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Cr Consultores

Start Your Bhutanese Business in Colombia Today

Get complete accounting services for Bhutanese companies in Colombia. However, our services extend beyond financial management. Moreover, we specialize in hydropower, eco-tourism, organic agriculture, handicrafts, and sustainability sectors. Therefore, your Bhutanese business can expand confidently with our support.

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We provide accounting services for Bhutanese companies in Colombia. However, our expertise includes audit, tax, payroll, and corporate services. Therefore, your hydropower, eco-tourism, organic agriculture, handicrafts, and sustainability operations receive complete support.

Why Choose Our Services?

We offer specialized financial and payroll management for your operations. Moreover, we have 18+ years of cross-border experience. However, our focus remains on your sector-specific needs.

Regulatory Expertise

We understand DIAN requirements for your Colombian operations. Therefore, compliance is guaranteed.

Complete Solutions

We integrate accounting, payroll, and tax services. However, our approach is tailored to Bhutanese business needs.

Sector Specialization

We design solutions for hydropower, eco-tourism, organic agriculture, and sustainability. Moreover, we understand Bhutanese GNH values.

Compliance Guarantee

We ensure full compliance for your business operations. Consequently, you avoid penalties.

Global Presence

We serve clients in 195 countries worldwide with specialized teams in each market

South America (3)

Frequently Asked Questions

Can Bhutanese hydropower companies develop projects in Colombia?

Yes, Bhutanese hydropower developers can participate in Colombian renewable energy projects leveraging Himalayan expertise in run-of-river and small hydropower development. However, we deliver accounting services for Bhutanese companies in Colombia managing environmental license applications, energy ministry authorizations, power purchase agreement negotiations, and grid connection permits. Moreover, Colombian hydropower sector offers untapped potential in Andean regions, attractive feed-in tariffs, and 20-year power purchase agreements providing stable revenues. Furthermore, we handle accounting for project development costs, construction expenditures, debt financing, and power generation revenues. Therefore, hydropower companies establish profitable Colombian operations with complete regulatory compliance, proper project accounting, sustainable development practices, and financial structures supporting clean energy infrastructure aligned with GNH environmental principles.

How do Bhutanese tourism operators establish eco-tourism ventures?

We manage complete tourism establishment including company incorporation, tourism operator registration with Ministry of Commerce, hotel licensing, and travel agency authorization. However, Bhutanese operators can apply high-value low-volume tourism model to Colombian destinations offering trekking, cultural experiences, and sustainable travel. Moreover, Colombian eco-tourism offers cloud forests, coffee regions, indigenous communities, and biodiversity hotspots attractive to conscious travelers. Furthermore, we handle accounting for tour revenues, accommodation costs, guide payments, and sustainable tourism investments. Therefore, tourism companies launch Colombian operations successfully with proper licensing, ethical tourism practices, community benefit sharing, and accounting systems supporting responsible travel business aligned with happiness and sustainability values.

What are requirements for exporting Bhutanese organic products?

We handle complete organic export establishment including INVIMA registration, organic certification recognition, phytosanitary permits, and import licensing. However, Bhutanese organic products including cordyceps, red rice, buckwheat, and medicinal herbs require certification equivalence, quality testing, and origin documentation. Moreover, Colombian market offers growing demand for organic superfoods, traditional medicine ingredients, and sustainable agricultural products from Himalayan region. Furthermore, we manage accounting for export costs, certification expenses, logistics charges, and pricing strategies. Therefore, organic exporters enter Colombian market successfully with complete regulatory compliance, proper certifications, quality assurance, and accounting systems supporting sustainable agriculture trade aligned with 100% organic farming principles.

What tax benefits exist for Bhutanese renewable energy projects?

