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Jonathon Richards

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Panama Company Formation Fast, Compliant Panama Incorporation Services

By Jonathon Richards
– posted 1 hour ago

Introduction Why Choose Panama for Company Formation

A Jurisdiction Built for International Commerce

Panama company formation remains one of the most sought-after corporate structuring options for international entrepreneurs, trading companies and asset-holding structures. Panama’s economy operates on the US dollar, its banking centre is the largest in Latin America, and the country’s corporate legislation rooted in Law 32 of 1927 provides a flexible, time-tested framework for the Sociedad Anónima (S.A.) and other entity types. Add the Panama Canal’s strategic importance, a thriving free-trade-zone ecosystem and a territorial tax system, and the commercial appeal is clear.

Yet the landscape is evolving. International transparency pressure including Panama’s inclusion on the EU list of non-cooperative jurisdictions for tax purposes and the enactment of Law No. 526 of 28 May 2026 (economic substance requirements) mean that anyone forming a Panama company today must plan for compliance from day one. This guide provides a lawyer-reviewed, step-by-step roadmap covering entity selection, costs, timelines, banking, tax, substance and beneficial-ownership obligations.

Quick Suitability Snapshot

  • Cross-border trading: Dollar-denominated contracts, Colón Free Zone access and flexible corporate law make Panama ideal for import/export and commodity trading structures.
  • Shipping & maritime: The world’s largest ship registry and a well-developed maritime services sector support vessel-owning and operational companies.
  • Asset protection & holding: Private-interest foundations and S.A. structures provide robust segregation provided substance and beneficial-ownership rules are satisfied.

Is Panama Right for Your Business? Suitability & Common Use-Cases

Trading (Cross-Border Contracts, Dollar Economy)

Panama’s position at the crossroads of the Americas, its canal infrastructure and its dollar-based economy create natural advantages for businesses that buy and sell internationally. Companies invoicing in USD avoid currency-conversion friction, and Colón Free Zone entities benefit from streamlined customs processes. For businesses conducting genuine trading activity, Panama company registration delivers a cost-effective base with established banking relationships.

Shipping & Maritime

Panama’s ship registry is the world’s largest by gross tonnage. Companies that register vessels under the Panamanian flag access competitive registration fees, experienced maritime counsel and a deep local services market. Shipping and Panama registry structures remain a core use-case, particularly for owners seeking operational flexibility with international flag-state recognition.

Asset Protection & Holding Structures

The Fundación de Interés Privado (Private-Interest Foundation) and the S.A. are frequently used for holding real estate, intellectual property and investment portfolios. Panama asset protection structures benefit from strong statutory privacy protections now modernised by beneficial-ownership reporting obligations and separation of personal and corporate assets. Advisers should note that substance requirements under Law 526 may affect passive-income holding structures from fiscal year 2027 onward.

When NOT to Pick Panama

Panama is not the optimal choice for every scenario. Companies that need to face onshore clients in jurisdictions with strict CFC rules, businesses requiring regulated financial-services licences (banking, insurance, securities) without a genuine local nexus, and structures with no demonstrable economic substance may encounter banking rejections or adverse tax treatment in the owner’s home country. A candid jurisdictional suitability assessment is essential before proceeding.

At a Glance: Key Benefits and Practical Limitations

  • Corporate law flexibility: Law 32 of 1927 permits broad objects clauses, minimal capitalisation and multi-jurisdictional director appointments.
  • Privacy (modernised): Bearer shares are immobilised; beneficial-owner data is held privately through the RUBF / SSNF platform, accessible only to competent authorities.
  • Cost-effectiveness: Formation fees and annual maintenance remain competitive compared with BVI, Cayman and Singapore.
  • Banking caveats: De-risking by international correspondent banks means account opening requires thorough preparation and realistic timelines.
  • Regulatory transparency: Law No. 526 introduces economic substance conditions for certain entities earning passive foreign income; the RUBF mandates beneficial-ownership disclosure via the resident agent.

