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can a foreign corporation operate in the philippines

Can a Foreign Corporation Operate in the Philippines in 2026? SEC License, Branch vs Subsidiary, BIR & PEZA Steps

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Yes, a foreign corporation can operate in the Philippines, provided it secures a license to do business from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and complies with the sectoral ownership limits set out in the 13th Foreign Investment Negative List (13th FINL) under Executive Order No. 113. The process involves three sequential layers: choosing the right entity structure (branch, subsidiary, or representative office), completing SEC registration or licensing, and then registering with the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) and, where incentives are sought, the Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA) or the Board of Investments (BOI). For 2026, the landscape has shifted: EO No.

113 recalibrated foreign-ownership caps across several sectors, the SEC’s eFAST and updated GIS form 2026 have digitised much of the filing process, and BIR has refined its online registration system (ORUS) for non-resident entities seeking a Tax Identification Number (TIN). This guide consolidates every procedural step, deadline, and risk factor a foreign corporation needs to manage before commencing Philippine operations.

What Counts as a Foreign Corporation, and When Is a License Required?

Legal definition and triggers

Under the Revised Corporation Code of the Philippines (Republic Act No. 11232), a foreign corporation is one that is formed, organised, or existing under laws other than those of the Philippines. The place of incorporation, not the nationality of shareholders, is the determinative test. A company incorporated in Singapore, the United States, Japan, or any other jurisdiction is therefore classified as a foreign corporation regardless of whether Filipinos sit on its board or hold shares.

The critical follow-up question is whether that foreign corporation intends to do business in the Philippines. The Corporation Code and the Foreign Investments Act (Republic Act No. 7042, as amended) define “doing business” broadly to include soliciting orders, opening offices, appointing representatives or distributors domiciled in the Philippines, and participating in the management or control of a domestic entity. Industry observers note that the SEC has applied these tests expansively, and even sustained or continuous commercial activity that falls short of a formal office opening may trigger the licensing requirement.

When a license is required, and when it is not

A license to do business from the SEC is mandatory before a foreign corporation may transact business in the Philippines on a continuing basis. Certain activities are, however, expressly excluded from the definition of “doing business” and therefore do not require a license:

  • Isolated transactions. A single, non-recurring contract, such as selling a piece of equipment, does not constitute doing business.
  • Export activities. Purchasing raw materials or goods in the Philippines for export, without any local sales, generally falls outside the threshold.
  • Maintenance of a bank account. Merely holding a Philippine bank account does not trigger the requirement.
  • Litigation or arbitration. Pursuing or defending an isolated legal action is not, by itself, doing business.

If the activity is sustained, revenue-generating, and directed at the Philippine market, the foreign corporation must secure the appropriate SEC authority before commencing operations.

Choosing the Right Structure: Branch vs Subsidiary vs Representative Office

Before applying to the SEC, the foreign corporation must decide which entity form best fits its Philippine objectives. The choice between a branch, a locally incorporated subsidiary, and a representative office determines liability exposure, tax treatment, capital requirements, and the scope of permitted commercial activity. Below is a concise comparison, followed by practical guidance on each option for teams weighing branch vs subsidiary in the Philippines.

Feature Branch Subsidiary Representative Office
Legal identity Extension of foreign parent, not a separate juridical entity Separate Philippine corporation Extension of parent; cannot earn local income
Liability Parent directly liable for all branch obligations Limited to subsidiary’s share capital (corporate veil) Parent liable for representative office acts
Tax treatment Taxed on Philippine-sourced income; branch profit remittance tax applies Taxed as a domestic corporation; dividends to parent subject to withholding tax Generally not subject to income tax (no local revenue)
Minimum capital Inwardly remitted assigned capital (USD 200,000 general rule under RA 7042; reduced thresholds may apply) Paid-up capital per SEC rules; USD 200,000 if fully foreign-owned (general rule) USD 30,000 minimum inward remittance
SEC requirement License to do business Registration as domestic corporation SEC registration (limited license)
Can hire and invoice locally? Yes, subject to permits Yes No, limited to information dissemination and liaison
Can sue or be sued locally? Yes Yes Yes, but only within scope of permitted activities
Exit complexity High, parent liabilities and SEC clearance required Moderate, standard winding-up procedure Low, closure filing with SEC

Representative office requirements in the Philippines

A representative office is the lightest footprint a foreign corporation can establish. It may promote the parent company’s products, conduct market research, coordinate quality control, and perform liaison work, but it cannot derive income from the Philippines. All operating expenses must be funded entirely by remittances from the head office. The SEC requires a minimum initial remittance of USD 30,000 (or its peso equivalent) and ongoing proof that operating costs are funded from abroad. For companies conducting due diligence ahead of a full market entry, the representative office offers a low-risk starting position.

