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Every foreign company entering Greece faces the same structural fork: incorporate a Greek subsidiary or register a local branch. The subsidiary vs branch Greece decision shapes your tax exposure, liability perimeter, compliance costs, and ability to contract with Greek counterparties for the entire life of your operations. Founders, CFOs, and in-house counsel typically confront this choice during market entry, acquisition planning, or when scaling from a remote sales channel into a physical Greek presence. This guide delivers a lawyer-led, dimension-by-dimension comparison, updated for 2026 e-invoicing mandates and EU anti-tax-avoidance transpositions, and closes with a concrete “choose X when” decision framework so you can act before engaging Greece business law experts.
A subsidiary is a separate Greek legal entity, incorporated under Greek company law, that carries its own assets, liabilities, contracts, and tax obligations. The foreign parent company owns the subsidiary through shareholding (wholly or partially) but is not, as a default rule, liable for the subsidiary’s debts beyond its invested capital. Greek company formation for a subsidiary typically takes one of two forms:
Incorporation follows a structured path: draft Articles of Association, notarise them (for an AE; an IKE may use a private agreement), register with GEMI, obtain a Greek Tax Identification Number (TIN) from the Independent Authority for Public Revenue (AADE), and register for VAT. For entities involving non-EU shareholders, apostilled or consularly legalised corporate documents of the parent are typically required.
Every Greek subsidiary must register for a TIN and, if carrying out taxable activity, for Greek VAT. VAT registration is effectively mandatory for any entity issuing invoices or importing goods into Greece. The subsidiary files its own corporate tax returns, submits quarterly or monthly VAT returns, and complies with Greece’s myDATA digital bookkeeping and e-invoicing obligations administered by AADE.
A Greek subsidiary must maintain local statutory books, prepare annual financial statements under Greek Accounting Standards (or IFRS where applicable), file corporate income tax returns, and, once audit thresholds are met, engage a statutory auditor. All revenue and expense documents must be transmitted electronically through the myDATA platform.
A subsidiary is typically recommended when the foreign company plans to hire locally, sign contracts in its own Greek name, pursue public procurement, seek Greek regulatory licences, or reinvest profits in Greece over the medium to long term.
A branch is not a separate legal entity. It is an extension of the foreign parent company operating in Greece. The parent retains full legal and financial responsibility for all branch obligations. Clients and counterparties contracting with the branch are, in law, contracting with the foreign parent.
To establish a branch, the foreign parent must file its constitutional documents (translated, apostilled, or legalised) with GEMI, appoint a local legal representative with a Greek power of attorney, and register the branch in the commercial registry. The process is generally faster and involves fewer notarial formalities than incorporating a subsidiary, but still requires engagement with Greek regulatory authorities and, for non-EU parents, compliance with additional documentation requirements.
A branch must obtain its own Greek TIN and register for VAT in the same way as a subsidiary. A branch bears the same tax and accounting obligations as a Greek company: profits attributable to the branch in Greece are taxed under Greek corporate tax rules, and the branch must file corporate income tax returns, maintain local books, and report through myDATA. The key difference is that the taxable base is limited to profits attributable to the Greek branch, determined under permanent establishment (PE) and transfer-pricing principles.
Because a branch is not a separate legal person, every liability incurred in Greece exposes the parent’s global assets. If a Greek court issues a judgment against the branch, the parent is the respondent. This creates meaningful risk for any parent that carries significant assets or operations in other jurisdictions.
A branch is typically chosen when a company wants to test the Greek market quickly with limited activity, operate a sales or liaison function, or use the parent’s existing credit lines without committing local share capital, but only where the parent accepts full liability and plans to operate for a limited period or at low risk.
The following table captures the key pros and cons of each structure across the dimensions that matter most to foreign investors deciding between a subsidiary and a branch in Greece.
| Dimension | Subsidiary (Greek Company) | Branch (Extension of Foreign Parent) |
|---|---|---|
| Legal status | Separate Greek legal entity (IKE or AE) with own assets and liabilities | Not a separate company, extension of the parent; parent liable |
| Ownership | Owned by parent via shareholding (wholly or partly owned) | No share capital, operated directly by parent |
| Formation time & cost | Higher (incorporation fees, notary for AE, capital contributions); typically 1–4 weeks | Lower initial cost and often faster registration; local representative required |
| Corporate tax | Taxed as a Greek company at the standard corporate rate (currently 22%) on profits | Taxed on profits attributable to the branch under PE rules (same 22% rate) |
| VAT & indirect tax | Full VAT registration; standard rate 24% | Full VAT registration; same obligations and rates |
| Withholding taxes | Withholding on outbound dividends, interest, and royalties; reduced rates under tax treaties and EU directives | Profit repatriation generally not subject to withholding, but verify treaty and domestic rules |
| Liability exposure | Limited to subsidiary’s assets; corporate veil protects parent | Parent exposed to full liability for all branch obligations |
| Permanent establishment risk | Lower PE ambiguity; entity has local substance | Branch is a PE by definition, triggers transfer pricing and treaty considerations |
| Enforceability / contracts | Contracts in subsidiary’s name; clearer local enforcement | Contracts in parent’s or branch’s name; enforcement may reach parent’s global assets |
| Dispute resolution & asset protection | Easier to ring-fence Greek assets; standard governance | Harder to ring-fence; parent may be sued directly in Greece |
| Accounting & reporting | Local books, audited accounts where thresholds met, myDATA e-invoicing | Same local bookkeeping and e-invoicing obligations; parent may also consolidate |
The table crystallises the core trade-off: a subsidiary delivers liability protection, local substance, and greater tax-planning flexibility; a branch delivers speed and lower initial cost but exposes the parent to Greek liabilities and creates an automatic permanent establishment.
