What happens if your company misses its registry deadline — and how can you stop that from ever happening?
This guide sets the context for 2026 compliance and explains who must file and why keeping public records accurate matters.
First, note clearly that an annual return is separate from your corporate tax submission to IRAS. Do not assume “tax done = compliance done”.
After reading, you will know the prerequisites: approved financial statements, whether an AGM or written resolution is needed, and how to complete BizFile+ end-to-end. You will also learn which document format to use and how to decide if your company is dormant, small or audit-exempt.
Follow a checklist in the order businesses actually work: prepare → approve → submit → retain proof. That approach helps you avoid late lodgement fees, red notices and enforcement action against officers, while protecting directors and officers.
Key Takeaways
- Understand that registry submission is separate from tax obligations.
- Know the prerequisites: financial statements and AGM or written resolution.
- Decide early on document format and audit exemptions to avoid mistakes.
- Use BizFile+ to submit and always retain proof of submission.
- Following the prepare→approve→submit checklist reduces escalation risks.
Why annual return filing matters for Singapore companies in 2026
A timely registry submission keeps corporate details accurate and protects your company’s commercial reputation. Maintaining up-to-date information helps third parties rely on the company profile during checks and transactions.
What the registry uses the submission for
Purpose of the registry update
The annual return is used to verify core company data so banks, investors and partners can trust the record. It confirms registered office, officers and shareholders, and where required, financial statements.
Risks to directors and officers
Late or missing submissions put officers at personal risk. Enforcement action can follow, and authorities may issue visible red notices as a formal pre-warning. Treat those notices as urgent.
- Verified details: officers, shareholders, addresses and statutory accounts.
- Business impact: good standing eases banking, payments and due diligence.
- Personal exposure: officers face penalties, not merely administrative hassle.
| Use | Validated information | Impact of non-compliance |
|---|---|---|
| Due diligence | Officers, shareholders, address | Delays, extra checks |
| Bank onboarding | Company profile, good standing | Account restrictions |
| Regulatory checks | Financial statements where applicable | Notices, enforcement |
Annual return filing vs corporate tax filing with IRAS
Tax submissions to revenue authorities do not automatically update a company’s registry details. Treat registry obligations and tax compliance as two parallel tracks that both need attention.
Why Form C-S/Form C does not complete registry compliance
Form C-S or Form C (and other tax return forms) only report a company’s income tax position to IRAS. They do not change the public register of officers, addresses or filed financial statements.
How the IRAS and registry timelines run in parallel
IRAS expects Estimated Chargeable Income (ECI) within three months after the financial year-end and the corporate tax return by 30 November each year.
- Different purposes: the registry confirms company data and governance facts; tax returns assess income tax liability.
- Timing: ECI first, then the tax return; registry deadlines follow the company’s financial year and approval milestones.
- Risk: treating both as one task can leave teams compliant for tax but late on the registry update.
Practical principle for 2026: schedule financial statement preparation and board approvals early enough so you can complete both tax work and the separate registry submission. Note that registry submissions often depend on whether an AGM was held or dispensed with, which income tax filings typically do not require.
What is included in an ACRA annual return submission
Before pressing submit, verify that your company profile, officers and capital details match the underlying records. The submission is a structured confirmation that the public register shows accurate company facts on the filing date.

Company details on the register
BizFile+ surfaces core fields for confirmation: UEN, principal activities and the registered office address. Correct any mismatch first, because discrepancies create delays and extra enquiries.
Particulars of officers and shareholders
Confirm director and company secretary details, and member records. Accurate names, identification and appointment dates protect governance and reduce officer liability.
Share capital and shareholdings information to confirm
Share capital checks usually cover issued share capital, paid‑up capital and the current distribution of shareholdings. Ensure recent allotments or transfers have corresponding lodgements.
Financial statements and relevant declarations
Where financial statements are required, you must also supply supporting declarations — director confirmations, audit selections and the accounting framework used.
Note: exemption from uploading statements does not remove the need to make accurate declarations. “No upload” is not “no work”.
“Keeping the register accurate protects the company and its officers.”
- Definition: a structured confirmation to the registry that records are accurate as at the filing date.
- Verify: UEN, activities, registered office before you submit.
