Captives are licensed by many
jurisdictions. The captive's primary jurisdiction is known as its
domicile. The captives are then regulated by local insurance authority agencies, which require that captives have enough money to pay claims as well as maintain a minimum surplus. Most captive insurers are based "
offshore", in places such as
Gibraltar,
Mauritius,
Belize,
Bermuda,
The Cayman Islands,
Ireland,
Guernsey,
Luxembourg,
Barbados,
Malta,
The Bahamas,
Singapore,
Anguilla, the
British Virgin Islands,
Qatar Financial Centre and
Dubai International Financial Centre. Bermuda is the world's leading offshore captive domicile. The onshore regulatory burden and the cost of operating either a US-based or Lloyd's-based captive in the early 1960s drove Reiss to seek out a jurisdiction that would allow his captive concept to flourish. After much investigation, he chose Bermuda, due to its geographical location, clean reputation and status as a
British Dependent Territory, which avoided the risks and uncertainties often experienced by international businesses operating in politically unstable and unaccountable jurisdictions. Bermuda's captives are predominantly owned by large US corporations. The Cayman Islands is the second largest licensing jurisdiction in terms of the number of captives licensed.
Vermont, in the United States, is second in terms of insurance company assets but third in terms of captives licensed. Healthcare corporations prefer Bermuda, due to the ease of claim payment provided by the regulatory environment.
Luxembourg is the largest captive reinsurance domicile in the EU. A recent trend has various states in the
United States revising their regulations to be more attractive to captive insurance companies. For example,
Oregon has removed
premium taxes from captives, instead charging a $5,000 annual fee. In the United States, Vermont is home to more captive insurers than any other US state, with nearly 900 licensed captive companies as of August 2009. In past years, Anguilla was a fast growing offshore domicile which ended in 2013. More recently, Anguilla along with other offshore domiciles have seen few new formations and many liquidations and transfers. As with the BVI, ever changing applications of the regulations and the departures of well regarded regulators have ended Anguilla as a domiciles for new formations. Meanwhile,
Montana,
Delaware,
Tennessee, and
Utah have been the fastest growing US domiciles. In 2013,
Texas began allowing captives. ==Business lines==