Yes a UK company non resident founder can absolutely incorporate a limited company in England, Wales, Scotland or Northern Ireland. There is no statutory requirement for directors or shareholders to be UK residents. However, the process is no longer as frictionless as it once was. Since the rollout of Companies House identity verification requirements from late 2025, combined with intensified bank KYC scrutiny and evolving corporation tax enforcement by HMRC, non‑resident founders face meaningful compliance hurdles at every stage from incorporation and ID checks through to opening a business bank account and managing cross‑border tax exposure. This guide sets out the eligibility rules, procedural steps, costs, tax implications and banking pathways that non‑resident entrepreneurs and their advisers need to navigate in 2026.
The short legal answer is yes. The Companies Act 2006 does not impose any nationality or residency requirement on directors or shareholders of a UK limited company. A sole director who lives anywhere in the world can incorporate a company through Companies House, provided they meet the general eligibility criteria (aged 16 or over, not disqualified from acting as a director) and supply all required information on the IN01 incorporation form.
There is, however, an important distinction between incorporating a new UK company and registering a UK establishment of an existing overseas company. If a company already incorporated abroad wishes to open a permanent place of business or branch in the UK, it must file form OS IN01 with Companies House and comply with ongoing overseas company reporting obligations. The two routes carry different filing requirements, fee structures and tax consequences.
Any individual aged 16 or over can serve as a director of a UK limited company, regardless of nationality or country of residence. There is no requirement for at least one director to be UK‑based. However, every director owes statutory duties under the Companies Act 2006 including the duty to promote the success of the company, exercise independent judgement, and avoid conflicts of interest. These duties apply with full force to non‑resident directors and can give rise to personal civil and criminal liability in the UK.
Individuals who have been disqualified by a UK court, or who are subject to equivalent disqualification orders in certain overseas jurisdictions, are prohibited from acting as directors. A bankruptcy restriction order may also bar appointment.
There are no statutory nationality or residency restrictions on owning shares in a UK company. Non‑residents can hold any class and quantity of shares. However, beneficial ownership must be declared on the company’s PSC (Persons with Significant Control) register where an individual holds more than 25% of shares, more than 25% of voting rights, or otherwise exercises significant influence or control over the company. The PSC register is publicly accessible at Companies House, and failure to maintain it accurately is a criminal offence.
Non‑residents sometimes appoint nominee directors or shareholders individuals who act on their behalf. While nominee arrangements are not inherently unlawful, they carry significant legal risks. A nominee director still owes the full range of statutory duties and can face personal liability for company decisions. PSC transparency obligations mean that the true beneficial owner must still be disclosed; using nominees to conceal beneficial ownership is a criminal offence. Nominee arrangements should only be established where they are lawful, fully documented with appropriate powers of attorney, and compliant with anti‑money laundering regulations.
Every UK company must maintain a registered office address in the same part of the United Kingdom where it is registered for example, an England‑and‑Wales company must have an address in England or Wales. The registered office address is publicly displayed on the Companies House register and used for statutory correspondence.
As explained in the Companies Act 2006 Explanatory Notes, directors may also supply a “service address” that is shown on public records instead of their usual residential address, protecting personal privacy. For non‑residents, the most common options are:
The Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023 introduced mandatory identity verification for anyone seeking to form, manage or control a UK company. The rollout has been phased: voluntary verification launched on 8 April 2025; mandatory verification for new directors, PSCs and those delivering documents began on 18 November 2025, with ongoing expansion into 2026 and beyond.
For non‑resident founders, identity verification is the single biggest procedural change. There are two routes:
As Companies House has confirmed, identity verification now applies to all new directors, all PSCs, and any person who files documents at Companies House. For a typical UK company non resident incorporation, this means the founding director(s), any PSC(s), and the person submitting the IN01 form must all have verified identities before the filing will be accepted. Non‑residents relying on the ACSP route should factor in additional processing time typically two to fourteen days and ensure they have colour passport scans and proof of address ready in advance.
