<
Cr Consultores

Ready to Expand Your Surinamese Business to Colombia?

Schedule a free consultation with our experts and discover how CR Consultores helps Surinamese companies achieve accounting, payroll, tax, audit, and legal compliance success in Colombia.

Consult Now

Information & Contact

We're here to answer your questions about accounting outsourcing, payroll, audit, tax advisory, corporate legal, and statutory audit services for Surinamese companies in Colombia.

Why Choose Us?

We combine over 18 years of international experience with in-depth expertise in Colombian regulations and cross-border operations.

Expertise in Colombian Regulations

Our specialists understand DIAN and Superintendence requirements, offering tailored solutions for Surinamese companies expanding to Colombia.

Comprehensive Business Solutions

We integrate accounting, payroll, tax, audit, and legal services to streamline your operations in Colombia.

Customized Strategies

We design tailored solutions with dedicated bilingual teams to ensure your company's success in the Colombian market.

Guaranteed Compliance

We ensure full compliance with DIAN, NIIF, and all Colombian fiscal regulations for international companies operating locally.

Global Presence

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

South America (3)

Frequently Asked Questions

What accounting services do you provide for Surinamese companies in Colombia?

We offer complete accounting outsourcing, NIIF-compliant financial reporting, payroll management, tax advisory, audit services, statutory audit, and corporate legal services for Surinamese companies in Colombia. Our team understands both Dutch-based accounting principles used in Suriname and Colombian NIIF requirements.

How does Dutch-based accounting in Suriname differ from Colombian NIIF?

Suriname follows Dutch accounting principles with historical cost basis and conservative valuation approaches. Colombia uses NIIF (IFRS) requiring fair value measurements, extensive disclosures, and international standards. We help Surinamese companies adapt their accounting practices, reconcile differences between Dutch GAAP and NIIF for consolidated reporting, and maintain compliance in both jurisdictions including proper translation of Surinamese Guilder (SRD) transactions to Colombian Peso (COP).

Can Surinamese bauxite and alumina companies establish operations in Colombia?

Yes, Surinamese bauxite mining and alumina refining companies can establish Colombian operations. We assist with foreign investment registration, ANM mining concessions, environmental licenses with ANLA for large-scale mining operations, aluminum processing permits, specialized accounting for ore extraction and refining costs, royalty compliance (4-5% for bauxite), export documentation, and coordination between Surinamese authorities and Colombian Ministry of Mines and Energy for technical standards and environmental compliance.

What requirements exist for Surinamese small-scale gold miners in Colombia?

Surinamese artisanal and small-scale gold miners can formalize operations in Colombia with ANM mining titles, mercury-free mining certifications (Colombia has strict mercury restrictions), environmental management plans, and community consultation requirements. We assist with mining cooperative formation, formalization procedures, cost accounting for alluvial and underground mining, gold sales documentation to authorized dealers, royalty payments (4% for gold), and compliance with Colombia's mercury elimination requirements under Minamata Convention.

How can Surinamese oil exploration companies operate in Colombia?

Surinamese oil companies including Apache/Total partners can establish Colombian operations or service provider subsidiaries. We assist with ANH licensing for offshore exploration blocks, environmental permits with ANLA for seismic surveys, petroleum service contracts, specialized accounting for exploration and development costs under successful efforts or full cost methods, cost recovery mechanisms, tax treatment of intangible drilling costs, and compliance with Colombian hydrocarbons regulations including royalty calculations and windfall profit tax.

What is the process for Surinamese companies to manage currency exchange?

Surinamese Guilder (SRD) transactions require conversion to Colombian Peso (COP) for accounting and tax purposes. We manage foreign exchange accounting under NIIF for functional currency determination, translation of foreign operations (NIC 21), hedge accounting for currency risk, exchange gain/loss recognition, and compliance with Banco de la República regulations for international payments. Our team handles SRD-USD-COP multi-currency accounting and provides exchange rate risk management strategies for import/export operations.

Can Surinamese timber companies establish operations in Colombia?

Yes, Surinamese forestry companies can establish sustainable logging or processing operations. We assist with forest management permits for tropical hardwoods, environmental licenses, CITES compliance for protected species like mahogany, FSC sustainable forestry certifications, sawmill registrations, inventory accounting for standing timber and processed lumber, carbon credit accounting, export documentation, and compliance with Ministry of Environment regulations. Colombia offers reforestation incentives and forest conservation programs.

How can Surinamese rice exporters operate in Colombia?

