Company Registration in Lithuania

POSSIBLE OPTIONS TO REGISTER A COMPANY IN LITHUANIA

1. Purchase of a ready-made company in Lithuania

In addition to the establishment of new companies, we also propose to acquire an already established company, whose authorized capital is fully established. It is possible to purchase a finished company completely remote...
1, 500 EUR

2. Company registration by visit to Lithuania

Legal address in the territory of Lithuania and registered capital (1,000 euros) is obligatory. For the establishment of the company, you need to be present at the notary in Vilnius...
1, 700 EUR

3. Opening a company in Lithuania by a power of attorney

Legal address in the territory of Lithuania and registered capital (1,000 euros) is obligatory. A notarized power of attorney...
2, 000 EUR

4. Subsidiary/branch registration in Lithuania

A branch of a foreign company in Lithuania has the right to conduct commercial activities in Lithuania, to receive profits, pay taxes, receive VAT number, hire personnel...
2, 900 EUR

Additional Services

Company formation in Lithuania

OPEN A COMPANY IN LITHUANIA

Lithuania ranks 11th in the world in terms of ease of doing business (World Bank Report «Doing Business, 2020)

The most common form of business presence in Lithuania is a limited liability company – UAB.

UĹľdaroji akcinÄ— bendrovÄ— (UAB) in translation from the Lithuanian language means Closed Joint-Stock Company. It is possible to sell the statutory capital of UAB in whole or in part, donate shares, or pass them down from one generation to the next. UAB must have a minimum of one owner or owner (natural or legal person) and a minimum of one director (natural person) who may sign on the company’s behalf.

ADVANTAGES

  • Lithuania ranks 11th in the world in terms of ease of doing business
  • Low cost of company registration compared to other EU countries
  • Lithuanian company income tax from 5%
  • Completely remote company re-registration

Forms of Business in Lithuania

There are four main types of company registration in Lithuania for foreign investors and they are:

All business entities must be registered in a single Register of Legal Entities.

Starting your business, you have to decide on the legal form for the enterprise. The most common forms of company registration in Lithuania are a closed joint-stock company, a small company and an individual enterprise. The most convenient option is considered to be the opening of a JSC, as indicated by the statistics.

More than 90% of all enterprises of the Republic of Lithuania are registered in the form of a closed joint-stock company (Uzdaroji Akcine Bendrove, abbreviated UAB). The founder may be a natural or legal person (up to 250 shareholders), and there are no restrictions on citizenship.

Management bodies are the general meeting of shareholders, the supervisory board and the head of which may become an individual, including a non-resident. Instead of a sole manager, a collegiate body can manage the company.

According to the legislation of the Republic of Lithuania, the statutory capital of a closed joint-stock company must be not less than 2,900 euros. At the time of registration the company has to pay 25% and the rest is paid within a year after its opening. The authorized capital is formed by transferring funds from any bank, including an account abroad, as well as by paying cash into the savings account of the enterprise.

The main advantage of UAB is limited liability to creditors. Shareholders and owners are not accountable for their personal property.

If the company employs 50 or more people, the company’s assets are estimated at 720,000 Euros or more, the company’s settlement accounts charge at 1,400,000 Euros, and a mandatory audit is required.

Why you must register company in Lithuania?

Company registration in Lithuania is an opportunity to broaden horizons, enter the European market at low cost and increase the number of potential customers. Strategically Lithuanian company is a conductor between Ukraine, other CIS countries and the European Union.

Company Registration in Lithuania Lithuania is the most suitable country in the Baltic region to start a business abroad, as it has a stable economy, a dynamic financial sector and low rates of profit taxes. To open a company in Lithuania means to expand horizons and bring business to a new level that meets world standards. The Republic of Lithuania ranks high second in Europe in the Investment Attractiveness Index and 11 in the world in the ease of opening its business, and has also risen by 13 in the ranking of the freest economies. The labour market is estimated at 1.5 million professionals.

The decision to register a company in the territory of the Republic of Lithuania is relevant to the establishment of a transit point and further access to the European market, which includes 27 States, which allows you to multiply the number of potential clients and to conduct your business more efficiently. The entrepreneur can also open a branch in any European Union country.

Why Lithuania

  • The profit tax is 5% and 15%
  • Trade without customs barriers (within EU)
  • No double taxation
  • Opening a company in Lithuania gives the right to receive GNH
  • No exchange control
  • Return and account for VAT code
  • The registration procedure lasts no longer than 5 days

The Republic of Lithuania is an attractive jurisdiction for obtaining a residence permit in Europe, as a result of which you will be able to move freely in the Schengen area without a visa.