A company incorporated in the UK is automatically UK tax resident and liable to corporation tax on its worldwide profits, unless it is treated as non‑resident under an applicable double taxation treaty. Even where a company is incorporated overseas, it will be treated as UK‑resident if its “central management and control” is exercised in the UK for example, if strategic board decisions are made from a UK location.
After incorporation, the company must register for corporation tax with HMRC (within three months of commencing business) and will receive a Unique Taxpayer Reference (UTR). Corporation tax returns must be filed annually, and the current main rate of corporation tax stands at 25% for companies with profits exceeding £250,000.
Non‑resident directors who receive remuneration for duties performed in the UK may trigger PAYE and National Insurance obligations. Where a director is employed and any part of their duties are performed in the UK, the company must register as an employer, operate PAYE and account for employer and employee National Insurance contributions on UK‑sourced earnings. Careful analysis of where duties are actually performed including board meetings and signing authority is essential to avoid unexpected payroll liabilities.
Dividends paid to non‑resident shareholders are generally not subject to UK withholding tax. However, the shareholder’s home country may tax dividend income under its own rules. The UK has an extensive network of double taxation treaties that may provide relief from double taxation on corporate profits, employment income and dividends. Non‑resident founders should obtain cross‑border tax advice before incorporation to ensure the chosen structure is tax‑efficient in both the UK and their country of residence. The value of early UK corporation tax planning for non‑resident companies cannot be overstated.
UK banks assess non‑resident company applications against their internal risk appetite and regulatory obligations under the FCA’s customer due diligence expectations. Non‑resident ownership, lack of UK trading history and complex multi‑jurisdictional structures are all factors that can lead to application refusal or lengthy enhanced due diligence. The FCA’s 2025–2026 thematic work on financial crime controls has further heightened scrutiny, particularly at challenger banks and fintech providers.
The Companies House filing fee for incorporation ranges from £12 (standard online) to approximately £50–£124 depending on the service level and filing method. Registered office and mail forwarding services typically cost £50–£400 per year. ACSP identity verification fees vary by provider. Lawyer‑led incorporation and compliance packages command a premium but include bespoke articles, tax structuring advice, KYC preparation and ongoing compliance support.
Where nominee arrangements are used, proper legal documentation including powers of attorney, nominee agreements and clear PSC disclosures must be in place. Nominee services should only be engaged where the arrangement is lawful, fully transparent to Companies House and HMRC, and documented to the standard required by anti‑money laundering regulations.
| Route | Typical Cost | IDV Route | Speed | Best For | Legal & Tax Cover |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GOV.UK online DIY | Low (£12–£50) | Director via GOV.UK One Login | Same day (if ID verified) | Simple single‑owner setups | Minimal no bespoke tax advice |
| Formation agent / ACSP | Medium | ACSP verifies and files | 1–5 days | Non‑residents needing operational support | Good operational support; limited legal advice |
| Lawyer‑led formation | Higher (fixed + hourly) | Law firm / ACSP route with KYC pack | 2–10 days | Complex ownership / cross‑border tax planning | Full legal & tax risk mitigation |
Case A Hidden Beneficial Ownership: A non‑resident founder appointed a UK nominee director without disclosing beneficial ownership on the PSC register. Companies House and HMRC opened concurrent investigations, resulting in penalties, enforced disclosure and reputational damage that delayed the company’s commercial contracts for months.
Case B Unplanned Dual Tax Residency: A sole non‑resident director of a UK company began holding board meetings and signing contracts from their home country without tax advice. The company was held to be dual‑resident taxable in both the UK and the director’s home jurisdiction creating double taxation that could have been avoided with early treaty planning.
Case C Bank Account Refusal: A newly incorporated UK company applied for a business bank account but was refused because its KYC submission lacked PSC transparency and source‑of‑funds evidence. Trading was stalled for ten weeks while documentation was remediated, causing loss of a key client contract and significant reputational harm.
To be eligible to form a UK company as a non‑resident, the following conditions and rules apply:
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