Legal Forms, Governance and Typical Corporate Structure

Common Vehicles

  • Sociedad Anónima (S.A.): The default choice for most international incorporations. Broad powers, no minimum paid-up capital requirement, and shares may be registered or (if immobilised with the resident agent) nominative bearer. Requires at least three directors and three officers.
  • Limited Liability Company (SRL): Less common internationally, but suited to joint ventures and smaller operations where partner control and profit-sharing are paramount.
  • Private-Interest Foundation (Fundación de Interés Privado): A hybrid between a trust and a company, used for estate planning, asset protection and charitable purposes. Not a trading vehicle; must have a foundation council and protector structure.

Governance: Board, Shares and Resident Agent

An S.A. must have a minimum of three directors (who may be of any nationality and reside anywhere) and three officers president, secretary and treasurer who may also serve as directors. Panama’s general corporate law framework allows shares to carry different classes and voting rights. Bearer shares, once a hallmark of Panamanian privacy, must now be held in custody by the company’s resident agent or an authorised custodian.

The agente residente (resident agent) is a licensed Panamanian lawyer or law firm. The resident agent’s obligations have expanded significantly: they must collect, verify and upload beneficial-ownership information to the RUBF, maintain corporate records and cooperate with the Superintendencia de Sujetos No Financieros (SSNF).

Registered Office, Local Agent & Record-Keeping Practicals

Every Panama company must maintain a registered office at the resident agent’s address. Corporate books (shareholder register, minutes of directors’ and shareholders’ meetings) must be kept up to date. Since 2021, companies engaged in commercial activities in Panama must also maintain accounting records sufficient to demonstrate the nature and source of transactions.

Step-by-Step Panama Company Formation Checklist

The following twelve steps outline the practical process for Panama company registration, from initial name selection through to post-incorporation compliance.

  1. Choose entity type & name check. Select the appropriate vehicle (S.A., SRL or Foundation). The proposed name is verified against the Registro Público database. Name reservations are not mandatory but are recommended to prevent conflicts.
  2. Prepare and notarise articles of incorporation. The Pacto Social (articles of incorporation) must include statutory minimum clauses: company name, objects, capital structure, initial directors/officers, resident agent details and duration (usually perpetual). The document is executed before a Panamanian notary.
  3. Appoint directors, officers and designate the resident agent. Identify at least three directors and three officers. The resident agent a licensed Panamanian attorney is formally designated and accepts the appointment. The agent begins collecting beneficial-owner information for RUBF reporting.
  4. File with the Registro Público. The notarised articles are filed at the Public Registry. Upon inscription, the company obtains legal personality. A certified extract (certificado de Registro Público) is issued confirming registration details.
  5. Register for RUC / tax ID with DGI. The Registro Único de Contribuyente (RUC) is obtained from the Dirección General de Ingresos (DGI). Companies conducting commercial activities in Panama must also obtain an Aviso de Operación (notice of operations).
  6. Prepare corporate books & registers. Share register, minutes book and accounting records are established. A certified extract typically takes 3–7 business days to obtain from the registry.
  7. Upload beneficial-owner data to RUBF / SSNF. The resident agent enters verified beneficial-ownership information into the RUBF via the SSNF portal. Initial registration must be completed upon incorporation; changes must be reported within 15 business days.
  8. Open bank account. Present corporate documents, certified extracts, director/shareholder passports, proof of address, source-of-funds documentation and a business plan to the selected bank (see Banking section below).
  9. Apply for sectoral licences (if required). Activities such as financial services, insurance, telecommunications or mining require additional regulatory approvals.
  10. Obtain apostilles / translations for foreign documents. Documents issued outside Panama may require apostille certification (Hague Convention) and sworn Spanish translations.
  11. Document retention & annual obligations. Annual franchise tax (tasa única) must be paid; DGI filing obligations apply to companies with Panama-source income. Accounting records must be maintained for at least five years.
  12. Post-incorporation compliance checklist. Schedule RUBF update reviews, annual franchise-tax payments, renewal of resident-agent engagement and for entities within scope substance reporting under Law 526.

