🇩🇪EU's Largest Economy · No Resident Director Required · Video Notary Available · GmbH or UG · R&D Credit 25%

Register a Company in Germany
GmbH or UG — Europe's Largest Market

Gesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung (GmbH) or Unternehmergesellschaft (UG) — direct access to Europe’s largest economy and B2B market. No German resident director required. Online video notarisation available since 2023. CompanyVista coordinates notary, Handelsregister, banking and all registrations end-to-end.

EU's #1
Economy by GDP
€25,000
Minimum Share Capital (GmbH)
€1
Minimum Capital — UG (Mini-GmbH)
~30%
Combined Effective Corporate Tax Rate
Video Notary Coordinated
German notary via video conference — no travel to Germany required
No Resident Director Needed
No German residency requirement for directors or shareholders
Handelsregister Registered
Commercial register, Finanzamt tax and Gewerbeamt trade all filed
Banking Sequenced Correctly
Capital deposit via Qonto solved before notary — no chicken-and-egg delay
Register Your Germany GmbH or UG

Free consultation · response within 4 hours · no obligation

🔒 Free · No commitment · Written quote before any payment

Why Germany

Why Register a Company
in Germany?

🇩🇪
Europe's Largest Economy
Germany is the EU's largest economy and the world's third-largest exporter — a German GmbH gives direct access to 84 million domestic consumers and a deeply integrated industrial and B2B supply chain that few other markets can match.
🏭
Unmatched Industrial Credibility
A German GmbH is recognised globally as a serious, well-regulated business structure. For B2B businesses selling to European enterprise customers, a German company identity carries weight that an offshore or micro-jurisdiction entity simply cannot replicate.
💻
Online Video Notarisation Available (Since 2023)
Since August 2023, German law permits GmbH formation via online notary video appointment for cash-contribution formations, removing the requirement to travel to Germany in many cases. CompanyVista coordinates the video notarisation process end-to-end.
🌍
No Resident Director or Shareholder Required
German law imposes no residency or nationality requirement on GmbH directors (Geschäftsführer) or shareholders — a non-resident individual or foreign company can fully own and manage a GmbH without any German presence.
Full EU Single Market Access
A GmbH is a full EU legal entity — EU VAT number, EU regulatory compliance, and the ability to trade freely across all 27 EU member states, as well as access to Germany's bilateral trade agreements and DFG research funding.
💡
R&D Tax Credit (Forschungszulage)
Germany introduced a research allowance (Forschungszulage) of 25% on qualifying R&D expenditure (up to €10M/year), giving GmbHs a meaningful incentive to locate research and development activity in Germany.
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UG Option — Low-Capital Entry Point
The Unternehmergesellschaft (UG) is a simplified GmbH-variant requiring as little as €1 in share capital — a practical entry point for founders who want to establish a German legal presence without committing €25,000 upfront. The UG gradually builds reserves until it can convert to a full GmbH.
⚖️
Transparent, Predictable Legal System
The German legal system — governed by the GmbH Act (GmbHG) and Commercial Code (HGB) — is among the most transparent and contract-enforcement-oriented in the world, giving domestic and international counterparties real confidence in German-law contracts.
Who Should Choose Germany

Which Businesses Benefit Most
From a German GmbH?

A German GmbH rewards businesses that genuinely need access to the German market or German institutional credibility. The complexity and tax burden are the price of admission to Europe’s largest B2B economy — and worth paying only where that access is genuinely needed.

