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how to register a foreign construction company in Germany

How to Register a Foreign Construction Company in Germany, Step-by-step

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

If you need to understand how to register a foreign construction company in Germany, the process involves far more than simple company formation. Foreign contractors entering the German construction market must navigate a sequence of regulatory steps, choosing a legal form, registering with the Commercial Register (Handelsregister) and local trade office (Gewerbeamt), obtaining a tax and VAT number, registering with SOKA‑BAU (the German construction industry holiday and pension fund), and filing pre-posting notifications with German Customs (Zoll) before any workers set foot on a German site.

In 2026, enforcement of these obligations has intensified, with regulators focusing on foreign contractor compliance across SOKA‑BAU contributions, customs notifications, and construction withholding tax, making a consolidated, step-by-step understanding of the entire registration procedure essential for any international builder planning a German project.

Overview of the Registration Process and Who It Applies To

Who this guide applies to

This procedural guide is written for foreign general contractors, specialist subcontractors, and any overseas company that intends to carry out construction work in Germany, whether through a permanent establishment or by temporarily posting workers to a German project site. It covers both EU/EEA‑based companies (which benefit from freedom of establishment and free movement of services) and non‑EU companies (which face additional documentation and immigration requirements). The registration process described here applies equally to companies planning a single project engagement and those establishing an ongoing German presence.

Two paths: branch registration vs subsidiary formation

A foreign construction firm generally has two structural options. It can register a branch (Zweigniederlassung) of the existing foreign parent, which does not create a separate legal entity but does require Commercial Register entry and trade registration. Alternatively, it can incorporate a German subsidiary, typically a Gesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung (GmbH), which creates a distinct legal person with its own assets, liabilities, and tax obligations. A third possibility exists for very short‑term, temporary postings where the foreign company operates without forming a local entity, but even in this scenario SOKA‑BAU registration and customs notifications remain mandatory for construction‑sector work.

Quick-start checklist, 8 core steps

  • Step 1. Decide legal form (branch vs GmbH subsidiary).
  • Step 2. Prepare and notarise formation or branch registration documents.
  • Step 3. File with the Commercial Register (Handelsregister).
  • Step 4. Complete trade registration (Gewerbeanmeldung) at the local trade office.
  • Step 5. Register with the tax office (Finanzamt) for corporate tax and VAT.
  • Step 6. Register with SOKA‑BAU and notify German Customs (Generalzolldirektion).
  • Step 7. Obtain A1 social security certificates and file posting-of-workers notifications.
  • Step 8. Open a German bank account, set up payroll, and begin ongoing compliance.

Eligibility and Prerequisites for Registering a Foreign Construction Company in Germany

Branch vs subsidiary, decision factors

The choice between a branch and a GmbH subsidiary turns on several factors. A branch is faster and cheaper to establish, requires no separate share capital, and allows the foreign parent to operate directly under its existing legal identity. However, the parent company bears full liability for branch obligations, and some German public-sector tenders require bidders to hold a German corporate entity. A GmbH limits liability to the company’s assets, may enhance credibility with German clients and banks, and creates a clear separation of German‑source profits for tax purposes, but requires a minimum share capital of €25,000 under the GmbH Act (GmbHG), of which at least half (€12,500) must typically be paid in at formation.

There is no nationality restriction: foreign nationals and foreign legal entities may freely establish a GmbH in Germany.

Insurance and bonding

Before commencing construction work, the company must hold adequate professional liability insurance and, depending on the project scope, construction all‑risk (CAR) insurance. Many German principals and general contractors require evidence of insurance cover as a precondition for subcontract award. Foreign contractors posting workers must also ensure that workers’ compensation and occupational accident insurance arrangements comply with German requirements, even where workers remain covered by their home‑country social security system under an A1 certificate.

