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how to register a local branch in the philippines

How to Register a Local Branch in the Philippines (2026): SEC License, Form F‑103 & Capital

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Last updated: 23 May 2026

Understanding how to register a local branch in the Philippines is the critical first step for any foreign corporation doing business in the Philippines in 2026. The process centres on three core stages: obtaining a license to do business from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) by filing Form F‑103 and supporting documents, registering with the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) through the now‑mandatory Online Registration and Update System (ORUS), and securing local government unit (LGU) permits. This guide walks through every stage in detail, covering SEC requirements for foreign corporations, capital and securities‑deposit rules, post‑registration permits, timelines and costs.

It also reflects the operational changes that have reshaped branch registration in 2026, including SEC digital filing enhancements, BIR ORUS onboarding for all new registrants, and the sector liberalisation introduced by the 13th Foreign Investment Negative List (FINL‑13) under Executive Order 113. Whether you are in‑house counsel planning a market entry, a CFO evaluating entity options, or a corporate service provider advising a client, this article provides the lawyer‑verified roadmap you need.

Quick Checklist, Do You Need a Branch or a Subsidiary?

Before diving into the SEC filing process, the threshold question every foreign corporation must answer is whether a branch office or a domestic subsidiary is the right vehicle. The choice affects legal liability, capital requirements, tax treatment and operational flexibility. A branch is not a separate legal entity, it is an extension of the parent company, which means the parent bears unlimited liability for the branch’s obligations in the Philippines. A subsidiary, by contrast, is a Philippine‑incorporated corporation with its own legal personality and limited liability for its shareholders.

Can a foreigner own a corporation in the Philippines? Yes, but the extent of permissible ownership depends on the industry. Under the Revised Corporation Code and the FINL‑13 regime, foreigners may own up to 100 per cent of a domestic subsidiary in sectors not listed on the negative list. For sectors that remain partially or fully restricted, a branch of a foreign corporation may still be the preferred route because it does not require local equity partners, the parent retains full control.

When a Branch Is Better

A branch is typically the stronger choice when the parent company wants direct operational control, plans to repatriate profits without the dividend‑withholding layers that apply to a subsidiary, or operates in a sector where local equity participation would complicate governance. Branches are also commonly used by foreign contractors undertaking a specific project, for example, infrastructure or energy contracts, where the engagement has a defined scope and duration.

When a Subsidiary Is Better

A subsidiary makes more sense when the parent wants to ringfence Philippine liabilities, when the business will have Filipino co‑investors or joint‑venture partners, or when long‑term brand localisation is the strategic goal. Because a subsidiary is a Philippine‑registered corporation, it can access incentives (such as those administered by the Board of Investments or Philippine Economic Zone Authority) that may not be available to a branch. Where ownership limits under the 13th Foreign Investment Negative List are not a concern, a subsidiary often provides greater commercial flexibility over time.

Step‑by‑Step: How to Register a Local Branch in the Philippines (SEC Filing)

The formal process for registering a branch office begins and ends with the SEC. Below is the step‑by‑step sequence that a foreign corporation must follow to secure its license to do business.

Step 1, Verify the proposed branch name. Although a branch typically operates under the parent’s corporate name with the suffix “Philippine Branch,” SEC staff will verify that the name does not conflict with an existing registrant. Name verification can be initiated through the SEC’s Company Registration System (CRS) portal.

Step 2, Prepare and notarise the required documents. The documentary package, anchored by SEC Form F‑103 (Application for a License to Do Business in the Philippines), must be assembled, authenticated and, where necessary, translated into English. All documents executed abroad require consularisation or apostille certification under the applicable convention.

Step 3, File Form F‑103 and attachments with the SEC. The completed package is submitted to the SEC’s Company Registration and Monitoring Department (CRMD). In 2026, the SEC has expanded its electronic filing capabilities; certain supporting documents may be uploaded digitally, though original notarised copies are still required for verification. Pay the filing and legal‑research fees at the SEC cashier or through the designated payment channels.

Step 4, SEC evaluation and issuance of the license. SEC examiners review the application for completeness and compliance. They may issue a comment letter requesting clarifications, common queries relate to the scope of the parent board resolution, the financial statements of the parent company, or the adequacy of the assigned capital. Once satisfied, the SEC issues the Certificate of Registration / License to Do Business.

