Our Expert in Philippines
No results available
Last updated: July 8, 2026
Every solo tech founder in the Philippines faces the same early fork in the road: register a simple sole proprietorship with the DTI, or incorporate a One Person Corporation (OPC) through the SEC. The OPC vs sole proprietorship Philippines 2026 decision turns on five concrete variables, personal liability exposure, corporate income tax rates under the CREATE Act (Republic Act No. 11534), compliance costs, investor readiness, and speed to launch. This guide puts the two structures side by side with actual tax figures, a worked scenario, and a clear “choose X when…” framework so you can stop researching and start building.
The short answer: if you plan to raise outside capital, hire employees, or hold valuable IP within the next 12 months, incorporate as an OPC now. If you are pre-revenue and testing product-market fit with no significant contractual exposure, start as a sole proprietor and convert later. The sections below show exactly why, and when the numbers flip.
A sole proprietorship in the Philippines is not a separate legal entity. The business and the owner are legally identical, every contract, every debt, and every lawsuit sits directly on the founder’s personal name. The business has no perpetual existence: it terminates on the owner’s death or voluntary closure, and there is no statutory mechanism for share transfer or succession planning beyond a new registration by heirs.
Stay a sole proprietor when you are very early stage, pre-revenue, running a low-risk freelance or consulting operation, and have no plans for outside funding in the near term.
The OPC was introduced by Republic Act No. 11232, the Revised Corporation Code (RCC), which took effect in 2019. Sections 116 through 131 of the RCC permit a single natural person, a Filipino citizen or a resident alien (subject to the Foreign Investment Negative List), to form a corporation with a single stockholder. The OPC is a separate juridical person with perpetual existence. The founder must designate a nominee and an alternate nominee who can step in if the sole shareholder becomes permanently incapacitated or dies.
Register as an OPC when you expect to hire, raise capital, sign material contracts, or need liability protection, in short, whenever the stakes of the business outgrow what a sole proprietorship can safely carry.
The table below is the centrepiece of this comparison. Use it as a quick-reference checklist, then read the dimension-by-dimension analysis that follows for worked numbers and practical guidance.
| Dimension | Sole Proprietorship | One Person Corporation (OPC) |
|---|---|---|
| Legal form & continuity | Not a separate legal entity; business = owner; terminates on death. | Separate juridical person; perpetual existence; nominee ensures continuity (RCC Sections 116–131). |
| Liability | Unlimited personal liability for all business debts and suits. | Limited to corporate assets; personal assets protected except in fraud, bad faith, or undercapitalization. |
| Tax regime (2026) | Taxed under personal income tax (progressive rates up to 35%). OSD election available (40% of gross sales/receipts). | Taxed as domestic corporation: RCIT 25% (standard) or 20% for small corps (net taxable income ≤ ₱5 M and total assets ≤ ₱100 M, excluding land). MCIT at 2% of gross income. OSD election available (40% of gross income). |
| Setup cost & formalities | DTI name registration + mayor’s permit + BIR registration. Low upfront cost (typically under ₱5,000). | SEC registration (Articles of Incorporation, nominee docs) + mayor’s permit + BIR registration. Higher upfront cost; SEC filing and documentary stamp fees apply. |
| Annual compliance cost | Municipal renewal + simple BIR filings. Minimal accounting. | SEC annual reportorial filings (GIS, AFS), BIR Form 1702 quarterly/annually, corporate bookkeeping. Typical annual accounting/compliance cost for a small tech startup: ₱30,000–₱80,000 (estimate; varies by complexity). |
| Investor readiness / funding | Cannot issue shares or split equity. Poor for external investors. | Clear share structure. Convertible to ordinary corporation to onboard investors. Suitable for pre-seed and seed rounds. |
| Transferability / exit | Only asset sale; no share transfer. Continuity issues on death. | Shares transferable. Conversion and dissolution formalized under RCC. Option to close the business through SEC procedures. |
| Audit / reporting | Simpler filings; less formal statutory reporting obligations. | Mandatory SEC reportorial requirements; financial statement review or audit depending on revenue/asset size thresholds. |
| Suitability for tech startups | Micro, pre-revenue, solo freelancing with no external contracts of substance. | Founders who will hire, take investment, hold IP, or face contractual liability. |
You are building a SaaS MVP nights and weekends. Revenue is zero. You have no employees, no external contracts beyond a hosting provider, and no plans to raise capital in the next 12 months. A sole proprietorship is the right starting point: low cost, no SEC compliance overhead, and you can convert to an OPC later when traction justifies the upgrade. The unlimited liability risk is manageable because there is minimal contractual or financial exposure at this stage.