When a subsidiary makes more sense

A subsidiary is a separately incorporated Philippine corporation with its own juridical personality. It is the preferred vehicle when the foreign investor wants to (a) ring-fence parent-company liability, (b) access BOI or PEZA fiscal incentives that are structured around domestic registrants, or (c) participate in sectors where the Constitution or the 13th FINL limits foreign ownership to 40 per cent or less, since Filipino equity partners can take the majority stake in a co-owned domestic entity. Industry observers expect subsidiaries to remain the dominant structure for foreign entrants in energy, aviation, technology services, and real-estate-adjacent sectors where sectoral caps and incentive eligibility overlap.

When a branch is faster

A branch does not require separate incorporation. For foreign corporations that want to begin Philippine operations quickly and whose head office is willing to assume direct liability, the branch route can shave several weeks off the registration timeline. The trade-off is exposure: the parent company’s global assets are, in principle, reachable by Philippine creditors. Branches are common among multinational banks, insurance companies, and engineering firms whose home-country regulatory licences already carry global effect.

SEC Licensing: Step-by-Step Process for a Foreign Corporation in 2026

Legal basis and the application test

The SEC derives its licensing authority from Title XVI of the Revised Corporation Code and the Foreign Investments Act. A foreign corporation seeking a license to do business in the Philippines must demonstrate that the purpose for which it seeks admission is lawful, that it possesses adequate capital, and that the proposed activities are not reserved to Filipino nationals under the 13th FINL. The applicant must also show that the country of incorporation grants reciprocal rights to Philippine corporations.

Required documents, what to prepare

The specific documentary requirements vary by entity type. The table below summarises the core SEC requirements for a foreign corporation applying as a branch, registering a subsidiary, or establishing a representative office.

Document Branch Subsidiary Representative Office
Application form (SEC Form) Required Articles of Incorporation and By-Laws Required
Authenticated articles of incorporation of parent Required Not required (new entity) Required
Board resolution designating resident agent Required N/A Required
Audited financial statements of parent Required Not required (new entity) Required
Proof of inward remittance of capital Required (assigned capital) Required (paid-up capital) Required (minimum USD 30,000)
Bank certificate of deposit Required Required Required
General Information Sheet (GIS), 2026 version Filed post-registration Filed post-incorporation Filed post-registration
Beneficial ownership declaration Required Required Required

All documents executed abroad must be authenticated or apostilled in accordance with Philippine requirements and accompanied by certified English translations where applicable.

Completing the SEC GIS and eFAST submission in 2026

The SEC’s electronic Filing and Submission Technology (eFAST) platform is now the primary channel for corporate filings. For 2026, the SEC released an updated GIS form (General Information Sheet version 2026) that includes expanded beneficial-ownership fields and nationality-of-shareholders disclosures aligned with the latest FINL. Foreign corporations should pay careful attention to the following when completing the form:

  • Beneficial ownership transparency. The 2026 GIS requires detailed information about ultimate beneficial owners holding 25 per cent or more (directly or indirectly) of the capital or voting rights.
  • Nationality verification. Declare the nationality of every stockholder or partner, cross-referenced against the FINL sector in which the corporation operates.
  • eFAST account. Ensure the resident agent or corporate secretary has an active eFAST account and digital signature before attempting submission.

Industry observers expect SEC processing times for licence applications submitted via eFAST to range from four to eight weeks, assuming the application is complete and no SEC queries arise.

Minimum paid-in capital and FINL ownership caps

Under the Foreign Investments Act (RA 7042, as amended), the general minimum paid-in capital for a foreign corporation engaging in a domestic-market enterprise is USD 200,000. This threshold drops to USD 100,000 if the enterprise involves advanced technology as determined by the Department of Science and Technology, or if the enterprise directly employs at least 50 Philippine nationals.

The 13th FINL under EO No. 113 classifies investment areas into two lists: List A (foreign ownership restricted by the Constitution or specific laws) and List B (foreign ownership restricted for reasons of security, defence, public health, or impact on small and medium enterprises). Foreign corporations entering sectors on List A, such as mass media, land ownership, or operation of public utilities beyond the threshold set by the Public Service Act, must ensure Filipino-majority ownership, typically through a subsidiary with appropriate equity allocation.

Enterprises registering with the BOI or locating within a PEZA zone may qualify for modified capital requirements and additional incentives, including income-tax holidays and duty-free importation of capital equipment. These benefits effectively lower the cost of market entry and are discussed further in the section below.