Local representation and bank account prerequisites

A branch must appoint at least one authorised representative (ständiger Vertreter) who is resident in Germany or can be served with legal process within the jurisdiction. A GmbH must appoint at least one managing director (Geschäftsführer), who need not be a German resident but must be able to act in Germany. Both structures require a German business address (a virtual office or registered-agent address may suffice for filing purposes, but a physical site is needed for trade registration). A German bank account is a practical prerequisite for paying taxes, SOKA‑BAU contributions, and payroll, though it is not a strict legal requirement for registration itself. Non‑EU companies may face extended KYC (know-your-customer) verification when opening a business account.

Step-by-Step Procedure to Register a Foreign Construction Company in Germany

The table below summarises the full registration procedure, identifying who is responsible for each step and the typical duration. Detailed guidance for each step follows.

Step Who does it Typical duration
1. Choose legal form (branch vs subsidiary) Company owners / legal counsel 1–7 days (decision)
2. Draft & notarise incorporation / branch documents Company + German notary 3–14 days (preparation & appointment)
3. File with Commercial Register (Handelsregister) Notary (files electronically) 1–3 weeks (registry processing)
4. Trade registration (Gewerbeanmeldung) Local authorised representative Same day – 1 week
5. Tax & VAT registration (Finanzamt / BZSt) Company / tax adviser 1–4 weeks (varies by office)
6. Register with SOKA‑BAU / notify German Customs Employer / representative Prior to posting; processing typically immediate – 2 weeks
7. Obtain A1 certificates & file posting notifications Employer / home-country social security authority Must be obtained before posting (times vary by home country)
8. Open local bank account & set up payroll Company / bank / payroll provider 1–4 weeks (KYC delays possible)
9. Ongoing reporting & payments Company / accountant Recurring (monthly / quarterly / annual)

Step 1, Decide legal form: branch vs GmbH subsidiary

Assess whether the German engagement is project‑specific or long-term, the level of liability separation needed, the expectations of German contracting partners, and the tax implications of each structure. Where a company will undertake multiple projects or employ German‑resident staff long-term, a GmbH subsidiary is usually preferable. For a single, time‑limited project where the contractor posts its own workforce, a branch or even direct cross‑border service provision (without a permanent entity) may be sufficient, though SOKA‑BAU and customs obligations still apply. Engage German legal counsel at this stage to model the permanent establishment and tax consequences of each option.

Step 2, Prepare formation documents and notarise

For a GmbH, the articles of association (Gesellschaftsvertrag) must be drafted and executed before a German notary. The notary will also authenticate the appointment of managing directors and the shareholders’ resolution. If a shareholder or director cannot attend in person, a notarised and apostilled power of attorney must be prepared in advance. For a branch, the parent company must issue a board resolution authorising the establishment of the German branch and appoint an authorised representative, again by notarised and apostilled instrument. All foreign‑language documents require certified German translations. Documents issued outside Hague Convention countries require consular legalisation rather than an apostille.

Step 3, File with the Commercial Register (Handelsregister)

The German notary submits the registration application electronically to the competent local court (Amtsgericht). For a GmbH, the filing includes the notarised articles of association, proof of share capital deposit, list of shareholders, and managing directors’ details. For a branch, the filing includes the parent company’s foreign commercial register extract (not older than one month), translated and legalised, together with the branch authorisation resolution and representative appointment. Processing by the Handelsregister typically takes one to three weeks, though delays can occur if the court requests supplementary documents. The company or branch may not formally commence trading under its registered name until the entry is published.

Step 4, Complete trade registration (Gewerbeanmeldung)

Once the Commercial Register entry is confirmed (or, for sole traders and certain branch operations, immediately upon commencing business), the company must register with the local trade office (Gewerbeamt) under §14 GewO (Trade Regulation Act). The Gewerbeanmeldung is a straightforward administrative filing that can often be completed in person or online on the same day. The fee is typically €20–60, varying by municipality. The Gewerbeamt will forward the registration to the tax office, the local chamber of commerce (IHK or HWK), and the professional liability insurer’s register. Construction companies may be required to register with the Handwerkskammer (Chamber of Skilled Trades) if the work falls within a regulated skilled trade (zulassungspflichtiges Handwerk).

