Curious whether a local extension of your international business is the right move — and what risks come with it?
This guide explains what it means to open a branch of an overseas company, who should consider this route, and the practical steps involved. A branch acts as an extension of the parent entity and does not form a separate legal body. That means the head office remains liable for debts and disputes arising from local activity.
You will see a clear, end-to-end path: deciding if a branch suits your strategy, preparing documents, engaging a licensed Corporate Service Provider, filing via BizFile+, and completing post-registration actions to trade. Expect quick filings when papers are ready — often within one business day — though regulated names or activities can delay matters.
Use a simple checklist to check compliance: a registered address, an authorised representative ordinarily resident locally, name rules, and ongoing ACRA and tax obligations. Each major section below points to requirements, document lists, the filing process and ongoing duties.
Key Takeaways
- A branch is an extension, not a separate legal entity; the parent remains liable.
- Decide on liability, tax position and whether local activities mirror the parent.
- Most foreign businesses must use a licensed Corporate Service Provider for filing.
- Filings can be fast if documents are ready, but regulated cases may take longer.
- Keep a checklist: address, authorised representative, name compliance and ongoing filings.
What a Singapore branch office is and when it makes sense
A Singapore branch office is the parent company operating locally as a direct extension of its home entity. It is not a separate legal entity; the parent remains the contracting party for agreements and liabilities.
What “not a separate legal” means practically
Contracts, lawsuits and debts attach to the parent company itself. That means judgments in Singapore can be enforced against the home entity.
Liability and operational alignment
Because the parent company holds full liability, group risk management and insurance must reflect that exposure.
The local extension normally carries out the same or closely aligned activities as the parent. Diversifying into unrelated lines is usually restricted.
Who typically uses this route
- Regulated financial firms, insurers and reinsurance groups.
- Shipping, logistics and global energy operators.
- Professional services and multinational corporate structures that need centralised control.
Small and medium-sized businesses often prefer a subsidiary for limited liability, while large groups choose a branch office to keep contracts and brand continuity under the parent company.
Next: compare this option with a subsidiary and a representative presence to see tax, credibility and flexibility trade-offs.
Branch office vs subsidiary vs representative office in Singapore
Choosing the right legal vehicle shapes liability, tax exposure and commercial credibility. This comparison helps business leaders pick the setup that fits risk appetite and market plans.

Legal status and entity separation
A branch is an extension of the parent and does not form a separate legal person. That means the parent remains directly liable for obligations.
Subsidiary is a separate legal entity and usually offers limited liability to shareholders. A representative office cannot enter contracts or invoice; it is limited to research and liaison.
Permitted activities and scope
Branches should mirror the parent’s activities. Subsidiaries can run wider services and pivot subject to licences. Representative office activities are non-commercial only.
Tax positioning and practical credibility
Branches are normally treated as non-resident for tax. That can restrict access to incentives and some DTA benefits. A subsidiary is often tax resident and may access local exemptions.
Practical note: Banks, landlords and large customers often prefer a local incorporated entity for contracts, credit and long-term deals.
| Structure | Legal status | Permitted activities | Tax & credibility |
|---|---|---|---|
| Branch | Not separate; parent liable | Must align with parent activities | Non-resident tax treatment; lower incentive access |
| Subsidiary | Separate company; limited liability | Broader operations; needs licences | Tax resident; higher credibility with banks |
| Representative office | Not a trading entity | Market research / liaison only | No trading tax; low commercial credibility |
Tip: Choose the structure that balances limited liability, tax goals and the commercial process you plan to pursue.
Pre-registration requirements foreign companies must meet in Singapore
Authorities require specific legal and practical safeguards before a parent company can extend operations here.

