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how to register a company in slovakia

How to Register a Company in Slovakia in 2026, Step‑by‑step, Timeline & Costs

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Understanding how to register a company in Slovakia is the essential first step for any entrepreneur, foreign investor or in‑house counsel planning to establish a commercial presence in the country. Slovakia remains one of the most cost‑effective EU jurisdictions for company formation, but 2026 brings several compliance changes that affect the process, including a higher corporate income‑tax rate, VAT procedural amendments effective from April 2026 and a mandatory e‑invoicing roadmap that begins to take effect in 2027. This guide walks through every stage of incorporation, from entity selection and capital requirements to post‑registration obligations, with realistic timelines, itemised costs and a practical checklist you can download.

Quick answer, Can you register a company in Slovakia in 2026?

Yes. Any natural or legal person, Slovak or foreign, can register a company in Slovakia. The most common vehicle is the spoločnosť s ručením obmedzeným (s.r.o.), Slovakia’s private limited‑liability company. The core process can be completed in as few as five to eight business days when all documents are in order.

At a glance, the four main stages are:

  • Choose your entity type, s.r.o. is the default for most SMEs and foreign investors.
  • Prepare and notarise your formation documents, articles of association, founder resolutions and registered‑office consent.
  • Deposit the minimum share capital (€5,000 for an s.r.o.) and obtain a bank certificate.
  • File with the Commercial Register and complete post‑registration obligations, tax registration, beneficial‑ownership filing, social‑fund notifications and opening a company bank account.

Note: From 2026, founders must also factor in a corporate income‑tax rate of 21 % for taxable income up to €100,000 (with a 24 % rate above that threshold) and new VAT procedural powers granted to the Financial Administration from 1 April 2026.

Who should use this guide, and which entity to pick

This guide is aimed at entrepreneurs starting a business in Slovakia, foreign investors incorporating a local subsidiary, and advisors managing cross‑border group structures. The choice of entity determines your minimum capital requirement, personal liability exposure and ongoing compliance burden.

When to choose an s.r.o.

The s.r.o. is by far the most popular vehicle for company formation in Slovakia. It offers limited liability for shareholders, a relatively low minimum share capital of €5,000 and a straightforward governance structure. It suits single‑member start‑ups as well as joint ventures with up to 50 shareholders.

Branch vs subsidiary

A branch (organizačná zložka) of a foreign company does not have separate legal personality, the parent bears full liability. It requires local registration but no minimum capital. A subsidiary (typically an s.r.o.) is a separate Slovak legal entity with its own assets, liabilities and tax residence. Industry observers expect that most foreign groups prefer the subsidiary route because it ring‑fences risk and simplifies local banking relationships.

Entity type Minimum capital (EUR) Key post‑incorporation obligations
Private limited‑liability company (s.r.o.) €5,000 Commercial Register filing; beneficial‑ownership registration; tax & social registrations; annual financial statements
Branch of foreign company None (depends on parent) Local registration; tax & VAT obligations; local statutory representative
Sole trader (živnosť) None Trade‑licence registration; personal income tax & social contributions

Step‑by‑step: How to register a company in Slovakia, practical checklist

The following nine steps cover the full incorporation workflow for an s.r.o. Each step lists the documents required, indicative timing and the authority involved. Use this section as your master checklist to register a company in Slovakia efficiently.

Step 1, Preliminary company‑name check

Before drafting any documents, verify that your chosen company name is unique. Search the Commercial Register (ORSR) database online. The name must be distinguishable from every existing entry. Allow one business day for this check; it can be done immediately online at no cost.

Step 2, Prepare articles of association and notarisation

Draft the founding document (spoločenská zmluva for multiple shareholders or zakladateľská listina for a single founder). The articles must include the company name, registered‑office address, business activities (aligned with trade‑licence categories), details of shareholders, share‑capital contributions and the appointment of the executive director (konateľ). All signatures must be officially verified, either by a notary or, for Slovak citizens, via a qualified electronic signature on the slovensko.sk government portal. Typical turnaround: one to three business days, depending on notary availability.

