Patrimonial Holding Company: Structure and Tax Benefits

Sociedad holding patrimonial estructura y fiscalidad

Compartir esta publicación

When a real estate portfolio grows and becomes more diversified, the question stops being which asset to buy and becomes how to structure it. A patrimonial holding company can help you organise shareholdings, properties, and dividend flows under a more efficient and controlled architecture.

At Borneo Advisors, we support investors and business families in designing structures that protect capital, strengthen governance, and optimise taxation in the medium and long term.

What a patrimonial holding company is and how it works

A patrimonial holding company is an entity whose main purpose is to own shareholdings in other companies and, in many cases, centralise the group’s financial and governance strategy.

Within the context of investment vehicles and corporate structures, the holding operates as the parent company, while underneath you may have:

  • Asset-Holding Real Estate Companies: Hold Specific Properties.
  • Operating Companies: If There Is Business Activity.
  • Project SPVs: Used For Specific Developments Or Acquisitions.

After defining the concept, it is worth analysing how it fits within corporate structures designed with a wealth, tax, and succession perspective.

Basic holding structure diagram

Level Company Type Main Function
Level 1 Patrimonial Holding Company Strategic Control And Dividend Reception
Level 2 Real Estate Holding Company Property Ownership
Level 3 SPV Or Specific Subsidiary Specific Project Or Asset

This architecture helps separate risks and organise decisions without mixing personal and business assets.

Strategic objectives of a patrimonial holding company

Before setting it up, you need to define clearly what you want to achieve.

Main objectives:

  • Asset Protection: Risk Isolation Between Companies.
  • Tax Optimisation: Efficiency In Dividend Flows.
  • Family Governance: Clear Rules Of Control And Succession.
  • Financial Flexibility: Internal Redistribution Of Resources.
  • Growth Planning: New Investments Under An Ordered Structure.

A holding company is a control structure with a strategic purpose.

Tax benefits of a patrimonial holding company

One of the most common reasons to create a patrimonial holding company is optimising taxation within the group.

Among the most relevant benefits are:

  • Dividend Exemption: Under Certain Conditions, Dividends Received By The Holding May Be Exempt Under Corporate Tax.
  • Capital Gains Exemption On The Sale Of Shareholdings: If Participation And Holding Requirements Are Met.
  • Tax Deferral: Profits Can Be Reinvested Without Immediate Personal Taxation.
  • More Efficient Succession Planning: Transfer Of Shares Instead Of Individual Assets.

Simplified tax comparison

Scenario Direct Taxation As An Individual Taxation Via A Holding
Dividends Immediate Personal Income Tax Possible Partial Exemption Within The Company
Sale Of Shareholdings Personal Income Tax On The Gain Exemption If Requirements Are Met
Reinvestment After Personal Taxation Reinvestment Before Distribution

The cumulative effect can be significant once the portfolio reaches a certain scale.

Key requirements to apply tax benefits

To access favourable tax regimes, specific conditions must be met.

Key aspects:

  • Minimum Shareholding In Subsidiaries (Typically 5% Or More).
  • Minimum Holding Period.
  • Genuine Activity In The Subsidiary, Where Required By Regulation.
  • Proper Documentation Of Related-Party Transactions.
  • Well-Organised Accounting Consistent With The Structure.

A common mistake is designing the structure without verifying these requirements from the start.

Structural advantages beyond taxation

Reducing a holding company to a tax topic limits its potential. Its real value appears in how it organises wealth.

Structural advantages:

  • Risk Separation: Each Subsidiary Responds For Its Own Activity.
  • Centralisation Of Strategic Decisions: Investment, Financing, And Divestment.
  • Easier Entry Of New Generations Through Shareholdings.
  • Ability To Diversify Assets Under A Single Direction.
  • Improved Positioning With Banks And Investors.

Comparison: simple structure vs. holding structure

Aspect Direct Ownership Holding Structure
Risk Separation Limited High
Family Governance Informal Rule-Based
Succession Planning Complex Organised
Profit Reinvestment After Personal Income Tax Before Distribution
Expansion Capacity Lower Higher

Once the portfolio reaches a certain size, structure becomes as important as the asset itself.

Costs and obligations you should consider

Creating a holding company involves additional responsibilities.

Typical costs:

  • Incorporation And Initial Legal Advice.
  • Consolidated Accounting If Applicable.
  • Corporate Income Tax Filings.
  • Information Obligations For Related-Party Transactions.
  • Audit In Certain Scenarios.

These costs should be assessed against the portfolio size and the structural benefits achieved.

Risks and common mistakes

Poor planning can turn a holding into an inefficient structure.

Common mistakes:

  • Creating The Holding Without A Clear Strategy.
  • Mixing Personal And Corporate Assets.
  • Failing To Properly Document Intra-Group Loans.
  • Ignoring International Tax Implications.
  • Not Planning For Generational Succession.

An effective corporate structure requires upfront design and periodic review.

How we design holding structures at Borneo Advisors

At Borneo Advisors, we approach the creation of a patrimonial holding company from an integrated perspective:

  • Analysis Of The Current Portfolio And Future Projection.
  • Review Of Alternatives Within Available Investment Vehicles.
  • Medium- And Long-Term Tax Modelling.
  • Corporate Governance Design And Family Protocol.
  • Coordination With Real Estate Legal And Tax Advisors.
  • Progressive Implementation Plan.

The goal is for the structure to bring stability, efficiency, and clarity to decision-making.

Are you considering creating a patrimonial holding company?

If your real estate portfolio has grown and you need a structure that organises risk, taxation, and succession coherently, we can help you design it step by step.

If you want, Contact Us and we will analyse your case with a strategic perspective.

Frequently asked questions about asset holding companies

No. The patrimonial holding company is usually the parent that owns shareholdings and centralises decisions; the real estate holding company is typically the one that owns properties directly. In layered structures, each entity has a role.

When the portfolio grows, becomes diversified (properties plus shareholdings), or when you need to organise governance, risk, and distribution or reinvestment of profits without improvising each year.

Building it “for tax reasons” without a group strategy: no clear objectives, no governance rules, and no review of requirements to apply benefits. Without design, it often becomes cost and complexity.

With clear documentation, market-consistent terms, traceable flows, and flawless accounting. In intra-group matters, poor documentation is a frequent source of friction.

It can facilitate it when the structure is properly designed. The key is to organise flows (dividends, loans, reinvestment) in a way that is coherent with regulation and your strategy.

Transferring shares can be more organised than transferring individual assets, but it requires governance rules and planning. The real advantage appears when there is a protocol and clear control logic.

Recurring advisory work, accounting, corporate tax, related-party disclosures, and audits where applicable. Before setting up the structure, you should compare these costs with portfolio size and real benefits.

Changes in shareholders, the next generation entering, new financing, acquisitions via SPVs, assets in different countries, or regulatory changes. When the portfolio changes, the architecture should adapt.

Enrique Rosa

Retail

With a degree in Business Administration and Management and a postgraduate degree from the United Kingdom, Enrique has developed his career in real estate and retail, participating in leasing operations, feasibility analyses, and market studies for commercial assets. In recent years, he has collaborated in the management and optimisation of spaces, as well as in negotiations with national and international operators, contributing to the structuring of commercial agreements. His profile combines analytical skills, strategic vision, and a strong commercial focus.

He stands out for his ability to build trusting relationships with clients and his results-oriented approach. With an international mindset and a commitment to continuous growth, he approaches each project with ambition, discipline, and commitment, always seeking to bring added value to both owners and operators.