Olha Harnyk

Olha Harnyk

Corporate Manager

International Company Formation • Corporate Administration • Corporate Documents • Legal Research

About me

I’m a Corporate Manager at Taxus Law & Finance. I help founders and operations teams with company formation, corporate administration, and corporate documentation across key jurisdictions, including Cyprus, the United Kingdom, Hong Kong, Estonia, and Seychelles. My role is to turn complex legal and procedural requirements into a clear structure: practical next steps, filing-ready documents, and reliable execution support.

I work with fintech and crypto projects, SaaS companies, e-commerce businesses, and iGaming teams that need structured corporate support for international growth. My focus includes corporate documents for company registration, POAs and resolutions, regulatory research, and ongoing registry support — with attention to deadlines, consistency, and business practicality.

Focus: Company formation support • Corporate administration • Corporate documents (POAs, resolutions) • Regulatory research • Multi-jurisdiction business setup • Registry maintenance

Languages: Ukrainian (native) • English (B2) • Russian (fluent)

Experience

  • Corporate Manager — Taxus Law & Finance (current)
  • Lawyer — business support and financing, including support with 5+ EU grant applications
  • Legal Assistant — preparation of procedural documents for court proceedings across all instances

Certificates & Training

  • Master’s degree in Law (International Law) — National University, Odesa Law Academy

FAQs

How should UBO ownership be structured for a crypto project to meet bank compliance expectations?
A common mistake is trying to hide the real beneficial owner behind overly complex nominee or trust chains. In practice, banks and compliance teams usually look through the structure to the ultimate individual, so a clear and transparent setup works better. In many cases, a straightforward corporate structure — for example, a holding company and an operating company — supported by proper corporate records and documented source of wealth helps reduce questions at the onboarding stage.

Is it better to register a crypto company offshore, or choose a regulated EU jurisdiction?
Offshore options can be faster and more cost-efficient, but they often create limitations later — especially with banking and card processing. Regulated jurisdictions require more setup and ongoing compliance, but they usually improve access to payment infrastructure and long-term scalability.

Need support with company formation, corporate documents, or post-registration corporate changes?

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Taxus – Law and Finance