Get free access to
Our legislation updates make it easy for you to keep on top of the latest changes affecting your business. Receive our articles, opinions, tips, industry news, country profiles, regional overviews and studies, latest events and even more, directly into your mailbox.
Check out our Newsroom to see what is included!
We will send you only relevant information we consider may be of your interest and treat your personal data in compliance with our Privacy policy and GDPR statement.
Unable to subscribe? Try this page.

Expanding into the United States is an ambition shared by many European companies, but the tax and legal landscape often bring unexpected challenges. To provide clarity and deliver tax insights for European investors entering the US market, we spoke with Petr Neškrábal, Head of Advisory at Accace and Managing Director & Partner at Accace Czech Republic. Drawing on his extensive experience supporting cross-border investments, Petr outlines six areas that every European investor should understand before stepping into the U.S. market.
Tax transparency is one of the most important concepts to understand. In the U.S., entities such as LLCs can be treated as transparent, meaning the company itself does not pay federal or state corporate income tax. Instead, all profits (whether distributed or not) are allocated directly to the shareholders and taxed at their level.
For foreign investors, this means that if a Czech or other European shareholder owns a U.S. transparent entity that performs activity in the U.S., the shareholder must register for U.S. taxation and pay tax on their portion of the income.
Fortunately, most EU countries recognise the U.S. transparency concept. Tax paid in the U.S. can typically be credited against tax obligations in the investor’s home country.
It’s also worth remembering that LLCs may choose their tax classification. Unless an election is made, they are considered transparent by default.
The Limitation of Benefits (LOB) clause is unique to U.S. tax treaties and has a direct impact on whether a foreign investor can enjoy reduced withholding tax rates and other treaty benefits.
To qualify for treaty benefits, an investor or their structure must meet at least one of several tests. The most common are:
Individual test: Individuals who are tax residents of the treaty country qualify automatically.
Active business test: Companies performing real business activities (manufacturing, services, production) qualify. Pure holding companies, even with staff and offices, typically do not.
Ownership test: If at least 50% of shareholders meet the above criteria, the company qualifies for treaty benefits
Problems arise when a holding company receives mainly passive income (e.g., interest, licensing fees) and has shareholders from multiple jurisdictions. If it fails the LOB tests, U.S. withholding tax on dividends rises from a treaty-reduced 5% to the statutory 30%.
It’s interesting that several EU jurisdictions (Greece, Hungary, Poland and Romania) do not include an LOB clause in their U.S. treaties, which changes the evaluation significantly.
A company may become a dual tax resident if it is incorporated in one country but effectively managed from another. How the tie is resolved depends heavily on the specific U.S. treaty in question.
Across the world, most treaties use the place of effective management to determine residence. U.S. treaties, however, fall into three different categories:
For European groups accustomed to managing subsidiaries centrally from their home office, this distinction is crucial. Under older treaties (e.g., Czech Republic, Poland, Romania), the effective management risk is essentially removed.
Again, the first step is to check whether the entity is transparent. Transparent entities don’t distribute traditional dividends because profits are already allocated and taxed at shareholder level.
For non-transparent entities, the rules regarding dividend taxation are straightforward. In the absence of treaty benefits, dividends paid to foreign investors are subject to a 30% withholding tax. However, if treaty benefits apply, the withholding tax can be significantly reduced. Specifically, a corporate shareholder that owns at least 10% of the U.S. company may benefit from a reduced tax rate of 5%. In all other circumstances where treaty benefits are available, the applicable rate is 15%. For individuals, the treaty rate consistently provides a 15% withholding tax on dividends received.
In Europe, dividend income is often either exempt or eligible for a foreign tax credit, reducing or eliminating double taxation.
If the company is non-transparent and the investor qualifies for treaty benefits, the U.S. generally cannot tax the capital gain from a share sale.
The key exception is the real estate entity rule. If at least 50% of the company’s assets consist of U.S. real estate, then the U.S. has the right to tax the gain.
If the entity is transparent, the investor is treated as selling underlying U.S. assets rather than shares and the U.S. will tax the income accordingly.
Home-country rules must also be checked. Many European jurisdictions exempt capital gains from share sales under their domestic legislation.
The U.S. applies transfer pricing principles consistent with the OECD Guidelines, so the conceptual approach is familiar to European companies. However, U.S. authorities pay close attention to cases where U.S. subsidiaries report relatively low margins compared to other group entities.
For any planned investment, investors should prepare their transfer pricing policy and benchmarking early, document everything thoroughly and be ready for scrutiny, especially in larger transactions.
Accace can support investors with benchmarking and documentation based on both European and U.S. databases to ensure compliance on both sides.
The U.S. market offers enormous potential, but it operates with its own tax logic. Understanding transparency, treaty limitations, management rules, dividend treatment, capital gains and transfer pricing from the start can prevent costly surprises. With the right structure and planning, European investors can enter the market efficiently and confidently.
These topics, along with practical examples, common pitfalls and additional legal insights, were also presented in our recent webinar “Doing business in the USA today – A guide for European investors.” You can watch the full recording on Accace’s YouTube channel.

Market entry support | Tax advisory and compliance | Legal advisory | Accounting and reporting | Accounting portal | Payroll outsourcing | Payroll portal | Attendance portal | HR administration | Transaction advisory | Transfer pricing | Company registration | Corporate and secretarial services | ESG reporting | Online consulting | Fixed service packages