Lithuania’s tax system is loyal. It has some of the lowest rates throughout the European Union. Only 5% of the profit is paid if the annual income is about EUR 289,620 and the number of employees is not more than 10. The VAT rate is 21%. Moreover, the entrepreneur can use legal ways of tax exemption and can avoid double taxation, as special agreements have been concluded with a number of countries.

Purchase of a ready-made company in Lithuania

Purchase of a ready-made company in LithuaniaThe fastest approach to opening a company in Lithuania will be to acquire a ready registered company. You can easily avoid bureaucracy, immediately start your business and make a profit.

Also, the purchase of a company with the existing name will be interesting to customers already operating in their country, who want to enter the European Union market and create a company with the same name.

The process of converting a company to a new owner involves updating the data in the Register Centre. Despite the fact that the procedure will take some time, it is possible to start and run a business only a couple of days after the purchase of the firm has been made.

Our company can also help with obtaining a crypto license in Lithuania.

Taxation

In Lithuania, income tax on enterprises is 15 per cent, and source-of-income tax 15 per cent. Small companies may apply for a reduced rate of profit tax of 0 per cent or 5 per cent under certain conditions. The total VAT rate is 21%.

Establishment of a Small Business (MB) in Lithuania

Main legal acts regulating registration (MB):

  • Civil Code of the Republic of Lithuania (LRCK)
  • The Law on Small Businesses of the Republic of Lithuania (LRMBÄ®)

Contribution of funds to a Small Business:

Although it is not required to have an authorized capital in a Small business, but members of the business must pay contributions (their size and payment terms shall be set at a Meeting of Members), and the profit of a Small business shall be divided proportionally, taking into account the size of each member’s contribution.

The contribution of a member of a Small business is his or her property transferred to the business. The contribution may be money or other property, with the exception of works and services. The property transferred to a Small business becomes its property.

Step 1 – Name

Requirements for the business name:

  • Novelty
  • Originality
  • Does not contradict public order and good morals

The name of the business must comply with the norms of the Lithuanian language.

The name should not consist only of general terms that do not differ (for example, wood, jewelry, etc.), nor can it be identical with a trademark.

The business name can be reserved in the Register of Legal Entities for a period of 6 months. This means that no one can register an identical name during this period, and you will also be sure that such a name is suitable.

If a branch of a foreign company is being created, the name may match or be similar.

When registering the name in the Register, you need to fill out a specially established JAR-5 form.

Step 2 – Preparation of constituent documents (constituent agreement/act)

If there are two founders, a constituent agreement shall be concluded. If there is one founder – a constituent act.

A Small business can have no more than 10 founders and they only can be individuals.

Specified shall be:

  • Founders of a Small business
  • Company name
  • The main office of the business
  • Legal form – Small Business (MB)
  • The head, if the business will have a single management body
  • Contribution of each member to the business, its size, conditions and terms of contribution
  • A person who has the right to act on behalf of the business
  • Conditions for concluding transactions on behalf of the business
  • Compensation of expenses related to the establishment of the business
  • Date of conclusion of the constituent agreement

When a Small business is established by two or more founders and it is assumed that the Meeting of Members of the Small business will be the main governing body of the business, the representative of the business, as well the representative’s rights and obligations must also be specified in the constituent agreement.

The constituent agreement/act shall be signed by all the founders or their authorized persons.

Step 3 – The Charter

The business’s charter is the main document on the basis of which the business conducts its activities.

The charter of the business being established must be signed by all the founders or their authorized persons.

The charter must specify:

  • Name of the Small business
  •  Legal form – Small Business (MB)
  • The purpose of the business’s activities
  • The business’s bodies and their competence
  • Rules for the appointment and dismissal of the head of the business, if the business has a single management body
  • Rules for holding a Meeting of members of the Small business
  • Rules and procedure for obtaining financial resources for personal needs by a member of the Small business in the form of an advance payment from the paid profit
  • Rules for the admission of new members to the Small business
  • Rules for voluntary withdrawal of a member from the business
  • Rules of settlement with members of the Small business in case of his or her voluntary departure from the business
  • Rules for familiarization of members of the Small business with documents and other information
  • Rules for informing the Small business about the intention to sell the rights of a member
  • The source where the public news of the Small business is published
  • Rules for changing the charter of the Small business
  • The term of activity of the Small business, if it is limited
  • Date of signing of the charter of the Small business
  • Other conditions that, according to the law, should be specified in the charter of the Small enterprise

In the case when there is only one member in the Small business, paragraphs 6, 9, 10, 11 and 12 are not mandatory.

