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Understanding how to register a company in the Philippines is the essential first step for any entrepreneur, local or foreign, looking to operate legally in one of Southeast Asia’s fastest-growing economies. The process touches multiple government agencies, from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) to local government units (LGUs) that issue the mayor’s permit. In 2026, founders must also navigate procedural updates to the SEC’s eSPARC online portal, recalibrated Audited Financial Statements (AFS) filing thresholds, and the ongoing impact of the 13th Foreign Investment Negative List (FINL) under Executive Order No. 113, all of which shape entity choices and compliance obligations from day one.
This guide walks through every step, form and fee so you can move from business concept to Certificate of Incorporation with confidence. It covers both domestic founders and foreign investors navigating EO 113 ownership restrictions, with practical timelines calibrated to current 2026 processing speeds.
Before diving into the detail, here is the at-a-glance registration path. Each step links to the deeper guidance below.
Typical end-to-end timeline: A straightforward domestic corporation can be fully registered within 2–4 weeks. Foreign-owned entities or those in regulated sectors should allow 4–8 weeks to account for additional FINL checks and capital-remittance documentation.
The entity type you select determines your minimum capital requirements, corporate governance obligations, and, for foreign founders, the foreign-equity ceiling that applies under the FINL. The Revised Corporation Code of the Philippines provides several options.
Introduced under the Revised Corporation Code, the One Person Corporation allows a single stockholder to incorporate with limited liability, eliminating the previous requirement for at least two to five incorporators. The OPC is well-suited to solo founders, freelancers scaling into a formal entity, and foreign nationals who want simplified governance. A nominee and an alternate nominee must be designated in the Articles of Incorporation to ensure continuity. The OPC is exempt from the minimum board-size requirements that apply to ordinary stock corporations, but it must still comply with SEC reporting, including the General Information Sheet (GIS) and AFS filings.
A domestic stock corporation is the default vehicle for profit-driven ventures with two or more shareholders. Under the Revised Corporation Code, there is no minimum authorised capital stock unless the business falls within a sector that imposes one, such as banking, insurance, or certain BOI-registered activities. Non-stock corporations are reserved for civic, religious, charitable or similar purposes and may not distribute dividends. Founders planning to raise equity should almost always choose a stock corporation.
Sole proprietorships, registered through the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) rather than the SEC, remain an option for individuals who want the simplest setup. However, they offer no liability shield and cannot accept foreign equity.
SEC registration is the cornerstone of company formation. All corporations, partnerships and OPCs must register through the SEC’s electronic platform, eSPARC, which handles name verification, document submission and fee payment in a single workflow.
Log in to the eSPARC portal and use the name-verification tool to check availability. The SEC will reject names that are identical or deceptively similar to existing registered entities. Reserve your preferred name, it is typically held for a limited window during which you must complete the full application. Prepare two or three alternative names in case your first choice is unavailable.
The Articles of Incorporation (AOI) must include the following, at minimum:
The By-laws may be submitted simultaneously with the AOI or within 30 days after incorporation. They govern internal procedures such as board meetings, officer election and share transfer rules.
The SEC’s eSPARC platform streamlines the entire filing process online. After creating an account, the typical workflow proceeds as follows:
| Filing Step | Required Documents | Typical Processing Time |
|---|---|---|
| Name reservation | Online name-verification request | Same day – 1 business day |
| AOI & By-laws submission | Notarised AOI, By-laws, IDs, Treasurer’s Affidavit, bank certificate | 2–7 business days (standard) |
| Payment of fees | SEC filing fee, legal research fee, documentary stamp tax | Processed upon payment confirmation |
| Certificate of Incorporation issued | Approved application | 1–3 business days after approval |
Processing times through eSPARC have improved markedly since the platform’s modernisation; industry observers expect most straightforward applications to clear within 5–10 business days in 2026, though complex structures may take longer.
After receiving (or concurrently with) SEC registration, you must open a corporate bank account in the Philippines. The Treasurer-in-trust deposits the paid-up portion of the subscribed capital, and the bank issues a certificate of deposit that forms part of your SEC filing.
Under the Revised Corporation Code, there is no blanket minimum capital stock for ordinary corporations. However, specific sectors, banking, financing, insurance, pre-need companies and certain BOI-registered activities, impose their own minimums. Foreign-owned corporations must also comply with paid-in capital requirements tied to their sector under the FINL, and the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) may require proof of inward remittance for funds originating overseas.
Foreign incorporators should prepare valid passports, proof of address (foreign or local), the SEC Certificate of Incorporation (or its application receipt) and the company’s AOI. Philippine banks apply anti-money-laundering KYC procedures, so expect requests for source-of-funds documentation, particularly where the paid-up capital exceeds the bank’s internal threshold for enhanced due diligence.
Every newly incorporated company must register with the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) to obtain a Tax Identification Number (TIN), a Certificate of Registration (COR, BIR Form 2303) and the authority to print official receipts and invoices. BIR registration should be initiated within 30 days of incorporation.
BIR Form 1903 is the application form for registration of corporations, partnerships and other juridical persons. Common pitfalls include misclassifying the tax type (percentage tax vs VAT), providing an incomplete principal office address that does not match the SEC-registered address, and failing to indicate the correct accounting period. Double-check that your Revenue District Office (RDO) code matches the physical location of your principal office, transferring between RDOs after registration adds time and paperwork.
The Philippine government’s NewBizReg portal aims to streamline registration across multiple agencies, BIR, SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG, into a single digital workflow. Where available, this portal can shorten registration time and reduce in-person visits. However, not all LGUs and RDOs are fully integrated, so check whether your municipality supports NewBizReg before relying on it as the sole channel.
