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Strategic Guide

How to Structure a Joint Venture Between Two Companies (2026)

Joint ventures (JVs) between companies can be structured as: (1) a new JV company (most common — a new Ltd/LLC jointly owned by both parties), (2) a contractual JV (no new entity — governed purely ...

March 2026 7 min read
How to Structure a Joint Venture Between Two Companies (2026)

Why Companies Form Joint Ventures

  • A joint venture allows two or more businesses to collaborate on a specific project, market entry, or product line while:
  • Sharing risk: Neither party bears 100% of the downside
  • Combining complementary capabilities: One party has technology; the other has market access
  • Ring-fencing the JV: Keeping the JV activity separate from each party's core operations (liability protection, accounting separation)
  • Preserving independence: Both parties remain separate entities — a JV is not a merger
  • Common JV scenarios for international founders:
  • A UK company and a UAE company forming a JV to bid on GCC government contracts (local partner requirement)
  • A technology company and a distribution company forming a JV for a specific market launch
  • Two competitors JVing on pre-competitive R&D (common in deep tech and pharma)
  • A foreign company and a local company forming a JV to satisfy local ownership requirements in markets like Saudi Arabia or China

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Option 1: JV Company (Most Common)

Form a new company (UK Ltd, US LLC, UAE FZ-LLC, etc.) jointly owned by the two parties. Each party holds shares in the JV company.

  • Advantages:
  • Separate legal entity — clear ring-fencing of JV activities and liabilities
  • Separate accounting — JV's P&L doesn't appear in either parent's accounts (if structured as an equity-accounted associate, it shows as a single line)
  • Clear exit mechanism — shares in the JV company can be sold
  • Can bring in additional investors or management teams
  • Disadvantages:
  • Formation cost and ongoing compliance overhead
  • Tax complexity — dividend flows from JV to parent companies may attract withholding taxes (mitigated by good treaty planning)
  • Less flexible than a pure contractual arrangement

Ownership structures for JV companies:

50/50: Equal control. Simple in concept, challenging in practice — requires robust deadlock resolution mechanisms. Used when both parties contribute equally.

51/49: One party has control but both have significant stakes. The 51% party makes day-to-day decisions; major decisions (defined in JV agreement) require either party's approval.

70/30 or other splits: Reflects unequal capital contributions or unequal value contribution. The minority party should have "reserved matters" protection — veto rights over major decisions.

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Option 2: Contractual Joint Venture

No new entity is formed. The parties enter into a JV Agreement that governs how they collaborate, allocate costs and revenues, and share responsibilities — but each party remains a completely separate company.

  • Best for:
  • Short-term or project-specific JVs
  • Lower-value collaborations where entity formation overhead is disproportionate
  • JVs in jurisdictions where entity formation is complex (the JV simply doesn't require a local entity)
  • Situations where both parties have established operations and simply want to co-bid or co-execute a contract

Key risk: No separate legal entity means each party is directly exposed to the JV's activities. Liabilities are contractually allocated between the parties — but third-party creditors may not be bound by those allocations.

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Option 3: Limited Partnership (LP)

  • A JV structured as a limited partnership has:
  • One or more general partners (unlimited liability, managing the JV)
  • One or more limited partners (liability capped at their capital contribution, no management role)
  • Best for:
  • Real estate JVs (property holding, development)
  • Private equity fund structures (GP manages, LPs are passive investors)
  • Infrastructure and project finance JVs

Tax transparency: UK limited partnerships are tax-transparent — profits are taxed in the hands of the partners (not at the LP level). This can be efficient when partners have different tax profiles.

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Essential Documents for a JV Company

1. Shareholders' Agreement (JV Agreement)

The most important document. Must cover:

  • Governance:
  • Board composition (each party nominates X directors; total board size; casting vote if any)
  • Reserved matters (decisions requiring unanimous or supermajority approval): appointing/removing management, changing business plan, taking on debt above a threshold, issuing new shares, approving annual budget
  • Economic:
  • Profit distribution policy (how and when dividends are declared)
  • Capital contribution obligations (if the JV needs additional funding — who contributes, in what proportion, on what terms)
  • Transfer pricing of goods/services between the JV and its parent companies (must be arm's-length)
  • Exit:
  • Tag-along: if one party sells their JV stake, the other party has the right to sell on the same terms
  • Drag-along: if one party wants to sell the whole JV, they can force the other party to sell on the same terms
  • Call options: one party can buy out the other at a defined price or formula
  • Put options: one party can force the other to buy their stake at a defined price
  • Deadlock resolution (critical for 50/50 JVs):
  • When two 50% shareholders cannot agree and the company is deadlocked — the JV is paralysed. Resolution mechanisms:
  • Russian Roulette clause: either party can offer to buy the other out at a stated price. The other party must either accept the buy-out or purchase the offering party's shares at the same price. Incentivises fair pricing.
  • Shotgun clause: similar to Russian Roulette — creates pressure to resolve deadlocks quickly.
  • Escalation to senior management/board then mediation/arbitration.

Non-compete: Typically, neither party competes directly with the JV during the JV period and for a defined period afterwards.

Termination: What triggers JV wind-up? Material breach, insolvency of a party, failure to meet commercial milestones, expiry of agreed term.

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Tax Structuring for International JVs

When the JV involves companies from different countries, tax treaty analysis is essential:

  • Withholding on JV dividends: When JV Co pays dividends to parent A (UK) and parent B (UAE) — what withholding tax applies in the JV's jurisdiction? Minimised by choosing a JV jurisdiction with good treaties with both parent countries.
  • Transfer pricing on intra-JV transactions: If parent A provides services to the JV and parent B provides distribution through the JV — all intra-group pricing must be arm's-length with documentation.
  • PE risk: If parent A's employees are regularly working in the JV's country — is there a PE created for parent A? JV structures should be designed to avoid inadvertent PE creation.

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FAQs

Do I need a lawyer for a JV agreement? For any JV involving significant value or ongoing commitments: yes. A JV agreement is one of the most complex commercial documents in business law. Template JV agreements are available online but are rarely adequate for specific situations. Use a specialist commercial lawyer.

What happens to the JV if one party becomes insolvent? This is one of the most important provisions to address in the JV agreement. Typical provisions: the solvent party has the right (but not the obligation) to buy out the insolvent party's shares at a defined price. The JV continues. Alternatively: insolvency of either party triggers JV termination and wind-up.

Can a JV be kept confidential? If structured as a new JV company: the company's existence will be registered at Companies House (UK) or equivalent — publicly visible. Ownership (shareholder information) may also be public depending on jurisdiction. If structured as a contractual JV: there is no public registration. Confidentiality provisions in the JV agreement restrict both parties from disclosing the arrangement.

How are JV profits reported in each parent company's accounts? If a parent owns 20–50% of a JV company: typically accounted for using the equity method — the parent shows its share of JV profits as a single line in its P&L ("share of associate profits"). The JV's detailed financials are not consolidated into the parent's accounts. If 50%+ ownership: full consolidation is typically required.

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This content is educational and does not constitute legal or tax advice. Always consult a qualified professional for your specific situation. Data last verified March 2026.