Tax and Local Registrations: BIR, Municipal Permits, and PEZA Incentives

BIR TIN application for a non-resident foreign corporation

Once the SEC license or certificate of registration is secured, the foreign corporation must register with the BIR. The TIN application for a non-resident foreign corporation follows these steps:

  1. Prepare BIR Form 1903 (Application for Registration for corporations, partnerships, and other non-individual taxpayers). For branches, the resident agent files on behalf of the foreign parent.
  2. Submit to the Revenue District Office (RDO) with jurisdiction over the entity’s principal place of business. Attach the SEC certificate of registration, articles of incorporation (or licence to do business), board resolution, and proof of address (lease contract or utility bill).
  3. Pay the annual registration fee and documentary stamp tax at an authorised agent bank or through the BIR’s online payment channels.
  4. Secure BIR Certificate of Registration (Form 2303). This document specifies the entity’s tax types (income tax, VAT or percentage tax, withholding tax) and filing obligations.
  5. Register books of account and official receipts/invoices with the RDO before commencing operations.

The BIR’s Online Registration and Update System (ORUS) allows certain registration steps, particularly TIN issuance and initial classification, to be completed electronically. For 2026, BIR registration for non-resident foreign corporations is typically processed within two to three weeks after complete submission.

VAT, withholding tax, and local business permits

Foreign corporations operating through a branch or subsidiary must determine their VAT status. Entities whose annual gross sales or receipts exceed the VAT threshold are required to register as VAT taxpayers. Withholding-tax obligations arise on payments to employees (compensation), to local suppliers (expanded withholding tax), and on profit remittances from a branch to its head office (branch profit remittance tax, currently set at 15 per cent under existing tax treaties with qualifying jurisdictions).

In addition to BIR registration, the entity must obtain a Mayor’s Permit (business permit) from the local government unit (city or municipality) where it operates, along with barangay clearance and any sector-specific permits (e.g., a Department of Energy service contract for energy firms, or a Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines certificate for aviation operations).

Registration Branch Subsidiary
BIR TIN (Form 1903) Required, filed by resident agent Required, filed as domestic entity
VAT registration Required if above threshold Required if above threshold
Withholding tax registration Required (compensation, expanded, branch profit remittance) Required (compensation, expanded, final withholding on dividends)
Mayor’s Permit / local business tax Required Required
Social contributions (SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG) Required upon hiring employees Required upon hiring employees

Claiming PEZA incentives, when and how to apply

Foreign corporations establishing export-oriented operations or IT-BPO centres may register with PEZA to access fiscal incentives under the Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprises (CREATE) Act and the Strategic Investment Priority Plan. PEZA registration is attractive because it offers:

  • Income-tax holiday of four to seven years (depending on the activity and location tier).
  • Special corporate income tax rate of five per cent on gross income earned after the tax holiday period, in lieu of all national and local taxes (subject to the CREATE Act sunset provisions).
  • Duty-free importation of capital equipment, spare parts, and raw materials used in the registered activity.
  • VAT zero-rating on local purchases of goods and services.

To apply, the foreign entity submits a PEZA application together with a project feasibility study, proof of SEC registration, board resolution, and a site-development plan (if locating in a PEZA-designated zone). The likely practical effect of locating within a PEZA zone is a significant reduction in effective tax burden during the initial years of operation, making it an important factor in the entity-structuring decision.

Compliance Risks, Enforcement, and Litigation Rights

Anti-dummy law exposure and practical mitigations

The Anti-Dummy Law (Commonwealth Act No. 108, as amended) penalises arrangements where a Filipino citizen or entity acts as a front or dummy to allow a foreign national or corporation to circumvent constitutional or statutory nationality restrictions. Penalties include imprisonment and fines. For foreign corporations entering sectors with equity caps, robust compliance measures are essential:

  • Genuine Filipino equity. Ensure Filipino shareholders exercise real control and are not merely nominal holders, board seats, voting rights, and dividend participation must reflect ownership proportionately.
  • Document the investment chain. Maintain clear records showing the source and beneficial ownership of all capital contributions, the SEC beneficial ownership declaration now mandates this.
  • Avoid management-override arrangements. Side agreements granting the foreign party de facto control over a nominally Filipino-majority entity trigger anti-dummy liability. Comprehensive guidance on this risk is available in our overview of the Anti-Dummy Law in the Philippines.

Operating without a license, penalties and remedial steps

A foreign corporation that transacts business in the Philippines without the requisite SEC license faces serious consequences. The SEC may impose fines, issue cease-and-desist orders, and refer the matter for criminal prosecution. Contracts entered into by an unlicensed foreign corporation are not automatically void, but the corporation is barred from maintaining any action or proceeding in Philippine courts. This principle, established in multiple Supreme Court decisions, means that a foreign corporation without an SEC license cannot sue in the Philippines to enforce contracts, collect debts, or seek injunctive relief. The corporation may, however, still be sued by Philippine parties.

If operations have already commenced without a license, the immediate remedial step is to engage Philippine legal counsel, file the appropriate SEC application, and regularise all ancillary registrations (BIR, local permits) before enforcement action is initiated. Early voluntary compliance significantly reduces penalty exposure.