Surinamese rice exporters can establish Colombian distribution or milling operations. We assist with ICA agricultural registration, phytosanitary certificates for paddy and milled rice, INVIMA food safety permits, warehouse facility registrations, inventory accounting for agricultural commodities, price risk management using futures contracts, VAT treatment for rice (excluded basic food means 0% VAT), CARICOM preferential tariffs to reduce import duties, and coordination between Surinamese Agriculture Ministry and Colombian ICA for quality standards.

Does Colombia have trade agreements with Suriname?

Yes, both countries are CARICOM-Colombia partners with preferential trade terms. We ensure compliance with certificate of origin requirements, tariff classifications for rice, timber, gold, and minerals, DIAN customs procedures, phytosanitary certificates for agricultural products, and coordination between Surinamese Customs Authority and Colombian DIAN. CARICOM benefits include reduced or eliminated tariffs on many goods, facilitating cross-border trade for Surinamese exporters entering Colombian market.

What payroll requirements exist for Surinamese companies with multi-ethnic workforce?

Colombian payroll includes mandatory contributions to EPS health insurance (12.5%), pension funds (16%), labor risk insurance (0.5-9% depending on industry - mining operations typically 6.96-8.7%), and family compensation funds (4%). We handle electronic payroll reporting, benefits calculation, multilingual payroll communications for diverse workforce backgrounds, expatriate tax treatment for Surinamese supervisors, and full labor law compliance. Our team understands cultural diversity common in Surinamese operations.

Can Surinamese shrimp and fishing companies establish operations in Colombia?

Yes, Surinamese fishing and shrimp processing companies can establish Colombian coastal operations. We assist with fishing permits through AUNAP, sanitary registrations with INVIMA for seafood products, vessel registrations with DIMAR, cold chain compliance, inventory accounting for perishable seafood, export documentation for frozen shrimp, quota management, and compliance with Colombian fishing regulations. Colombia's Caribbean and Pacific coasts offer opportunities for Surinamese fishing expertise and aquaculture development.

How long does it take for Surinamese companies to establish presence in Colombia?

The process typically takes 3-5 weeks for standard operations depending on document apostille from Suriname, regulatory approvals, and investment registration. Mining operations (bauxite, gold) may require 4-8 months including ANM approvals, environmental impact assessments, and community consultations. Oil exploration can take 6-12 months including ANH petroleum contracts. Forestry operations require 3-6 months for environmental licenses. We expedite by managing all registrations, filings, and communications with Colombian authorities.

Our Location

Main Office in Colombia

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



Lo siento, no se han encontrado publicaciones.



Concepto Nº 557 23-12-2014

Concepto Nº 557 23-12-2014 Consejo Técnico de la Contaduría Pública     Bogotá D. C.   Señor JUAN CARLOS SEGURA Senior Auditoria Deloitte & Touche Ltda. Carrera 7 # 74 – 09 Bogotá, Colombia jsegura@deloitte.com   REFERENCIA: Fecha de radicado 15 de octubre de 2014 Entidad de Origen Consejo Técnico de la Contaduría Pública Nº de Radicación CTCP 2014 –…

MEMORANDO DIAN Nº 000018

MEMORANDO DIAN Nº 000018 DE: Director General PARA: Directores de Gestión, Directores Seccionales, funcionarios del área de Asistencia al Cliente, Recaudación y Cobranzas, Fiscalización y Liquidación, Tecnología; ASUNTO: Lineamientos para la aplicación del parágrafo 4o del artículo 56 de la Ley 1739 de 2014, aplicable a los contribuyentes, agentes de retención y responsables de los impuestos nacionales, los usuarios aduaneros….

OFICIO 220-230889

Asunto. Atendiendo el artículo 29 de la ley 1429 de 2010 una sociedad limitada que se encuentre en proceso de liquidación puede acordar su reactivación por decisión de la junta de socios conforme a las normas legales y estatutarias, siempre y cuando se cumpla las condiciones señaladas para ese fin.

Por lo anterior, es importante indicar que el pasivo externo de la sociedad no debe superar el 70% de los activos sociales y que no se haya iniciado la distribución de los remanentes a los socios.

Inclusión del acoso laboral

Asunto. El Consejo de Estado, recientemente se pronunció al indicar la importancia de incluir dentro de los Reglamentos Internos de las empresas un escenario propicio para escuchar las opiniones, quejas y sugerencias propuestas por los trabajadores,

Teniendo en cuenta lo anterior, el alto tribunal resalta el deber de respetar las garantías y derechos adquiridos por los trabajadores, en lo especial a los parámetros establecidos en los Reglamentos Internos de Trabajo.