Step 5, Proceed to BIR, LGU and other post‑registration agencies. With the SEC license in hand, the branch registers for tax (BIR), secures a barangay clearance and a Mayor’s Permit from the LGU where it will operate, and enrols with social‑insurance agencies.

Completing SEC Form F‑103, Field‑by‑Field Checklist

Form F‑103 is the centrepiece of the branch registration package. The table below summarises the key fields and the supporting documents that must accompany each.

Form F‑103 Field / Requirement What to Provide Common Pitfall
Corporate name and principal address of parent Exact legal name as it appears on the parent’s certificate of incorporation; registered office address Mismatch between the name on the articles and the name used on the application, ensure consistency
Articles of incorporation / charter of the parent Certified copy, apostilled or consularised, with English translation if not originally in English Failure to include the apostille or consularisation stamp; uncertified translations
Board resolution authorising the branch Certified resolution specifically authorising the establishment of a Philippine branch, appointing a resident agent, and designating assigned capital Resolution that is too generic or does not name the Philippines; omitting the resident agent appointment
Audited financial statements (AFS) of the parent Latest AFS (typically for the most recent fiscal year), audited by an independent auditor acceptable to the SEC Providing unaudited or management‑prepared statements; statements older than one fiscal year
Assigned capital and proof of inward remittance Evidence that the minimum assigned capital has been remitted to a Philippine bank, bank certificate of inward remittance Remitting capital before SEC approval (timing must align with SEC instructions); insufficient capital for the intended activities
Resident agent information Name, Philippine address and acceptance letter of the designated resident agent (must be a Philippine resident) Appointing a non‑resident; failure to include the agent’s written acceptance
Securities deposit (where required) Deposit of acceptable securities with the SEC, typically Philippine government bonds or other approved instruments equal to the statutory percentage of the assigned capital Failing to deposit on time or using non‑qualifying instruments

SEC Fees, Legal Research Fees and Common Rejects

SEC filing fees for a branch license are calculated based on the assigned capital. A separate legal‑research fee applies. In practice, total SEC charges for a mid‑sized branch assignment range from approximately PHP 20,000 to PHP 60,000 or more, depending on the capital amount. The most frequent grounds for rejection or delay include incomplete apostillisation, a board resolution that does not explicitly cover the Philippine branch, and audited financial statements that do not meet SEC recognition standards. Applicants should budget additional time if documents must be re‑authenticated.

Capital, Securities Deposit and Proof of Funds

Capital rules are among the most scrutinised aspects of branch registration. The Revised Corporation Code and related SEC regulations require every foreign corporation applying for a license to do business to designate an “assigned capital” for Philippine operations. This assigned capital must be actually remitted to a Philippine depository bank, and proof of inward remittance must accompany the Form F‑103 filing.

How much does it cost to register a corporation, or in this case, a branch, in the Philippines? The capital outlay depends on the sector and the scope of planned operations. For activities where foreign equity is fully permitted, the SEC generally expects the assigned capital to be sufficient to fund the branch’s intended operations, there is no blanket statutory minimum for branches in the way that a paid‑up capital floor exists for domestic corporations with foreign equity. However, the SEC exercises discretion and may require additional capital commitments for branches proposing to operate in capital‑intensive industries.

In addition to the assigned capital, the SEC requires a securities deposit. This deposit, which takes the form of government bonds or other SEC‑approved instruments, serves as a guarantee to protect Philippine creditors. The amount is typically pegged to a percentage of the branch’s assigned capital. The securities are held by the SEC and are only released if the branch ceases operations and all Philippine liabilities have been settled.

For sectors partially restricted under the FINL‑13, additional capital conditions may apply. The table below compares capital and deposit obligations for branches and subsidiaries at a glance.