Newly registered corporations must pay the documentary stamp tax (DST) on original issuances of shares. In addition, you will need to register your books of account (manual or computerised) and secure an Authority to Print (ATP) receipts and invoices from the BIR before issuing any official receipt to customers.
| BIR Step | Form / Requirement | Expected Processing Time |
|---|---|---|
| File application for registration | BIR Form 1903 + supporting documents | 1–3 business days |
| Pay registration fee & DST | BIR Form 0605 (registration fee); BIR Form 2000 (DST) | Same day (upon payment) |
| Register books of account | Physical or loose-leaf books presented to RDO | 1–2 business days |
| Obtain Authority to Print (ATP) | Application at RDO + accredited printer details | 3–5 business days |
| Receive COR (Form 2303) | Issued upon completion of the above | Released with or shortly after ATP |
No business may lawfully operate in the Philippines without a mayor’s permit (also called a business permit) from the LGU where the principal office is located. The process varies by city and municipality, but the core requirements are consistent.
You will typically need the following documents when applying for a mayor’s permit:
Processing times range from same-day (in LGUs with streamlined one-stop shops) to several weeks in municipalities with manual workflows. Mayor’s permits must be renewed annually, typically during January, and are subject to local business taxes computed on gross receipts.
Once your company is operational, Philippine law requires employer registration with three statutory agencies:
Companies with five or more employees must also register with the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) under Rule 1020 of the Occupational Safety and Health Standards. Additionally, employers are responsible for withholding and remitting income tax on employee compensation to the BIR on a monthly basis.
Foreign nationals can register and own companies in the Philippines, but the extent of permissible foreign equity depends on the business sector. The 13th Foreign Investment Negative List (FINL), promulgated under Executive Order No. 113, identifies activities where foreign ownership is limited or prohibited entirely. List A covers sectors restricted by the Constitution or specific laws (such as mass media, small-scale mining, and certain professional services), while List B covers sectors limited for security, defence, health or public-morals reasons, or where enterprises capitalised below a threshold are reserved for Filipino nationals.
For sectors not on the FINL, foreign investors may hold up to 100 % of the equity. Enterprises seeking fiscal incentives, such as income tax holidays or duty-free importation, should consider registering with the Board of Investments (BOI) under the Strategic Investment Priority Plan.
| Entity Type | Foreign Ownership Allowed (Typical) | Filing / Approval Body |
|---|---|---|
| OPC (One Person Corporation) | Up to 100 %, subject to FINL sector rules | SEC via eSPARC |
| Domestic Stock Corporation | Up to 100 % unless restricted by FINL | SEC + sector regulator (BOI / others) |
| Branch of Foreign Company | Treated as an extension of the foreign parent, sector dependent | SEC branch registration + BOI / FINL checks |
Founders should also note that the SEC periodically recalibrates AFS filing thresholds, which can affect the level of audit assurance required for annual financial statements. Consult the latest SEC circulars on the SEC website to confirm whether your company falls within the scope of full audit, review-level or compilation-level reporting requirements, this determination can influence your choice of external auditor and ongoing compliance costs.
Costs vary depending on entity type, authorised capital and LGU location. The table below provides conservative ranges for a standard domestic stock corporation.
| Item | Typical Cost (PHP) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| SEC filing fee | 2,000 – 10,000+ | Scaled to authorised capital stock; includes legal research fee |
| Documentary stamp tax (DST) | Varies | Based on par value of shares issued; computed per BIR schedule |
| Notarisation of AOI & By-laws | 1,000 – 5,000 | Depends on notary public |
| BIR registration fee | 500 | Standard annual registration fee per establishment |
| Books of account & ATP | 500 – 2,000 | Loose-leaf or manual books; printing costs for OR/invoices |
| Mayor’s permit & local fees | 3,000 – 30,000+ | Highly variable by LGU; includes barangay clearance, fire safety, sanitary permit |
| Legal / professional fees | 15,000 – 80,000+ | Optional but recommended; covers drafting, filing and liaison |
Rough total for a small corporation: PHP 25,000 – 130,000+, depending heavily on capital size and whether professional assistance is engaged. Foreign-owned entities may incur additional costs for capital remittance documentation and sector-specific clearances.
Avoiding post-registration penalties starts with getting the basics right during incorporation. The most frequent mistakes include:
If any of these issues arise, early legal intervention is the most cost-effective remedy. Engaging a Philippine corporate lawyer before filing, rather than after a deficiency notice, can save weeks of delays and significant penalty exposure.
The SEC may reject an application for several reasons: a confusingly similar company name, incomplete or improperly notarised documents, or non-compliance with sector-specific requirements. When a rejection or clarificatory comment is issued, the applicant typically has a limited window, often 30 days, to resubmit corrected documents via eSPARC.
For name disputes, the SEC provides a formal protest mechanism. If another entity challenges your reserved name, you may need to submit evidence of prior use, trademark registrations or a legal opinion to support your claim. Industry observers expect the eSPARC system to continue improving dispute resolution turnaround times, but contested names can still add 2–4 weeks to the overall registration timeline.
Registering a company in the Philippines in 2026 is more streamlined than ever thanks to the eSPARC platform and emerging one-stop portals, but the regulatory landscape, particularly for foreign investors, still demands careful planning. Incorrect entity selection, FINL miscalculations or missed BIR deadlines can result in costly delays, penalties or even revocation of registration.
If you are planning to register a company in the Philippines and need guidance tailored to your sector, ownership structure or investment goals, consult an experienced Philippine corporate lawyer through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
This article provides general legal information and does not constitute legal advice. Laws, regulations and administrative procedures may change. Readers should seek independent professional advice for their specific circumstances.
Last updated: 20 May 2026
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Joseph James Joaquino Jr at AJA Law (Alcantara Joaquino Alcantara Law), a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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