Costs & Typical Timelines

Typical Cost Bands for Panama Company Formation

Panama company cost structures vary depending on the complexity of the engagement and service level:

  • Formation-only (basic S.A.): USD 1,200–2,000, covering government filing fees, notarisation, initial registered-agent fee and certified extract.
  • Full-service incorporation: USD 2,500–4,500, including nominee directors/officers (if needed), corporate books, RUBF registration, apostilles and bank-introduction services.
  • Annual maintenance: USD 800–1,500 per year, covering franchise tax, resident-agent renewal, RUBF maintenance and basic compliance support.

These are indicative ranges as at mid-2026 and will vary by provider and scope. Structured-data pricing estimates are published alongside this page to support search visibility.

Typical Timelines

Step Typical duration
Name check Same day
Notarisation of articles 1–3 business days
Registry filing & issue of extract 3–7 business days
RUC / DGI registration 1–5 business days
RUBF beneficial-owner upload Concurrent with incorporation
Bank account opening 2–8+ weeks (highly variable)

Cost Drivers & Why Some Banks Ask for More

The principal cost variables are complexity of beneficial-ownership chains, the number of directors/shareholders requiring KYC documentation, sector risk (crypto, extractives, gaming) and whether nominee structures are involved. Banks frequently request additional documentation audited financial statements, reference letters from existing banks or professional references when ownership structures are multi-layered or the anticipated transaction profile is high.

Banking in Panama How to Open a Business Account & Common Friction Points

Documents Banks Typically Require

Panama bank account opening requires thorough preparation. Banks regulated by the Superintendencia de Bancos de Panamá typically require:

  • Corporate documents: Certified copy of the articles of incorporation, board resolution authorising account opening and certified registry extract.
  • Identification: Notarised colour copies of passports for all directors, officers and beneficial owners.
  • Proof of address: Recent utility bills or bank statements for all natural persons identified as beneficial owners.
  • Source of funds / source of wealth: Documentary evidence demonstrating how the company will be funded and the origin of the owners’ wealth.
  • Business plan: Description of activities, expected transaction volumes, counterparty jurisdictions and anticipated account turnover.

Common Rejections & Causes

Account applications are most commonly declined due to insufficient economic substance in Panama, opaque or overly complex beneficial-ownership chains, counterparties in high-risk jurisdictions, and activities in sectors that trigger enhanced due diligence (virtual assets, gambling, arms). Industry observers note that de-risking by correspondent banks has made Panamanian banks increasingly selective since 2020.

Practical Tips to Maximise Success

A pre-KYC review assembling the complete document package before approaching banks significantly improves approval rates. Selecting a bank aligned with the company’s sector, using local counsel for introductions, and planning a progressive relationship (starting with modest transaction volumes) all reduce friction. Companies with demonstrable substance local employees, contracts, premises find banking relationships markedly easier to establish.

Tax, Economic Substance & Reporting

The Territorial Tax Principle

Panama operates a territorial tax system: only income sourced within Panama is subject to Panama corporate tax. Foreign-sourced income has traditionally been entirely non-taxable, making the jurisdiction attractive for international trading and holding structures. Panama corporate tax on locally-sourced income is levied at 25%.

Law No. 526 of 28 May 2026 Economic Substance

Law No. 526, enacted on 28 May 2026, represents Panama’s most significant corporate-tax reform in decades. The law applies to Panamanian legal entities that are members of multinational enterprise groups and that derive certain categories of passive foreign-source income including dividends, interest, royalties and capital gains. For these entities, the traditional non-taxable treatment of foreign-source income is conditioned on demonstrating adequate economic substance in Panama. The law takes effect for fiscal years beginning on or after 1 January 2027; implementing regulations (reglamentación) are pending.