Core requirements are non-negotiable and exist to protect creditors, regulators and the public. These cover legal status, a local point of contact, a physical address and a verified name.
Parent incorporation and ownership
The parent company must be duly incorporated at home and own 100% of the local extension. This is because the branch is not a separate legal person and the parent bears full liability.
Registered office address and local expectations
A Singapore registered office address is required (no PO boxes). The address must accept statutory notices and usually be accessible during normal business hours, often with a minimum public access window.
Authorised representative — at least one resident
There must be at least one authorised representative ordinarily resident locally. Qualifying persons include citizens, permanent residents or eligible pass holders. The agent handles statutory filings and receives legal notices.
Using a licensed Corporate Service Provider
Foreign companies cannot submit an ACRA application directly. A licensed Corporate Service Provider prepares the documents and conducts the BizFile+ submission to ensure compliance.
“The branch name must match the parent name and is subject to strict ACRA approval; avoid names that are identical or confusingly similar to established marks.”
| Requirement | Why it exists | Typical detail | Risk if missing |
|---|---|---|---|
| Parent incorporation | Legal accountability | Proof of incorporation and constitution | Filing refused |
| Registered office address | Service of notices | Physical Singapore address (no PO Box) | Non-compliance penalties |
| Authorised representative | Local statutory contact | At least one resident agent with consent | Inability to process filings |
Documents and information needed for Singapore branch registration
A well-ordered dossier of corporate proofs, financials and consents is essential before filing. Prepare each item ahead of time to let your Corporate Service Provider lodge the application swiftly.

Certified corporate documents
Provide certified copies of the parent company’s Certificate of Incorporation and Constitution. These link the local extension to the same legal entity overseas.
Directors’ particulars and parent profile
Supply a complete list of directors, their nationalities, residential addresses and ID details. Include the parent company’s overseas registered address and a short description of the activities planned locally.
Financial statements and acceptable alternatives
Attach the latest audited financial statements where available. If audits are not prepared, include unaudited accounts. Newly incorporated parents should supply a signed declaration confirming no accounts exist yet.
Authorised representative and registered office address
Upload identity documents and a signed consent for the authorised representative. Confirm the registered office address for ACRA correspondence early to avoid form rework.
“Certified copies must be stamped or notarised by a relevant authority at the place of incorporation.”
| Item | Form of proof | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Certificate of Incorporation | Certified copy | Links branch to parent legal entity |
| Financial statements | Audited / unaudited / declaration | Shows financial standing |
| Representative consent | Signed ID + consent | Local statutory contact |
Checklist: one certified certificate; constitution; directors’ particulars; accounts or declaration; authorised representative ID and consent; and a confirmed registered office address.
How to register branch office in singapore for foreign company with ACRA (BizFile+ process)
Begin the BizFile+ flow by securing ACRA approval for the proposed name; once cleared, the formal submission follows.