- Confirm: officers, members, share capital entries and any audit declarations.
| Section | Typical items | Why it matters | Action required |
|---|---|---|---|
| Company details | UEN, principal activities, registered office | Public identification and contactability | Correct mismatches in BizFile+ |
| Officers & shareholders | Names, IDs, appointment dates, shareholdings | Governance and liability allocation | Update records and attachments |
| Share capital | Issued capital, paid‑up capital, allotments | Reflects true ownership and capital structure | Confirm and lodge transfer/allotment forms |
| Financials & declarations | Financial statements, director declarations, audit choice | Shows solvency, accounting framework and audit status | Upload or declare exemptions as applicable |
For a concise overview of what this confirmation covers and official guidance, see what is an annual return.
Key deadlines to know: financial year end, AGM, and annual return filing
Good planning hinges on three key dates: the company’s year end, the meeting or written approval, and the registry deadline.
Three control dates
- Financial year end (FYE): the anchor date from which deadlines are calculated.
- Approval date: when accounts are approved at an annual general meeting or by written resolution.
- Return deadline: the final date to lodge records with the registry.
Deadlines for private and listed companies
For most private and unlisted companies, the rule is clear: file within 7 months after the financial year-end. Treat this as a hard operational deadline.
Listed companies have an earlier window. They must complete submission within 5 months after FYE. Do not apply the 7‑month timeline to listed entities.
Timing and the AGM window
The phrase within months means you count from the day after your year end and allow buffer time for accounts, review and director sign-off.
AGMs or written resolutions generally must be completed within 6 months once financial statements are ready. That approval is a gating item in BizFile+ for key fields.
| Period after year end | Main action | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Months 1–2 | Close accounts and prepare draft financial statements | Provides time for bookkeeping and audit checks |
| Months 3–5 | Finalise, circulate and obtain approval (AGM or written resolution) | Required before completing the registry confirmation |
| Months 6–7 | Complete submission and retain proof | Meets deadlines and creates an audit trail |
Practical tip: build at least a two‑week buffer before the statutory deadline to manage unexpected queries.
Before you file: preparing financial statements that meet Singapore requirements
Before pressing submit, ensure the company’s financial statements are complete and authorised for use in the registry confirmation.
Core statements typically required
Companies usually compile a Statement of Financial Position, Statement of Comprehensive Income, Statement of Cash Flows, Statement of Changes in Equity and Notes. The exact package depends on the company profile and any exemptions claimed.
Accounting standards and consistency
All companies must prepare financial statements in accordance with local accounting standards. Use the same accounting policies year‑on‑year unless a change is justified and disclosed. Sudden policy shifts create queries at approval and during the online confirmation.
When audit may apply and when companies may be exempt
Small companies or dormant entities may exempt the company from audit. Directors should confirm audit status early to avoid last‑minute delays and to ensure external auditors can meet review timelines.
When XBRL is required and when PDF may be accepted
XBRL via BizFinx is required for some profiles; others may upload PDF. Decide the file route early so preparers and reviewers follow the correct workflow.
“Preparing financial statements is the gating item: figures and approval dates feed directly into the registry fields.”
| Item | What to prepare | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Core statements | Balance sheet, income, cash flows, changes in equity, notes | Provides source figures for registry confirmation |
| Accounting standards | Consistent policies, disclosures for changes | Avoids inconsistencies and review queries |
| Format | XBRL (BizFinx) or PDF | Affects submission workflow and validation |
Understanding AGM requirements and when you can be exempt
An annual general meeting is the formal forum where directors present the company’s accounts and shareholders ask questions about performance. It is a statutory general meeting to approve accounts, appoint auditors where needed and allow member oversight.

When an AGM is required under the Companies Act
Companies must hold an AGM unless they qualify for an exemption. The register process will ask whether you held the meeting or relied on an exemption.
AGM exemption routes for private companies
Private companies may dispense with AGMs if all members pass a resolution to do so.
Alternatively, a company may avoid holding a general meeting if it circulates financial statements to members within five months after the financial year-end and no shareholder asks for a meeting.
Private dormant relevant companies that are exempt from preparing accounts also fall within an exemption route.