Step 5, Register with the tax office (Finanzamt) for corporate tax and VAT

The local Finanzamt will issue a tax questionnaire (Fragebogen zur steuerlichen Erfassung) shortly after receiving notice from the Gewerbeamt. The company must complete this to receive its German tax identification number and, where applicable, a VAT identification number (USt‑IdNr). Foreign companies without a fixed establishment in Germany that make taxable supplies there must register for VAT with the Federal Central Tax Office (BZSt) or the competent Finanzamt. VAT registration is free of charge; the standard German VAT rate is 19%. Processing times vary from one to four weeks depending on the tax office.

For construction work, the reverse-charge mechanism (§13b UStG) often applies, shifting the VAT obligation to the German recipient of the construction service, but the foreign company must still hold a VAT number and file returns.

Step 6, Register with SOKA‑BAU and notify German Customs (Generalzolldirektion)

Any employer carrying out construction work in Germany, including foreign employers temporarily posting workers, must register with SOKA‑BAU, the German construction industry’s collectively agreed holiday pay and pension fund scheme. Registration is submitted through SOKA‑BAU International. The obligation arises from the German Posted Workers Act (AEntG) and the applicable collective bargaining agreements for the construction sector (Bundesrahmentarifvertrag für das Baugewerbe). SOKA‑BAU contributions cover holiday pay and supplementary pension entitlements for posted construction workers and are calculated as a percentage of gross wages.

Separately, before the first worker is posted to Germany, the employer must submit a posting notification to the Generalzolldirektion (German Customs / Zoll). This notification must include details of the posting employer, the posted workers, the German principal, the worksite address, and the anticipated duration of work. Failure to register with SOKA‑BAU or notify Customs before posting can result in significant fines and on‑site project stoppages. Further context on Germany’s 2026 compliance changes is available in our dedicated guide.

Step 7, Obtain A1 social security certificates and file posting-of-workers notifications

Workers posted from an EU/EEA member state or a country with a bilateral social security agreement must carry an A1 certificate (or equivalent) confirming that they remain subject to their home‑country social security system. The A1 is issued by the competent social security institution in the worker’s home country and must be obtained before the posting begins. In addition, the employer must keep German‑language payroll records at the worksite (or at a designated German address) documenting working hours, wages paid, and compliance with the collectively agreed minimum conditions under the AEntG. For an overview of construction law terminology, including terms used in German posting requirements, see our glossary.

Step 8, Open a German bank account, set up payroll, and begin ongoing compliance

A German business bank account is needed to pay SOKA‑BAU contributions, employee wages, taxes, and statutory levies. Opening an account as a foreign company can take one to four weeks due to KYC verification, particularly for non‑EU entities. Payroll must be set up in accordance with German wage tax (Lohnsteuer) and social security withholding requirements. Monthly or quarterly VAT returns must be filed, and SOKA‑BAU contributions must be paid on an ongoing basis. Employers are also required to register their workers for occupational health and safety with the relevant trade association (Berufsgenossenschaft der Bauwirtschaft, BG BAU).

Required Documents to Register a Foreign Construction Company in Germany

The documents needed vary depending on whether the foreign company is forming a GmbH, registering a branch, or posting workers without a local entity. The table below consolidates all core documents. All foreign-language documents must be accompanied by certified German translations. Documents from non‑Hague Convention countries require consular legalisation; all others need an apostille.

