Once your Singapore subsidiary is generating profit, the next question is: how do you get that money back to Japan? The answer matters — because the tax treatment differs significantly depending on whether the transfer is structured as a dividend, royalty, management fee, or intercompany loan. This article walks through each option from a practical tax perspective.

1. Overview: How the Main Transfer Methods Are Taxed

Transfer TypeSingapore TreatmentJapan Treatment
DividendNo withholding tax (generally)95% dividend exemption may apply
RoyaltyDeductible; withholding tax (treaty-reduced)Taxable as income
Management FeeDeductible (substance required)Taxable as income
Intercompany Loan InterestDeductible; withholding tax (treaty-reduced)Taxable as interest income

2. Dividends: The Simplest Route with Lowest Tax Risk

Dividends paid by a Singapore company carry no withholding tax under Singapore's One-Tier Tax System. Once corporate income tax has been paid at the company level, distributions to shareholders are not taxed again in Singapore.

On the Japan side, a Japanese parent company holding at least 25% of a foreign subsidiary for at least six months may benefit from the Foreign Dividend Exemption (95% dividends received deduction under Japanese tax law), significantly reducing Japan-side tax on the receipt.

Dividends require a shareholders' resolution and can only be paid from after-tax profits. They are a distribution of earnings, not a deductible expense for the Singapore company.

3. Royalties: IP-Based Transfers

If the Japanese parent owns intellectual property — trademarks, patents, software, know-how — and the Singapore subsidiary uses it, royalty payments are a way to transfer funds while giving the Singapore company a tax deduction. The Japan-Singapore tax treaty provides for reduced withholding tax on royalties.

Key tax considerations

⚠️ Royalty rates must comply with transfer pricing rules. The arm's length principle requires that rates reflect what unrelated parties would agree to. Rates that are too high or too low are at risk of adjustment by tax authorities in both countries. Transfer pricing documentation is essential.

4. Management Fees: Legitimate but Requires Substance

If the Japanese parent provides genuine management, HR, IT, legal, or strategic services to the Singapore subsidiary, it can charge a management fee for those services. The Singapore subsidiary can deduct the fee as a business expense.

What makes a management fee defensible

⚠️ Management fees without genuine underlying services are a common target for tax authority scrutiny. IRAS (Singapore) and the NTA (Japan) both look closely at these arrangements. Good documentation is not optional — it is your first line of defence.

5. Japan's CFC Rules: The Constraint That Shapes Everything

Japan's Controlled Foreign Corporation (CFC) rules — the "Tax Haven Counter Measures" — require Japanese parent companies to include certain foreign subsidiary income in their Japanese taxable income, regardless of whether it has been remitted to Japan. Singapore's 17% tax rate falls below Japan's CFC threshold.

However, the CFC rules include an active business exemption: if the Singapore subsidiary is conducting genuine business operations — with real employees, a physical office, and management decisions made locally — its income from those operations is generally exempt from Japanese CFC taxation.

This means the structure of how you remit funds to Japan cannot be considered in isolation from whether the Singapore entity has real business substance. A company that exists primarily to hold profits and distribute them to Japan is unlikely to qualify for the CFC exemption.

6. Practical Checklist Before Making Any Transfer

CIC Partners advises on the full picture — Singapore tax compliance, intercompany transaction design, transfer pricing documentation, and coordination with Japan-side advisors. We help you structure things correctly from the outset, so there are no surprises when funds start moving.

Questions about how to structure transfers between your Singapore and Japan entities?
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