We provide specialized tax planning for renewable energy including accelerated depreciation (20% annual), VAT exemptions on equipment imports, and income tax credits for clean energy generation. However, we deliver accounting services for Bhutanese companies in Colombia structuring hydropower projects maximizing tax benefits, carbon credit revenues, and investment incentives. Moreover, Colombia offers 15-year income tax exemptions for renewable energy projects, customs duty relief on turbines and equipment, and property tax reductions. Furthermore, we calculate optimal cost recovery, manage project finance tax implications, and document environmental benefits properly. Therefore, renewable energy developers reduce effective tax rates significantly through strategic planning while supporting Colombian clean energy transition and climate goals aligned with carbon-negative development philosophy.

How do Bhutanese handicraft exporters enter Colombian market?

We manage complete handicraft business establishment including SAS incorporation, import licensing, traditional design protection, and fair trade certification. However, Bhutanese textiles, thangka paintings, wood carvings, and handmade paper products require authenticity certificates, cultural heritage documentation, and artisan origin verification. Moreover, Colombian market offers appreciation for ethically-sourced crafts, traditional art, and sustainable products with cultural significance. Furthermore, we handle accounting for artisan payments, fair trade premiums, import duties, retail pricing, and gallery consignment arrangements. Therefore, handicraft exporters establish successful operations with proper documentation, cultural preservation support, fair compensation for artisans, and accounting supporting ethical craft trade respecting traditional knowledge and community wellbeing.

What payroll considerations exist for Bhutanese workers abroad?

We manage specialized expatriate payroll including base salary, housing allowance, cultural adjustment support, and meditation/wellness benefits reflecting Bhutanese values. However, Bhutanese employees require proper work visas, professional recognition, cultural sensitivity training, and community connection opportunities. Moreover, we calculate mandatory Colombian contributions (25% employer burden), income tax withholding, and coordinate with Bhutanese social security for international workers. Furthermore, companies should accommodate Buddhist holidays, meditation practices, work-life balance emphasis, and wellbeing programs. Therefore, Bhutanese employees receive culturally-sensitive compensation, proper legal protections, happiness-focused benefits while companies maintain compliance, accurate records, and workforce practices honoring GNH principles supporting employee wellbeing and life satisfaction.

How does currency exchange work between Ngultrum and peso?

We provide currency management services handling Bhutanese Ngultrum (BTN) to Colombian peso (COP) conversions through international banking with competitive rates. However, we deliver accounting services for Bhutanese companies in Colombia processing international transfers, managing exchange fluctuations, and maintaining multi-currency financial reporting. Moreover, BTN maintains 1:1 peg with Indian Rupee (INR) requiring conversions through INR or USD intermediaries affecting costs and timing. Furthermore, we implement optimal transaction strategies, hedging for renewable energy revenues, and forward contracts protecting project economics from currency volatility. Therefore, businesses minimize currency costs while maintaining accurate financial reporting across currencies with proper DIAN documentation, Central Bank registration, and transparent accounting supporting international operations and profit repatriation to Thimphu.

Are there investment treaties between Bhutan and Colombia?

Currently no bilateral investment treaty exists between Bhutan and Colombia, as Bhutan maintains selective international engagement focused on meaningful relationships and sovereignty protection. However, Bhutanese investors receive standard protections under Colombian investment law including property rights, contract enforcement, and dispute resolution access. Moreover, both countries share values of sustainable development, environmental conservation, and social wellbeing providing philosophical alignment for cooperation. Furthermore, we structure investments maximizing available protections, documenting capital flows properly, and establishing robust corporate governance. Therefore, we create secure legal frameworks protecting investments while respecting both nations' unique development philosophies and monitoring opportunities for future bilateral cooperation in renewable energy, sustainable tourism, and environmental sectors.

What environmental compliance exists for Bhutanese projects?

We manage complete environmental compliance including impact assessments, environmental licenses, monitoring plans, and sustainability reporting exceeding minimum requirements. However, Bhutanese companies typically implement higher environmental standards than required including biodiversity protection, carbon-negative operations, and community benefit programs. Moreover, Colombian environmental regulations mandate assessment studies, permits from environmental authorities, quarterly monitoring, and remediation guarantees. Furthermore, we handle accounting for environmental investments, conservation expenses, carbon offset purchases, and sustainability program costs. Therefore, companies operate with exemplary environmental stewardship, proper regulatory compliance, transparent sustainability reporting, and accounting documenting environmental investments supporting operations aligned with Bhutan's carbon-negative status and constitutional environmental protection mandates.

