Your Singapore or Hong Kong company may already be an Australian tax resident.
If you are an Australian resident directing a Singapore or Hong Kong company through a nominee director, Singapore's Register of Nominee Directors now reports your arrangement to the ATO annually. Under the High Court's Bywater precedent, that structure may place central management and control in Australia — triggering 30% Australian corporate tax on every dollar of profit, for every year it has been in place.
Enforcement update, January 2026: Singapore's Register of Nominee Directors (ROND) became publicly visible from 31 December 2025. ACRA shares this data with the ATO under the Common Reporting Standard annually. Australian tax residents using nominee directors in Singapore are now automatically identified to the ATO. This is not a future risk — it is a present one.
The structural tax risk inside every nominee director arrangement
A nominee director — by statutory definition — is obligated to act on the instructions of the person who appointed them. If that person is an Australian resident, those instructions constitute the exercise of central management and control in Australia.
You incorporate in Singapore or Hong Kong
To satisfy the resident director requirement, you appoint a nominee director through a company secretarial firm — standard industry practice, offered at SGD 2,000–10,000 per year.
The nominee follows your instructions
Under Singapore's Corporate Services Providers Act 2021, a nominee director is explicitly defined as someone obligated to act on the directions of another person. They sign what you tell them to sign.
CM&C is exercised in Australia
Under s.6(1) of Australia's Income Tax Assessment Act 1936, a company is Australian tax resident if its central management and control is exercised in Australia. The ATO asks: who actually makes the decisions?
Your company is assessed at 30%
If CM&C is in Australia, the company faces Australian corporate tax at 30% — for every year the structure has been in place — plus penalties, general interest charges, and fines. All non-deductible.
"Central management and control exercised in Australia alone is sufficient to constitute carrying on business in Australia, triggering full Australian corporate tax liability."Bywater Investments Limited v Commissioner of Taxation [2016] HCA 45 — High Court of Australia (unanimous)
The ATO's 13 CM&C factors
When assessing central management and control, the ATO applies 13 factors. The most significant:
- Whether directors genuinely exercise discretion or rubber-stamp instructions
- Who the real decision-maker is in substance, not just in form
- The contemporaneous documentary record of how decisions were made
- The physical location of directors when decisions are made
- Whether the company maintains a genuine place of business in Singapore or Hong Kong
Who this affects
The CM&C risk applies to any Australian resident who:
- Owns a Singapore or Hong Kong operating company through which they run a business remotely
- Holds investments, real property, or business interests through a Singapore or Hong Kong holding company
- Has a family office, fund vehicle, or wealth structure incorporated offshore
- Operates a digital business, SaaS company, or e-commerce entity through a Singapore entity
- Has incorporated a company in connection with an Employment Pass or relocation to Singapore
Why this risk is now unavoidable
Three regulatory developments have transformed the CM&C risk from theoretical to immediately enforceable. The ATO now receives nominee director data automatically, every year.
Register of Nominee Directors (ROND) — Singapore
All Singapore companies must file information on their nominee directors with ACRA. This register identifies every nominee director and their nominator. Companies incorporated on or after 16 June 2025 must file at incorporation. Existing companies were required to comply by 31 December 2025. Penalties for non-compliance: SGD 25,000 per breach.
BizFile Disclosure — Nominee status is now public
From 31 December 2025, nominee director status became publicly visible on a company's BizFile+ business profile. The nominator's identity — your identity — is accessible to public agencies including ACRA, law enforcement, and tax authorities. It is no longer confidential from the ATO.
Common Reporting Standard (CRS) — Automated data sharing
Under the Common Reporting Standard, ACRA data — including nominee director registrations and company ownership information — is shared with overseas tax authorities, including the ATO, on an annual basis. Australian tax residents using nominee directors are now systematically identified to the ATO through automatic data exchange.
FATF Recommendation 24 — Hong Kong and global expansion
FATF Recommendation 24, which underpins Singapore's ROND requirement, is expected to be adopted progressively across other financial centres including Hong Kong. As this regulatory direction continues, the enforceability risk for nominee arrangements will grow across both markets.
Active fractional directorship — not a nominee arrangement
ONUS Directors provides genuinely active resident directors to Singapore and Hong Kong companies on a fractional basis. The director exercises real, independent governance authority. They are not a nominee — they are not under any obligation, formal or informal, to act on your instructions.
Sole authorised bank signatory
The ONUS director is the sole authorised signatory on the company's bank accounts. The beneficial owner may hold view-only and transaction-creation rights for operational convenience — but cannot approve or execute payments. This is the most significant structural differentiator from a nominee arrangement.
Signatory on material agreements
The director reviews and signs all material agreements entered into by the company following independent review. No contract of significance is executed without the director's genuine consideration — not upon instruction.
Institutional-grade board resolutions
Every material decision is documented in a board resolution prepared by the ONUS administrator, reviewed, and signed by the director on the basis of their independent judgement. These resolutions form the contemporaneous evidential record the ATO would demand in any review.
Appointed Data Protection Officer
The director is appointed as Data Protection Officer, ensuring compliance with Singapore's Personal Data Protection Act — removing a second statutory obligation from the beneficial owner and further demonstrating genuine operational engagement with the company.
