Last updated: 22 May 2026
Understanding how to register a company in Macau online is now a higher-stakes exercise than at any point in the territory’s recent history. Macau’s New Tax Code, enacted through Law No. 24/2024 and published in the Official Gazette on 30 December 2024, took full effect on 1 January 2026, introducing a codified territorial taxation principle, formal transfer-pricing rules and new documentation obligations. For founders, in-house counsel and international investors, these changes mean that entity choice, capital planning and the registration process itself carry direct tax and compliance consequences from day one.
This guide walks through the complete online registration sequence, from the DSEDT trade-name search through the Commercial and Movable Property Registry filing to the issuance of the Macau business registration certificate, and flags the 2026 compliance obligations that every new company must meet.
At a glance:
Before beginning the online registration process in Macau, assembling the correct documentation eliminates the most common cause of delay. The Macao SAR Government Portal and IPIM’s Investors One-Stop Service both list the core filings, which include:
Government fees for registration are modest, typically a few hundred MOP for the name-admissibility certificate and registry filings, but notarisation, translation and professional-service fees can raise total formation costs into the range of MOP 15,000 to MOP 50,000, depending on complexity and the number of shareholders.
The first practical step in registering a business in Macau is confirming that the desired company name is available. The DSEDT (Economic and Technological Development Bureau) operates an Online Name and Emblem of Establishment Search System that allows applicants to check existing registrations before filing. Accessing the system through the DSEDT portal, users can search by trade name in Chinese, Portuguese or English to identify conflicts with already-registered establishments.
A clean search result does not guarantee approval, the Commercial Registry Office conducts its own substantive review, but it significantly reduces the risk of rejection at the formal filing stage.
Once the preliminary search is clear, the applicant files an application for a Certificate of Admissibility of Trade Name at the Commercial Registry Office. This application must specify the proposed company name (including any Chinese-character variant), the intended business scope, and basic shareholder details. The Commercial Registry Office issues the certificate within approximately five working days.
Names must comply with Macau’s naming conventions: they cannot replicate or closely imitate existing registered names, and they must include a suffix denoting the legal form (for example, “Limitada” for a limited-liability company). Companies intending to operate under a bilingual name, common for businesses targeting both Macau and Greater Bay Area markets, should file both language versions simultaneously to ensure consistency across all subsequent filings.
Foreign investors incorporating in Macau must ensure that personal identification documents, powers of attorney and any corporate documents from the parent company are properly notarised and, where applicable, apostilled or consularised for use in Macau. Documents originating from Hague Convention countries require an apostille; those from non-Convention jurisdictions require consular legalisation through the relevant Chinese embassy or consulate.
Documents not originally in Portuguese or Chinese must be accompanied by certified translations prepared by a sworn translator recognised in Macau. Industry observers note that translation and legalisation bottlenecks are the single most common reason for timeline overruns in cross-border incorporations.
The Memorandum and Articles of Association must define the company’s business scope (which must match the scope declared on the trade-name application), the share capital structure, the distribution of quotas among shareholders, the powers and appointment mechanism for directors, and the rules for shareholder meetings. For a standard Sociedade por Quotas, the articles are executed by notarial deed. The notary then files a certified copy with the Commercial and Movable Property Registry as part of the incorporation process.
The Commercial and Movable Property Registry (Conservatória do Registo Comercial e de Bens Móveis) is the central repository for all company records in Macau. Following the notarial execution of the articles, the notary or authorised solicitor submits the incorporation documents to the registry. Certain pre-filing steps, such as name searches and form downloads, can be initiated online through the Macao SAR Government Portal, but the core registry submission currently requires in-person attendance or submission through a local legal representative.
Upon successful registration, the company is assigned its Macau company registration number, which appears on the registry extract and is required for all subsequent filings, from tax registration to bank-account opening.
| Filing | Documents Needed | Typical Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Trade-name admissibility application | Name application form, shareholder details, business scope | Approximately 5 working days |
| Notarial deed of incorporation | Memorandum and Articles, shareholder IDs, proof of address, powers of attorney | 1–3 working days (notary appointment) |
| Commercial Registry filing | Notarial deed, Certificate of Admissibility, director appointments, specimen signatures | 5–10 working days |
| Industrial Tax filing (Form M1) | Form M1 (2 copies), signature verification, shareholder and director ID copies | Filed concurrently or immediately after registry |
The registry extract, essentially the company’s birth certificate, confirms the company registration number, the registered office address, the identities of shareholders and directors, and the authorised business scope. Third parties performing due diligence on Macau entities typically request this extract as the first verification step.
The Macau business registration certificate is a separate document from the Commercial Registry extract. Issued by the Financial Services Bureau (DSF), it confirms the company’s tax-registration status and business scope for regulatory and commercial purposes. The application is filed through IPIM’s Investors One-Stop Service or directly with the DSF, and the certificate is typically issued within a few working days of submission.