Step 4 – Small Business Bodies

1) Members’ Meeting only:

In this case, the Meeting of Members is also the governing body that makes all decisions related to the activities of the business, and one of the members of the business is chosen by the representative of the business, who, in principle, performs the functions of a manager.

2) A meeting of members and one governing body – the head:

One of a Small business members may be its head. A contract for the provision of services shall be signed with the head. The head acts on behalf of the business and has the right to make transactions independently. In this case, a meeting of members of a Small business resolves the main issues of the business (for example, changing the charter, the location of the office, the head, etc.), and the head performs other functions provided for in the charter.

Step 5 – Notary

All prepared documents must be submitted to a Notary.

The Notary confirms the charter and checks whether the documents correspond to legal acts.

Step 6 – Register of Legal entities

Having confirmed the documents of the business, the Notary transfers them to the founder or his or her authorized person. This person must submit documents to the Register.

The Register of Legal Entities registers the business and issues a certificate of registration, as well as one copy of the confirmed charter.

The registration period is about 3 days.

The price of setting up a Small business (MB)

Registration of the name
16,22 EUR
Notary fee
about 120 EUR
Registration of the business in the Register of Legal Entities
51.61 EUR
Legal services
under a separate contract

Establishment of a limited liability company (UAB) in Lithuania

Handbook on the establishment of a limited liability company (UAB)

Main legal acts regulating Registration (UAB):

  • Civil Code of the Republic of Lithuania (LRCK);
  • The Law on Joint-Stock Companies of the Republic of Lithuania (LRABÄ®).

Step 1 – Name

Requirements for the business name:

  • Novelty
  • Originality
  • Does not contradict public order and good morals.

The name of the business must comply with the norms of the Lithuanian language.

The name should not consist only of general terms that do not differ (for example, wood, jewelry, etc.), nor can it be identical with a trademark.

The business name can be reserved in the Register of Legal Entities for a period of 6 months. This means that no one can register an identical name during this period, and you will also be sure that such a name is suitable.

If a branch of a foreign company is being created, the name may match or be similar.

When registering the name in the Register, you need to fill out a specially established JAR-5 form.

Step 2 – Preparation of constituent documents (constituent agreement/act)

If there are two founders, a constituent agreement shall be concluded. If there is one founder – a constituent act.

Specified shall be:

  • Founders
  • Name and location of the company
  • Persons who have the right to represent the company
  • The size of the authorized capital

Specified shall be:

  • The nominal value of the shares, the rights granted by them, the issue price;
  • Number of shares acquired by each founder;
  • Terms and conditions of payment of shares, as well as making initial contributions;
  • Terms of convocation of the Founding meeting, if the Meeting is convened;
  • Conditions for providing founders with documents and information related to the Founding meeting, if the Meeting is convened;
  • Compensation of expenses related to the foundation and payment for the institution;
  • Date of conclusion of the constituent agreement.

The Constituent agreement of the company must be signed by all the founders or their authorized person.

The constituent agreement/act is at the same time an agreement on the signing of shares.

Step 3 – Deposit of the authorized capital/payment of shares

The signed constituent agreement / act allows you to open an account of the company with a bank.

The shares must be paid in full within the period specified in the constituent agreement/act, and cannot be longer than 12 months from the date of its certification.

The authorized capital must be at least 1,000 EUR.

Shares can be paid for:

  • By money
  • By property
  • By ownership rights

Shares cannot be paid for:

  1. By property removed from circulation
  2. By work
  3. By services

If the authorized capital is minimal (1,000 EUR), it can only be formed in money, and the entire amount shall be deposited to the account. If the authorized capital is more than the minimum amount, part of it can be paid with property, but in each case the monetary part must be at least 25% of the authorized capital and it must be at least 1,000 EUR.

Step 4 – Charter

The company’s charter is the main document on the basis of which the company conducts its activities.

The charter of the business being established must be signed by all the founders or their authorized persons.

The Charter must be submitted to the Register within 6 months from the date on which it was signed by all the founders.

The Charter shall be prepared and signed before the Founders’ Meeting, if it is convened.

