Company Incorporation in Belgium is often the first legal step for founders, investors, and international groups that need a clear operating or holding structure in Belgium. The right setup affects liability, contracts, tax positioning, banking readiness, reporting duties, and future licensing work. Bergers Legal can help assess the structure before documents are filed.
What is Company Incorporation in Belgium?
Company Incorporation in Belgium is the process of forming a legal entity under the laws of Belgium. The choice of entity, shareholders, directors, registered office, and governance documents affects how the business can contract, open accounts, hold assets, and meet reporting duties. Bergers Legal can guide the setup and document preparation process.
Who this service is for
- Foreign founders planning to start or expand a business in Belgium.
- Holding, trading, consulting, technology, fintech, or investment businesses that need a legal entity.
- Groups comparing jurisdictions for tax, governance, substance, reporting, and banking readiness.
- Entrepreneurs who need company documents prepared consistently for banks, partners, or future licensing.
- Existing businesses restructuring ownership or adding an international entity.
What problem this service helps solve
A company can be incorporated quickly on paper, but problems usually appear later if the entity type, ownership file, registered address, articles, accounting duties, or bank-readiness pack do not match the business plan. A careful incorporation process reduces avoidable friction with banks, counterparties, tax advisers, and local authorities.
How Bergers Legal can assist
- Reviewing the proposed business model, ownership structure, and target markets before documents are prepared.
- Identifying the documents, compliance policies, and corporate records that are usually expected for the case.
- Coordinating local counsel, registered agent, or filing support where local execution is required.
- Preparing or reviewing corporate, compliance, and application materials so they are consistent and regulator-ready.
- Guiding follow-up questions, corrections, and post-setup compliance steps without promising a final approval outcome.
Step-by-step process
- Initial consultation and business model review.
- Selection of the most suitable company structure in Belgium.
- Shareholder, director, UBO, and governance document preparation.
- Name, registered office, and registered agent or local filing coordination where required.
- Incorporation filing and review of issued corporate documents.
- Post-incorporation support for bank readiness, compliance records, and next legal steps.
Documents and information usually required
- Passport copies and proof of address for shareholders, directors, and beneficial owners.
- Proposed company name, activities, ownership percentages, and management structure.
- Source-of-funds or source-of-wealth information where banks or agents request it.
- Registered office, local agent, or local representative information where applicable.
- Corporate documents for any shareholder that is a legal entity.
- Business plan or short activity description for banking and compliance review.
Estimated timeline
The timeline for company Incorporation in Belgium depends on name checks, document collection, local filing speed, notarization or apostille requirements, and whether the structure involves corporate shareholders. Bergers Legal can outline a realistic sequence after reviewing the ownership and activity profile.
Costs and pricing factors
Costs usually depend on the entity type, registered office or agent requirements, document legalization, number of shareholders and directors, local filing fees, tax or accounting support, urgency, and any post-incorporation banking or compliance assistance.
Risks and mistakes to avoid
- Choosing a jurisdiction before confirming the real operating model, client geography, and compliance burden.
- Submitting generic AML/KYC or corporate documents that do not match the actual activities of the business.
- Underestimating substance, governance, reporting, renewal, or ongoing compliance requirements.
- Starting bank, payment provider, or regulator discussions before the ownership and source-of-funds file is complete.
- Treating timelines and costs as fixed when they depend on third-party review, regulator questions, and document quality.
Detailed jurisdiction notes
Belgium is a well-established European jurisdiction offering a stable legal environment, access to the European Union market, and a sophisticated corporate regulatory framework. Entrepreneurs and international investors can incorporate various types of business entities depending on their operational goals, ownership structure, and tax strategy.
Foreign individuals and companies are permitted to act as founders of Belgian enterprises, making the country an accessible destination for international business expansion and corporate structuring.
Partnership Structures and Tax Transparency
Belgian legislation allows the establishment of certain partnership arrangements that do not qualify as separate taxable legal entities. In these cases, the partnership itself is not subject to corporate income tax.
Instead, the entity is treated as tax transparent, meaning that profits generated by the business are allocated directly to the partners. Each partner is then taxed individually according to the tax laws of their country of tax residence.
While such structures may provide flexibility in international tax planning, they require careful legal analysis. It is important to determine whether:
- a double taxation treaty exists between Belgium and the jurisdiction where the partner is tax resident;
- the activities carried out by the partnership could create a permanent establishment in Belgium.
Because international tax rules depend on specific circumstances, consulting with legal and tax professionals before selecting this structure is strongly recommended.
Main Types of Companies for Incorporation in Belgium
Belgian corporate legislation provides several business entity structures available to foreign investors. Among them, two corporate forms are most commonly used when incorporating a company in Belgium.
Public Limited Company – NV (SA)
The Naamloze Vennootschap (NV), also referred to as Société Anonyme (SA), represents the Belgian public limited company structure. It is typically chosen by larger businesses or companies planning to attract external investment.
Key characteristics include:
- At least two founders are required. Founders may be individuals or legal entities and can be either Belgian residents or foreign investors.
- The minimum share capital is €61,500, which must be fully paid at the time of incorporation.
- The company may issue shares representing ownership interests in the business.
Corporate governance requirements vary depending on the shareholder structure:
- When the company has two shareholders, a minimum of two directors must be appointed.
- If the company has more than two shareholders or an expanded ownership structure, at least three directors are required.
Directors may be natural persons or legal entities and can be residents of Belgium or foreign nationals.
Private Limited Liability Company – BVBA (SPRL)
The Besloten Vennootschap met Beperkte Aansprakelijkheid (BVBA), also known in French as SPRL, is a widely used corporate structure for small and medium-sized enterprises in Belgium.
This entity type provides flexibility in management and ownership while limiting shareholder liability.
Key features include:
- The company may be incorporated by a single founder, who can be either an individual or a corporate entity. Both residents and non-residents are permitted to establish the company.
- The minimum statutory share capital is €18,550.
- If the company has only one shareholder, €12,400 must be paid at incorporation. If there are multiple shareholders, the initial capital contribution must be at least €6,200.
- Company shares are issued exclusively as registered shares, meaning the ownership structure is recorded in the official shareholder register.
A BVBA company may operate with only one director, making this structure particularly suitable for entrepreneurs and privately owned businesses.
Work Authorization for Foreign Directors
Foreign nationals serving as directors of Belgian companies are generally required to obtain a professional authorization to conduct business activities, commonly known as a professional card (carte professionnelle / arbeidskaart).
This document should not be confused with a Belgian residence permit. Although both may be required for individuals planning to live and work in Belgium permanently, they are separate legal authorizations.
In practice, applications for both permits are usually submitted simultaneously. However, if at least one of these authorizations has already been granted by the time the company is incorporated, the director may begin managing the Belgian company while the remaining permit is still under review.
Corporate Taxation in Belgium
Companies incorporated in Belgium are subject to corporate income tax on their taxable profits.
The standard corporate tax rate in Belgium is 33.99%, applied to corporate income generated by the company. Belgian companies must also comply with national accounting standards and submit annual financial statements and tax returns.
Tax obligations may vary depending on the company’s structure, activities, and ownership model. Partnerships that qualify as fiscally transparent structures may allocate profits directly to partners, who then declare and pay taxes in accordance with their personal tax residency rules.
Next steps
If you are considering Company Incorporation in Belgium, share the business model, ownership structure, target markets, and current documents with Bergers Legal. The team can review the case, identify missing information, and outline practical next steps by Telegram, WhatsApp, email, or consultation request.