Industry observers expect the implementing regulations to specify minimum thresholds for personnel, premises, operating expenditure and decision-making that entities must satisfy. Failure to meet substance conditions would result in the relevant income being treated as Panama-source and taxed accordingly.

Practical Compliance Checklist

  • Personnel: Adequate qualified employees or contracted personnel in Panama.
  • Premises: Physical office space proportionate to the nature and scale of the activity.
  • Operating expenses: Demonstrable local expenditure (rent, utilities, professional fees).
  • Decision-making: Board meetings held in Panama; strategic decisions documented locally.
  • Reporting: Annual substance declarations to DGI (timing and format to be confirmed by regulation); penalties for non-compliance or material misstatement.

Compliance, Beneficial Ownership Disclosure and Resident Agent Duties

RUBF / Private & Unique Beneficial Owners Registry

Panama’s beneficial-ownership framework established by Law 129 of 2020 and subsequent amendments requires every Panamanian legal entity to identify its beneficial owners and report this information through the resident agent to the RUBF, administered by the SSNF. The registry is private: information is accessible only to competent authorities upon formal request. Changes in beneficial ownership must be updated within 15 business days. Non-compliance exposes both the entity and the resident agent to administrative fines and potential suspension of the company’s good standing.

AML / KYC Expectations

Designated non-financial businesses and professions (DNFBPs), including corporate-service providers and law firms acting as resident agents, are subject to AML/CFT obligations. The IMF’s technical assessments of Panama’s AML framework highlight ongoing supervisory strengthening, which directly affects how banks evaluate companies formed in the jurisdiction. Resident agents must maintain client files, conduct ongoing due diligence and report suspicious transactions to Panama’s Financial Analysis Unit (UAF).

Best Practices

Clients are assured that BO data submitted to the RUBF is not publicly searchable and is protected by data-security protocols. However, maintaining accurate, current records is a legal obligation not optional. Companies should establish internal calendars for RUBF updates, annual franchise-tax payments and substance reporting (where applicable) to avoid lapses.

Panama vs Alternatives Comparison Tables & Analysis

Table A: Panama vs BVI / Cayman / Belize

Factor Panama BVI Cayman Belize
Corporate law flexibility High (Law 32, broad objects) High (BCA 2004) High (Companies Act) High (IBC Act)
Substance risk (2026) Emerging (Law 526 passive income) Established (ES Act) Established (ES Act) Lower (limited rules)
Banking openness Moderate (de-risking ongoing) Low (limited local banking) High but expensive Moderate
Tax treatment Territorial (+ Law 526 caveats) No income tax No income tax Territorial / exempt
EU list implications Listed (Annex I as at 2026) Not currently listed Not currently listed Watch-listed periodically
Typical full-service cost USD 2,500–4,500 USD 2,000–4,000 USD 10,000–25,000+ USD 1,500–3,000
Typical use-case Trading, shipping, holding Holding, fund vehicles Funds, insurance, SPVs Simple holding / trading

Table B: Panama (Territorial) vs Onshore Jurisdictions

Factor Panama UK US (Delaware) Singapore
Corporate tax rate 25% (Panama-source only) 25% 21% (federal) + state 17%
Foreign income treatment Non-taxable (subject to Law 526) Worldwide (with CFC rules) Worldwide (GILTI / Subpart F) Territorial (with conditions)
Transfer pricing rules Limited (expanding) Comprehensive (OECD-based) Comprehensive Comprehensive (OECD-aligned)
BO public register Private (RUBF) Public (Companies House) FinCEN BOI (restricted access) Not public (ACRA-held)
CFC exposure for owners N/A domestically Owner’s home CFC rules apply US shareholders exposed Limited CFC regime

Takeaway: Panama suits trading, shipping and holding structures where the owner’s home jurisdiction does not impose aggressive CFC rules on the company’s income. BVI and Cayman may be preferable for fund structures. Onshore jurisdictions offer treaty networks and perceived legitimacy at the cost of worldwide taxation. Buyers should obtain jurisdiction-specific tax advice before committing. A detailed comparison is available in our Panama vs BVI / Cayman analysis.