Name application and approval with ACRA
ACRA runs a two-step digital process: (1) name approval, then (2) the foreign entity registration submission. A licensed Corporate Service Provider (CSP) must lodge both steps for a foreign company.
“Ensure the proposed name matches the parent and does not conflict with existing marks.”
Preparing the ACRA filing package
The CSP assembles:
- certified parent documents and constitution;
- details of planned Singapore activities and directors;
- registered office address and authorised representative consent;
- audited accounts or a signed declaration where needed.
Timeline and avoiding delays
When all paperwork is correct, approval often completes within one business day. Common delays come from name objections, missing certifications or mismatched spellings across forms.
Practical tips: use identical name spellings, submit clear PDFs, and confirm contact details on every page to speed the registration process.
Receiving your UEN and business profile
After approval ACRA issues a Unique Entity Number (UEN) and a business profile record. Use the UEN for banking, licences, invoicing and official correspondence.
Next: convert approval into operations by completing post-registration compliance and banking setup for your singapore branch office.
Post-registration setup tasks to start operating compliantly
Getting legally recorded is only the start; the next phase is setting up banking, licences and payroll.
Open a corporate bank account early
Priority one is a corporate bank account to handle receipts, payroll and vendor payments. Most banks ask for the UEN/business profile, certified parent documents and ID for the authorised representative.
Due diligence can take days to weeks. Some global banks, such as HSBC and Standard Chartered, may permit remote onboarding in selected cases. Compare bank services, fees and onboarding timelines before you commit.
Secure licences and permits before trading
ACRA filing does not grant permission to begin regulated activities. Sectors that commonly need licences include finance, education, food and beverage, childcare, travel agents and liquor distribution.
Do not commence operations until the relevant regulator has approved your specific activities.
GST, hiring and trade compliance
GST becomes mandatory when taxable turnover exceeds S$1 million. You must notify the inland revenue authority within 30 days of becoming liable. Note: GST is 9% from 1 January 2024.
Foreign hires typically require a relevant work pass such as an Employment Pass. Staffing choices also affect who can act as an authorised local representative.
Customs and CPF obligations
If you import, export or tranship goods, obtain a CR number from Singapore Customs to clear shipments and manage permits.
CPF contributions apply to Singapore citizens and permanent residents earning above S$50 per month. CPF does not apply to most foreign employees — this helps with payroll planning.
“Prioritise banking and licences, then complete tax and hiring formalities to move from ‘registered’ to fully trading.”
For a practical checklist on setting up banking and additional compliance, see this guide to open a corporate bank account and related steps.
Ongoing compliance and tax essentials for a Singapore branch office
Ongoing compliance turns initial approval into sustained, lawful trading. Maintain a calendar for accounting, statutory filings and tax deadlines to avoid penalties. Although a branch office is not a separate legal entity, it must meet local reporting duties on time.
Accounting and annual filings
Prepare accounts under Singapore FRS. These align closely with IFRS and may need reconciliations from the parent company’s home financial statements.
ACRA requires submission of the local accounts and the parent company’s statements. Audited branch financial statements are usually due within 60 days of the parent’s AGM.
IRAS steps and tax timelines
File Estimated Chargeable Income (ECI) within three months of the financial year-end. Then submit the annual corporate tax return by the statutory deadline — 30 November for paper, 15 December for e-filing.
The inland revenue authority taxes Singapore-sourced income at the prevailing corporate rate. As a general rule, non-resident entities cannot claim start-up exemptions or many local incentives.
DTAs and governance risks
Non-resident status often limits access to Double Tax Avoidance benefits. That can increase cross-border tax leakage depending on the parent jurisdiction’s rules.
Governance note: monitor the parent company’s solvency. If the parent enters liquidation, the local extension must cease and notify authorities promptly.
| Obligation | Who files | Typical deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Accounts under FRS | Local entity (with parent data) | Aligned with parent AGM; audited within 60 days |
| Estimated Chargeable Income | Local entity | Within 3 months of FYE |
| Corporate tax return | Local entity | 30 Nov (paper) / 15 Dec (e-filing) |
“Timely filings and clear records reduce compliance risk and ease banking and licence renewals.”
Conclusion
The right structure balances control, compliance and access to incentives, so choose with strategy and risk appetite in mind.
Large multinationals and regulated groups often pick a branch to operate under the parent identity, while many SMEs favour a subsidiary for limited liability. Representative routes suit research or liaison without revenue activity.
Meet core requirements early: confirm a local address and authorised representative, engage licensed services, and prepare certified documents before filing. Then follow the BizFile+ name and registration steps, open bank accounts, secure licences and manage GST, customs and payroll matters.
Remember the two main trade-offs: full parent liability and non-resident tax treatment. Use professional advisers to reduce delays and keep statutory compliance disciplined so your operations run smoothly over the long term.
FAQ
What is a Singapore branch office and when does it make sense?
How does a branch differ from a subsidiary or representative office?
What business activities can a branch undertake?
What are the main liability implications for the parent company?
What pre-registration requirements must the parent company meet?
Can I choose any name for the branch?
Which documents are needed to file with ACRA?
What is the BizFile+ process to register a foreign entity?
How long does approval typically take and how can delays be avoided?
What post-registration tasks are essential before trading?
How does a branch open a corporate bank account in Singapore?
When must the branch register for GST with IRAS?
What are the employment and work pass considerations?
What ongoing compliance and tax obligations apply to a branch?
How is a branch taxed compared with a local company?
Are audited financial statements always required for registration?
Who must act as the authorised representative and what are their duties?
What records and filings must the branch maintain annually?
Can a branch access government incentives or double tax treaty benefits?
Must the branch register for Singapore Customs and import/export controls?
What are practical considerations when choosing between opening an extension or a local subsidiary?
Who must I contact for assistance with the whole process?

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.