You no longer need to move to Singapore to own a company there. Singapore company formation is open to foreigners, and a private limited company can be registered remotely, often within days, without a single flight. That accessibility is why founders from every region use Singapore as a clean base for regional trade, holding structures and fundraising. This guide keeps it practical, as of 2026: what the process really involves, the one rule that trips people up, and how to open a corporate bank account without flying in.
By the Travel Explore editorial desk. Last updated 11 July 2026.
Singapore company formation at a glance
The default vehicle is a private limited company registered with ACRA, the national business regulator. You need at least one shareholder, one resident director, a company secretary appointed within six months, a registered local address and a modest paid-up capital that can start at one Singapore dollar. Foreigners can own 100 percent of the shares. Incorporation itself is fast and mostly online once your documents and name are approved. What takes thought is structure: who directs the company, how you will bank, and whether you eventually need a work pass to relocate. Get those three right and the rest is administrative.
The nominee director rule that trips up founders
Here is the requirement newcomers miss: every Singapore company needs at least one director who ordinarily resides in Singapore. If you live abroad, you satisfy this by appointing a nominee resident director, a formal service most corporate service providers offer. Take a Colombian founder in Bogota building a software firm. She owns her company fully, runs it from Colombia, and appoints a nominee director purely to meet the residency rule while she decides whether to apply for an EntrePass and move. The nominee holds no real control if the paperwork is done properly. Skipping this step, or misunderstanding it, is the most common reason a remote incorporation stalls.
Planning a company and a move? See our company formation service to map the structure before you register.
Opening a corporate bank account without flying in
Banking is where remote founders feel friction, because banks run their own compliance checks. Several Singapore banks and licensed digital banks now allow remote or video onboarding for straightforward cases, though some still prefer a short in-person meeting. Prepare a clean pack: incorporation documents, proof of business activity, a simple ownership chart, and identity papers for all beneficial owners. Expect questions about where your customers and money come from. A tidy, honest file clears faster than a vague one. If one bank hesitates, another may not, so it pays to apply thoughtfully rather than everywhere at once.
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Founder questions
Can a foreigner fully own a Singapore company?
Yes. Foreigners can hold 100 percent of the shares of a Singapore private limited company.
Do I need to live in Singapore?
No. You can own and run the company from abroad, but you must appoint a resident director to meet the local rule.
What is a nominee director?
A locally resident director appointed to satisfy the residency requirement, without holding real control of your business.
How long does incorporation take?
Often just a few days once your name is approved and documents are in order.
Share this story
- LinkedIn: You can own a Singapore company without living there. Here is how in 2026.
- Twitter: Remote founders love Singapore. The nominee director rule is the part to get right.
- Facebook: Thinking of a Singapore company? Read this before you register.
Build your Singapore base the right way
Singapore rewards founders who structure carefully from day one. Register the right vehicle, meet the resident-director rule cleanly, and prepare a strong banking file. In short: full foreign ownership is allowed, a resident director is required, and a tidy document pack speeds everything up. For company setup and relocation updates as they change, follow us at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore
Sources
- Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority (ACRA), starting a company (T0 official)
- Economic Development Board Singapore, setting up a business (T0 official)
- Ministry of Manpower, EntrePass and work pass criteria (T0 official)