Document Notes (issuer / format / validity)
Extract from foreign commercial register (parent company) Official extract, not older than 1 month. Translated and legalised/apostilled. Issuer: foreign registry.
Passport or national ID of directors / authorised signatories Certified copy; translation required if not in German or English.
Articles of association / incorporation deed For GmbH: must be notarised in Germany. For branch: parent’s articles, translated and apostilled.
Notarial power of attorney (if signatory is abroad) Notarised + apostille/legalisation. Must authorise the representative to act before German notary and authorities.
Proof of German business address Lease agreement or landlord confirmation letter.
Board resolution authorising German branch or subsidiary Notarised; translated. Issuer: parent company board.
Gewerbeanmeldung (trade registration receipt) Issued by local Gewerbeamt upon registration.
VAT registration confirmation (USt-IdNr) Issued by Finanzamt or BZSt.
SOKA‑BAU registration confirmation Issued by SOKA‑BAU International after employer registration.
A1 certificate (for each posted worker) Issued by home-country social security authority. Must be obtained before posting commences.
Proof of insurance (professional liability / CAR) Policy certificates; may need German-language summary for principals.
Work permits / immigration documents (non-EEA workers only) Required if workers are not EEA or Swiss nationals. Check Vander Elst visa rules for posted third-country nationals.

Industry observers note that the most common cause of registration delay is incomplete or improperly legalised foreign documents. Engaging a German notary and a specialist translator early in the process, before the notary appointment, can reduce turnaround by several weeks.

Timeline and Key Deadlines for the Registration Process

The overall timeline to complete the full registration procedure and be operationally ready depends on the chosen legal form and the responsiveness of foreign authorities providing legalised documents. The sample timelines below illustrate a realistic schedule for each path.

Sample timeline, GmbH subsidiary (from decision to first day on site):

  • Weeks 1–2: Legal form decision, drafting articles of association, gathering and translating parent-company documents, scheduling notary appointment.
  • Weeks 2–3: Notary appointment; execution of articles; deposit of share capital (at least €12,500).
  • Weeks 3–5: Handelsregister filing and processing (1–3 weeks); Gewerbeanmeldung (same day once Handelsregister entry confirmed).
  • Weeks 4–7: Tax and VAT registration; SOKA‑BAU registration; customs posting notification; A1 certificate applications.
  • Weeks 6–9: Bank account opening, payroll setup, insurance confirmation. Operations may commence once all registrations are in place.

Sample timeline, branch registration (typically 1–2 weeks shorter):

  • Weeks 1–2: Board resolution and power of attorney; document legalisation and translation.
  • Weeks 2–4: Handelsregister filing, Gewerbeanmeldung, tax registration.
  • Weeks 3–5: SOKA‑BAU, customs, A1 certificates, bank account, payroll.

Critical statutory deadlines to note: the Gewerbeanmeldung must be filed before the company begins commercial operations. SOKA‑BAU registration and the customs posting notification must both be completed before the first posted worker starts work on a German site. VAT registration should be obtained before the company issues its first German invoice or, at the latest, within one month of commencing taxable activity. VAT returns are filed monthly during the first two calendar years, then quarterly or monthly depending on the assessed VAT liability. Further detail on recent construction law changes in Germany can help contractors plan around evolving filing obligations.

Costs, Fees, and Tax Considerations for Foreign Construction Companies in Germany

Registration costs include a mixture of fixed government fees, professional service charges, and ongoing variable obligations. The table below summarises the principal cost items.

Item Amount (indicative) Notes
Gewerbeanmeldung (trade registration) €20–60 Paid to local Gewerbeamt; varies by municipality.
Notary fees + Handelsregister filing €300–1,200 Depends on share capital and complexity. Notary fees set by statute (GNotKG); registry fees separate.
GmbH minimum share capital €25,000 (minimum) At least €12,500 typically paid in at formation (§5 GmbHG). Full amount must be paid in over time.
VAT registration €0 No registration fee. Standard German VAT rate: 19%.
SOKA‑BAU contributions Variable (% of gross wages) Holiday pay and pension fund contributions calculated on payroll. Rates set by collective agreement; confirm with SOKA‑BAU.
Tax adviser / accountant, initial setup €500–3,000 One-off advisory, registration assistance, and payroll configuration.
German bank account opening €0–200 Account fees vary; non-EU companies may face additional KYC requirements and longer processing.
Fines for non-registration (Customs / SOKA‑BAU) Variable, potentially significant Customs fines for failure to notify can reach tens of thousands of euros. SOKA‑BAU may pursue unpaid contributions plus interest.

