Curious how foreign founders meet the local director rule without relocating?
This short guide explains a practical, step-by-step process that helps overseas founders and foreign‑owned companies comply with the Companies Act.
The law says every company must have at least one locally resident director at all times. Many foreign owners meet this by appointing a nominee director through a compliant arrangement.
From choosing a registered Corporate Service Provider to filing on BizFile+ and keeping accurate records, we cover eligibility, appointment, ongoing compliance and risk controls.
Note the 2025 CSP Act update: only registered CSPs may facilitate appointments. Avoid unlicensed intermediaries and check provider terms, such as KYC and AML obligations, before you proceed via a trusted service like a regulated CSP.
For official filing steps and officer obligations, see ACRA guidance on appointing officers here.
Key Takeaways
- Every local company must have at least one resident officer under the Companies Act.
- Appointing a nominee is a legal option but carries statutory duties and liability.
- Since June 2025, use only a registered CSP to arrange appointments.
- Follow a clear process: choose provider, complete due diligence, sign agreement, file on BizFile+, keep records.
- Good governance and accurate filings reduce compliance risk for both the company and the appointed person.
Understanding the local resident director rule under Singapore’s Companies Act
Every registered company must maintain continuous onshore board representation to meet statutory oversight obligations. The Companies Act requires a company to keep at least one person who is ordinarily resident and contactable locally at all times. This is not only at incorporation but across the company’s life.
Why every company must have a resident
The rule exists to give regulators an onshore contact who can be held to account. It helps ACRA and tax authorities enforce laws, investigate misconduct, and secure accurate filings for singapore companies.
Accountability and enforcement
Directors, including nominee directors, must exercise oversight. Authorities expect board members to know company activities, keep records accurate and prevent wrongdoing.
“A hands-off approach will not shield an appointed person from enforcement action.”
- Non-compliance can trigger fines, disqualification and, in serious cases, imprisonment.
- Late filings, misleading information or poor records amplify risk.
- Role differs from shareholders, secretaries or authorised representatives and carries personal legal exposure.
Takeaway: continuous resident coverage is the compliance baseline. Without it, banking, tax and filings become harder and the company’s legal exposure grows.
What a nominee director is and how the role works in practice
Appointing a local office-holder gives a foreign‑managed company a lawful on‑island presence while executive control stays abroad. This person satisfies the residency law but typically does not run daily operations.
Nominee role vs executive role: authority and involvement
An executive manages staff, signs commercial contracts, sets budgets and drives strategy.
The local appointee focuses on governance: approving board resolutions, confirming statutory filings and acting as the official onshore contact.
Nominee role vs shareholder holding: different legal obligations
Holding shares on behalf of a beneficial owner is an ownership function. It does not carry the same fiduciary duties as a board office-holder.
So, ownership and governance remain distinct roles with separate legal exposure.
Common misconception: having a local appointee does not make the owner risk‑free. Legal liability follows the office held and obligations under the Companies Act apply.
- Typical practice: routine check‑ins, signing specified resolutions and confirming filings.
- Agreement boundaries: clear approvals, prohibited transactions, confidentiality and defined sign‑off workflows.
- Professional corporate services teams support the appointee with secretarial, compliance and filing processes.
Practical map: overseas management runs the business with documented board approvals. The local office‑holder joins for statutory touchpoints and acts as the onshore point of contact.
Nominee director requirement in singapore: when your company must appoint one
Certain business events make a local board member mandatory before you can register or operate a company.
If no current board member is ordinarily resident, you will often need to appoint nominee director to satisfy the statutory gate for incorporation. This is the classic incorporation gating item: ACRA will not complete registration until at least one qualifying onshore office‑holder is listed.
Relocation gaps: while founders wait for an employment pass, EntrePass or other eligible work pass, a local appointee can bridge the compliance shortfall. That keeps filings current until a relocating executive becomes the resident director.
For ongoing governance, global businesses commonly maintain at least one local appointee so the company can meet continuous duties while management sits overseas. If the resident resigns or loses status, the company must replace them immediately to avoid breach.
- When all founders are abroad, appointment is usually required before registration proceeds.
- Temporary cover during work‑pass delays reduces filing risk and operational disruption.
- Triggers include relocation, pass renewal delays, board restructuring or group policy to keep least one local appointee.
Decision rule: if you cannot maintain at least one qualifying resident director at all times, you should consider appointing nominee or appointing nominee director arrangements with clear authority limits and a compliance calendar.