Under Macau’s tax framework, every new commercial entity must file an Industrial Tax declaration (Form M1) to register for profits-tax purposes. As detailed on IPIM’s registration-procedures page, Form M1 must be submitted in duplicate, with signature verification, alongside copies of shareholder and director identification documents. This filing is an immediate post-incorporation requirement, delay risks administrative penalties and can block subsequent business-licence applications.
The Macau company registration number assigned at the Commercial Registry is the reference number used across all tax filings, making it essential to confirm the number before submitting Form M1.
Macau’s Commercial Code permits a Sociedade por Quotas to be formed with a minimum capital of MOP 25,000. In practice, however, banks in Macau often expect the paid-in capital to reflect the company’s stated business activities. A trading company or a professional-services firm may face minimal scrutiny at MOP 25,000, while a fintech or gaming-adjacent venture will likely need to demonstrate substantially higher capitalisation before a corporate account is approved.
The banking onboarding process itself requires the Commercial Registry extract, the business registration certificate, shareholder and director identification, proof of address, and a clear description of the company’s intended activities. Enhanced due-diligence requirements introduced in recent years mean that nominee-director arrangements and opaque ownership structures attract additional scrutiny and can delay account opening by several weeks.
Before deciding how to register a company in Macau online, international investors must first resolve a structural question: should the Macau presence be a locally incorporated subsidiary, a registered branch of the foreign parent, or a representative office? Each option carries different implications under the 2026 Tax Code.
| Entity Type | Tax and Reporting Obligations (2026) | Practical Pros and Cons |
|---|---|---|
| Subsidiary (Sociedade por Quotas or SA) | Subject to Macau profits tax on income sourced in Macau (territorial principle under Law No. 24/2024). Must maintain local accounts, file annual profits-tax returns, and comply with transfer-pricing documentation rules for related-party transactions. | Pros: Separate legal personality limits parent liability; eligible for Macau incentive regimes; perceived as locally committed. Cons: Full formation process required; ongoing compliance costs; transfer-pricing documentation obligations. |
| Branch of foreign company | Profits attributable to the branch’s Macau operations are taxable. The branch must file tax returns and maintain Macau-specific accounts. Transfer-pricing rules apply to dealings with head office. | Pros: Simpler to establish if parent company is well-documented; no separate capitalisation needed. Cons: Parent company bears unlimited liability for branch obligations; may face higher regulatory scrutiny in licensed sectors. |
| Representative office | Generally not permitted to conduct revenue-generating activities. Limited tax filing obligations, but must register and maintain a local presence. | Pros: Lowest cost; suitable for market research and liaison. Cons: Cannot sign contracts, invoice clients or generate revenue in Macau; limited practical utility for active businesses. |
Under the territorial principle codified in Law No. 24/2024, as confirmed by PwC’s tax summary and the KPMG implementation-rules analysis, only income derived from or sourced in Macau is subject to profits tax. The likely practical effect for international groups is that a properly structured subsidiary can shield non-Macau-sourced income from local taxation, provided the company maintains adequate substance and complies with the new transfer-pricing documentation requirements. Early indications suggest that the Financial Services Bureau will scrutinise arrangements where a Macau entity earns income from related parties outside the territory but lacks genuine local decision-making or operational capacity.
One of the most significant changes introduced by the 2026 Tax Code is the formal transfer-pricing regime. According to the EY analysis of Law No. 24/2024, Macau taxpayers must prepare all important documents related to transfer pricing within nine months after the end of the relevant financial year. The KPMG implementation-rules summary confirms that these rules took effect on 1 January 2026, meaning that the first documentation deadline will fall in September 2027 for companies with a December year-end.
Macau’s profits tax applies at progressive rates. Taxable income below MOP 32,000 is exempt. Income between MOP 32,001 and MOP 300,000 is taxed at rates ranging from 3% to 9%, while income exceeding MOP 300,000 is taxed at the top rate of 12%. Companies must file annual profits-tax returns and maintain accounting records that comply with Macau’s commercial and tax law requirements. The Financial Services Bureau issues annual filing guidelines, and IPIM provides support to foreign-invested companies through the Investors One-Stop Service.
For a straightforward incorporation with all documents ready and properly legalised, the following timeline is realistic:
Indicative cost ranges:
Even a well-prepared application can encounter obstacles. The most frequent pitfalls when registering a company in Macau include:
Engaging qualified legal counsel before the process begins, rather than after a rejection or delay, is the most cost-effective approach to ensuring a smooth incorporation.
Knowing how to register a company in Macau online in 2026 requires more than following a formation checklist. The New Tax Code has raised the compliance bar for every entity operating in the territory, from the first trade-name search through to the annual transfer-pricing documentation deadline. Choosing the right structure, preparing documents to the correct standard and aligning the company’s capitalisation with both regulatory and banking expectations are decisions that benefit from qualified legal guidance. For international investors seeking a Macau commercial presence under the 2026 regime, professional advice at the outset avoids costly corrections later.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Pedro Cortés at Lektou, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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