Both a subsidiary and a branch pay Greek corporate income tax at the standard rate of 22% on their Greek-source profits. Greece applies a standard VAT rate of 24%, with reduced rates of 13% and 6% applying to specified goods and services. These rates and obligations are identical regardless of whether the taxpayer is a subsidiary or a branch.
The divergence appears in three areas:
The initial cost advantage of a branch narrows significantly once recurring compliance is factored in.
| Cost Item | Subsidiary (Estimate) | Branch (Estimate) |
|---|---|---|
| One-off formation fees (legal, notary, GEMI registration) | €1,500 – €6,000 (higher for AE due to notarisation and capital requirements) | €800 – €2,500 (fewer formalities; local representative fees) |
| Minimum capital | IKE: no mandatory cash minimum; AE: statutory minimum share capital required | No local capital required (operates on parent capital) |
| Annual accounting & audit (small operation) | €2,000 – €10,000 (depends on size and audit threshold) | €1,500 – €6,000 (local bookkeeping plus separate tax returns) |
| Ongoing compliance (myDATA, e-invoicing, VAT filings) | Same obligations as branch; implementation cost may be slightly higher | Same VAT and e-invoicing obligations; may create duplicate reporting at parent level |
| Payroll & social security (per employee) | Same employer contributions and payroll admin | Same employer contributions and payroll admin |
For operations expected to last beyond 12–18 months, the cumulative cost difference between a branch and a subsidiary is marginal. The subsidiary’s higher setup cost is offset by cleaner profit repatriation planning and reduced liability exposure.
A Greek subsidiary operates behind a corporate veil: creditors of the subsidiary can reach only the subsidiary’s assets, not the parent’s. Greek law recognises exceptions, fraud, gross undercapitalisation, or commingling of assets can lead to piercing the veil, but these are narrow and fact-specific. A branch offers no such separation. Every commercial obligation, employment claim, or tort judgment against the branch is enforceable directly against the parent’s worldwide assets. For any parent carrying material assets or multiple-jurisdiction exposure, this distinction alone often decides the question in favour of a subsidiary.
Branch registration can be completed more quickly than subsidiary incorporation, often within one to two weeks for an EU parent with readily available corporate documents. Subsidiary formation through GEMI typically takes two to four weeks, though expedited procedures exist for IKE entities using the e-GEMI platform. Where speed is the paramount concern and the activity is low-risk and temporary, a branch may be the faster route. For any permanent or high-value operation, the additional formation time for a subsidiary is a minor cost relative to the structural benefits gained.
Certain regulated sectors, financial services, insurance, energy, telecommunications, require a locally incorporated entity or specific licensing that may not be available to a branch. Public procurement in Greece frequently requires bidders to be registered Greek entities or to demonstrate equivalent legal standing, which is administratively simpler for a subsidiary. Before choosing a structure, confirm whether the target sector imposes entity-form requirements under Greek or EU law.
Contracts executed in a subsidiary’s name are enforced against the subsidiary. Contracts executed through a branch may be enforced against the parent, potentially subjecting the parent to Greek court jurisdiction. Both structures must comply with GDPR when processing personal data in Greece, including appointing a data protection officer where required and maintaining processing records. The choice of structure does not alter GDPR obligations, but a subsidiary offers cleaner data-controller separation from the parent’s global processing activities.
Several regulatory developments in the 2024–2026 period have materially shifted the subsidiary vs branch Greece calculus:
The likely practical effect of these 2026-era changes: the fixed compliance cost of operating in Greece is now largely the same for both structures, while the substance, liability, and treaty advantages of a subsidiary have grown. For any investor planning operations beyond a short-term pilot, the case for a subsidiary has strengthened.
The following framework distils the comparison into actionable triggers. Use it as a starting checklist before engaging counsel for a bespoke analysis.
| If Your Priority Is… | Choose |
|---|---|
| Liability protection and asset isolation | Subsidiary, limits parent exposure; choose an IKE or AE depending on scale |
| Fast market test with minimal setup | Branch, lower setup hurdles, faster to operate for short pilot projects |
| Clear local substance for tax treaties and permanent expansion | Subsidiary, local board, employees, and accounting strengthen treaty claims |
| Lower initial incorporation cost with accepted parent liability | Branch, suitable for limited, reversible market tests |
| Local contracting in a Greek company name | Subsidiary, clients contract with a Greek entity; easier for procurement and regulated sectors |
| Centralised group control and single-entity accounting | Branch initially, but convert to subsidiary if Greek operations exceed 12–18 months |
Choose a subsidiary when:
Choose a branch when:
Many aspects of the subsidiary-versus-branch choice can be framed at a high level, but specific situations demand professional legal advice before committing to a structure. Engage a Greek business lawyer when:
A qualified lawyer will draft the incorporation documents or branch registration filings, advise on tax rulings where appropriate, design intercompany agreements, and prepare a compliance calendar covering myDATA, e-invoicing, VAT, and corporate tax filings. Early engagement avoids the cost and disruption of restructuring later.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Diomidis Papacharalampous at P&C LAW FIRM, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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