Who can act as a nominee director in Singapore (eligibility checklist)
Before you appoint an onshore office‑holder, verify basic eligibility and practical presence. The person must be at least 18 years old and a natural person — a company cannot fill this role.
Ordinarily resident status: acceptable categories are a citizen, permanent resident or an individual holding an eligible work pass with a Singapore residential address. Provide copies of NRIC, PR card or valid work‑pass and proof of local address.

Fit‑and‑proper screening
- Clear of bankruptcy and not subject to disqualification orders under the Companies Act.
- No convictions for fraud, dishonesty or specified corporate/financial offences, locally or overseas.
- Reasonable record checks to confirm integrity and capacity to meet statutory duties.
Residential address expectations: a genuine local address means the person can receive official correspondence, respond to regulators and attend to statutory matters when required.
These checks exist so authorities can hold office‑holders accountable and avoid arrangements that mask wrongdoing. Treat eligibility as non‑negotiable: filings may be rejected if the appointee fails any screening.
Practical note: from 2025, a registered service provider will generally facilitate appointments and formally perform these verification steps.
Important 2025 update: nominee directors must be facilitated by a registered CSP
Recent CSP Act amendments shifted appointment handling to licensed corporate services firms. Since June 2025, nominee arrangements must be facilitated by a registered corporate service provider. This change reduces the risk of informal or unvetted placements.
What a registered provider does
The service provider sources or assigns the appointee, conducts checks, documents the agreement and files details with ACRA. A registered corporate service will manage the full appointment process and keep records.
Due diligence you should expect
- Identity and address verification.
- Sanctions and PEP screening where relevant.
- Bankruptcy, disqualification and offence‑history checks.
Good CSP practice means a written engagement, a transparent scope, a documented risk assessment and reliable record‑keeping. These steps lower the chance of rejected filings and improve governance for both the company and the appointed person.
Practical steps: confirm CSP registration status, request the due diligence checklist and ask who will be appointed. Remember: after appointment, the appointee remains a full officer under the Companies Act and must meet statutory duties.
What nominee directors actually do: statutory duties and day-to-day touchpoints
Holding an onshore office requires active oversight: timely filings, clear records and prompt responses to regulators. The role carries the same statutory and fiduciary duties as any board member even if operational control sits overseas.

ACRA compliance and annual returns
Key compliance tasks include submitting annual returns on schedule and lodging event‑based filings for changes to officers, addresses or share capital. Missing timelines can trigger penalties and complicate banking and tax matters.
Corporate governance basics
Appointees must approve board resolutions, confirm minutes are accurate and declare conflicts of interest where applicable. Good governance means asking questions, not signing documents blindly.
Working with the company secretary
The company secretary prepares filings, maintains registers and drafts minutes. The appointee reviews, approves and signs; legal accountability remains with the office‑holder.
Local representation duties
As the local point of contact, the person receives official correspondence and ensures timely replies to ACRA, IRAS and other authorities. Routine touchpoints include quarterly compliance check‑ins and pre‑filing verification of particulars.
“Effective nominee director services combine oversight with robust secretarial processes to reduce compliance friction for overseas owners.”
- Practical process: regular updates, a compliance calendar and pre‑filing checks.
- Oversight standard: seek confirmations and supporting documents before signing.
- Service model: director services should pair review responsibilities with secretarial support.
What your company must prepare before appointing nominee director services
Prepare a short pre-appointment checklist so overseas founders avoid delays when engaging nominee director services.
Internal approvals: board resolution and consent
After incorporation, the board must pass a resolution recording the appointment decision and authority limits.
Obtain a signed consent to act from the appointee; this confirms acceptance of statutory duties and helps file accurately on BizFile+.
Key particulars to collate
Gather the individual’s full legal name, identification number, nationality, date of birth where requested and current residential address.
Provide clear, matching ID and address proofs to speed due diligence and reduce discrepancies.
Company documents that may be required
Have the company constitution, certificate of incorporation, registers of directors and shareholders and recent board resolutions ready.
Consistent, complete records make the CSP’s checks and the appointment process smoother.
Practical tip: align your board on who manages banking and operations and set realistic timelines for CSP checks and sign‑offs before the formal appointment is lodged.
Selecting a safe and compliant nominee director service provider
A careful selection process protects your company from informal placements and compliance gaps.

Non-negotiables to verify
Confirm the firm is a registered CSP and shows documented onboarding workflows. Ask for written proof of checks, ongoing filings and sample templates of the agreement.
What proven processes look like
- Identity and address verification, sanctions and bankruptcy checks.
- Clear filing process for BizFile+ and a compliance calendar.