🏭
Best Fit
Manufacturing, Engineering & Industry
Germany is the global home of Mittelstand — the mid-sized industrial and engineering companies that dominate their sectors worldwide. For manufacturing, precision engineering, automotive supply chain, and industrial technology businesses, a German GmbH is the expected entity type and the one that opens doors with German OEMs and procurement teams.
💻
Best Fit
B2B Software, SaaS & Enterprise Tech
German enterprise customers — particularly in manufacturing, finance, healthcare and logistics — strongly prefer local contracting entities. A German GmbH removes procurement friction and enables direct participation in German public procurement and EU-funded technology projects.
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Strong Fit
R&D, Pharma & Life Sciences
Germany's 25% R&D tax credit, world-class research universities (Fraunhofer, Max Planck), and established pharma/medtech ecosystem make it a genuine location for R&D-intensive businesses — particularly those seeking to commercialise IP developed within the German public research system.
Strong Fit
Renewable Energy & Cleantech
The Energiewende — Germany's energy transition — has created one of Europe's largest cleantech markets. Wind, solar, storage and grid technology businesses benefit from a well-developed regulatory framework, established industrial customers and significant government procurement.
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Good Fit
EU Market Entry for Non-EU Businesses
For US, Asian or Middle Eastern businesses that need a credible German legal entity to serve enterprise customers across the DACH region (Germany, Austria, Switzerland), a GmbH provides the institutional credibility that a UK or offshore entity cannot.
🏦
Good Fit
Fintech & Financial Services
BaFin (Federal Financial Supervisory Authority) is Germany's financial regulator, and a BaFin licence passports across the EU. Frankfurt is Germany's financial centre and home to the European Central Bank — giving German-licensed entities real EU-wide financial services reach.
⚠️ When Germany Is NOT the Right Fit
  • Founders seeking the lowest corporate tax rate in Europe — Germany's combined ~30% effective rate (CIT + trade tax) is one of the highest in the EU; Ireland (12.5%), Netherlands (19% + participation exemption) or Estonia (0% on retained profits) are more tax-efficient for pure trading income.
  • Businesses wanting the fastest, simplest EU incorporation — the mandatory notary, Handelsregister registration (2–4 weeks), Gewerbeamt registration and banking sequencing requirement make Germany one of the most process-intensive EU incorporations available.
  • Founders without €12,500 available for upfront share capital deposit — if the GmbH minimum capital is a barrier, the UG (€1 minimum) is the alternative, though it carries lower banking and customer credibility and restricts early profit distributions.
  • Businesses primarily serving consumers or SMEs outside the DACH region who don't genuinely need German market presence — the Germany premium (tax, compliance cost, complexity) is justified by access to the German market, not by general EU incorporation advantages.
German Notary & Video Formation — Explained

How German Notarisation Works
& Why You Don't Need to Travel

📜 Why a Notary Is Required
Like the Netherlands, Germany mandates that GmbH formation be executed by a licensed German notary (Notar) — the Articles of Association (Gesellschaftsvertrag) must be notarised, and all shareholders or their authorised representatives must appear before the notary either in person or via the new online video procedure. This is a hard legal requirement under the German GmbH Act (GmbHG).
💡 What This Means for You
For non-resident founders, the good news is that since August 2023, Germany's online GmbH formation procedure (via the Federal Chamber of Notaries portal) allows video-conference notarisation for standard cash-contribution formations — eliminating the need to travel to Germany in most cases. For formations involving contributions in kind, or where the founder's ID document is older than August 2021, the in-person or proxy route may still be required. A notarised Power of Attorney at a German consulate is the alternative for founders who cannot use the video procedure.
Your Three Formation Routes
1
Online Video Notarisation (Most Common for Non-Residents)
The standard remote route since August 2023: a German notary conducts the appointment via video conference through the official Federal Chamber of Notaries portal (onlineverfahren.notar.de). Founders sign with a qualified electronic signature. Requires a German eID-compatible ID document issued after August 2021, or a valid passport with a video identification system. CompanyVista coordinates the notary booking and document preparation.
2
Notarised Power of Attorney (At a German Consulate)
For founders unable to use the video procedure — older ID documents, contributions in kind, or complex multi-party formations — a Power of Attorney notarised at a German consulate or German-language notary in your home country is executed, authorising a representative to attend the German notary on your behalf. CompanyVista provides the template and coordinates the process.
3
In-Person Notary Visit (Fastest and Simplest)
If you visit Germany, an in-person notary appointment is the most straightforward route — all formalities resolved in a single session. Combined with in-person bank account opening, this is the most reliable single-trip approach to a fully operational GmbH.
⚠️
Banking Sequencing Note: Unlike the Netherlands, Germany requires the GmbH bank account to be opened and share capital deposited before the notary can finalise the Handelsregister registration — the bank issues a capital deposit confirmation (Einzahlungsbestätigung) which the notary needs to submit the registration application. Sequencing banking and notary correctly is critical, and is something CompanyVista manages as part of the standard formation process.
GmbH vs UG

Two Structures, One Decision:
GmbH or UG?

GmbH vs UG — Which Structure Is Right for You?

