Whether you are a local entrepreneur launching your first startup or a foreign investor expanding into Southeast Asia, company registration Singapore is one of the most streamlined incorporation processes in the world. Singapore’s Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority (ACRA) administers all company formations through its electronic portal, BizFile+, enabling founders to reserve a company name, submit incorporation documents, and receive a Unique Entity Number (UEN) often within the same business day.
Here is a snapshot of what incorporation typically involves: a name reservation fee of S$15, an incorporation filing fee of S$300, and a mandatory requirement for at least one director who is ordinarily resident in Singapore under section 145 of the Companies Act. For companies that expect taxable turnover to exceed S$1 million, GST registration with IRAS will be a further post-incorporation step. Recent amendments to the Companies Act particularly the introduction of section 145A restricting nominee‑director arrangements and tightened Register of Registrable Controllers (RORC) obligations mean that foreign incorporations now face additional compliance checkpoints that were not required a few years ago.
This guide walks you through every stage of the process, from name reservation to UEN issuance, and covers the cost breakdown, key eligibility requirements, common pitfalls, and practical templates you can use immediately. Here is what you will find on this page:
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| Typical timeline | Same‑day (straightforward) to 15 working days (complex); up to 60 days if referral to another agency is required |
| Resident director | At least one director ordinarily resident in Singapore (citizen, PR, or qualifying pass holder) |
| Name reservation fee | S$15 |
| Incorporation fee | S$300 |
| Company secretary | Must be appointed within 6 months of incorporation |
| GST registration threshold | Compulsory if taxable turnover exceeds S$1 million (prospective or retrospective basis) |
| Minimum share capital | S$1 (no statutory minimum beyond at least one issued share) |
| Beneficial ownership filing | Register of Registrable Controllers (RORC) must be established at incorporation |
Quick document checklist have these ready before you begin:
All Singapore company incorporations are filed electronically through ACRA’s BizFile+ portal. Singapore citizens and permanent residents log in using SingPass (or CorpPass for corporate users). Foreign founders who do not hold SingPass must engage a registered filing agent typically a Corporate Service Provider (CSP) or a law firm to submit the application on their behalf.
Log in to BizFile+ and file a name application. ACRA will check the proposed name against its register and, where relevant, against existing trade marks on IPOS’s register. A name may be refused if it is identical or too similar to an existing registered name, contains prohibited terms (such as “Temasek” or terms implying government affiliation), or is obscene or offensive. The name reservation fee is S$15.
Once approved, a reserved name is valid for 120 days (with the option to extend for a further 60 days). You will receive a reserved transaction number keep this safe, as you will need it to retrieve the reservation when you file the incorporation application. Tip: prepare two or three alternative names in case your first choice is rejected.
Before filing, collate the documents listed in the at‑a‑glance checklist above. For each proposed director, shareholder, and company secretary, you will need full legal name, identification number, nationality, residential address, and contact details. You must also prepare a share capital statement specifying the number and class of shares, the amount paid up on each share, and the currency denomination.
Choose your company constitution: you may adopt the model constitution prescribed in the Companies Act (suitable for most small private companies) or upload a bespoke constitution (recommended where there are multiple shareholders, nominee arrangements, or complex share‑class structures). Select an appropriate SSIC code to describe your principal business activity BizFile+ provides a searchable directory. If the company’s activities require a licence or regulatory approval (e.g., food, financial services, education), you may need to obtain referral clearance from the relevant agency before incorporation can proceed.
Resident director requirement. Under section 145 of the Companies Act, every company must have at least one director who is ordinarily resident in Singapore. A person is considered ordinarily resident if they are a Singapore citizen, a Singapore permanent resident, or a holder of an Employment Pass, EntrePass, or certain other MOM‑issued passes who lives in Singapore. Foreign founders who do not themselves qualify must appoint a qualifying individual.
Nominee directors and section 145A. Following amendments to the Companies Act, a person may not act as a nominee director by way of business unless the arrangement is facilitated through a registered CSP. Section 145A imposes disclosure obligations on both the nominee and the nominator. Breach of these provisions carries penalties, and industry observers expect ACRA to increase enforcement scrutiny of nominee arrangements. A nominee director risk checklist should cover: (i) the nominee’s personal liability exposure; (ii) disclosure obligations to ACRA; (iii) the terms of any nominee agreement, including indemnity and removal mechanics; and (iv) the CSP’s registration status.
Company secretary. A company secretary must be appointed within six months of incorporation. The secretary must be a natural person ordinarily resident in Singapore; for a company with only one director, that sole director cannot simultaneously serve as company secretary.
The model constitution works well for single‑member or small private companies with straightforward ownership. If your company has multiple shareholders, nominee arrangements, or complex governance needs, a bespoke constitution is strongly recommended. Consider including the following sample clauses as starting templates:
For comprehensive drafting guidance and additional templates, see Company Constitution templates and clauses for Singapore companies.
With your name reserved and documents prepared, return to BizFile+ and start the incorporation transaction:
Common form‑validation traps: ensure share amounts do not include commas or currency symbols; address fields must not exceed maximum character limits; and endorsement requests must be sent to the correct SingPass IDs. If a position holder does not have SingPass, the CSP must manage endorsements accordingly.
Upon successful filing, you will receive a payment receipt and a BizFile+ inbox notification. For straightforward applications, the notice of incorporation and UEN are issued almost immediately. Complex or referred cases will show a “pending” status.
