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Greece welcomes foreign entrepreneurs, both EU and non-EU nationals, and allows 100 % foreign ownership in most sectors without requiring a local partner. Understanding how to start a business in Greece as a foreigner has become significantly easier since the launch of the Gov.gr Business Portal for digital company formation and the enactment of Law 5275/2026 (ΦΕΚ A’ 17, 6 February 2026), which restructured residence and work-permit categories for investors and founders. This guide walks through every practical step: choosing the right company type, securing visas, registering online, opening a bank account, and meeting tax obligations, with realistic cost estimates and timelines current as of May 2026.
Whether you are an EU citizen relocating to Athens, a non-EU tech founder eyeing the Greek startup ecosystem, or an in-house counsel advising on a Mediterranean expansion, the checklist-driven sections below cover the legal, procedural, and financial ground you need. The entire incorporation process for the most popular entity, the IKE (Private Company), can now be completed digitally in as little as one to two weeks, while total startup costs typically range from €1,000 to over €5,000 depending on entity type and professional fees.
Before diving into the detail, here is a condensed roadmap with estimated durations for each milestone. Founders who prepare documents in advance and use the Gov.gr digital portal can compress the process significantly.
Fast-track tip: Granting a power of attorney to a Greek lawyer before arrival allows steps 1, 3, 4 and 6 to proceed in parallel, saving several weeks for non-EU founders who cannot yet travel to Greece.
Company formation in Greece begins with selecting the right legal structure. Greek law offers several entity types, each with distinct capital requirements, liability exposure, and governance formalities. The choice has downstream effects on taxation, visa eligibility, and day-to-day administration. Below is a comparison of the four main company types in Greece relevant to foreign entrepreneurs.
| Entity Type | Minimum Capital / Liability | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| IKE (Idiotiki Kefalaiouchiki Etaireia, Private Company) | From €1 (flexible share capital) / Limited liability | Startups, SMEs, digital businesses, fastest digital formation via Gov.gr |
| EPE (Etaireia Periorismenis Efthinis, Limited Liability Company) | No statutory minimum since 2012, but historically higher capitalisation expected / Limited liability | Small-to-medium firms preferring a more traditional LLC structure |
| AE (Anonymi Etaireia, Société Anonyme / Public Ltd) | €25,000 minimum share capital / Limited liability | Larger businesses, those planning public offerings or institutional investment |
| Sole Trader (Atomiki Epicheirisi) | No corporate capital requirement / Unlimited personal liability | Freelancers, sole consultants, tradespeople |
The IKE has become the most popular vehicle for foreigner company formation in Greece. Its share capital can be as low as €1, formation can be completed entirely online through the Gov.gr Business Portal, and members enjoy limited liability. The IKE can accommodate capital contributions, labour contributions, and guarantee contributions, a flexibility rarely found in other EU jurisdictions. A single-member IKE (Monoprosopi IKE) is permitted, making it ideal for solo founders.
The AE (Société Anonyme) requires a minimum share capital of €25,000 and involves more complex governance: a board of directors, general assembly of shareholders, and mandatory statutory audits once revenue thresholds are met. It is the appropriate choice for businesses planning to raise institutional capital, issue bonds, or eventually list on a stock exchange. Formation requires notarisation of the statute.
A sole proprietorship (Atomiki Epicheirisi) is the simplest structure, but the founder bears unlimited personal liability for all business debts. EU nationals and Greek citizens can register online through the AADE portal. Non-EU nationals may face additional administrative steps. General partnerships (OE) and limited partnerships (EE) are also available but carry similar personal-liability exposure for at least one partner. Industry observers note these structures are declining in popularity among foreign founders, who overwhelmingly prefer the IKE for its liability protection and streamlined formation.
A critical question for anyone exploring how to start a business in Greece as a foreigner is whether a visa or residence permit is required. The answer depends on nationality and on whether the founder intends to live and work in Greece or merely own the entity remotely.