Germany offers two closely related limited liability structures. The GmbH (Gesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung) is the standard form, requiring €25,000 minimum share capital with at least €12,500 paid in at incorporation. It carries the strongest market credibility and is the structure expected by German banks, enterprise customers and institutional counterparties. The UG (haftungsbeschränkt) — informally the ‘Mini-GmbH’ or ‘one-euro GmbH’ — can be incorporated with as little as €1 in share capital, making it accessible for founders who cannot commit €25,000 upfront. The UG is legally required to retain 25% of annual profits as a reserve until the accumulated reserve reaches €25,000, at which point it can convert to a full GmbH. Both structures are taxed identically; the UG simply carries slightly lower credibility with banks and larger customers, and distributions are restricted during the reserve-building phase.

Entity Type & Requirements

GmbH & UG
Key Facts & Requirements

GmbH & UG — Key Facts
Entity Name (Full)Gesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung (GmbH)
Mini-GmbH VariantUnternehmergesellschaft haftungsbeschränkt (UG) — from €1 capital
Governing LawGmbH Act (GmbHG) · Commercial Code (HGB) · Tax Code (AO)
Minimum Shareholders1 — individual or corporate, any nationality
Minimum Directors (Geschäftsführer)1 — no German residency or nationality required
Minimum Share Capital (GmbH)€25,000 total — at least €12,500 paid in at incorporation
Minimum Share Capital (UG)€1 minimum — 25% of annual profits retained until €25,000 reserve reached
Notary RequirementMandatory — German notary (in-person, video, or via Power of Attorney)
Handelsregister Registration2–4 weeks after notary filing with local Amtsgericht (district court)
Transparency RegisterBeneficial owner disclosure mandatory — publicly searchable
Registered OfficeMandatory German physical address — virtual office acceptable
Annual AccountsFiled publicly with Bundesanzeiger (Federal Gazette) — small GmbHs file abbreviated accounts
Key Advantages of Germany
  • Europe's Largest Economy
  • Unmatched Industrial Credibility
  • Online Video Notarisation Available (Since 2023)
  • No Resident Director or Shareholder Required
  • Full EU Single Market Access
Documentation & Restrictions

What You'll Need to Provide
& What to Be Aware Of

Germany’s formation process involves more documentation than most jurisdictions — all documents must be in German, foreign documents need certified translation, and share capital must be in a German bank account before registration completes. CompanyVista manages all of this.

Documents You'll Need to Provide
1
Valid ID Document (German eID or Passport)
For the online video notarisation route: a German-compatible eID document issued after August 2021 (most EU passports qualify), or a valid passport used with a video identification system. For the Power of Attorney route: a notarised and apostilled copy of your passport.
2
Proof of Residential Address
Recent utility bill, bank statement or government letter (within 3 months) for all shareholders and managing directors. Must be translated into German by a certified translator if not in German, English, French or another language accepted by the specific notary.
3
Articles of Association (Gesellschaftsvertrag)
CompanyVista prepares either the simplified Musterprotokoll (for straightforward single-director, 1–3 shareholder formations) or customised articles for more complex share structures. All articles must be in German.
4
Share Capital Funds (€12,500 minimum for GmbH)
The share capital must be available in a German GmbH bank account before the Handelsregister registration can be completed. CompanyVista coordinates the Qonto account opening to resolve the sequencing between banking and notary.
5
Source of Funds Declaration
Required for both the notary's AML compliance and the bank's KYC process — a written explanation of where the share capital originates and how the GmbH will generate revenue. Quality and specificity of this document significantly affects banking approval timelines.
6
Corporate Documents (If Corporate Shareholder)
Certificate of incorporation, good-standing certificate, certified German translation, and authorised representative details — for any corporate entity acting as shareholder or director. An apostille or legalisation of foreign corporate documents is typically required.
⚠️ Restrictions Non-Residents Should Be Aware Of
  • No German residency is required for shareholders or directors, but the absence of any German substance (a German-resident managing director, German employees, or genuine German operations) makes traditional banking approval significantly harder and may trigger questions about where the GmbH is effectively managed for tax purposes.
  • The mandatory notary requirement means Germany's formation process cannot be completed entirely online via a company registry portal — either the video notarisation procedure, a Power of Attorney notarised at a German consulate, or an in-person notary visit is required.
  • Share capital of at least €12,500 (for a GmbH) must be deposited in a German business bank account before the Handelsregister registration can be finalised — this creates a sequencing challenge since a bank account is needed before registration, but registration is needed to prove the company exists. Qonto solves this with pre-registration accounts.
  • All formation documents must be in German. Foreign-language documents (passports, corporate certificates) require certified German translation and in many cases an apostille or consular legalisation — translation costs and timing should be factored into the formation budget from the start.
  • The Transparency Register (Transparenzregister) requires disclosure of all beneficial owners holding 25%+ of shares, voting rights or effective control. This register is publicly searchable — unlike the private registers in some other jurisdictions.
Tax Environment — In Depth