Requirement Branch Office Domestic Subsidiary
Capital designation Assigned capital, must be actually remitted and evidenced by bank certificate of inward remittance Subscribed and paid‑up capital; minimum paid‑up thresholds apply for foreign‑owned corporations in certain sectors
Securities deposit Required, SEC‑approved instruments (e.g., government bonds) pegged to a percentage of assigned capital Not required
Sector‑specific capital conditions May apply under FINL‑13 or sector‑specific regulations (e.g., banking, insurance, mining) Sector‑specific minimum capital under FINL‑13 and sector regulators
Source of funds Must originate from the parent company abroad, verified by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) inward remittance documentation May include local and foreign subscriptions

Post‑SEC Steps: BIR, LGU/Business Permit, Barangay & SSS/PhilHealth

Obtaining the SEC license is only the midpoint. A branch cannot legally commence commercial operations until it has completed tax registration, obtained local government permits and, if it will employ staff, registered with the mandatory social insurance agencies.

BIR Registration and ORUS Digital Requirements

Every branch must register with the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) to secure a Tax Identification Number (TIN), register its books of account, and obtain an Authority to Print (ATP) official receipts and invoices. In 2026, new registrants are required to onboard through BIR’s Online Registration and Update System (ORUS), which digitises much of the registration and compliance workflow. Through ORUS, the branch submits its initial registration, applies for its ATP, and manages ongoing compliance filings electronically. The branch must also register for applicable tax types, income tax, value‑added tax (VAT) or percentage tax, withholding taxes, and documentary stamp tax, based on the nature of its operations.

Local Business Permit and Barangay Clearance

Before the branch can open its office, it needs a barangay clearance from the barangay where the office is physically located and a Mayor’s Permit (business permit) from the city or municipal government. These permits typically require presentation of the SEC Certificate of Registration, proof of address (lease contract), and the BIR Certificate of Registration. Processing times vary by LGU but generally range from one to three weeks.

Payroll and Reporting Registrations (SSS, PhilHealth, Pag‑IBIG)

If the branch will employ Filipino staff, it must register as an employer with the Social Security System (SSS), the Philippine Health Insurance Corporation (PhilHealth) and the Home Development Mutual Fund (Pag‑IBIG/HDMF). Registration is straightforward, typically completed within one to two weeks, and is a prerequisite for lawful payroll operations. Failure to register exposes the branch to penalties and, critically, to personal liability for the resident agent.

Timeline, Costs and Practical Timeline Table

How long does it take to register a corporation, or a branch, in the Philippines? The answer depends on the completeness of the documentary package and how quickly the SEC processes the application. The table below provides a realistic range.

Stage Best Case Typical Worst Case
Document preparation, authentication and translation 2 weeks 4–6 weeks 8+ weeks
SEC filing and evaluation (Form F‑103) 2 weeks 4–8 weeks 12+ weeks (if comment letters issued)
BIR registration (ORUS onboarding + TIN + ATP) 1 week 2–3 weeks 4 weeks
Barangay clearance + Mayor’s Permit 1 week 2–3 weeks 4 weeks
SSS / PhilHealth / Pag‑IBIG registration 1 week 1–2 weeks 3 weeks
Total (all stages) ~7 weeks 13–22 weeks 31+ weeks

Cost estimates vary widely. SEC filing and legal‑research fees are capital‑based and typically range from PHP 20,000 to PHP 60,000+. Notarisation, apostillisation and translation costs depend on the jurisdiction of incorporation and the volume of documents, budgets of USD 2,000–5,000 are common. The assigned capital itself (which must be remitted) and the securities deposit represent the largest cash outlay and are entirely project‑specific. Professional fees for legal counsel and corporate service providers generally run from USD 3,000 to USD 10,000 for a straightforward branch setup.

Compliance and Ongoing Obligations for Branches

Once operational, a branch must meet annual reporting and compliance obligations that differ in several respects from those of a domestic subsidiary. Key ongoing requirements include the following:

  • Annual reporting to the SEC. Branches must submit an annual report, the General Information Sheet (GIS) in the updated 2026 format, and audited financial statements of both the Philippine branch operations and the parent company.
  • Beneficial ownership declaration. Under current SEC rules, branches are required to file a beneficial ownership declaration, identifying the natural persons who ultimately own or control the parent entity.
  • Tax compliance. The branch is taxed on income derived from Philippine sources. It must file quarterly and annual income tax returns, monthly VAT or percentage tax returns, withholding tax remittances and the required informational returns, all through the BIR ORUS platform and eFPS/eBIRForms as applicable.
  • Branch profit remittance tax. When the branch remits profits to the parent abroad, a branch profit remittance tax applies (generally 15 per cent, subject to applicable tax treaties).
  • Renewal of local business permits. The Mayor’s Permit and barangay clearance must be renewed annually, typically during the January renewal window.