EU/EEA citizens enjoy freedom of establishment under the EU Treaties. They can incorporate, manage, and work for a Greek company without a visa or work permit. The only prerequisite is an active AFM (tax number). Non-EU nationals can own a Greek company from abroad, but if they wish to reside in Greece or actively manage the business on Greek soil, they must hold an appropriate residence permit.
Greece offers several Greece business visa categories tailored to founders and investors. The main routes relevant to entrepreneurs include:
The Golden Visa programme grants a five-year residence permit to non-EU nationals who invest at least €250,000 (or €500,000 in designated high-demand areas) in Greek real estate. Holders of a Golden Visa are eligible to establish, manage, and invest in Greek companies without obtaining a separate entrepreneur visa. The Golden Visa does not, however, grant the right to employment by a Greek employer, only self-employed business activity and company ownership. For founders whose primary goal is to operate a business rather than invest in property, the dedicated investment/entrepreneur residence permit is typically the more direct route.
Law 5275/2026, published on 6 February 2026 (ΦΕΚ A’ 17), introduced sweeping changes to Greece’s immigration framework. Key provisions affecting foreign founders include:
Immediate checklist for non-EU founders:
Once you have selected your entity type and addressed any visa requirements, the company registration process in Greece follows a well-defined sequence. The Gov.gr Business Portal now supports full online formation for IKE companies, significantly reducing the need for in-person visits to public offices.
Every founder, whether Greek, EU, or non-EU, needs an AFM to conduct any financial or corporate transaction in Greece. EU nationals can apply remotely by booking a telephone appointment through the AADE myAADElive platform, submitting a digital form and a copy of their passport or national ID. Non-EU nationals who are not yet in Greece can obtain an AFM by granting a notarised and apostilled power of attorney to a Greek lawyer or accountant, who then visits the local tax office (DOY) or files through the AADE system on their behalf.
Required documents: Passport or EU ID, proof of address (home country is acceptable for initial AFM issuance), and, for non-EU applicants, a power of attorney with Apostille or consular legalisation.
The Articles of Association set out the company’s name, registered office, purpose, share capital, members’ contributions, and management structure. For an IKE, the statute can be drafted as a private document (no notary required) if it follows a standard template. For an AE, EPE with in-kind contributions, or any formation involving real estate transfers, a notarial deed is mandatory.
Fast-track tip: Using the standardised statute template available on the Gov.gr Business Portal for an IKE avoids the notary requirement entirely and saves both time and cost.
The General Commercial Registry (GEMI) is the central database for all Greek business entities. Before filing, you should pre-check name availability through GEMI’s online search. The registration application, which includes the statute, founder identification documents, and proof of a registered business address (a lease agreement or property deed), is submitted electronically via the Gov.gr portal. GEMI issues a unique registration number and publishes the incorporation in the Government Gazette.
Required documents for GEMI filing:
Greek banks require the company’s GEMI registration confirmation, the statute, founder identification, and proof of the source of funds (anti-money-laundering compliance). Opening a corporate account typically takes one to three weeks, as banks conduct thorough KYC and AML checks. The minimum share capital, as low as €1 for an IKE, must be deposited into this account. For an AE, the full €25,000 minimum must be paid up before registration is finalised.
After GEMI registration, the company must register with the Independent Authority for Public Revenue (AADE) for tax purposes. This includes obtaining a VAT number (if the business expects to exceed the small-business exemption threshold or engages in intra-EU trade) and activating myDATA e-Books, Greece’s mandatory digital bookkeeping and e-invoicing platform. Registration is completed online through the AADE Taxisnet portal, typically within one to two business days.
One of the most frequently asked questions is how much it costs to start a company in Greece. The answer depends on the entity type, whether you use a notary, and the level of professional assistance required. The table below provides a realistic breakdown.
| Cost Item | Low Estimate | Typical Estimate | High Estimate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Government registration fee (GEMI, online) | €18 | €50 | €80 |
| Notary fees (required for AE; optional for IKE) | €0 (IKE private statute) | €300 | €800+ |
| Lawyer fees (statute drafting, filing, advisory) | €400 | €800 | €2,500+ |
| Accountant setup and first-year bookkeeping retainer | €200 | €500 | €1,200 |
| Document translations and Apostille | €50 | €150 | €400 |
| Bank account opening (administrative charges) | €0 | €50 | €150 |
| Minimum share capital deposit (IKE) | €1 | €1,000 | €5,000+ |
| Total estimated startup cost (IKE) | €670 | €2,850 | €5,000+ |
Timeline summary: A straightforward IKE formation with all documents prepared in advance can be completed in one to two weeks. When visa applications (for non-EU founders), bank-account opening delays, and document apostille timescales are factored in, the realistic end-to-end timeline extends to two to three months.