If endorsements from position holders have not yet been completed at the time of filing, the endorsers have up to 60 days to log in and endorse the application. If endorsements are not completed within this window, the application lapses and must be resubmitted (with a fresh fee).
ACRA may also refer the application to another government agency for clearance for example, the Monetary Authority of Singapore for financial services activities, or the Ministry of Education for education‑related businesses. Referrals can add 14 to 60 days to the overall timeline. Once all checks clear, ACRA issues the notice of incorporation and the company’s UEN, which functions as the company’s registration number for all official purposes.
| Stage | Typical Timeline | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Name reservation | Same day (if no objection) to 1–2 working days | Referrals to IPOS or other agencies can extend this |
| Document preparation | 1–5 working days | Depends on shareholder structure complexity |
| Incorporation filing (straightforward) | Immediate to same day | All endorsements complete; no referral required |
| Incorporation filing (complex / referral) | Up to 15 working days; 14–60 days for referrals | Regulated activities, foreign corporate shareholders |
| Post‑incorporation (bank, GST, licences) | 1–4 weeks | Bank KYC timelines vary significantly |
| Item | Government Fee (S$) | Typical Service Provider Cost (S$, indicative range) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Name reservation | 15 | Included in most packages | Per application |
| Incorporation filing | 300 | Included in most packages | One‑time |
| CSP / corporate secretary package (Year 1) | 800–2,500 / year | Includes AGM prep, filings, registered address | |
| Nominee resident director | 2,400–6,000 / year | Market range; personal liability priced in | |
| Bespoke constitution drafting (law firm) | 1,500–5,000 | Varies with complexity | |
| GST registration (if applicable) | Nil | 200–500 (if outsourced) | Compulsory if turnover > S$1 million |
Service provider costs are indicative market ranges and are not statutory fees. Actual costs vary by provider and scope of services.
| Approach | Pros | Cons | Indicative Total Cost (Year 1, S$) |
|---|---|---|---|
| DIY (SingPass holder) | Lowest cost; full control | No professional guidance; risk of compliance errors; not available to foreigners without SingPass | 315 (gov’t fees only) |
| CSP / corporate secretary firm | Handles BizFile+ filing, registered address, annual compliance; nominee director available | Limited legal advice; may not draft bespoke constitutions | 1,200–3,500 |
| Law firm (full‑service) | Legal structuring, bespoke constitution, shareholder agreements, regulatory advice, RORC compliance | Higher cost | 3,000–10,000+ |
Resident director. Section 145 of the Companies Act requires every company to have at least one director who is ordinarily resident in Singapore. Failure to maintain a resident director is an offence the company and every officer in default may be liable to a fine. Where the sole resident director vacates office (resignation, death, or disqualification), the company must appoint a replacement within the timeframes specified in the Act or risk striking off.
Company secretary. The company secretary must be a natural person with their principal or sole place of residence in Singapore. The appointment must be made within six months of incorporation. The secretary’s duties include maintaining statutory registers, filing annual returns, and ensuring the company meets its compliance obligations.
Minimum share capital and shareholders. There is no statutory minimum paid‑up capital a company can be incorporated with a single share worth S$1. Single‑member companies are expressly permitted under the Companies Act. A private company limited by shares (Pte Ltd) may have a maximum of 50 shareholders.
Beneficial ownership RORC, ROND, and RONS. Every Singapore‑incorporated company must establish and maintain a Register of Registrable Controllers (RORC). The RORC records individuals or legal entities that have significant interest in, or significant control over, the company. Companies must also lodge this information with ACRA’s central register. ACRA requires companies to send annual confirmation notices to their registrable controllers and to update the RORC within two business days of any change. Registers of Nominee Directors (ROND) and Registers of Nominee Shareholders (RONS) must also be maintained where applicable. Failure to comply is a common trigger for ACRA enforcement action and can delay post‑incorporation regulatory clearances.
Downloadable incorporation checklist: A one‑page PDF checklist covering every document to upload, every authorisation required, and sample signing blocks for director and shareholder consent forms. This checklist mirrors the fields and stages in the BizFile+ filing workflow.
Sample constitution clauses: Three ready‑to‑use clauses are provided earlier in this guide (Step 4) covering share transfer restrictions, nominee director declarations, and pre‑emptive rights for existing shareholders. These are starting templates and should be tailored to the company’s specific circumstances. For an expanded clause library, see Company Constitution templates and clauses.
BizFile+ screenshot walkthrough notes: For each key stage of the filing name reservation, position‑holder entry, RORC declaration, constitution upload, and payment screen annotated screenshots with field‑name references can be found in the companion guide: ACRA BizFile+ screenshot walkthrough and troubleshooting. Image alt text and captions reference the official field names as documented in ACRA’s BizFile+ user guide.
For authoritative guidance, consult the official resources from ACRA, IRAS, and MOM linked throughout this guide. Use the downloadable checklist and sample constitution clauses provided above as practical starting points for your company registration Singapore filing. For post-incorporation guidance including opening a corporate bank account, registering for GST, and obtaining business licences see the Post‑Incorporation Checklist: Bank Accounts, Taxes and Licences in Singapore. For multi‑jurisdiction incorporation support, visit the Global Law Experts company formation services page.
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