- Recurring support for annual returns and statutory updates.
Scope and limits of services
Good providers offer statutory oversight, sign governance papers when appropriate and act as the local contact. They must not run your commercial operations or hide beneficial ownership.
Red flags and pricing transparency
- Unlicensed firms, vague paperwork or pressure to file with missing data.
- Suspiciously low fees that exclude proper due diligence.
- Ask how pricing changes with regulated sectors, transaction volume or enhanced checks.
Selection checklist: confirm CSP registration, review due diligence steps, agree limits of authority, verify coordination with the company secretary, and get a clear fee schedule. These steps protect your business and uphold officer accountability under the post‑2025 framework.
How to appoint a nominee director in Singapore: step-by-step process
Start by choosing whether to engage an individual you trust or to source a vetted professional through a licensed corporate services team.
Candidate selection and due diligence
Decide between a private candidate or a registered service provider. Since the 2025 changes, using a licensed corporate services firm is the usual, compliant route.
Expect ID checks, address verification, bankruptcy and disqualification screening and sanctions/PEP checks before any appointment proceeds.
Drafting and signing the agreement
The written agreement must set authority limits, board approval workflows, confidentiality and data protection terms, indemnities for good‑faith acts and clear termination and handover clauses.
Lodging the appointment via BizFile+
File the appointment on BizFile+ and ensure all particulars match supporting documents to avoid rejection. The company should keep a single source of truth for records.
Timing and what if details fail
File within 14 days. Missing or mismatched data, or an ineligible appointee, will lead to a rejected filing and delays to incorporation, bank onboarding and other company actions.
Practical compliance tip: maintain one up‑to‑date record for officer particulars, KYC documents and board minutes to speed checks and filings.
- Process recap: select candidate, complete due diligence, sign a robust agreement, lodge on BizFile+, and file within 14 days.
After appointment: your ongoing compliance obligations
Maintaining post-appointment discipline turns a single filing into an ongoing compliance programme for the company. This section explains the practical steps your business must follow once the appointment is complete.

Keeping ACRA information current
Companies must notify ACRA of changes to an office-holder’s particulars, resignations or replacements promptly. File updates are commonly due within 14 days.
Tip: treat these deadlines as non-negotiable to avoid penalties and delays with banking or licences.
Maintaining statutory registers and records
Keep registers for directors, shareholders and beneficial owners up to date. Internal registers often need amendment within seven days of a change.
Ensure minutes, resolutions and the Register of Nominee Directors are inspection-ready at the registered office.
Staying on schedule: recurring filings
The company must meet cycles such as annual returns and preparation of financial statements. Missed deadlines can trigger fines, audit attention and enforcement action under the Companies Act.
Operationalising compliance from abroad
- Appoint responsible contacts and a single compliance lead.
- Maintain a compliance calendar with pre-clearance times for reviews and signatures.
- Run periodic governance reviews to confirm the arrangement still matches the company’s risk profile and responsibilities.
“A robust calendar and clear sign-off workflows turn compliance obligations into manageable tasks.”
Final point: the appointment is the start, not the end. The company must sustain accurate records, timely filings and active oversight so that statutory duties are met and risk is minimised.
Managing risk: liabilities for the nominee director and exposure for your business
Appointed persons carry full legal exposure under the Companies Act, so passive involvement rarely shields them from liability.
Legal reality: once appointed, the individual is a company director under the companies act and bears the same duties and responsibilities as other officers. Courts expect active oversight, not silence or token attendance.
Common triggers that create risk are practical and avoidable:
- Late or missing ACRA filings and annual returns.
- Incorrect or incomplete statutory registers and backdated resolutions.
- Unclear beneficial ownership or transactions outside authorised business activities.
- Poor documentation for unusual cash flows or regulated sector activity.
Consequences can be severe. Penalties include significant fines (up to SGD 100,000 cited by courts), disqualification from acting as a company director, reputational harm to the business and, in serious cases, imprisonment.
Founders should note practical impacts: banks may freeze accounts, vendors may withhold services and investors may withdraw support after compliance failures. These outcomes harm both the company and those who act on its behalf.
Risk management mindset: treat the appointed person as a governance partner, keep audit‑ready records and agree authority limits, reporting lines and a clear compliance calendar from day one.
“Hands-off approaches do not remove statutory duties; diligent oversight and documented controls are the real defence.”
Next step: use robust agreements, defined approval workflows and documented checks to reduce personal exposure and safeguard the company.
Safeguards to build into your nominee arrangement from day one
Clear, written protections prevent misunderstandings and reduce legal and operational risk for both the appointed person and the company.