Practical Pitfalls, Regulator Practice Notes and Anti‑Dummy Risks

Industry observers note that the most common causes of delay in SEC branch registration are documentary rather than substantive. Parent board resolutions that do not specifically name the Philippines, financial statements that pre‑date the acceptable window, and apostille certificates that omit the required chain of authentication account for the majority of SEC comment letters. Applicants should also be aware of the following practice‑level risks:

  • Resident agent liability. The designated resident agent is personally accountable for receiving legal process on behalf of the branch. If the branch fails to comply with Philippine law, the resident agent may face regulatory consequences. It is essential to appoint an agent who understands the scope of this obligation.
  • Anti‑dummy exposure. The Anti‑Dummy Law (Commonwealth Act No. 108, as amended) penalises arrangements where Filipino or Philippine‑resident intermediaries are used to circumvent foreign ownership restrictions. While this risk is more acute for subsidiaries with local equity, branches can still trigger scrutiny if their operations extend into restricted sectors without proper authorisation.
  • SEC refusal grounds. The SEC may refuse a license if the applicant’s home jurisdiction does not grant reciprocal rights to Philippine corporations, if the applicant has been found guilty of fraud, or if the assigned capital is deemed insufficient for the proposed activities.
  • BIR audit triggers. New branch registrants are frequently selected for initial verification visits by the BIR within the first year of operations. Maintaining complete books of account from day one, and ensuring ORUS compliance, reduces audit risk.

Choosing the Right Route: Branch vs Subsidiary, Comparison Table

The decision between a branch and a subsidiary has far‑reaching implications for liability exposure, taxation, capital requirements and ongoing compliance. The comparison table below consolidates the key differences to help foreign corporations make an informed choice when deciding how to register a local branch in the Philippines, or whether to incorporate a subsidiary instead.

Factor Branch Office Domestic Subsidiary
Legal personality Extension of the parent, no separate legal personality; the parent company bears unlimited liability for the branch’s Philippine obligations Separate Philippine‑incorporated entity; shareholders enjoy limited liability up to their subscribed capital
Ownership and control 100 % owned and controlled by the parent; no local equity partner required Foreign ownership capped by the FINL‑13 for restricted sectors; up to 100 % foreign ownership permitted in liberalised sectors
Tax treatment Taxed on Philippine‑source income at the regular corporate income tax rate; branch profit remittance tax applies on repatriated profits (generally 15 %, subject to treaties) Taxed on worldwide income if a resident corporation; dividends to foreign shareholders subject to withholding tax (rate depends on treaty)
Capital and deposit Assigned capital (actually remitted) plus mandatory securities deposit with the SEC Subscribed and paid‑up capital; no securities deposit; sector‑specific minimums may apply
Annual compliance GIS, audited branch financials, audited parent financials, beneficial ownership declaration, annual report GIS, audited financials, beneficial ownership declaration, annual report, stockholders’ meeting minutes
Ease of wind‑down Requires SEC revocation of license; securities deposit released only after all creditors are paid Formal dissolution process under the Revised Corporation Code; may be simpler where there are no outstanding liabilities

For foreign corporations whose primary objective is project‑based work, a time‑limited engagement, or full repatriation of profits without local co‑investors, the branch model remains compelling. For those planning long‑term, diversified Philippine operations with the possibility of local equity participation, a subsidiary may offer greater strategic flexibility.