You have a working product, early paying customers generating ₱200,000 per month, and two angel investors ready to discuss a pre-seed round. You need to issue convertible notes or SAFEs, hold the codebase in a corporate name, and hire your first two developers. Choose the OPC. Limited liability protects your personal assets if a client dispute or employment claim arises. The corporate structure lets you convert to a regular stock corporation when the investor is ready to take equity. The incremental compliance cost, roughly ₱30,000 to ₱80,000 per year for accounting and SEC filings, is negligible relative to the protection and credibility the OPC provides.
This section breaks each decision dimension into practical terms, starting with the tax numbers most founders ask about first.
The tax math is the dimension where most founders get stuck. Under the CREATE Act (RA 11534), the OPC’s corporate tax position differs materially from the sole proprietor’s personal income tax position. The table below lays out the headline rates and the Optional Standard Deduction mechanics for each.
| Item | Sole Proprietorship | OPC (Corporate Tax Rules) |
|---|---|---|
| Headline income tax rate (2026) | Progressive personal income tax: 0%–35% depending on taxable income bracket. | RCIT: 25% (standard). 20% for domestic corps with net taxable income ≤ ₱5 M and total assets ≤ ₱100 M (excluding land), per RA 11534. |
| Minimum Corporate Income Tax (MCIT) | Not applicable. | 2% of gross income, applies beginning the 4th taxable year if MCIT exceeds RCIT. (Rate reverted from 1% back to 2% effective July 1, 2023.) |
| Optional Standard Deduction (OSD) | 40% of gross sales or gross receipts, in lieu of itemized deductions (election made on BIR Form 1701). | 40% of gross income, in lieu of itemized deductions (election made on BIR Form 1702). Legal basis: Revenue Regulations No. 16-2008 as amended; election irrevocable for the taxable year. |
| Percentage tax / VAT | 3% percentage tax if gross sales ≤ ₱3 M (non-VAT); 12% VAT if above threshold. | Same VAT/percentage tax rules apply to the OPC as a domestic corporation. |
Worked example, ₱5,000,000 gross revenue, ₱2,000,000 actual expenses:
Sole proprietor (using OSD): OSD = 40% × ₱5,000,000 = ₱2,000,000. Net taxable income = ₱3,000,000. Under the progressive personal income tax table, the tax due on ₱3,000,000 of taxable income falls largely in the 30%–32% effective range (the exact amount depends on the individual’s other income and applicable brackets). Rough estimate: approximately ₱600,000–₱650,000 in income tax.
OPC (using OSD, qualifying for 20% rate): Gross income = ₱5,000,000 − ₱0 cost of sales (for a pure-service tech startup) = ₱5,000,000. OSD = 40% × ₱5,000,000 = ₱2,000,000. Net taxable income = ₱3,000,000. If the OPC qualifies for the 20% reduced rate (net taxable income ≤ ₱5 M and total assets ≤ ₱100 M): tax due = 20% × ₱3,000,000 = ₱600,000. If the standard 25% rate applies: tax due = ₱750,000.
At this revenue level, the OPC at the 20% reduced rate matches or slightly beats the sole proprietor’s personal income tax liability, with the added benefit of limited liability. As revenue grows above ₱5 million in net taxable income, the OPC loses access to the 20% band and pays 25%, but the sole proprietor’s marginal rate can reach 35%. Run your own numbers with a licensed tax adviser before committing.
Setup and recurring compliance are meaningfully heavier for the OPC. Here is a practical comparison of the steps involved.
Recurring annual obligations for the OPC include filing the General Information Sheet with the SEC, submitting audited or reviewed financial statements (thresholds determine which), filing BIR Form 1702 quarterly and annually, and maintaining corporate books. Industry observers estimate that a small tech startup’s annual accounting and compliance spend for an OPC runs ₱30,000 to ₱80,000, a meaningful overhead for a bootstrapped founder but a rounding error once revenue exceeds ₱1 million per year.