Financial statements circulation within five months after FYE
Within five months is an operational deadline, not optional. Keep proof of circulation dates — emails, delivery receipts or board minutes — to show you met the requirement when you complete the registry confirmation.
What happens if a shareholder requests an AGM
Shareholders enjoy protection. If a member requests an AGM at least 14 days before the end of the sixth month after the financial year-end, the company must hold the meeting within that six‑month window.
If a shareholder or auditor asks for a meeting after receiving the circulated statements, the company must hold the meeting within 14 days of the request.
“Selecting the wrong exemption when you record AGM details can create a mismatch between corporate actions and the registry confirmation.”
- Explain: the general meeting is for accounts and questions.
- Confirm: an AGM is required unless an exemption applies.
- Record: circulate statements within five months and keep proof.
- Protect: respect 14‑day and six‑month shareholder request triggers.
- Check: choose the correct exemption in BizFile+ to avoid follow-up queries.
Written resolutions as an alternative to holding an AGM
Written resolutions let private companies document member approval without convening a physical meeting. They are common where all voting shareholders agree to dispense with a general meeting.
How written approvals support the annual return process
Use signed resolutions as the governance event that authorises accounts and declarations used in the annual return filing. They supply the approval date and confirm director actions for the registry fields.
What to record and keep
Document the signed financial statements, the resolution text and the exact approval date. Retain a distribution log showing how members received papers and when votes were returned.
Managing late member requests after dispensing with AGMs
If a member later requests a meeting, the company must hold an AGM within the statutory window. Act promptly: call the meeting and update records before you file.
| Action | Why it matters | Practical step |
|---|---|---|
| Use standard resolution template | Ensures consistent approvals | Keep editable template with signature blocks |
| Maintain distribution log | Proof of circulation for compliance | Record dates, recipients and confirmations |
| Retain signed documents | Audit trail for filing and queries | Store PDFs and original signed copies |
Note: Dispensing with an AGM does not remove the duty to file annual records; it changes what you enter in the registry and what you must preserve.
ACRA annual return filing Singapore: filing on BizFile+ from start to submission
A sharp, correct online submission starts with the right user access and authorisation.
Log in as a Business User via Corppass or Singpass and confirm the filer is authorised to act for the company. Without proper transaction rights the system will block key actions.
In BizFile+ select Annual filing → Local company → File annual returns. Pause and verify the UEN, company name and registered office before you proceed.
Set financial year‑end and company type
Choose the correct financial year‑end and company type. The system will present different questions (audit, dormancy, solvency) based on those selections.
Complete AGM, uploads and declarations
Enter the AGM date if held or record the exemption and circulation date. Upload financial statements via BizFinx when XBRL is required; otherwise attach PDFs as prompted.
Complete director and audit declarations, and disclose any directors’ interests. If a non‑disclosure is sought, attach shareholder consent so the workflow does not stall.
Registers and final steps
Declare controllers and nominee registers by stating whether they are exempt or where they are kept. Then review all fields, make the payment and retrieve the acknowledgement from the BizFile Inbox.
Practical note: update any outdated entity details via the correct eService before filing to avoid mismatches and follow‑up queries.
| Stage | Action | Why it matters | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Access | Corppass/Singpass login and authorisation | Ensures filer can transact | Proceed to eService |
| Verify | Confirm UEN, registered office and company type | Avoids data conflicts | Correct record prior to filing |
| Documents | AGM details, financial statements via BizFinx | Required for validation and XBRL checks | Successful attachments |
| Finalise | Declarations, payment and acknowledgement | Completes the statutory confirmation | Receipt in BizFile Inbox |
Uploading financial statements correctly: XBRL, PDF, and exemption scenarios
A reliable upload workflow starts with matching figures and clear metadata. This reduces validation errors and speeds up the online process.

Using BizFinx to prepare and validate XBRL
BizFinx packages and checks XBRL files so uploads meet system rules. It validates tags, periods and reconciliations against the signed accounts.
Use the tool early to spot mismatched reporting periods and inconsistent accounting standard entries.
