent judiciary, and investment‑friendly environment make Mauritius one of the most reputable and secure African jurisdictions for fund domiciliation.

Ease of doing business

Streamlined regulatory processes, bilingual (English/French) business environment, and digital filing systems make Mauritius a business‑friendly jurisdiction.

What activities can a Limited Partnership in Mauritius do?

Subject to applicable licensing where relevant (e.g., financial services), an LP can conduct any lawful business: holding and investment vehicles, fund partnerships, carried‑interest partnerships, co‑investment and joint ventures, asset holding (real estate, infrastructure), advisory or management vehicles, and trading activities. Where activities fall under the remit of the Financial Services Commission (FSC), appropriate licences/approvals are required.

Taxation of this type of structure in Mauritius

Default position – fiscally transparent

  • A resident LP does not incur taxation at the partnership level; instead, each partner bears tax liability on their share of income. Importantly, the Mauritius tax authority taxes non-resident partners only on Mauritius-source income. Furthermore, transparent LPs do not receive tax residence certificates; however, eligible partners may claim treaty benefits.

 

Election to be taxed at entity level

  • An LP (including one holding a Global Business Licence) can elect to apply a company-level tax treatment. Specifically, this election allows the LP to benefit from the headline 15% corporate income tax rate (with potential 80%–95% partial exemptions on specified income, subject to substance), enabling the partnership itself to claim treaty benefits. Additionally, you must consider substance, control & management, and licensing implications when making this election.

 

Corporate Climate Responsibility (CCR) Levy

  • From the year of assessment starting 1 July 2024, a 2% CCR levy applies on chargeable income of companies and resident sociétés with turnover > MUR 50m. Where an LP is transparent, any CCR exposure is assessed at the level of partners that are in‑scope taxpayers; where an LP elects to be taxed as a company, the levy may apply at the entity level if thresholds are met. Assess case‑by‑case. 

Important: The precise outcome depends on residence, source of income, elections made under the Income Tax Act, treaty positions, and whether the LP holds a Global Business Licence. Obtain bespoke tax and legal advice before structuring.

Key features of a Limited Partnership in Mauritius

Governing law
Limited Partnerships Act 2011.
Legal personality
Optional (electable on registration or later with Registrar consent).
Partners: Minimum 1 GP and 1 LP
GP manages and has unlimited liability; LPs have limited liability if they do not participate in management.
Activities
Any lawful business in or from Mauritius.
Fund use case
Widely used for private equity and alternative funds.
Local presence & administration
Practical requirements typically include registered office/agent and maintenance of accounting records in Mauritius (especially where a GBL is sought).
Partnership Agreement
The partnership agreement governs the rights and obligations of partners, offering maximum contractual flexibility on profit sharing, capital contributions, distributions, voting, and management roles.
Registration and Legal Recognition
The Registrar of Limited Partnerships requires LPs to register. The Registrar issues a Certificate of Registration upon approval, confirming the legal existence of the LP.
Duration
An LP may be formed for a fixed term, for a specific purpose, or with perpetual succession—depending on what is stated in the partnership agreement.
Annual Filings
LPs must file annual returns and financial summaries, even if fiscally transparent, especially when holding a Global Business Licence (GBL).
Accounting and Record-keeping
LPs must keep proper books and records at their registered office in Mauritius (or another approved location), which must be accessible for inspection by authorities.
Audit Requirements
LPs holding a GBL or conducting financial services are typically subject to annual audit requirements under FSC rules.
Change of Partners
Partnerships must notify the Registrar of changes in general or limited partners, and in some cases, partners may need to update the partnership agreement.
Dissolution and Winding Up
Partners can dissolve LPs voluntarily (e.g. via terms in the agreement) or compulsorily (e.g. by court order). Upon dissolution, law and the partnership agreement determine the priority order for distributing assets.
Tax ID and Compliance
Even if tax transparent, LPs must register with the MRA and submit returns regarding GBL compliance, AML/CFT, or partner income where applicable.
AML/CFT and Beneficial Ownership
AML/CFT requirements and beneficial ownership register obligations apply to LPs with a GBL or engaging in relevant activities.

FAQs

Is a Mauritian LP a separate legal entity?

It can be, if it elects legal personality. Without that election, it operates as a partnership without separate personality.

How are investors taxed if the LP stays transparent?

Partners (not the LP) receive tax liability on their share. Mauritius generally taxes non-resident partners only on Mauritius-source income. For foreign-source income in a fully offshore fund LP, non-resident partners typically owe no Mauritius tax.

Can an LP access Double Tax Treaties?

A transparent LP generally cannot obtain a Tax Residence Certificate; eligible partners may claim treaty benefits in their own right. If the LP opts to be taxed as a company and meets residence/substance requirements (e.g., via a GBL), the LP itself may access treaty benefits.

What licences might be needed?

If the LP carries out regulated financial services (fund management, CIS, advisory, etc.), licences/approvals from the FSC are required. Non‑regulated activities do not require FSC licensing.

How are fund LPs typically structured?

A common model uses a Mauritius LP with a Mauritian GP, often alongside a GBL to bolster treaty access and substance; this is widely used for Africa‑focused private equity and venture funds.

Does the 2% Corporate Climate Responsibility Levy apply?

It applies to companies and resident sociétés above the MUR 50m turnover threshold. Its impact on LP arrangements depends on whether the LP is tax‑transparent (levy assessed, if at all, at in‑scope partner level) or has elected to be taxed as a company (levy may then apply at the entity level). Model your expected chargeable income and turnover before electing.

How can Renesis help?

  • Structure design: Selecting between transparency vs. entity‑level taxation; election for legal personality; waterfall and carried interest mechanics.

  • Regulatory pathway: Assessing whether your LP needs FSC licensing; coordinating GBL applications and substance.

  • Tax & treaty positioning: Cross‑border cash‑flow mapping, treaty access analysis, CCR levy modelling, and partner‑level tax considerations.

  • Set‑up & administration: Drafting the partnership agreement, appointing GP/administrator, registered office/agent, accounting and audit coordination.

  • Ongoing compliance: Tax returns, FATCA/CRS, economic substance, AML/CFT policies, and corporate secretarial support.

Speak to Renesis to map your investment goals to the most efficient LP configuration in Mauritius—while staying fully compliant.

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