Why safeguards matter. Informal expectations fail when urgent decisions arise or when regulators query filings. A formal agreement and documented processes make responsibilities explicit and protect the business.
Authority limits and approval workflows
Set firm boundaries on what the local appointee may sign without further consent. Typical permitted acts include statutory confirmations, routine board minutes and signing annual filings.
Items that should require prior written approval include banking mandates, major contracts, borrowing, asset sales and changes to share capital. Record escalation routes and target response times for urgent approvals.
Reporting lines and a compliance calendar
Assign named contacts for weekly or monthly updates and map who holds each compliance task. Build a calendar listing filing deadlines, internal cut‑offs and pre‑filing review periods to avoid missed submissions.
Data protection and confidentiality
Limit data access to secure channels, require encryption for sensitive files and document who may receive company information. Include confidentiality covenants that survive termination of the service.
Indemnities, dispute handling and termination
Include indemnities for good‑faith acts, while excluding cover for fraud, gross negligence or unauthorised conduct. Define notice periods, handover duties and the return of documents to ensure continuity if the provider changes.
| Safeguard | Why it matters | Typical clause |
|---|---|---|
| Authority limits | Prevents unintended commitments | List of permitted acts; written approval for major transactions |
| Compliance calendar | Avoids late filings and penalties | Deadlines, internal cut‑offs, responsible persons |
| Data controls | Protects confidential records and client data | Secure exchange, access lists, confidentiality covenant |
| Indemnity | Reassures the appointed person when acting in good faith | Limited indemnity excluding wilful misconduct and negligence |
| Termination & handover | Ensures business continuity | Notice period, document return, transition support |
Practical tip: capture these safeguards in a written agreement and review them with your corporate service provider. For a detailed guide to arranging compliant services, see this nominee director service guide.
Replacing or removing a nominee director without breaching the resident director requirement
Planned transitions protect the company from accidental non‑compliance and operational disruption. When one local office‑holder leaves, the company must ensure there is no gap: the company must keep at least one resident director at all times.
Transition planning and sequencing
Golden rule: appoint the incoming resident before processing the outgoing person’s cessation. Do not accept a resignation that would leave the company with no local coverage.
Confirm the new appointment, get a signed consent and complete due diligence first. Only then file the cessation for the outgoing office‑holder.
Resignation and ACRA filing timeline
All cessations and appointments must be filed with ACRA within 14 days. Delays can create a breach of statutory duties and attract penalties.
If an outgoing individual insists on immediate resignation, the company must act fast to appoint a replacement or risk a compliance breach.
Common switch triggers and control checklist
Typical switch points include work pass approval (for example, Employment Pass), hiring a local executive, or changing your corporate services or service provider.
- Confirm handover of registers, resolutions and filing history.
- Transfer the compliance calendar and active correspondence logs.
- Agree a clear sign‑off and document transfer date with the outgoing party.
Continuity of knowledge matters. Ensure the departing appointee transfers key correspondence, regulatory notices and the compliance context to avoid missed statutory actions.
“A controlled transition preserves compliance and minimises operational disruption for the business and the board.”
Conclusion
Practical closing: take action now to avoid last‑minute risks and delays. A clear plan saves time and cost when filings, banking and licensing matter.
Summary: every company must keep at least one local resident on its board under the Companies Act. A nominee director can meet that requirement for overseas founders, but the role carries real duties and liabilities.
Since June 2025, use a registered CSP to arrange appointments. Follow a simple process: prepare documents, sign a robust agreement, lodge the appointment on BizFile+ and maintain accurate registers and records.
Next step: review your board composition today. Plan any appointment or replacement early so your company and business remain fully compliant.
FAQ
What is the resident director rule under the Companies Act?
Why must every Singapore company keep a resident board member?
How does a nominee board member differ from an executive board member?
Are there differences between a local appointee and a shareholder representative?
When is appointing a local board member necessary during incorporation?
What if founders are waiting for an Employment Pass or EntrePass?
Who is eligible to act as a resident board member?
What checks should a company perform on a candidate?
What changed in 2025 about using a corporate service provider (CSP)?
What due diligence should a CSP perform before filing an appointment?
What are the statutory duties of a resident board member?
How does a resident board member work with the company secretary?
What should a company prepare before appointing a resident appointee?
How do I choose a safe and compliant corporate service provider?
What are the steps to appoint a resident board member via BizFile+?
What are the filing deadlines and consequences of late notification?
What ongoing compliance must the company manage after appointment?
What liability does a local board member face?
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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.