Can Bhutanese companies access impact investment financing?

Yes, Bhutanese companies' GNH-aligned business models attract impact investors, green bonds, and ESG-focused financing from international development banks and ethical investment funds. However, accessing financing requires demonstrable social impact metrics, environmental benefits quantification, and community wellbeing outcomes measurement. Moreover, we prepare applications for IFC green financing, multilateral development bank loans, and impact investment funds prioritizing sustainability and social returns. Furthermore, we document GNH alignment, sustainability reporting, and triple-bottom-line accounting. Therefore, companies access specialized financing supporting growth through values-aligned capital, transparent impact reporting, proper financial management, and comprehensive documentation demonstrating measurable positive outcomes for people, planet, and prosperity beyond pure financial returns.

What are total costs for Bhutanese renewable energy projects?

Small hydropower project establishment costs including incorporation ($3,000-5,000), environmental studies ($100,000-300,000), engineering design ($150,000-400,000), legal services ($20,000-50,000), and first-year accounting ($24,000-48,000) typically total $297,000-803,000 before construction. However, actual construction requires $2-5 million per MW capacity for civil works, electromechanical equipment, and grid connection. Moreover, monthly operational costs include specialized accounting ($2,000-4,000), maintenance personnel, environmental monitoring, and regulatory reporting. Furthermore, project financing typically covers 70-80% of capital costs. Therefore, Bhutanese developers should budget $300,000-1,000,000 equity investment plus project finance arrangements for successful Colombian renewable energy development supporting clean energy transition and rural electrification.

Can Bhutanese companies repatriate renewable energy revenues?

Yes, hydropower companies freely repatriate profits after Colombian taxes, with dividends subject to 10% withholding and requiring Central Bank foreign investment registration for renewable energy projects. However, we deliver accounting services for Bhutanese companies in Colombia managing complete repatriation including profit calculation, debt service payments, tax compliance verification, and international transfers to Thimphu. Moreover, power purchase agreements provide stable long-term revenues supporting predictable repatriation schedules and project finance obligations. Furthermore, we optimize repatriation timing considering exchange rates, reinvestment requirements, and shareholder distributions. Therefore, renewable energy investors access profits freely while maintaining regulatory compliance, proper project accounting, Central Bank reporting, and transparent financial documentation supporting legitimate clean energy revenues and international fund transfers aligned with sustainable development principles.

Our Location

Main Office in Colombia

carrera 48 # 106a - 24, Bogotá D.C. - Colombia



Lo siento, no se han encontrado publicaciones.



OFICIO Nº 900298 28-02-2017 DIAN

En este Oficio se da respuesta a las siguientes inquietudes: “1. ¿Una persona natural extranjera no residente fiscal en Colombia, que como accionista en una sociedad nacional recibe un pago por concepto de dividendos no gravados, está obligado a presentar declaración del Impuesto de Renta y Complementarios?”// “2. ¿Un no residente fiscal colombiano que percibe rendimientos financieros mínimos con ocasión de una cuenta bancaria en Colombia, sobre los cuales la entidad bancaria no practicó retención en la fuente, se encuentra obligado a presentar declaración de renta por esos rendimientos?”/ “a) ¿Existe un monto o valor mínimo para estar obligado a presentar declaración de renta en caso de obtención de ingresos por rendimientos financieros anuales o rentas y ganancias de fuente nacional?”// “3. Un no residente fiscal colombiano, accionista en una sociedad colombiana que recibe un pago a título de intereses presuntos del artículo 35 del Estatuto Tributario por un préstamo realizado a la sociedad de la cual es accionista, y al cual, no se le practicó retención en la fuente ¿debe estar obligado a presentar declaración de renta por el pago de esos intereses presuntos, teniendo en cuenta que acorde con los artículos 407 al 411 del Estatuto Tributario, no se encuentra la obligación de practicar la retención?