Step 3, Deposit share capital and obtain a bank certificate

The minimum share capital in Slovakia for an s.r.o. is €5,000. Each shareholder’s individual contribution must be at least €750. Before registration, shareholders must deposit the capital into a temporary bank account opened in the company’s name (pre‑registration). The bank then issues a written confirmation of the deposit. For a single‑founder s.r.o., the full €5,000 must be paid up before filing. Where there are multiple founders, at least 30 % of each cash contribution (and 100 % of any contribution in kind) must be paid before registration, with the remainder due within five years as stipulated in the articles. Allow two to five business days for the bank to process the deposit and issue the certificate.

Step 4, Obtain a trade licence

Most business activities require a trade licence (živnostenské oprávnenie) issued by the relevant District Office (Trade Licensing Department). You can file the application at the same time as the Commercial Register application if you use the single‑window service. Government fees for trade‑licence registration are €5 per free trade (electronic filing) or €15 per free trade (paper filing). Regulated trades carry higher fees. Typical processing: three business days.

Step 5, File with the Commercial Register

Submit the registration application to the competent registry court (registrový súd). Since 2023, notaries also act as registration agents and can process filings electronically, which is now the most common route. The application must include:

  • Completed registration form (Form No. 7 for s.r.o.)
  • Articles of association / founding document (notarised)
  • Bank certificate confirming share‑capital deposit
  • Trade‑licence confirmation
  • Registered‑office consent (landlord’s written permission or property‑ownership proof)
  • Declaration by the executive director (acceptance of appointment, criminal‑record declaration)
  • For foreign founders: apostilled or superlegalized documents with certified Slovak translations

The court fee for electronic registration of an s.r.o. is €150. Paper filing costs €300. The registry court is required to decide on the application within two business days of receiving a complete filing. In practice, filings via a notary are often processed within one to two business days.

Step 6, Register for tax (and VAT if required)

Once the company is entered in the Commercial Register, you must register with the Tax Office (Daňový úrad) for corporate income tax. The Tax Office should issue a tax‑identification number (DIČ) within 30 days, although in practice it is usually faster. If the company expects annual turnover to exceed €49,790 within 12 months (or meets other statutory triggers), it must also register for VAT and will receive an IČ DPH number. Voluntary VAT registration is possible from day one.

Step 7, Register for social and health insurance

If the company will have employees, register with the Social Insurance Agency (Sociálna poisťovňa) and the relevant health‑insurance company before the first employee’s start date. Executive directors who receive remuneration are treated as employees for social‑insurance purposes. The registration is completed through electronic portals or in person at district offices.

Step 8, Register beneficial owners

Slovak law requires every entity registered in the Commercial Register to file details of its ultimate beneficial owners (UBOs). This is done in a non‑public section of the Commercial Register at the time of initial registration or immediately after. Failure to register beneficial owners can result in fines and, in serious cases, restrictions on distributing profits. The filing is typically handled by the notary or lawyer managing the registration.

Step 9, Open a company bank account and commence operations

After incorporation, convert the temporary capital‑deposit account into a full operating account, or open a new one. Slovak banks require certified copies of the Commercial Register extract, articles of association, proof of the executive director’s identity and, for foreign‑owned entities, documentation of the UBO chain. KYC checks for foreign shareholders can take five to fifteen business days. Once the bank account is active and all registrations are in place, the company may begin trading.

Timeline and practical turnaround times, realistic 2026 estimates

The table below provides realistic 2026 turnaround times for each stage of the process to register a company in Slovakia. Total elapsed time from document preparation to operational readiness is typically three to four weeks for domestic founders and four to six weeks for foreign founders.

Action Typical time Fastest realistic Common delays
Name check (ORSR) Same day Minutes (online) None
Draft & notarise articles 2–3 business days 1 day Notary backlog; multi‑party negotiations
Share‑capital deposit & bank certificate 3–5 business days 2 days Bank KYC for foreign shareholders
Trade‑licence application 3 business days 1–2 days (electronic) Regulated‑trade approvals
Commercial Register filing 2 business days 1 day (via notary) Incomplete documentation; court queries
Tax registration (DIČ) Up to 30 days (statutory) 5–10 days Verification of registered office
Open operating bank account 5–10 business days 3 days (domestic founders) Foreign UBO verification; missing documents

The likely practical effect for most foreign founders is a total timeline of around five to six weeks from first instruction to fully operational status, principally because bank KYC and document legalisation add time.

