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Registering a company in Uganda starts with the Uganda Registration Services Bureau (URSB), and the total cost is determined by a combination of statutory fees, stamp duty and often-overlooked ancillary charges. For the 2026 financial year, the core URSB company registration fees range from approximately UGX 140,000 for the smallest private limited company to well over UGX 1,000,000 for entities with higher nominal share capital, before stamp duty, legal drafting and notarisation are factored in.
This article unpacks every line item in the URSB fee schedule, walks through the Online Business Registration System (OBRS) filing process step by step, explains how stamp duty is calculated and paid to the Uganda Revenue Authority (URA), and flags the hidden costs that frequently catch first-time incorporators off guard. All tariff figures cited below are drawn from the official URSB fees page and the Fees-TM. pdf schedule published by the Bureau.
The table below consolidates the principal fees payable to URSB when incorporating a company in Uganda. These figures reflect the tariffs listed on the official URSB fees page and the Fees-TM.pdf schedule. All amounts are in Uganda Shillings (UGX).
| Fee item | Amount (UGX) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Company name reservation | 35,000 | Valid for a limited period; must be reserved before filing registration documents |
| Registration, nominal share capital ≤ UGX 5,000,000 | 105,000 | Flat fee applicable to the majority of small private limited companies |
| Registration, nominal share capital > UGX 5,000,000 | 1.5% of nominal share capital | Calculated on the total stated nominal capital; no cap published |
| Stamp duty (Memorandum & Articles) | Varies, see stamp duty section below | Payable to URA; amount depends on share capital and document type |
| OBRS service / transaction fee | Included in registration fee | OBRS does not currently publish a separate service surcharge; verify at OBRS services-cost page |
Quick worked example: A private limited company with a nominal share capital of UGX 5,000,000 pays UGX 35,000 (name reservation) + UGX 105,000 (registration fee) = UGX 140,000 in URSB fees alone, before stamp duty and ancillary costs. How much does it cost to incorporate a company in Uganda in total? As the sections below demonstrate, realistic all-in costs for a small company typically fall between UGX 300,000 and UGX 700,000 once stamp duty, statutory declarations, and basic legal drafting are included.
Understanding the fee formula is essential for budgeting accurately. The URSB applies a two-tier structure based on the nominal (authorised) share capital stated in the company’s Memorandum and Articles of Association.
These figures are sourced from the URSB Fees-TM.pdf schedule. It is worth noting that the fee is calculated on nominal (authorised) share capital, not on paid-up capital. Founders who set an unnecessarily high authorised capital will therefore incur proportionally higher URSB company registration fees.
Example 1, Small private limited company (UGX 1,000,000 nominal capital):
Example 2, Mid-range company (UGX 50,000,000 nominal capital):
Example 3, High-capital company (UGX 500,000,000 nominal capital):
These examples illustrate why many practitioners advise setting the authorised share capital at the minimum level needed for operational purposes: the difference in URSB company registration fees between a UGX 5,000,000 company and a UGX 50,000,000 company is more than UGX 600,000 in statutory fees alone.
Stamp duty is a separate government levy administered by the Uganda Revenue Authority (URA), and it is one of the most misunderstood costs in the registration process. It applies to specific documents filed during incorporation, and failure to pay it can delay or invalidate registration.
| Document | Who pays | Stamp duty treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Memorandum and Articles of Association | The company (founders) | Stampable, amount depends on nominal share capital; typically a percentage-based charge on the capital instrument |
| Statutory declaration of compliance | The company (founders) | Fixed stamp duty (nominal amount per declaration) |
| Share transfer instruments (post-incorporation) | Transferor / transferee (as agreed) | Percentage of consideration, relevant at transfer, not initial registration |
The Memorandum and Articles of Association is the primary stampable instrument at incorporation. For companies with a small nominal share capital, the stamp duty amount may be relatively modest, but for entities with capital above UGX 5,000,000 the charge becomes material. The exact rates are set out in the Stamps Act and administered by URA. Industry observers note that practitioners should always verify the current applicable rate directly with URA’s stamp duty division before filing, because gazetted adjustments can shift thresholds between financial years.
Payment is typically made through the URA e-tax portal or, in some cases, at designated bank branches. The stamped instrument is then uploaded as part of the OBRS filing. Any document submitted without the requisite stamp is liable to be rejected by URSB, adding days, and re-submission fees, to the timeline.
Since the URSB migrated its services to the Online Business Registration System (OBRS), virtually all company formation steps are completed electronically. Understanding the OBRS workflow is critical for anyone seeking to register a company in Uganda online without unnecessary delays.