Checklist and Sample Timeline, Your First 90 Days

The following checklist provides a printable summary of the actions a foreign corporation should complete within the first 90 days of initiating branch registration:

  • Weeks 1–2: Confirm entity choice (branch vs subsidiary). Engage Philippine counsel. Begin preparing the parent’s board resolution, articles of incorporation, audited financial statements and other core documents.
  • Weeks 3–4: Obtain apostille or consularisation for all foreign‑executed documents. Arrange certified English translations where needed. Appoint a resident agent and secure their written acceptance.
  • Weeks 5–6: File SEC Form F‑103 and the full documentary package with the SEC CRMD. Pay filing and legal‑research fees. Open a Philippine bank account and remit the assigned capital.
  • Weeks 7–10: Respond to any SEC comment letters. Prepare the securities deposit. Once the SEC issues the license, proceed immediately to BIR registration via ORUS.
  • Weeks 10–12: Obtain BIR TIN, register books of account, and secure ATP. Apply for barangay clearance and Mayor’s Permit. Register with SSS, PhilHealth and Pag‑IBIG if employing staff.
  • Week 12+: Commence operations. Confirm all compliance calendars (monthly, quarterly, annual) are set up. File the first-month tax returns as required.

Conclusion

Registering a local branch in the Philippines in 2026 is a structured but documentation‑intensive process. The core pathway, SEC Form F‑103 filing, capital remittance, securities deposit, BIR ORUS registration and LGU permits, has been streamlined by digital filing improvements, yet the regulator’s scrutiny of authentication, capital adequacy and resident‑agent compliance remains rigorous. Early and careful preparation of the documentary package, particularly apostillisation and the parent’s board resolution, is the single most effective way to avoid delays. For foreign corporations weighing how to register a local branch in the Philippines against alternative structures, the choice ultimately depends on liability appetite, sector restrictions under the FINL‑13, and long‑term strategic objectives in the Philippine market.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Kerwin Tan at Tan Hassani & Counsels, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Securities and Exchange Commission (Philippines), Official Website
  2. Bureau of Internal Revenue (Philippines), ORUS and E‑Registration Guidance
  3. InCorp Philippines, Guide on Setting Up a Branch Office
  4. ASEAN Briefing, How Foreign Companies Can Establish a Branch Office in the Philippines
  5. Acclime Philippines, Branch Office Guide
  6. Philippines Business Registration, Branch Office Procedural Checklist
  7. Kittelson & Carpo (CarpoLaw), Branch Office Formation
  8. Global Law Experts, 13th Foreign Investment Negative List (Philippines)
  9. Global Law Experts, SEC GIS Form 2026 (Philippines)

FAQs

How do you register a local branch in the Philippines?
File SEC Form F‑103 together with the parent company’s authenticated articles of incorporation, board resolution, audited financial statements, proof of inward capital remittance, and the resident agent’s acceptance. Once the SEC issues the license to do business, register with the BIR through ORUS, obtain a barangay clearance and Mayor’s Permit, and enrol with SSS, PhilHealth and Pag‑IBIG.
SEC filing and legal‑research fees for a branch typically range from PHP 20,000 to PHP 60,000 or more, depending on the assigned capital. Total setup costs, including notarisation, apostillisation, translation, professional fees and the securities deposit, commonly range from USD 5,000 to USD 15,000 before the assigned capital itself is factored in.
A branch registration can be completed in as few as seven weeks under ideal conditions but more commonly takes 13 to 22 weeks from the start of document preparation through to full operational readiness, including BIR and LGU permits. Delays are most often caused by incomplete authentication of foreign documents or SEC comment letters.
Yes. In sectors not restricted by the 13th Foreign Investment Negative List (FINL‑13), foreigners may own up to 100 per cent of a Philippine corporation. A branch office, as an extension of the foreign parent, is inherently 100 per cent foreign‑owned and does not require local equity partners.
SEC Form F‑103 is the prescribed application form for a foreign corporation seeking a license to do business in the Philippines. It is filed with the SEC’s Company Registration and Monitoring Department (CRMD) in Manila, together with authenticated supporting documents and the required fees.
Yes. A branch must register independently with the BIR to obtain its own TIN, register books of account, and secure an Authority to Print for official receipts. In 2026, all new registrants must complete onboarding through BIR ORUS.
No. A branch is an extension of the parent corporation and does not have a separate legal personality under Philippine law. The parent company is directly and fully liable for all obligations of the branch. This is a fundamental distinction from a Philippine‑incorporated subsidiary, which is a separate juridical person with limited liability.

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How to Register a Local Branch in the Philippines (2026): SEC License, Form F‑103 & Capital

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