Example scenario, Solo non-EU tech founder forming an IKE: AFM via power of attorney (€150 lawyer fee, 5 days), standard statute via Gov.gr (€0 notary, 1 day), GEMI filing (€50 fee, 2 days), bank account (2 weeks), VAT registration (2 days), Type D visa application (filed in parallel, 6–10 weeks). Total cost approximately €1,500–€2,500 including professional fees; total elapsed time approximately 8–12 weeks.
Once registered, every Greek company must comply with a set of ongoing tax and reporting obligations. A basic understanding of the tax framework helps foreign founders budget accurately and avoid penalties.
The standard VAT rate in Greece is 24 %. Reduced rates of 13 % and 6 % apply to specific goods and services (food, pharmaceuticals, books, and certain cultural services). A preferential rate of 17 % applies on certain Aegean islands (including Chios, Kos, Leros, Lesbos, and Samos). Companies must register for VAT if their annual turnover exceeds the small-business exemption threshold or if they engage in intra-EU trade.
The corporate income tax rate in Greece is 22 % on net profits. Companies must file an annual income tax return (typically by June of the following year) and make advance tax payments during the fiscal year. Dividend distributions are subject to a 5 % withholding tax at source.
If the company hires employees, it must register with EFKA (the Unified Social Security Fund). Employer social security contributions are approximately 22.29 % of gross salary, while employee contributions are approximately 13.87 %. The current statutory minimum gross monthly wage is €830 (fourteen payments per year including mandatory holiday and Christmas bonuses), though industry observers expect further adjustments in 2026.
All companies must maintain accounting records in compliance with Greek Accounting Standards (ELP) or IFRS (for larger entities). Greece mandates the use of myDATA e-Books, an electronic reporting platform administered by AADE, for real-time transmission of revenue and expense data. E-invoicing is progressively becoming mandatory for B2B transactions. Companies must retain accounting records for at least five years from the end of the relevant fiscal year.
Experienced practitioners routinely identify the same set of avoidable errors among foreign founders entering Greece. Awareness of these pitfalls can save weeks of delay and significant expense.
When to engage a lawyer: While a simple IKE formation can be handled using the Gov.gr portal and a competent accountant, founders should seek legal counsel whenever the business involves non-EU visa applications, multiple jurisdictions, in-kind capital contributions, shareholder agreements, or regulated activities (financial services, healthcare, food production).
The work does not end at registration. The first six months set the operational and compliance foundation for the business. Use the following checklist to stay on track.
Learning how to start a business in Greece as a foreigner in 2026 is no longer the bureaucratic obstacle course it once was. The combination of the Gov.gr digital portal, the flexible IKE company structure with its €1 minimum capital, and the modernised immigration framework under Law 5275/2026 makes Greece one of the more accessible EU jurisdictions for foreign founders. The core process, obtaining an AFM, choosing the right entity, filing with GEMI, opening a bank account, and meeting tax-registration obligations, can be completed in as little as two weeks for an EU national forming an IKE, or approximately two to three months for a non-EU founder who also needs a residence permit.
The key to a smooth incorporation is preparation: secure your AFM early, select the correct visa category before applying, use the digital formation tools available, and engage qualified legal and accounting professionals for any steps involving cross-border documentation, immigration filings, or regulated activities. Greece’s business environment continues to attract increasing foreign investment, and the procedural reforms of 2026 have meaningfully lowered the barriers to entry for international entrepreneurs.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Diomidis Papacharalampous at P&C LAW FIRM, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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