Typical upload combinations for different company profiles
Choosing the wrong format can cause rejection or query. Small exempt private companies often submit PDF only, while companies subject to audit usually require XBRL plus supporting PDF schedules.
| Company profile | Common upload | Why it is chosen | Common pitfall |
|---|---|---|---|
| Audit‑required companies | XBRL + PDF | Full disclosure and system validation | Figures not reconciling to signed statements |
| Exempt private companies | PDF only | Simplified submission where XBRL not mandated | Wrong accounting standard selected |
| Dormant relevant companies | No upload required | Exempt preparing financial statements | Failing to declare dormancy correctly |
When no upload is needed for dormant relevant companies
If a company is exempt preparing financial statements because it is dormant, you may not need to attach accounts. You still complete the form and declare the exemption.
Keep internal records regardless. Maintain copies of ledgers and minutes so you can support the declaration if asked later and so future prepare financial activities are straightforward.
Filing fee and proof of filing: what you receive after submission
Completing the payment closes the loop and creates the official proof you must keep.
Payment and checkout checks
Standard fee: the statutory charge is $60. Budget for this cost so there are no surprises when you reach the payment page.
Before you click pay, review key entries: dates, exemption choices and that the correct financial statements are attached. A final check prevents rework and validation rejections.
Acknowledgement, receipt and Business Profile
After a successful payment you will see an acknowledgement screen and receive a receipt. A notification is sent to your BizFile Inbox with a link to download the Business Profile.
Why keep these documents? They serve as proof for audits, bank queries and due diligence. Save the receipt, the acknowledgement screenshot and the downloaded Business Profile together with signed accounts.
Practical control: store proof of the annual returns confirmation with the signed financial statements and board approval documents for the same year.
| Item | What you receive | Use |
|---|---|---|
| Payment | Confirmation page and electronic receipt | Evidence of payment and filing completion |
| BizFile Inbox notice | Download link to Business Profile | Quick verification of filing status and core particulars |
| Saved records | Receipt, acknowledgement, Business Profile, signed accounts | Audit trail and proof for banks or regulators |
What happens if you miss the annual return filing deadline
Missing a statutory lodgement date can trigger fees and enforcement steps that escalate quickly.
Immediate financial consequence: when you submit an overdue annual return, the system applies a late lodgement fee at the point of filing.
Late lodgement fees under Section 197 of the Companies Act
There are two tiers. If you file within 3 months after the deadline the charge is $300. If you file more than 3 months late the fee rises to $600.
| Delay | Fee | Practical step |
|---|---|---|
| Within 3 months | $300 | File promptly to limit cost |
| More than 3 months | $600 | Act immediately; costs escalate |
Composition offers and potential prosecution pathways
A composition offer is a settlement the registry may propose instead of prosecution. Typical sums start at $500 and are separate from the late lodgement fee.
Red notices as a formal pre-warning and what to do next
Red notices are formal pre-warnings. Treat them as urgent: you must file outstanding annual returns and stabilise records to avoid prosecution.
- Confirm what is overdue and the exact dates.
- Prepare missing financial statements and meeting records.
- Complete the return filing, pay charges and retain proof.
- Seek professional help if access or authorisation problems block progress.
Practical point: early action reduces cost and lowers the risk of escalation to settlement offers or prosecution.
Other statutory deadlines people confuse with annual returns
Many companies confuse separate statutory clocks, so minor updates can become urgent at the last minute.

Clarify the boundary: the late lodgement fees under Section 197 apply only to the annual return and not to other statutory lodgements. For changes due on or after 9 December 2024, different penalty scales now apply.
Penalties for late non-AR lodgements after 9 December 2024
If a non-AR notification (for example a change of director or address) is late, the charge is $50 when filed within 3 months of the due date and $200 if filed more than 3 months late.
Common examples: director changes and registered address updates
Typical triggers are updates to directors or officers, changes to the registered office and notices of charges or share allotments.
- Why confusion happens: these items affect the same public register and often surface when you prepare the annual return, so teams assume one lodgement covers all.
- Prevention: make sure corporate changes are filed as they occur so the confirmation step becomes routine rather than corrective.
- Practical control: keep a simple compliance register — a spreadsheet or company secretary tracker — to monitor due dates separate from months financial calendars.
Tip: track statute clocks individually; this reduces surprise fines and keeps governance tidy.
IRAS tax obligations to track alongside annual return filing
Tax deadlines do not pause for registry work; plan both streams together to avoid last-minute pressure.