The charter must specify:

  • Company name, legal form, purpose of activity, indicating the object of activity
  • The size of the authorized capital of the company
  • The number of shares, as well as their number by class, nominal value, rights granted
  • Competence of the General Meeting of Shareholders and terms of its convocation
  • Conditions for the announcement of the company’s news, as well as the source in which the news is announced
  • Conditions for providing documents and other information to shareholders
  • Rules for making decisions on the establishment of branches, agencies, etc.
  • Rules for changing the company’s charter
  • The term of activity of the company, if it is limited
  • Date of signing of the charter

Step 5 – Founding Meeting (optional)

Before the company is registered in the Register, a Founding Meeting must be convened. The Founding meeting of UAB may not be convened if the company’s management bodies selected by the general meeting of shareholders are specified in the constituent agreement/act, taking into account the charter.

Other documents required for company registration:

  • List of shareholders
  • Application according to JAR form(JAR-1, JAR-VO-V, JAR-T, JAR-AF);
  • Agreement on the transfer of the name
  • Permission to be located under the specific address of the main office
  • The decision of the shareholders (owner) on the appointment of the director
  • Personal documents of the founders

Step 6 – Notary

All prepared documents must be submitted to a Notary.

The Notary confirms the charter and checks whether the documents correspond to legal acts.

Additionally, the Notary shall be provided with:

  • A certificate from a bank confirming the deposit of the authorized capital;
  • Consent of the owner of the building where the company’s office is registered.

Step 7 – Register of Legal Entities

Having confirmed the documents of the company, the Notary transfers them to the founder or his or her authorized person. This person must submit documents to the Register.

The Register of Legal Entities registers the business and issues a certificate of registration, as well as one copy of the confirmed charter.

The registration period is no later than 3 working days from the submission of documents.

Company registration in Lithuania 2023

The association is defined as a public legal entity with limited civil liability with its own name, the purpose of which is to coordinate the activities of the members of the association, representing the interests of the members of the association and their protection or satisfaction of other public interests. It should be noted that the name of the association may contain the words «association», «public organization», «association», «confederation», «union», «society», «club» or other words, but they all operate under the same Associations Act.

A public institution is a non-profit public legal entity with limited civil liability established in accordance with the law, the purpose of which is to satisfy the public interest through the implementation of educational, educational, scientific, cultural, medical, environmental, environmental, medical, sports, social or legal assistance, as well as other services useful for the activities of society.

State institution (VšĮ) Association
Founders The founder may be one or more natural and/or legal persons. The founders of the association may be capable natural and (or) legal persons who have reached the age of 18 and who have treaty on the establishment association. Members associations whose activities are related to needs of children and young people may be under the age of 18.
Minimum number of founders 1 Minimum number of founders of an association – 3.
Basic difference The main objective of a public enterprise is satisfaction of public, i.e. society, interests in scientific, cultural, educational, medical and other areas. This organizational legal form of the legal entity provides educational and leisure institutions of employment organizations providing social services. The purpose of the association is to represent the interests of its members, like-minded people who have joined the association to achieve a common goal, Cooperation with organizations of a similar type ascribed to abroad. Therefore, individuals or companies most often are organized into interest associations: these may be communities equipment manufacturers, sports representatives (clubs, teams).
Authorities General Meeting of Shareholders Head (Director) government agency. The charter of a public institution may also provide for a collegiate management body of a public institution, as well as other collegial bodies. Number of members collegial bodies. The charter of the public institution, its competence and the procedure for electing and withdrawing the members of these bodies shall be determined by the charter of the public institution. General Meeting of Members + Head of Association (President). Structure, competence, and the procedure for convening and taking decisions of the association’s bodies is defined in the Charter associations.
Manager The head of a public institution organizes the activities of a public institution and acts on behalf of a public institution in relations with others, Concludes and terminates employment contracts with employees state-owned institution. The State agency takes office from the date of its appointment and, when a State institution is established, institutions—from the day of registration of the institutions. The employment contract is concluded with the head of the public enterprise. The head of a State institution which is not classified as a public administration entity and registered as a non-governmental organization in the register of legal entities, instead of an employment contract, may be concluded agreement on voluntary activity. Head of the Association chairman (President). Conclusion employment contract with the head of the association is not obligatory.

The objectives of the activities of the public legal entities should be described clearly and in detail, indicating the area and type of activity. Therefore, when establishing an association or public institution for operational purposes, including commercial ones, special attention should be paid, as they depend on the legality of the activity of the legal entity: receipt and use of support, payment of funds, transfer of property, etc. Both state institutions and associations have the right to engage in economic and commercial activities, which are not prohibited by law and are inextricably linked to their operational objectives and necessary for their achievement.

Viktoria

Viktoriia Korotkevich

Managing Associate

[email protected]

Frequently asked questions

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