Germany Tax Environment
For Non-Resident Owners

Key tax rates and obligations for your German GmbH. Germany’s combined effective rate (~30%) is among the EU’s highest — this is the honest position founders need before committing. A post-2028 reform reduces CIT by 1% per year toward ~25% combined by 2032. CompanyVista files all returns via ELSTER.

Corporate Income Tax (Körperschaftsteuer)
15% nationwide on all corporate profits
Solidarity Surcharge (Solidaritätszuschlag)
5.5% of corporate income tax = 0.825% of taxable profit — total federal burden ~15.825%
Trade Tax (Gewerbesteuer)
Varies by municipality: 3.5% base rate × local multiplier (Hebesatz). Typically 14–17% in major cities. Berlin ~14.35%, Frankfurt ~16.1%, Munich ~17.15%
Combined Effective Rate
Approximately 29–33% depending on location — national average ~30%. Post-2028 reform plans to reduce CIT by 1% per year to ~25% combined by 2032
Participation Exemption
95% of dividends and capital gains from qualifying shareholdings (10%+ holding) exempt from corporate and trade tax — effective rate ~1.5% on qualifying distributions
R&D Tax Credit (Forschungszulage)
25% credit on eligible R&D wages and contract research costs, capped at €10M eligible expenditure per year (€2.5M maximum annual credit)
Dividend Withholding Tax (Kapitalertragsteuer)
25% + solidarity surcharge = ~26.375% on dividends paid to shareholders; reduced under EU Parent-Subsidiary Directive (10%+ holding) or applicable tax treaty
VAT (Mehrwertsteuer / Umsatzsteuer)
19% standard rate · 7% reduced rate (food, books, public transport, certain services)
Loss Carry-Forward
Unlimited carry-forward; 60% limitation on offset above €1M (temporarily raised to 70% for 2024–2027 under Growth Opportunities Act); 1-year carry-back limited to €10M
Filing Authority
Finanzamt (local tax office) for tax filings via ELSTER · Amtsgericht for Handelsregister · Gewerbeamt for trade registration
Banking — The Real Picture

Banking for a Non-Resident
German GmbH

Banking is genuinely the most difficult step of GmbH formation for non-resident founders — and also the step that must happen before the Handelsregister registration can be completed, since the capital deposit confirmation (Einzahlungsbestätigung) is required by the notary. Getting the sequencing right matters significantly.

Traditional German Banks
Deutsche Bank, Commerzbank, Sparkasse (savings banks), Volksbank
Full German corporate banking with SEPA, trade finance, credit lines and payroll. However, these banks are notoriously conservative toward foreign-owned GmbHs without German substance — most require an in-person branch visit by the managing director, extensive KYC including source-of-funds documentation, and meaningful German business activity. Approval can take 4–12 weeks and is not guaranteed.
⭐ Recommended for Non-Residents
Qonto (German business-focused), N26 Business, Finom, Wise Business
Qonto is Germany's leading business fintech and explicitly designed for non-resident GmbH founders — it can issue a temporary account for the share capital deposit before Handelsregister registration is complete, solving the chicken-and-egg banking sequencing problem. N26 Business and Finom offer German IBANs with faster onboarding than traditional banks.
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CompanyVista's standard approach: CompanyVista's standard approach: open a Qonto account immediately for the share capital deposit (solving the Handelsregister sequencing requirement) and use it as the primary operational account. Pursue Deutsche Bank or Commerzbank only if your GmbH genuinely needs credit facilities, trade finance or the institutional credibility of a traditional German bank — and only after your Handelsregister registration is complete.
Germany vs Other EU Jurisdictions