Estimated Chargeable Income: early estimate
Estimated Chargeable Income must be submitted within three months of your financial year-end. This early estimate of chargeable income helps IRAS assess provisional tax and must reflect timely account closing.
Corporate tax return deadline
The corporate income tax tax return is due by 30 November each year. That submission is separate from the registry confirmation and follows on from ECI and final computations.
Practical coordination tips
Align management accounts with audited figures so the same dataset supports both compliance streams.
- Set internal cut-off dates earlier than statutory ones.
- Avoid scheduling both the registry confirmation and the tax return in the same month.
- Plan for audit, XBRL work and shareholder approval time when setting deadlines.
Note: some small companies may qualify for an ECI waiver where revenue is low and ECI is nil, but they still file the final corporate tax return.
| Action | Deadline | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| ECI | Within three months of financial year-end | Estimates provisional chargeable income |
| Corporate tax return | By 30 November | Final assessment of income tax |
| Planning tip | Internal deadlines ahead of statutes | Prevents last-minute conflicts |
For practical guidance on corporate tax processes see this basic guide to corporate income tax.
Common annual return filing problems and how to solve them
Many companies may hit the same five snags when they prepare to file: format confusion, AGM exemption mistakes, data mismatches, access issues and tight deadlines.
Uncertainty over XBRL or PDF
Decide format early. If XBRL is required, run files through BizFinx to validate tags and spot reconciliation errors before upload.
If PDFs are allowed, ensure the signed financial statements match attachments exactly to avoid rejection.
Incorrect AGM exemption or missed member requests
Common errors include selecting the wrong exemption basis or omitting the circulation date. Correct these in your records and keep proof of circulation.
Company structure changes not updated
Directors, shares or address updates block a clean confirmation. Fix these via the appropriate manage/update eService, then return to file annual return.
Access, navigation and authorisation problems
Check Corppass rights early. If permission gaps persist, use a registered filing agent to avoid last‑minute delays.
Tight timelines after financial year-end
Within months after the financial year-end the work compresses. Build a backward plan, set calendar reminders one to two months ahead and align sign-off among directors, accountants and secretaries.
“A short checklist and early validation prevent most late lodgements.”
- Use BizFinx for XBRL validation.
- Keep circulation logs for AGM exemptions.
- Update entity data before submission.
- Confirm authorisations well before the deadline.
Conclusion
Conclusion
Scheduling milestones from the year end backward is the clearest way to stay compliant. Plan your financial year tasks so you can close and prepare financial statements, obtain approvals and then complete the online confirmation.
Remember: the registry obligation is separate from tax processes. Treat annual return submission as its own statutory task and do not conflate it with income tax work.
Follow the sequence: prepare accounts → approve at AGM or by written resolution → file annual documents. Keep proof of submission and the Business Profile receipt to reduce friction with banks and regulators.
Good governance pays. Companies must keep entity data current, schedule reminders and act early so filings are done within months and avoid fees or red notices.
FAQ
What is the purpose of filing an annual return with ACRA?
How does an annual return differ from the corporate tax return to IRAS?
What company information must be included in the return?
When is the annual return due after the financial year-end?
Are there earlier deadlines for listed companies?
Do companies always need to hold an AGM before filing?
What financial statements must be prepared for the return?
When is an audit required and when can a company be exempt?
Do I need to upload XBRL files or is PDF acceptable?
How do written resolutions relate to the return?
What access and authorisations are needed to file online?
What declarations and disclosures are required in the online submission?
What happens after I submit the return?
What are the consequences of missing the filing deadline?
Are there other statutory deadlines I should track alongside this return?
How do I resolve common filing problems like XBRL confusion or authorisation issues?
What should companies do if a shareholder requests an AGM after exemption was claimed?
When must estimated chargeable income be lodged with IRAS?
Can dormant companies skip uploads of financial statements?
What fees apply and what proof will I receive after payment?

Dean Cheong is a Singapore-based B2B growth strategist and the CEO of VOffice. He helps companies scale revenue through sharper sales execution, CRM implementation, and go-to-market strategy, backed by a strong foundation in business banking and finance from Nanyang Technological University and a track record of driving sustainable, performance-led growth.