
Estonia is an increasingly popular base for global entrepreneurs and investors. But how can you actually use an Estonian company for investing?

This article is based on a Live Q&A session where sector experts and investors shared their insights:
For international investors, Estonia stands out not because it is radically different in terms of legal protection, but because it removes friction from almost every step of running a company.
The country’s digital-first infrastructure allows you to establish and manage a company entirely online. Through e-Residency, investors can sign documents, submit reports and interact with authorities without being physically present. This makes Estonia especially attractive for on-the-go founders and investors who want to operate across borders efficiently.
Philip Jungen, e-resident investor and cofounder of Darkstar“It feels like you’re travelling to the future… the ease of doing these investments is purely digital, and that makes it much more transparent.”
At the same time, Estonia offers the reliability of a well-regulated European jurisdiction. As part of the EU, it provides access to the single market and operates under a stable legal framework familiar to international investors.
Another important advantage is the corporate tax system. Profits are not taxed when retained and reinvested, which makes Estonia well-suited to long-term investment strategies where capital is continuously deployed rather than distributed.
For many first-time investors, trust is a key factor when choosing where to base their investment activities. Estonia may be small, but its institutional framework provides strong reassurance.
As part of the European Union and NATO, Estonia operates within a stable and internationally recognised system. Estonia’s security and legal environment should be viewed in the same context as other EU countries – particularly in today’s geopolitical climate, where alignment with international institutions has become even more important.
Philip Jungen, e-resident investor and cofounder of Darkstar“It’s part of the European Union… part of NATO… I would say it is as safe and secure as in Berlin.”
Rather than being a standalone jurisdiction, Estonia is deeply integrated into European legal, financial and security frameworks. For investors, this means that the risks are not fundamentally different from operating in other EU markets, while the operational experience is often significantly simpler.
Transparency further strengthens this sense of reliability. Estonia’s digital infrastructure makes company data, reporting and ownership structures more accessible and verifiable, reducing uncertainty and increasing trust in cross-border operations.
Together, these factors – strong institutional backing, geopolitical alignment and digital transparency – create a business environment where investors can operate with confidence.
Despite its simplicity, Estonia is not a “set-and-forget” solution. There are a few important nuances that investors should understand early on.
One of the most common surprises is related to permanent establishment. If you manage your Estonian company from another country, local tax authorities in that jurisdiction may consider the company taxable there. This is especially relevant for founders who remain physically based elsewhere while operating their company remotely.
Another practical consideration is banking. While opening an account is possible, it may take more time than expected – particularly for non-residents. Many e-residents rely on fintech solutions alongside or instead of traditional banks. In most cases, a fintech account is sufficient for investors.

Urmas Peiker, founder of Poolside“You can actually start a business without being here in Estonia fully digitally. But at the same time, you need to understand things like taxation, how your structure works, and where your company is effectively managed.”
Ultimately, Estonia simplifies operations – but it does not replace the need for proper planning, especially around tax residency and compliance.
For many e-residents, startup investing begins with a single opportunity – often alongside other investors. This is where Special Purpose Vehicles (SPVs) come into play.
An SPV is typically a private limited company (OÜ) created specifically to make one investment. Instead of each individual investor appearing on the startup’s cap table, all participants invest through the SPV, which becomes the single shareholder.
This structure is particularly useful in syndicates or informal investor groups. It reduces administrative complexity for the startup while allowing investors to pool resources efficiently.
“For startups, it makes things much easier. They only have one investor on the cap table: the SPV.” – Urmas Peiker, founder of Poolside
However, setting up an SPV requires clear agreements between participants. Investors need to decide how the investment is structured, who takes the lead role and how decisions will be made.
In most cases, one person acts as the lead investor, coordinating the deal, representing the SPV and often serving on its board. This role carries both responsibility and liability, so it should be assigned carefully.
SPVs work best when the scope is clearly defined. They are designed for one-off investments, not ongoing activity. Once you start making multiple investments or bringing in different investors over time, the structure can quickly become inefficient.
As investment activity becomes more frequent and structured, many investors consider setting up a fund. Unlike SPVs, an investment fund is designed for continuous activity. It allows you to raise capital from multiple investors, deploy it across several deals and manage the portfolio in a systematic way.
Estonia offers a range of fund structures within an EU-compliant regulatory framework. While these setups are more complex and may require licensing, they benefit from the same digital efficiencies.
Philip Jungen, e-resident investor and cofounder of Darkstar“Compared to many countries, you can complete processes without notarisation – or even do notarisation remotely. That's huge.”
Setting up a fund typically makes sense when investing becomes a core activity rather than an occasional one. It is particularly relevant for investors managing capital on behalf of others.
However, this added structure comes with increased responsibilities, including regulatory compliance, reporting obligations and higher setup costs. Many investors, therefore, start with SPVs and transition to a fund later.
For e-resident investors looking to move beyond SPVs, service providers like Poolside offer a structured approach. Poolside operates as a “fund-as-a-service” platform, helping investors launch and run EU-regulated alternative investment funds fully digitally. They handle setup, compliance, onboarding and reporting, allowing founders to focus on investments.
Not all e-resident investors focus on startups or syndicates. Many use Estonian companies as flexible, long-term investment vehicles – especially once they have accumulated capital from business activities and want to deploy it more systematically.
In practice, this typically means setting up a standard Estonian private limited company (OÜ) and using it as a long-term investment vehicle. Unlike SPVs, which are designed for single transactions, this structure allows continuous investing and portfolio management within one entity. It allows you to make and manage investments across different asset classes – such as public equities, ETFs, crypto, or even private deals
For investment-purpose vehicles, Estonia’s advantage lies not only in digital convenience but also in how easy it is to operate and experiment with such structures.

Bertil Dobris, cofounder of Investor 2.0“Estonia provides this access to the EU market… the ease of establishment, the ease of management of your company.”
This makes the private limited company suitable as a central investment hub, where investors can consolidate activities that would otherwise be fragmented across multiple accounts, jurisdictions or personal tax systems.
A key benefit is Estonia’s corporate tax model. Since profits are not taxed when retained, investors can reinvest gains without immediate tax friction. Over time, this enables more efficient compounding – especially for active investors or those managing diversified portfolios.
This setup is commonly used by founders who have exited a business and want to continue investing through a single structure. Instead of holding assets personally, they operate through a company that provides clearer governance, easier reporting and more flexibility in managing capital.
For e-residents using a private limited company as their main investment vehicle, Investor 2.0 provides a practical setup for managing personal portfolios through an Estonian company. Many investors move beyond one-off deals and instead centralise their investments – such as stocks, ETFs or crypto – into a single structure.
Investor 2.0 supports this by helping establish and run investment-purpose private limited companies, combining accounting and compliance with a software layer for portfolio tracking and management. This allows investors to operate independently while benefiting from Estonia’s tax and digital environment, without the complexity of fund structures.
Estonia offers a flexible toolkit for investors at different stages.
You can start small with a single investment, scale into syndicated deals through SPVs, and eventually move into fund structures as your activity grows. At the same time, the ecosystem supports broader investment strategies through standard companies.
The key is to match the structure to your goals – and to understand the legal and tax implications from the beginning.
“The structure you choose depends on how often you invest and how many people you invest with – there’s no one-size-fits-all,” explains Urmas Peiker, founder of Poolside.
Watch the full webinar to learn how e-Residency lets you set up and manage your investment company fully online:
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