Mauritius has established itself as the primary offshore financial centre for African capital the jurisdiction of choice for family offices, private equity funds, holding structures, and wealth management mandates with pan-African investment strategies. Its treaty network, regulatory framework, and political stability have made it the default structuring location for capital flowing into and out of the continent. That position is durable but not static.
What Mauritius Offers That Others Cannot Easily Replicate
The combination of a comprehensive double taxation treaty network covering major African economies, a common law legal system, a well-regulated financial services sector, and geographic proximity to both African and Asian markets creates a structuring environment that competing jurisdictions have not been able to replicate at equivalent scale and credibility.
For fund managers investing across multiple African markets, the ability to hold assets through a single, treaty-protected jurisdiction simplifies structuring, reduces withholding tax exposure, and provides a familiar legal framework for international investors.
FATF Compliance and Regulatory Pressure
Mauritius was placed on the FATF grey list in 2020 and exited in 2021 following significant regulatory reforms. The episode reinforced the importance of compliance infrastructure and prompted a tightening of beneficial ownership disclosure requirements, enhanced due diligence standards, and strengthened AML frameworks.
For wealth managers and fund administrators using Mauritius, these requirements increase operational compliance costs but also strengthen the jurisdiction's long-term credibility with institutional counterparties.
Treaty Renegotiations and Structuring Implications
Several African countries including India, and more recently some Sub-Saharan African markets have renegotiated or are reviewing their tax treaties with Mauritius, reducing historical withholding tax advantages. This evolving treaty landscape requires active structuring review rather than reliance on historical arrangements.
The Competitive Landscape
Rwanda's Kigali International Financial Centre and South Africa's financial infrastructure are positioning as alternatives for specific use cases. Neither has achieved the combination of treaty coverage, regulatory depth, and market familiarity that Mauritius provides but the competitive pressure is shaping the pace of Mauritian regulatory evolution.