This is the dimension where the OPC wins unconditionally. A sole proprietor is personally liable for every peso the business owes, a single breach-of-contract claim or employment dispute can reach personal bank accounts, real property, and vehicles. The OPC, as a separate juridical entity, limits creditor recourse to corporate assets. Philippine courts will pierce the corporate veil only where there is fraud, illegality, or the entity is used as a mere alter ego, a high bar when the corporation is properly maintained. Founders who sign personal guarantees (common in landlord leases or supplier credit lines) surrender this protection for the guaranteed obligation, so structure guarantees carefully.
A sole proprietorship can be fully operational within three to five business days (DTI online registration is often same-day; mayor’s permit takes one to three days in most LGUs). An OPC typically takes one to three weeks, SEC online filing and processing, notarization of documents, and LGU permits. The SEC’s Company Registration System (CRS) has shortened processing times, but delays can occur during peak filing periods. If speed-to-market is your only constraint, start as a sole proprietor and convert to an OPC once the business stabilizes.
A sole proprietorship cannot issue shares, grant stock options, or accommodate convertible instruments, any investor conversation ends before it starts. The OPC issues a single block of shares to the founder; when outside capital arrives, the RCC provides a conversion path from OPC to an ordinary stock corporation by amending the Articles of Incorporation with the SEC. This conversion is well-trodden and predictable. For founders planning to register a corporate presence with the SEC and eventually raise a seed round, starting as an OPC avoids the friction, and legal cost, of a later sole-proprietor-to-corporation migration, which requires dissolving the sole proprietorship and incorporating fresh.
The CREATE Act (RA 11534), which took effect on April 11, 2021, permanently reset the corporate income tax framework that governs OPCs. Two provisions are particularly relevant for the OPC vs sole proprietorship Philippines 2026 decision:
The OSD election (40%) remains available to both sole proprietors and corporate taxpayers under existing BIR regulations (Revenue Regulations No. 16-2008 as amended). The likely practical effect for most small-scale tech OPCs is that combining the 20% reduced RCIT rate with the OSD produces a competitive effective tax rate, but only if actual expenses are below the 40% OSD threshold. Where actual expenses exceed 40% of gross income, itemized deductions yield a lower taxable base, making the OPC’s flexibility to choose between OSD and itemized deductions each year a tangible advantage.
Use the table below to match your current situation to the right entity. This is the core OPC vs sole proprietorship Philippines 2026 decision framework.
| If your priority is… | Choose… |
|---|---|
| Minimise setup cost and admin; you are testing product-market fit with minimal financial risk | Sole proprietorship, start simple, defer incorporation until regular revenue or investor interest materialises. |
| Protect personal assets and limit liability from contracts, employment claims, or IP disputes | OPC, separate juridical personality and limited creditor recourse (subject to veil-piercing exceptions). |
| Raise external capital, issue convertible notes, or offer equity to co-founders | OPC (convert to ordinary stock corporation when investors come in), clear share structure and RCC conversion path. |
| Optimise tax at revenue below ₱5 M net taxable income with moderate expenses | OPC at the 20% reduced rate, run the numbers vs personal income tax brackets. OPC + OSD often wins at this band. |
| Keep accounting as light as possible; annual revenue under ₱500,000 | Sole proprietorship, compliance savings outweigh the marginal tax benefit of the OPC at very low revenue. |
| Ensure business continuity after your death or plan an eventual sale | OPC, perpetual existence, nominee mechanism, and formal share transfer rules. |
If you answered yes to two or more of these questions, incorporate as an OPC now. The cost premium is modest relative to the risk mitigation and structural advantages.
Many founders can register a sole proprietorship without legal help. However, engage a Philippine corporate lawyer before you proceed in these specific situations:
Bring the following to your first consultation: a 12-month revenue forecast, your intended ownership structure (solo or eventual co-founders), a list of material contracts you expect to sign, and the current status of any IP.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Joseph James Joaquino Jr at AJA Law (Alcantara Joaquino Alcantara Law), a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 20 minutes ago
posted 30 minutes ago
posted 30 minutes ago
posted 45 minutes ago
posted 57 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message