Practical Timeline and Compliance Checklist

The table below provides an estimated timeline for establishing a foreign corporation’s Philippine operations through the three main entity types. Actual timescales depend on document completeness, SEC workload, and the need for any sector-specific clearances.

Action Typical time Critical dependencies
Entity-type decision and document preparation 2–4 weeks Head-office board resolution; authentication/apostille of foreign documents
SEC application and processing (branch/rep office license; subsidiary incorporation) 4–8 weeks Complete eFAST submission; name reservation; compliance with capital requirements
BIR registration and TIN issuance 2–3 weeks SEC certificate issued; lease contract for principal address secured
Mayor’s Permit and local registrations 1–3 weeks BIR Certificate of Registration; barangay clearance
PEZA or BOI registration (if applicable) 4–8 weeks Feasibility study; site-development plan; SEC registration complete
Total (subsidiary/branch without PEZA) 9–18 weeks ,
Total (subsidiary/branch with PEZA) 13–26 weeks ,

Pre-filing checklist, documents to assemble before engaging counsel:

  • Certified copy of parent company’s articles of incorporation (apostilled)
  • Latest audited financial statements of parent (apostilled)
  • Board resolution authorising Philippine operations, designating resident agent, and specifying assigned/paid-up capital
  • Proof of inward remittance of capital (bank certificate of deposit in a Philippine bank)
  • Passport copies and biographical details of directors, officers, and resident agent
  • Lease contract or deed of assignment for the principal office address
  • Completed SEC GIS form (2026 version) and beneficial ownership declaration
  • Sector-specific licences or clearances (if applicable)

Conclusion

A foreign corporation can operate in the Philippines in 2026, but only after satisfying a clearly defined sequence of regulatory steps, from choosing the appropriate entity structure through to SEC licensing, BIR registration, and any applicable PEZA or BOI filings. The 13th FINL under EO No. 113 has reset sectoral caps, the SEC’s eFAST platform has streamlined submissions, and BIR’s ORUS system has shortened TIN-issuance timescales. Taken together, these changes make Philippine market entry more transparent and procedurally efficient than in prior years, although compliance risks, particularly around the Anti-Dummy Law and the prohibition on unlicensed corporations suing in Philippine courts, remain significant.

Businesses considering entry should engage qualified Philippines-based legal counsel experienced in foreign investment to navigate the process with confidence.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Kerwin Tan at Tan Hassani & Counsels, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Official Gazette of the Philippines
  2. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Philippines
  3. Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) Philippines
  4. Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA)
  5. Board of Investments (BOI) Philippines
  6. Supreme Court of the Philippines, E-Library
  7. The Lawphil Project

FAQs

Can a foreign corporation operate in the Philippines?
Yes. A foreign corporation may operate in the Philippines provided it obtains a license to do business from the SEC and complies with ownership restrictions under the Foreign Investments Act and the 13th FINL (EO No. 113). It must also register with the BIR and secure local business permits before commencing commercial activity.
Under the Revised Corporation Code, a foreign corporation is any corporation formed, organised, or existing under laws other than those of the Philippines. The test is purely jurisdictional, it hinges on the place of incorporation, not the nationality of the shareholders or directors.
No. The Revised Corporation Code bars an unlicensed foreign corporation from maintaining or intervening in any action, suit, or proceeding in Philippine courts. This prohibition has been consistently upheld by the Supreme Court. However, the unlicensed corporation may still be sued by Philippine parties, the restriction is one-directional.
A domestic corporation is incorporated under Philippine law and is treated as a Philippine juridical entity. A foreign corporation is incorporated under the laws of another country. The distinction affects tax treatment (resident vs non-resident), the ability to own land, eligibility for certain government contracts, and the applicable SEC registration process.
File BIR Form 1903 at the Revenue District Office (RDO) with jurisdiction over your principal place of business. Attach the SEC certificate of registration, board resolution, proof of address, and payment of the annual registration fee. The BIR’s ORUS platform supports electronic submission of certain preliminary steps. Processing typically takes two to three weeks.
The general minimum paid-in capital for a foreign enterprise in the domestic market is USD 200,000. This drops to USD 100,000 where the enterprise involves advanced technology or employs at least 50 Filipino nationals. For export enterprises (at least 60 per cent of output exported), the minimum capitalisation may be set by the SEC at its discretion. Sector-specific rules and PEZA/BOI incentives may also modify these thresholds.
PEZA registration is most beneficial when the foreign corporation intends to engage in export manufacturing, IT-BPO services, or other eligible activities within a designated economic zone. The fiscal incentives, including income-tax holidays of up to seven years and duty-free importation, can substantially reduce the effective cost of establishing Philippine operations, particularly during the start-up phase.

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Can a Foreign Corporation Operate in the Philippines in 2026? SEC License, Branch vs Subsidiary, BIR & PEZA Steps

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