Tax·Luxury

Part II · Jurisdictions · No. 01

Delaware

More than half of all U.S. publicly traded corporations and a substantial share of all private-wealth entities are organized in Delaware. The Court of Chancery, the Limited Liability Company Act, the trust statutes, and the absence of state sales tax together make Delaware the default for U.S. luxury-asset holding entities.

Why this jurisdiction matters

Delaware is not principally a tax-haven jurisdiction; it is a corporate-law jurisdiction. The state has cultivated for more than a century a legal infrastructure for business entities and trusts — sophisticated statutory framework, specialized courts, experienced bar, predictable judicial output. For luxury-asset planning specifically, Delaware serves as:

The relevant tax regime

Registration or residency mechanics

LLC formation: file Certificate of Formation with the Delaware Division of Corporations; pay filing fee (currently $90); appoint registered agent. Annual franchise tax of $300. No information about members is disclosed in public filings.

Trust situs: appoint a Delaware-resident trustee (institutional or individual); incorporate Delaware-choice-of-law and -administration provisions in the trust instrument; conduct administrative activities in Delaware.

Reporting and disclosure

Public records of entity formation are limited. Members of an LLC are not disclosed publicly. The Corporate Transparency Act now requires beneficial-ownership disclosure to FinCEN for most Delaware LLCs and corporations; the disclosure is not public but is available to law-enforcement and authorized parties. See beneficial-ownership reporting.

Trust records are private. Trust accounting is generally not publicly filed.

The substance question

For Delaware to function as the operative jurisdiction (rather than merely the state of formation), substance requirements vary:

Recent changes

Delaware repealed its state estate tax in 2018. The dynasty-trust statute permits perpetual personal-property trusts (and 110-year terms for real estate). The Delaware LLC Act continues to evolve with periodic statutory updates. The state has not enacted a comprehensive privacy reform; the CTA's beneficial-ownership disclosure to FinCEN applies despite Delaware's public-record privacy.

Common asset classes parked here

Primary Sources

  1. Delaware Limited Liability Company Act, 6 Del. C. ch. 18 — delcode.delaware.gov.
  2. Delaware Statutory Trust Act, 12 Del. C. ch. 38.
  3. Delaware Qualified Dispositions in Trust Act, 12 Del. C. §§3570-3576.
  4. Delaware Code title 30 (revenue and taxation).
  5. Delaware Division of Corporations — corp.delaware.gov.
  6. 31 C.F.R. §1010.380 (CTA BOI reporting).

Reviewed May 2026