If you are expanding into the Philippines, the company incorporation process is straightforward on paper and fiddly in reality. The hard part is not “what form do I fill in”, it is making sure your structure is right, your documents are consistent, and you do not get stuck bouncing between agencies because one detail does not line up.
This guide gives you a practical overview of how to incorporate in the Philippines, what decisions you need to make up front, what the usual steps look like, and where people typically waste weeks.
Sections:
- What “incorporation” actually covers in the Philippines
- Step 1: Choose the right structure before you lodge anything
- Step 2: Prepare the documents the SEC will accept the first time
- Step 3: Lodge with the SEC and handle follow ups fast
- Step 4: Register with the BIR so you can operate legally
- Step 5: LGU permits, barangay clearance, and mayor’s permit
- Typical timeline and what affects it
- Common mistakes that cost time and money
- When it makes sense to use an end to end incorporation service
What “incorporation” actually covers in the Philippines
Incorporation is the initial legal registration phase where your entity is created and recognised by the relevant government bodies. In practice, that usually includes:
• Creating the legal entity with the SEC, the Securities and Exchange Commission
• Registering with the BIR, the Bureau of Internal Revenue, so you can legally invoice and pay tax
• Securing local permits through the LGU, the Local Government Unit, including barangay clearance and a mayor’s permit, where applicable
• Obtaining your TIN, Taxpayer Identification Number, and core registration certificates
It does not automatically include ongoing compliance, tax filings, payroll setup, corporate secretarial work, renewals, and operational governance. Those are the next layer once the entity exists.
Step 1: Choose the right structure before you lodge anything
Before anyone prepares documents, you need clarity on:
• Ownership: who owns shares, and in what proportions
• Directors and officers: who is listed, and who can sign
• Business activities: what you will actually do in the Philippines, because this matters for classification and downstream compliance
• Foreign involvement: whether you are a foreign owned entity, a subsidiary, or a joint venture
• Practical intent: whether you are doing this to hire locally, win contracts, transition off EoR, apply for permits, or hold assets
If you get this wrong and “fix it later”, later usually means amendments, extra fees, delays, and sometimes refiling.
Step 2: Prepare the documents the SEC will accept the first time
The SEC stage is where most delays happen, usually because submissions are incomplete, inconsistent, or do not match what the SEC expects for your structure.
Common inclusions vary by structure, but often include:
• Articles of Incorporation
• Treasurer’s Affidavit
• Bylaws and internal governance documents, where required
• Supporting ID and appointment documents for directors and officers
• Any additional declarations needed for foreign participation or specific activities
The goal is simple: lodge a package that does not trigger a loop of corrections.
Step 3: Lodge with the SEC and handle follow ups fast
Once lodged, the process can involve:
• Clarifications requested by reviewers
• Minor amendments to names, addresses, activities, or officer details
• Resubmission of corrected pages or additional attachments
The difference between a smooth timeline and a painful one is usually response time and having the right supporting documents ready.
Step 4: Register with the BIR so you can operate legally
After SEC approval, you typically register with the BIR to enable compliant operations, including invoicing and tax reporting.
This phase often covers:
• BIR registration
• TIN acquisition, as applicable
• Certificate of Registration issuance
• Setup steps that position you for compliant taxation from day one
This is also where “we incorporated, now we can trade” assumptions fall short. Without BIR registration, you can be legally formed but operationally blocked.
Step 5: LGU permits, barangay clearance, and mayor’s permit
Depending on your setup, location, and operations, you may need local permits to fully incorporate in the Philippines. This is the part many foreign founders underestimate because requirements can vary by municipality and can be procedural.
Typical inclusions include:
• Barangay clearance
• Mayor’s permit
• Other local permits depending on your activity and premises
Typical timeline and what affects it
A realistic timeline depends on:
• Complexity of ownership structure, especially foreign participation
• Whether documents are clean and consistent on first submission
• How quickly signatories can provide required paperwork
• Whether your business activities trigger extra scrutiny
• Local permit requirements based on location
If you are trying to hit a commercial deadline, such as contracts, hiring, visas, or office opening, work backwards from that date and treat incorporation as a project with a checklist, not a formality.
Common mistakes that cost time and money
• Picking a structure because “someone else did it” instead of matching your actual intent
• Lodging documents before all parties are aligned on ownership, roles, and signing authority
• Underestimating the LGU permit steps
• Forgetting that incorporation is not the same as being ready to invoice, hire, and run payroll
• Treating amendments as trivial, because they are rarely trivial in practice
When it makes sense to use an end to end incorporation service
You will usually want end to end help if:
• It is your first time trying to incorporate in the Philippines
• You need a clean path from entity creation to being operational
• You are transitioning from EoR to your own entity and need the structure right
• You are stuck with another vendor trying to incorporate in the Philippines and need support
• You have multiple shareholders, foreign ownership, or a joint venture
• You care more about certainty and speed than “doing it yourself to save a bit”