Expert
The global tax landscape has fundamentally shifted with the implementation of Pillar 2's 15% minimum tax on global corporate profits, designed to address base erosion and profit shifting by Multinational Corporations (MNCs). This transformation has created new strategic considerations for corporate domicile decisions, particularly in light of the January 2026 introduction of the "side-by-side" (SbS) system that exempts US-parented companies from certain Pillar 2 requirements. So the question rises: Is the United States a more attractive jurisdiction for corporate redomiciliation?
Pillar 2 proposes a coordinated global 15% minimum tax regime under a set of global base erosion (GLoBE) rules, adopted by the European Union in December 2022 along with several other countries. The system operates through three primary mechanisms:
In a significant development, the OECD announced on January 5, 2026, that US-parented multinational groups would be excluded from the IIR and UTPR on the grounds that existing US law is sufficiently robust in its taxation of domestic and foreign profits. This arrangement, effective for fiscal years beginning January 1, 2026, fundamentally changes the compliance landscape for US-headquartered companies.
The side-by-side system recognizes the US tax framework, including a domestic tax rate of 21 percent and a separate corporate alternative minimum tax (CAMT) of 15 percent, as meeting Pillar 2 objectives without requiring full GloBE rule implementation.
The side-by-side framework creates several potential advantages for US-domiciled companies:
Recent market activity suggests companies are indeed considering US redomiciliation more seriously.
Interestingly, it remains to be seen whether the SbS Safe Harbor will materially influence behavior by encouraging certain non-US MNE groups to redomicile their UPE or "invert" into the United States. This represents a significant reversal from the pre-2017 era when US companies sought to invert out of the United States.
The evidence suggests that the Pillar 2 framework, particularly with the January 2026 side-by-side system, has indeed made the United States a more attractive jurisdiction for corporate domicile. Recent redomiciliation announcements indicate growing interest in US incorporation.
However, this is not a simple story of US exceptionalism. The side-by-side system creates advantages, but it also comes with requirements, maintenance of the 21% corporate rate and 15% CAMT, that could change with future legislation. Moreover, the system doesn't eliminate all Pillar 2 compliance burdens, particularly regarding foreign QDMTTs.
The key transformation is the reversal of pre-2017 dynamics. Where once US companies sought to invert to foreign jurisdictions to escape a 35% corporate rate and worldwide taxation, the combination of TCJA reforms and now the side-by-side system has made the United States competitive, if not advantaged, in the global domicile competition.
For multinational enterprises, the decision to redomicile to the United States now involves a complex calculus of tax efficiency, compliance burden, market access, and strategic positioning. The side-by-side system has undoubtedly shifted this calculus in favor of US domicile, but whether this translates into a wave of redomiciliations will depend on how the global tax architecture evolves, how other jurisdictions respond, and whether the United States maintains the tax framework that qualified it for side-by-side status.
What is clear is that Pillar 2 and the side-by-side system have fundamentally reshaped the global tax landscape, and the United States currently enjoys a unique position within this new architecture. One that appears to be attracting renewed interest from companies worldwide seeking an optimal corporate domicile.
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