Costs, itemised fees and typical service costs (2026)

Company registration costs in Slovakia remain competitive within the EU. The table below separates mandatory government fees from typical professional‑service costs so founders can budget accurately.

Cost item Low estimate (EUR) Typical (EUR) High estimate (EUR) Notes
Commercial Register court fee (electronic) 150 150 300 €150 electronic; €300 paper filing
Trade‑licence fee (per free trade, electronic) 5 5–15 15+ €5 electronic / €15 paper per trade; regulated trades higher
Notary fees (signature verification & registration) 80 150–250 400 Depends on complexity and number of documents
Bank‑account opening & deposit handling 0 0–50 100 Some banks charge a fee for the capital‑deposit certificate
Certified translations (per page) 20 25–35 50 Required for all foreign‑language documents
Apostille / superlegalisation (per document) 10 30–50 100+ Depends on issuing country; non‑Hague states require consular legalisation
Legal / formation‑agent service fee 500 800–1,500 3,000+ Full‑service formation packages vary widely
Registered‑office (virtual office), annual 100 200–500 1,200 If founders do not own or lease premises

Typical all‑in cost for a straightforward s.r.o. formation (excluding share capital): €800–€2,000 for domestic founders; €1,500–€3,500 for foreign founders once translation, apostille and enhanced KYC costs are included.

These figures are consistent with market references published by formation‑service providers such as Healy Consultants and Accace, though individual quotes will vary depending on the complexity of the corporate structure.

Minimum share capital, capital rules and shareholder contributions

The minimum share capital in Slovakia for a standard s.r.o. is €5,000. This is set by the Slovak Commercial Code (Act No. 513/1991 Coll.). Each shareholder must contribute a minimum of €750 to the share capital, and the nominal value of each share must be at least €750.

Key rules on capital payments:

  • Single‑member s.r.o.: The full €5,000 must be paid up before the registration application is filed.
  • Multi‑member s.r.o.: At least 30 % of each shareholder’s cash contribution must be paid before registration. The aggregate paid‑up capital must be at least €2,500. The balance must be paid within five years (or a shorter period specified in the articles).
  • Contributions in kind: Non‑cash contributions (e.g., real estate, IP, equipment) must be paid up in full before registration and require an independent expert valuation.
Entity Minimum capital Payment timing
s.r.o. (single founder) €5,000 100 % before filing
s.r.o. (multiple founders) €5,000 (aggregate) ≥ 30 % of each cash contribution + ≥ €2,500 aggregate before filing; remainder within 5 years
Joint‑stock company (a.s.) €25,000 ≥ 30 % before filing; remainder per articles

For detailed practitioner commentary on capital requirements and shareholder structures, see CMS, Doing Business in Slovakia.

Special considerations for foreign founders (non‑EU and EU)

Foreign nationals, whether EU or non‑EU citizens, can register a company in Slovakia on the same terms as Slovak nationals. However, the documentation requirements are more involved, and founders should budget additional time and cost for legalisation and translation.

Key requirements for foreign founders:

  • Identification: Valid passport (non‑EU) or national ID card (EU/EEA).
  • Criminal‑record certificate: Required for executive directors. Must be issued by the founder’s home country (or country of residence), apostilled under the Hague Convention (or consularly superlegalised for non‑Hague states) and accompanied by a certified Slovak translation.
  • Power of attorney (POA): If the founder will not be present in Slovakia for notarisation and filing, a notarised POA authorising a local representative is required. The POA itself must be apostilled and translated.
  • Registered office: A Slovak address is mandatory. Proof of the right to use the premises (lease agreement or landlord consent letter) must be included in the filing.
  • Visa and residence: EU/EEA nationals do not need a work permit. Non‑EU nationals who will work in Slovakia as executive directors or employees must obtain a residence permit (typically a temporary‑residence permit for the purpose of business). The company must usually be incorporated first, then the residence permit is applied for, creating a sequencing challenge that benefits from local legal advice.
  • Bank account: Opening a company bank account in Slovakia as a foreign‑owned entity requires comprehensive KYC documentation. Expect banks to request certified copies of the parent company’s formation documents, UBO declarations and personal identification of all signatories. Processing times of five to fifteen business days are common.