Permanent establishment risk and tax exposure

A foreign construction company that maintains a fixed place of business in Germany, or whose construction site or project lasts longer than the threshold specified in the applicable double taxation agreement (typically 6 or 12 months), may create a permanent establishment (PE) under German domestic law (§12 AO) and/or the relevant tax treaty. A PE triggers German corporate income tax (Körperschaftsteuer, 15% plus solidarity surcharge) and trade tax (Gewerbesteuer, typically 14–17% depending on the municipality) on profits attributable to the German activity.

The company should also be aware of the construction withholding tax (Bauabzugsteuer) under §48 EStG, which requires German clients receiving construction services to withhold 15% of the gross payment unless the foreign contractor holds a valid exemption certificate (Freistellungsbescheinigung) from the Finanzamt. Obtaining this certificate early in the registration process is strongly recommended. For broader context on German regulatory compliance, see our guide to pay transparency obligations in Germany and the market access and reimbursement framework.

What Changes in 2026 for Foreign Construction Companies in Germany

The 2026 regulatory environment brings several developments that foreign construction contractors must factor into the registration process:

  • Heightened SOKA‑BAU enforcement. SOKA‑BAU has increased its scrutiny of foreign employers, with more systematic cross‑referencing of customs posting notifications against SOKA‑BAU registration records. Companies that post workers without registering, or that under‑report payroll, face accelerated enforcement proceedings and potential claims for back contributions plus interest. Early indications suggest that SOKA‑BAU is also expanding its multilingual compliance outreach to employers in central and eastern European EU member states.
  • Customs (Zoll) pre-posting notification enforcement. The Generalzolldirektion has reinforced its expectations that every posting to a German construction site must be notified in advance, with complete data on each posted worker. On‑site inspections by Zoll’s Financial Control of Undeclared Work unit (Finanzkontrolle Schwarzarbeit, FKS) have been intensified, and inspectors now routinely check for both the customs notification and valid A1 certificates.
  • VAT and construction withholding scrutiny. Tax authorities are paying closer attention to the construction supply chain, particularly reverse-charge compliance and the Bauabzugsteuer exemption certificate process. The likely practical effect is that foreign contractors without a Freistellungsbescheinigung will face more frequent withholding by German principals, reducing cash flow and requiring claims for refund. Industry observers expect this trend to continue as part of broader federal efforts to combat tax evasion in the construction sector.
  • Posted workers’ minimum conditions. The collectively agreed minimum wages and supplementary conditions applicable to the German construction sector are updated periodically. Contractors should verify the current rates via SOKA‑BAU and the Federal Ministry of Labour before each new posting period.

Given the pace of regulatory change, foreign contractors planning to register a construction company in Germany in 2026 should consult the official SOKA‑BAU, Zoll, and Finanzamt guidance portals directly, and engage German legal counsel to confirm that no new obligations have taken effect since this article’s publication date.

Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

  • Late or missing SOKA‑BAU / Customs registration. This is the single most common compliance failure for foreign construction contractors. Both registrations must be completed before the first posted worker starts work. If you discover the omission after work has commenced, file immediately, notify SOKA‑BAU proactively, and seek legal advice on mitigating penalties.
  • Missing A1 certificates at the worksite. Workers must carry valid A1 certificates at all times while on a German site. FKS inspectors check for these on the spot. If a certificate has not yet been issued, postpone the worker’s deployment until it arrives.
  • Improper trade classification. Registering under the wrong trade category at the Gewerbeamt, or failing to register with the Handwerkskammer for regulated trades, can result in fines and an order to cease operations. Ensure the Gewerbeanmeldung accurately reflects the construction activities to be performed.
  • Poor record-keeping for posted workers. German law requires detailed working-time and pay records to be maintained in German, either at the worksite or at a designated German address. Incomplete records are treated as a presumption of non‑compliance.
  • Ignoring permanent establishment triggers. A project that extends beyond the treaty threshold, or a branch that takes on characteristics of a fixed place of business, can inadvertently create a taxable PE. Structure contracts carefully and monitor project durations. Where multiple projects overlap at the same location, seek a tax opinion on aggregation risk.
  • Failure to obtain a Freistellungsbescheinigung for construction withholding tax. Without this exemption certificate, German clients are legally required to withhold 15% of gross payments. Apply for the certificate as part of Step 5 (tax registration) to avoid cash‑flow disruption from the outset.