Uganda’s Companies Act permits a single individual to form a company. The OBRS process for a Single Member Company (SMC) follows the same steps outlined above, with two key differences: only one subscriber signs the Memorandum and Articles, and the system requires the appointment of at least one additional person as a nominee director or secretary (depending on the entity structure selected). The URSB company registration fees are identical to those for a multi-member private limited company at the same capital tier.
| OBRS process step | Typical timeline (normal) | Typical timeline (expedited, where available) |
|---|---|---|
| Name reservation | Same day to 2 business days | Same day |
| Document upload and payment | 1 business day (applicant-dependent) | 1 business day |
| Registrar review and approval | 3–7 business days | 1–3 business days (surcharge may apply) |
| Certificate of Incorporation issued | Same day as approval | Same day as approval |
The official URSB company registration fees represent only part of the total outlay. Founders and corporate paralegals routinely underestimate several additional costs that arise before, during or immediately after incorporation.
| Hidden cost item | Typical range (UGX) | When it applies |
|---|---|---|
| Legal drafting of Memorandum & Articles | 200,000 – 1,500,000 | Always, unless using a basic template (higher for bespoke articles with shareholder agreements) |
| Notarisation / Commissioner for Oaths | 20,000 – 50,000 per document | Statutory declaration of compliance and certain affidavits |
| Stamp duty (URA) | Variable, see stamp duty section | Always; amount depends on nominal share capital |
| Certified copies of Certificate of Incorporation | 10,000 – 30,000 per copy | Needed for bank account opening, tax registration and third-party due diligence |
| Company seal (optional but common) | 50,000 – 150,000 | Many Ugandan banks and government bodies still request a company seal despite it no longer being a strict legal requirement |
| Expedited processing surcharge | 50,000 – 200,000 (estimated) | When available, not always officially published |
| Incorporation agent / law firm fees | 300,000 – 3,000,000+ | If outsourcing the entire process to a corporate services provider |
| Post-incorporation filings (TIN, trading licence) | Variable | Mandatory within stipulated periods after incorporation |
Industry observers note that the most common budget overrun occurs when founders omit stamp duty from their initial projections. For a mid-range company, stamp duty on the Memorandum and Articles can exceed the URSB registration fee itself. The second most frequent surprise is the cost of re-submission: each time OBRS rejects an application due to incomplete documents, the applicant effectively loses time and, in some cases, must re-pay certain filing fees.
How long does company registration take in Uganda? Under normal OBRS processing, the entire sequence, from name reservation to receiving a Certificate of Incorporation, takes approximately five to ten business days, assuming all documents are in order. Expedited processing can shorten the registrar review phase, but availability and surcharges vary.
| Task | Normal timeline | Expedited timeline & estimated extra cost |
|---|---|---|
| Name reservation | Same day – 2 business days | Same day (no additional cost) |
| Preparation of documents (applicant side) | 1 – 5 business days | 1 – 2 business days (depends on legal counsel availability) |
| OBRS filing, payment and submission | 1 business day | 1 business day |
| Registrar review and approval | 3 – 7 business days | 1 – 3 business days (surcharge of UGX 50,000 – 200,000 where available) |
| Total estimated | 5 – 10 business days | 3 – 6 business days |
The single biggest variable is the registrar review. If URSB issues a query (for example, a name conflict or missing stamp), the clock resets. Experienced practitioners recommend treating document preparation as the phase to compress: engage qualified counsel early, obtain stamp duty clearance in advance, and verify all OBRS form fields against supporting documents before hitting submit.
Uganda’s Companies Act provides several entity types, each with different fee implications and ongoing compliance obligations. The choice of structure should be driven by the founders’ commercial objectives, but URSB company registration fees and post-incorporation filing requirements are practical factors that influence the decision.
| Entity type | Typical registration fee (UGX) | Key ongoing filing obligations |
|---|---|---|
| Private Company Limited by Shares (LTD) | 140,000 (at ≤ UGX 5M capital) to 1.5% of capital + 35,000 | Annual return filed with URSB; audited accounts (if applicable); notification of changes in directors, secretary or registered office |
| Single Member Company (SMC) | Same as Private LTD at equivalent capital tier | Same as Private LTD; additional obligation to file any changes to the sole member’s details |
| Company Limited by Guarantee (CLG) | 105,000 (no share capital) + 35,000 name reservation | Annual return; accounts; CLGs cannot distribute profits, typically used for NGOs and associations |
For most commercial startups and foreign investors seeking to register a limited company in Uganda, the Private Company Limited by Shares is the standard choice. It offers limited liability, a flexible share structure, and is the entity type recognised by most Ugandan banks, the URA and sector-specific regulators. Companies Limited by Guarantee are suited to non-profit purposes and carry a lower initial fee (since there is no share capital on which to calculate the 1.5 per cent charge), but they cannot issue dividends or equity to investors. Employers registering a new company should also review the latest Uganda employment law changes for 2026 to ensure compliance from day one.
Use this checklist to ensure nothing is missed before submitting your application through the URSB online registration system. The URSB Information Guide and Fees-TM.pdf provide detailed specifications for each item.
For the official fee schedule in downloadable format, refer to the URSB Fees-TM.pdf. The process for transferring land titles in Uganda follows a similarly structured URSB workflow and may be relevant for companies acquiring property at formation.
Understanding the full picture of URSB company registration fees, from the UGX 35,000 name reservation through the tiered registration charges to stamp duty and ancillary costs, is essential for any founder, in-house team or corporate paralegal planning an incorporation in Uganda during 2026. The OBRS portal has streamlined the filing process significantly, but accuracy in document preparation and advance payment of stamp duty remain the two factors most likely to determine whether your registration completes in days or weeks. For complex structures, foreign ownership scenarios or entities with significant share capital, engaging experienced corporate counsel at the outset consistently saves both time and cost. Browse the Global Law Experts lawyer directory to connect with qualified Uganda-based corporate practitioners.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Frederick Muwema at Muwema & Co Advocates & Solicitors, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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