Early indications suggest that Slovak banks have tightened their onboarding procedures in 2026, particularly for structures involving non‑EU beneficial owners, making early engagement with the bank advisable.

Post‑incorporation compliance and 2026 regulatory updates to watch

Once the company is registered, several mandatory compliance steps must be completed, and 2026 introduces notable changes to the tax and VAT landscape.

Beneficial‑owners register

As noted in Step 8, all entities in the Commercial Register must file their UBO details. The information is recorded in a non‑public section of the Commercial Register and is accessible to specified authorities. The obligation is ongoing: any change in beneficial ownership must be notified without undue delay. Non‑compliance can trigger financial penalties and restrictions on profit distributions.

VAT, e‑invoicing and reporting

Amendments to Slovakia’s VAT Act took effect on 1 April 2026, granting the Financial Administration expanded procedural powers in areas such as VAT registration verification and deregistration. These changes strengthen the tax authority’s ability to conduct risk assessments on newly registered entities.

Looking further ahead, Slovakia has legislated a mandatory e‑invoicing regime that will begin to apply from 2027 for certain categories of VAT payers. While e‑invoicing is not yet compulsory in 2026, companies incorporating now should ensure their accounting systems are e‑invoicing‑capable. Detailed guidance is available in the LeitnerLeitner analysis of mandatory e‑invoicing in Slovakia from 2027 and the Meridian Global Services summary of the April 2026 VAT amendments.

Corporate tax and payroll reporting

Slovakia’s corporate income‑tax rate structure changed for 2026. Taxable income up to €100,000 is taxed at 21 %, while income exceeding that threshold is subject to a rate of 24 %. This represents an increase from the previous flat 21 % rate and is particularly relevant for mid‑sized companies and profitable subsidiaries. See the Tax Foundation’s European corporate‑tax‑rate overview for comparative context.

Payroll‑tax and social‑contribution obligations begin as soon as the company hires employees or remunerates its executive director. Monthly payroll reports must be submitted to the Social Insurance Agency and the relevant health‑insurance company.

Practical templates and downloadable checklist

To streamline your company formation in Slovakia, prepare the following documents before engaging a notary or filing agent:

  • Incorporation checklist (PDF): A step‑by‑step tracker covering all nine stages above, with space for document status, dates and responsible persons.
  • Sample articles of association (s.r.o.): A template spoločenská zmluva in Slovak and English, covering standard provisions for a two‑shareholder s.r.o.
  • Filing cover letter: A specimen cover letter for submission to the registry court or notary, listing all enclosed documents.
  • Specimen power of attorney: A bilingual POA template for foreign founders authorising a local representative to act on their behalf in the registration process.

These templates are available on request. For bespoke drafting tailored to complex shareholder arrangements, multi‑jurisdictional structures or regulated activities, professional legal advice is recommended. You can find corporate lawyers in Slovakia through the Global Law Experts directory.

Conclusion and next steps

Knowing how to register a company in Slovakia in 2026 means accounting for not only the standard incorporation steps but also the year’s regulatory changes, a higher corporate‑tax rate, expanded VAT procedural powers and the approaching e‑invoicing mandate. With the right preparation, a straightforward s.r.o. can be operational within three to six weeks. Founders should prioritise early bank engagement, accurate document legalisation and timely beneficial‑ownership filings to avoid the most common delays.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Peter Marcis at Nitschneider & Partners, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Obchodný register (Commercial Register ORSR)
  2. slovensko.sk, Setting up a company
  3. Štatistický úrad SR, Business register
  4. LeitnerLeitner, Mandatory e‑invoicing in Slovakia from 2027
  5. Tax Foundation, Corporate income tax rates in Europe
  6. CMS, Doing Business in Slovakia
  7. Accace, Company formation in Slovakia
  8. Meridian Global Services, Slovakia’s VAT law amendments effective April 2026
  9. Healy Consultants, Slovakia company registration fees and timelines

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How to Register a Company in Slovakia in 2026, Step‑by‑step, Timeline & Costs

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