Concepto Nº 155 30-03-2017

Es peligroso hablar de materialidad en valores absolutos, pues esta debe calcularse en términos relativos y el punto de referencia para la relatividad no está predeterminado, porque debe fijarse en función de los impactos que pueda tener esa partida y la relación que pueda existir con otras partidas…// (…) En el caso de las cuentas por cobrar y por pagar (…) este Consejo considera (…) que la norma no se dirige en principio al cálculo del deterioro en sí mismo sino al seguimiento de indicadores de deterioro que evidencien la necesidad de realizar el cálculo del deterioro…/ (…) En cuanto al uso del costo amortizado, (…) si el efecto financiero no es significativo, puede obviarse el registro a valor presente de la partida./ (…) No puede alegarse esfuerzo desproporcionado en ninguna de estas situaciones…// (…) El hecho de que el inventario no tenga factores de obsolescencia no es suficiente, porque como ya se indicó, el deterioro puede venir de diversas fuentes. En consecuencia, es mandatorio garantizar que el valor neto realizable no es inferior al valor en libros…// (…) En cuanto al préstamo de accionistas (…) si se concluye que no se cumple la definición de pasivo, la partida sería patrimonio (…). Si por el contrario se concluye que sigue cumpliendo la definición de pasivo, debe procurar establecerse los flujos estimados de pago. Si no es posible hacerlo, la partida debe quedar entonces a valor nominal, hasta que cambien las circunstancias

OFICIO Nº 005237 13-03-2017 DIAN

OFICIO Nº 005237 13-03-2017 DIAN     Dirección de Gestión Jurídica Bogotá, D.C. 100208221- 000395 Señor KEVIN DANILO GRANADOS CRUZ CRA 91 D SUR 49 B -04 BR ALAMEDA Email: kevin.granados@ulagrancolombia.edu.co Bogotá D.C. Ref: Radicado 100009950 del 07/03/2017 Tema Impuesto sobre la Renta y Complementarios Descriptores DEDUCCIÓN ESPECIAL DEL IMPUESTO SOBRE LAS VENTAS Fuentes formales Ley 1819 de 2016. Art. 67. Estatuto Tributario. Art. 115-2. Cordial…

Resolución Nº 14874 28-04-2017

Esta Resolución obedece, según sus considerandos, a que “los vigilados clasificados en la Resolución número 414 de 2014/CGN (Entidades Estatales) del 28 de marzo al 25 de abril de 2017, no reportarán información financiera adicional, toda vez que durante la vigencia 2015, el reporte de la información se realizó bajo el Decreto número 2649 de 1993”. Así mismo, a que “con el objeto que los sujetos de supervisión realicen el reporte de la información financiera de la vigencia 2015, conforme a las normas internacionales, se hace necesario ampliar los plazos establecidos en la Resolución número 7419 del 28 de marzo de 2017

Concepto Nº 176 28-03-2017

  Concepto Nº 176 28-03-2017 Consejo Técnico de la Contaduría Pública     Bogotá, D.C. Señora MARÍA VANEGAS gcmarvel@yahoo.com Asunto: Consulta Destino: Externo Origen: 10 REFERENCIA: Fecha de Radicado 28 de febrero de 2017 Entidad de Origen Consejo Técnico de la Contaduría Pública N° de Radicación CTCP 2017-176- CONSULTA Tema Propiedad de inversión El Consejo Técnico de la Contaduría Pública (CTCP) en su carácter…

OFICIO Nº 901865 09-03-2017 DIAN

OFICIO Nº 901865 09-03-2017 DIAN     Bogotá, D.C. Señor HERNANDO LUGO RODRÍGUEZ mvallejo@burgerking.com.co Carrera 25 A N° 1 -31 Oficina 1701 Medellín – Antioquia Ref: Radicado 1000000303 del 13/01/2017   Tema Impuesto Nacional al Consumo Descriptores Impuesto al Consumo – Base Gravable; Impuesto al Consumo – Base Gravable y Tarifa en el Servicio de Restaurantes Fuentes formales Artículo 512-1 del Estatuto Tributario; Artículo 200…