Client Case Study Trading Structure with Substance Measures

(Anonymised lawyer-reviewed)

Problem: A Latin American trading group needed a Panama company to centralise procurement contracts across five countries. Two previous attempts to open banking facilities had been declined due to insufficient documentation of beneficial ownership and lack of demonstrable substance in Panama.

Actions taken: After forming a Sociedad Anónima with full RUBF compliance, the advisory team helped the client establish a small operational office in Panama City, appoint a locally resident commercial manager, and prepare a detailed business plan documenting counterparties, expected volumes and source of funds. A targeted bank-introduction strategy was implemented, approaching two banks with strong trade-finance capabilities and pre-assembling the complete KYC file with reference letters from the group’s existing bankers in Colombia.

Result: The company obtained a corporate operating account within five weeks of submission. Within three months, the entity was processing monthly procurement payments averaging USD 2.3 million. The substance footprint local office, employee, documented board meetings also positioned the company favourably for Law 526 compliance when it takes effect in 2027.

Conclusion

Panama company formation continues to offer compelling advantages for international trading, shipping and holding structures but the compliance environment has changed materially. Law 526’s economic substance requirements, the RUBF beneficial-ownership registry and heightened bank due diligence mean that successful incorporation now demands professional planning from the outset. Businesses that invest in proper structuring, transparent ownership reporting and demonstrable substance will find Panama remains a highly competitive and legally robust jurisdiction for international operations.

Sources

FAQs

Can foreigners own a company in Panama?
Yes. Panama’s corporate legislation places no restrictions on foreign ownership of companies. Non-residents may hold 100% of the shares of a Sociedad Anónima, serve as directors and officers, and there is no requirement for a local shareholder. The only mandatory local appointment is the resident agent, who must be a licensed Panamanian attorney or law firm.
At a minimum, a Panamanian S.A. requires: a unique company name, articles of incorporation executed before a Panamanian notary, at least three directors (of any nationality), three officers (president, secretary, treasurer), a licensed resident agent, and registration with the Registro Público. The resident agent must also register beneficial-ownership information with the RUBF / SSNF. There is no minimum paid-up capital requirement.
Typical formation costs range from USD 1,200–2,000 for a basic S.A. incorporation (government fees, notarisation and initial registered-agent fee) to USD 2,500–4,500 for a full-service package including nominee appointments, corporate books, RUBF registration and bank-introduction services. Annual maintenance typically runs USD 800–1,500. For a personalised estimate, use our Panama company cost estimator.
The name check can be completed same-day. Notarisation of the articles takes 1–3 business days, and registry filing with issuance of a certified extract typically takes 3–7 business days. A company can therefore be legally incorporated within approximately one to two weeks. Bank account opening, however, adds 2–8 weeks or more depending on the bank’s due diligence requirements and the complexity of the ownership structure.
Under Panama’s territorial tax system, foreign-sourced income has traditionally been non-taxable. However, Law No. 526 of 28 May 2026 now conditions this non-taxable treatment for entities within multinational groups earning certain passive foreign income (dividends, interest, royalties, capital gains) on demonstrating adequate economic substance in Panama. Entities that fail to meet substance requirements may have their passive foreign income reclassified as taxable. The law is effective for fiscal years beginning 1 January 2027.
Banks regulated by the Superintendencia de Bancos typically require: a certified copy of the articles of incorporation, a current registry extract, board resolution authorising the account opening, notarised passport copies for all directors and beneficial owners, proof of residential address, documentary evidence of source of funds and source of wealth, and a business plan describing expected activities and transaction volumes.

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Panama Company Formation Fast, Compliant Panama Incorporation Services

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