As a general rule, engaging German construction law and tax counsel before the first contract is signed, not after the first worker is deployed, prevents the majority of these pitfalls. Use the Global Law Experts lawyer directory to find a qualified construction law specialist in Germany.

Conclusion

Understanding how to register a foreign construction company in Germany is the first, and most critical, step toward operating lawfully and competitively in one of Europe’s largest construction markets. The registration process spans legal form selection, Commercial Register and trade office filings, tax and VAT registration, SOKA‑BAU enrolment, customs posting notifications, and ongoing payroll and compliance obligations. Each step carries specific document requirements, deadlines, and enforcement consequences, particularly in 2026, as German regulators intensify their focus on foreign contractor compliance.

By following the procedural sequence set out in this guide, preparing the required documents in advance, and engaging qualified German legal and tax counsel early, foreign construction companies can establish their German operations efficiently and avoid the costly pitfalls that routinely affect unprepared entrants.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Atif Yildirim at SMNG Rechtsanwaltsgesellschaft mbH, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. SOKA‑BAU International, Employer Registration
  2. German Customs (Zoll), Posting of Workers and Notifications
  3. Germany Trade & Invest (GTAI), Company Set Up in Germany
  4. Handelsregister, Commercial Register Information
  5. Federal Central Tax Office (BZSt)
  6. GmbH Act (GmbHG)
  7. AEntG, German Posted Workers Act
  8. Firma.de, Company Formation Checklist

FAQs

How do I register a foreign construction company in Germany, branch or subsidiary?
You can either register a branch (Zweigniederlassung) of your existing company or incorporate a new German subsidiary, typically a GmbH. A branch is faster and requires no separate share capital, while a GmbH provides limited liability and may be preferred for long‑term operations or public tenders. Both routes require Commercial Register entry, trade registration, tax registration, and, for construction work, SOKA‑BAU registration and customs notification.
Core documents include a recent extract from your home-country commercial register (not older than one month), notarised articles of association or branch resolution, passport copies of directors, proof of a German business address, and a power of attorney if signatories cannot attend the German notary in person. All documents must be translated into German by a certified translator and apostilled or legalised. See the full documents table above for the complete list.
Yes, if you make taxable supplies in Germany. Even where the reverse-charge mechanism shifts the VAT payment obligation to the German recipient of construction services (under §13b UStG), the foreign company must hold a German VAT identification number and file periodic VAT returns. Registration is free and is processed by the local Finanzamt or the BZSt.
Both registrations must be completed before the first posted worker starts work on a German construction site. SOKA‑BAU registration is submitted through the SOKA‑BAU International portal. The customs posting notification is filed with the Generalzolldirektion (Zoll). These are separate filings, completion of one does not satisfy the other.
Failure to register with SOKA‑BAU can result in enforcement proceedings for unpaid holiday and pension contributions, plus interest and penalties. Failure to file the customs posting notification is an administrative offence that can attract fines of up to €500,000 in serious cases under the AEntG. On‑site inspections by the FKS can also lead to immediate work stoppages and worker removal orders.
Ideally, before committing to a German contract. A German construction lawyer can advise on the optimal legal form, PE risk, and posting compliance from the outset. A tax adviser should be engaged no later than Step 5 (tax and VAT registration) to ensure correct structuring and to apply for the Freistellungsbescheinigung in time. Early professional engagement typically costs far less than remedying compliance failures after the fact.
By Awatif Al Khouri

posted 4 hours ago

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How to Register a Foreign Construction Company in Germany, Step-by-step

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