How Australian Citizens Can Set Up a Company in Singapore: A Complete Step-by-Step Guide

Singapore has become one of the most attractive destinations for Australian entrepreneurs, investors, and business owners looking to expand into Asia. With its stable political environment, low corporate tax, strong legal system, world-class banking infrastructure, and reputation as a global business hub, it offers advantages that are difficult to match elsewhere in the region.

But while Singapore is known for being business-friendly, setting up a company as an Australian citizen is not the same as doing it as a local. There are specific legal, tax, banking, and compliance requirements that foreigners must meet—and misunderstanding these can lead to costly mistakes.

This guide explains exactly how Australian citizens can set up a company in Singapore, step by step, so you can do it right the first time.


Step 1: Understand That You Cannot Self-Register

This is the first major difference Australians must understand.

In Australia, you can register a company yourself online with ASIC.

In Singapore, foreigners cannot self-register.

To incorporate a company, you must engage a Singapore-licensed corporate services firm. Only licensed professionals or Singapore residents are allowed to submit incorporation filings to ACRA (the Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority).

This is not optional.


Step 2: Choose the Right Business Structure

Most Australian founders choose a Private Limited Company (Pte Ltd).

Why Pte Ltd Is the Preferred Option

• Separate legal entity
• Limited liability
• 100% foreign ownership allowed
• Strong international credibility
• Tax-efficient
• Easy to scale
• Investor-friendly

Other options (branch office, representative office) exist but are usually unsuitable for most entrepreneurs.


Step 3: Decide Your Shareholding Structure

Singapore allows:

• 100% foreign ownership
• Individual or corporate shareholders
• Multiple shareholders

You must decide:

• Who owns the shares
• In what proportions
• Voting rights
• Dividend rights
• Future dilution

This is a strategic decision, not an administrative one.


Step 4: Appoint a Local Resident Director

Singapore law requires at least one locally resident director.

This must be:

• A Singapore Citizen, or
• A Singapore Permanent Resident, or
• An Employment Pass holder

If you are an Australian without Singapore residency, you will need a nominee director provided by your corporate services firm.

This role is legally significant. Choose your provider carefully.


Step 5: Appoint a Corporate Secretary

Every Singapore company must appoint a qualified corporate secretary within 6 months.

They handle:

• Annual filings
• Statutory records
• Director and shareholder resolutions
• Compliance documentation

Failure to appoint one can result in penalties.


Step 6: Secure a Registered Office Address

Your company must have a Singapore-registered address.

This is where:

• Government notices are sent
• Official correspondence arrives
• Records are kept

Most foreigners use their service provider’s address.


Step 7: Prepare Your Incorporation Documents

Your corporate services firm will prepare:

• Company constitution
• Consent forms
• Director resolutions
• Shareholder resolutions
• Registers (directors, shareholders, controllers)

You will need to provide:

• Passport
• Proof of address
• CV or LinkedIn profile
• Business description
• Source of funds declaration


Step 8: Name Reservation

Your provider will:

• Check name availability
• Ensure compliance with naming rules
• Avoid restricted words
• Submit the name application to ACRA

Once approved, the name is reserved for 120 days.


Step 9: Incorporation Filing

Your provider submits the application to ACRA electronically.

If all documents are in order, incorporation usually takes:

1–3 business days

Once approved, your company officially exists.


Step 10: Receive Your Company Documents

You will receive:

• Certificate of Incorporation
• Business Profile
• Unique Entity Number (UEN)
• Constitution

These documents are required for banking and compliance.


Step 11: Open a Corporate Bank Account

This is one of the hardest steps for foreigners.

Singapore banks conduct extensive due diligence.

They assess:

• Business model
• Ownership structure
• Source of funds
• Target markets
• Risk profile

Your provider should assist with:

• Selecting suitable banks
• Preparing a business profile
• Compiling KYC documents
• Arranging interviews
• Submitting applications

This process typically takes 2–6 weeks.


Step 12: Set Up Accounting & Tax Framework

Every Singapore company must:

• Keep proper books
• File annual returns
• Submit tax filings
• Maintain records

Your provider should set up:

• Accounting system
• Compliance calendar
• Reporting framework

Singapore is business-friendly—but not lax.


Step 13: Apply for Work Passes (If You Want to Relocate)

Owning a Singapore company does not automatically give you the right to live or work in Singapore.

If you plan to relocate, you must apply for a visa.

Employment Pass (EP)

Most Australian founders apply for this.

It requires:

• A qualifying salary
• Relevant experience
• Strong business profile
• Compliance with the COMPASS framework

EntrePass

For innovative startups, but stricter.


Step 14: Understand Singapore’s Tax System

Singapore uses a territorial tax system.

This means:

• Income sourced in Singapore is taxable
• Foreign-sourced income may be tax-exempt
• No capital gains tax
• No dividend tax

This is very different from Australia’s worldwide tax system.

You must understand how the Australia–Singapore Double Tax Agreement (DTA) applies to you.


Step 15: Register for GST (If Required)

GST is only mandatory if:

• Annual turnover exceeds SGD $1 million, or
• You voluntarily register

Incorrect registration can result in penalties.


Step 16: Maintain Annual Compliance

Every year, your company must:

• File Annual Returns
• Submit tax filings
• Maintain registers
• Hold AGMs (or record them)
• Prepare financial statements

Non-compliance can result in:

• Fines
• Director disqualification
• Company strike-off


Step 17: Understand Ongoing Costs

Singapore is efficient—but not cheap.

Typical annual costs include:

• Nominee director: AUD $2,000–$6,000
• Corporate secretary: AUD $600–$1,500
• Registered address: AUD $300–$1,000
• Accounting & tax: AUD $1,500–$5,000


Step 18: Avoid Common Mistakes

Mistake 1: Going Cheap

Cheap providers often:

• Don’t support foreigners properly
• Don’t handle banking
• Don’t advise on tax
• Don’t provide nominee directors


Mistake 2: Choosing the Wrong Structure

This can lead to:

• Higher taxes
• Banking problems
• Investor resistance


Mistake 3: No Cross-Border Tax Planning

Australia–Singapore interactions matter.


Mistake 4: No Long-Term Strategy

This is not just a setup—it’s a platform.


Step 19: Decide If Singapore Is Right for You

Singapore is ideal for Australians who:

• Want to expand into Asia
• Have international clients
• Want global credibility
• Need multi-currency banking
• Plan to raise capital
• Want scalable structures

It may not be necessary if your business is purely local.


Step 20: Work With a Full-Service Corporate Provider

You need a firm that handles:

• Incorporation
• Nominee director
• Corporate secretarial
• Banking support
• Accounting
• Tax advisory
• Visa applications
• Ongoing compliance

Not piecemeal.
Not DIY.


Why Australians Choose Singapore

Because it offers:

• Stability
• Credibility
• Tax clarity
• Global trust
• World-class infrastructure

Singapore is not just a jurisdiction.

It is a business platform.


Final Thoughts

Setting up a company in Singapore as an Australian citizen is not difficult—but it must be done correctly.

The process is straightforward if you:

• Choose the right structure
• Work with the right advisors
• Plan long-term
• Budget realistically
• Think globally

When done right, Singapore becomes a powerful base for regional and international growth.