Countries
Countries
Compare
Pick up to 4 countries and see residency, company, banking, family, and risk notes line up. No prices, no marketing packages - just the working notes.
MaltaEurope | CyprusEurope | SlovakiaEurope | ChileLatin America | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overview | Malta is an EU member state with established residency, company, and family relocation routes. English is widely spoken and regulatory processes are well documented. Bordercase coordinates with licensed Maltese partners for filings. | Cyprus is an EU member state with established routes for residency, company setup, and family relocation. Bordercase coordinates with regulated Cypriot lawyers and corporate-services providers for filings and ongoing compliance. | Slovakia offers EU residency and corporate structures with a stable regulatory environment and competitive costs. Bordercase coordinates with licensed Slovak partners for filings. | Chile is a stable Latin American economy with structured residency routes, strong civil infrastructure, and growing relevance for international founders. Bordercase coordinates with licensed Chilean partners for filings. |
| Best for |
|
|
|
|
| Currency | EUR | EUR | EUR | CLP |
| Language | English / Maltese | Greek / English | Slovak | Spanish |
| Time zone | UTC+1 | UTC+2 | UTC+1 | UTC-4 |
| EU member | Yes | Yes | Yes | No |
| Schengen | Yes | No | Yes | No |
| Residency | Maltese residency routes:
The citizenship-by-naturalisation-for-exceptional-services programme is closed to new applicants. | Cyprus residency routes:
The investor citizenship programme is closed. | Slovak residency routes:
| Chilean residency routes:
|
| Company setup | Maltese companies are commonly used for trading, IP holding, and gaming / fintech structures. Substance, accounting, and tax-refund mechanisms are well established but require careful structuring. | Cyprus Limited companies are widely used by international groups for IP, holding, and trading structures. Substance, local director, and accounting requirements have tightened in recent years and must be planned at setup. | S.R.O. (private limited) is the standard entity, with relatively low minimum capital and well-established formation processes. VAT registration depends on activity. | SpA (Sociedad por Acciones), Ltda, and SA are standard structures. SII tax registration, RUT, and patent municipal registration follow. |
| Banking | Local banking has tightened; EMIs are common supplements. Bordercase coordinates banking introductions through partners with current relationships. | Cypriot banks have strict KYC and source-of-funds processes following past compliance episodes. EMIs are widely used as supplements. Personal and corporate banking introductions go through vetted partners. | Resident banking is straightforward; corporate banking varies by activity. Bordercase coordinates introductions for cross-border cases. | Residency unlocks personal banking. Corporate banking depends on activity. Bordercase coordinates introductions for cross-border cases. |
| Family | Family reunification is supported on most routes. Schooling and healthcare are accessible to legal residents. | Family reunification is available on most routes. English-language schools (public and private) and healthcare options are widely accessible to legal residents. | Family reunification is supported. International schools are available in Bratislava. | Family reunification is supported. Schools (public, private, English, German, French) are concentrated in Santiago. |
| Risks | Risks Bordercase watches for in Malta:
| Common pitfalls in Cyprus cases:
| Risks Bordercase watches for in Slovakia:
| Risks Bordercase watches for in Chile:
|
| Documents | Standard EU residency document pack for Malta:
Apostille or legalisation where required. | Typical document pack for Cyprus residency:
For company formation: business plan, ownership-chain documents, and KYC for all ultimate beneficial owners. | Typical Slovak residency documents:
| Typical Chilean documents:
|
Country pages stay the authoritative source. This view is a side-by-side; nothing here promises a particular outcome.