Active governance framework
All decisions are governed by a Board Meeting and Decision Making Policy that formally delineates the boundary between directorial authority and beneficial owner operational involvement. This policy, together with the full governance documentation suite, is provided at onboarding.
Singapore and Hong Kong coverage
ONUS Directors provides active directorship services for both Singapore Pte Ltd companies and Hong Kong limited companies — addressing the CM&C risk in both jurisdictions from a single engagement framework and one named director.
Nominee director versus ONUS Directors — a direct comparison
Nominee Director
Active Fractional Director
The governance documentation suite
Every client company receives a full suite of governance documentation, prepared to institutional standard, adopted by board resolution, and maintained contemporaneously. This is the evidential record that would be produced in any ATO review.
Board Meeting and Decision Making Policy
Governs meeting procedure, written resolutions, matters reserved for board approval, and the authority matrix. Formally delineates the boundary between CM&C and UBO operational involvement.Personal Data Protection Policy
Adopted with the director named as Data Protection Officer. Ensures compliance with Singapore's PDPA. Removes this statutory obligation from the beneficial owner.Code of Conduct Policy
Establishes the ethical standards and professional obligations governing the director's conduct — conflicts of interest, anti-bribery, confidentiality, and regulatory compliance.Bank Account Signatory Agreement
Documents the sole signatory arrangement on the company's bank account(s). Executed with the bank and maintained on file as evidence of genuine directorial control over company finances.Onboarding Board Resolution
An omnibus written resolution confirming the director's appointment, the director's non-nominee status, adoption of all policies, and bank account establishment. Prepared to institutional standard.Standing Resolutions for Recurring Payments
Pre-approved payment authorities for recurring, known expenditure — allowing operational efficiency without requiring a board resolution for every routine transaction.Transparent, fixed-fee engagement
The ONUS Directors engagement is structured around two fees. The onboarding fee covers a defined set of professional deliverables — it is not an administrative charge. The monthly fee covers the ongoing fractional directorship and DPO service.
Standard trading entities: SGD 2,000/month. Variable Capital Companies and complex holding structures: SGD 3,000–5,000/month. Out-of-pocket expenses (ACRA filing fees, bank charges, third-party professional fees) are invoiced separately at cost.
A named, qualified individual — not an anonymous nominee
ONUS Directors provides access to a named, publicly identifiable director with verifiable professional credentials. This is fundamental to the substantive governance case — and the structural alternative to an anonymous rubber stamp.
Yuseff Murphy is a senior fiduciary and governance executive with over ten years of board-level experience across Singapore, Hong Kong, and the Middle East. He founded ONUS Directors specifically to address the structural gap between the nominee director industry — which provides regulatory compliance but not governance substance — and the active, independent directorship required to make the strongest possible case that central management and control is exercised outside Australia.
As a Singapore and Hong Kong permanent resident, Yuseff brings genuine, documentable local presence to every company he serves as director. He is full-time on the ONUS Directors mandate and devotes defined hours to each engagement per month.
What ONUS Directors does not do
Clarity about what ONUS Directors is — and is not — is a prerequisite for an honest engagement. The following limitations are stated plainly.
- NOT Not a guarantee of tax outcomes. ONUS Directors provides the governance infrastructure to make the strongest possible substantive case that CM&C is exercised outside Australia. Whether a company is assessed as an Australian tax resident is a question for the ATO and, ultimately, the courts. ONUS Directors makes no representation about any particular tax outcome.
- NOT Not an Australian tax adviser. ONUS Directors does not provide Australian tax advice. All clients are directed to obtain independent advice from a qualified Australian cross-border tax adviser — such as Tristan Perry (RP Private) or Boon Tan (CST Advisors) — regarding their specific circumstances and Australian tax obligations.
- NOT Not a nominee director in any form. The ONUS director is explicitly not under any obligation — formal or informal — to act on the beneficial owner's instructions. Clients who require a director who will sign whatever they are told to sign should engage a corporate secretarial firm. That is not this service.
- NOT Not the mandatorily required licensed director for VCCs. For Variable Capital Companies requiring a MAS-licensed director, ONUS Directors provides supplementary governance oversight alongside the licensed director — for funds seeking to strengthen their governance posture beyond the minimum regulatory requirement.
Book a free 30-minute consultation
Discuss your Singapore or Hong Kong company structure with Yuseff Murphy directly. No obligation. We will assess whether the service is a fit for your situation — and if not, point you to who can help.
Book with Yuseff Murphy →Responses within 24 hours. Meetings conducted by video call — Singapore, Sydney, or Melbourne time zone.
Disclaimer: This page is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. ONUS Directors Pte Ltd provides active directorship and governance services. It does not provide Australian tax advice and makes no representation that the use of its services will produce any particular outcome in relation to Australian tax residency, the central management and control test, or any ATO assessment. All clients are directed to obtain independent advice from a qualified Australian cross-border tax adviser regarding their specific circumstances. The Bywater Investments case and other legal references cited on this page are provided for general informational purposes only.