How Germany Compares
Against Other EU Options

Jurisdiction
Tax Rate
Resident Director
Audit
Formation Time
Germany GmbH
~30% combined (CIT + Gewerbesteuer)
None required
Yes — all sizes
4–8 weeks
Netherlands BV
19%/25.8% + participation exemption
None required
Exempt (small cos)
3–6 weeks
Ireland LTD
12.5% trading / 25% passive
EEA director or bond
Exempt (small cos)
4–6 weeks
UK LTD
19–25% CIT
None required
Exempt (small cos)
5–10 business days
Austria GmbH
23% (reduced from 25% in 2024)
None required
Varies
4–6 weeks
Formation Process

Registering Your German GmbH
Step by Step

1
Free Consultation — GmbH vs UG & Structure
CompanyVista reviews whether a GmbH (full €25,000 capital) or UG (€1 minimum) is more appropriate for your situation, confirms the video notarisation route or Power of Attorney route based on your ID documents, and advises on the right city/state for registration from a trade tax perspective.
2
Company Name Check & Articles Drafted
Your proposed company name is checked for availability with the local IHK (Chamber of Commerce) and Handelsregister. CompanyVista drafts the Articles of Association (Gesellschaftsvertrag) — either the simplified Musterprotokoll (standard form for up to 3 shareholders, 1 director) or custom articles for more complex structures.
3
Notary Appointment Coordinated
CompanyVista books the German notary appointment — video conference via the official portal for most non-resident founders, or Power of Attorney if the video route is unavailable. All documents are prepared in German, with certified translations arranged where needed.
4
Bank Account Opened & Capital Deposited
A GmbH/UG business bank account is opened (Qonto for speed, or a traditional bank if preferred). The required share capital (€12,500 minimum for GmbH, or full UG amount) is deposited. The bank issues a capital deposit confirmation (Einzahlungsbestätigung) for the notary.
5
Handelsregister Registration Filed
The notary submits the formation documents to the local district court (Amtsgericht). The GmbH legally exists only upon Handelsregister registration — typically 2–4 weeks after submission. The registered company number (HRB number) is issued at this point.
6
Tax Registrations (Finanzamt & Gewerbeamt)
Corporate tax number (Steuernummer) and VAT ID (USt-IdNr.) registered with the local Finanzamt via ELSTER. Trade registration (Gewerbeanmeldung) filed with the local Gewerbeamt (€20–60 fee) — this automatically notifies the IHK and initiates Chamber of Commerce membership.
7
Transparency Register & Ongoing Compliance Set Up
Beneficial owner information filed with the Transparenzregister. Ongoing compliance calendar set up — annual accounts (Jahresabschluss) to Bundesanzeiger, quarterly VAT returns, annual corporate and trade tax returns to Finanzamt.
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Pricing: confirmed in your written quote — covering notary fees, Handelsregister court fee, Gewerbeamt registration, Finanzamt registrations and registered office for Year 1. Certified translation costs (where required) are included at exact cost. All government and notary fees passed through at exact cost with zero markup. Free written quote within 4 hours of enquiry.
Frequently Asked Questions

Germany Company Registration
Questions Answered

Does a Germany GmbH require a German resident director? +
No — German law (the GmbH Act, GmbHG) imposes no residency or nationality requirement on GmbH managing directors (Geschäftsführer) or shareholders. Any adult individual or legal entity, regardless of nationality or country of residence, can form and manage a GmbH. However, there is an important practical nuance: German banks are significantly more cautious about opening accounts for GmbHs with no German substance — no German-resident director, no German employees, no German business address beyond a virtual office. This is not a legal restriction but a practical banking reality that can meaningfully slow the formation process for fully non-resident founders.
What is the difference between a GmbH and a UG? +
Both are forms of German limited liability company, taxed identically and governed by the same GmbH Act. The key differences are share capital and distribution restrictions. A GmbH requires €25,000 minimum share capital, with at least €12,500 paid in at formation. A UG (Unternehmergesellschaft, haftungsbeschränkt) — informally the ‘Mini-GmbH’ — can be incorporated with as little as €1 in share capital. However, the UG is legally required to retain 25% of its annual net profits as a mandatory reserve until the accumulated reserve reaches €25,000, at which point it can convert to a full GmbH. The UG carries lower credibility with German banks, enterprise customers and institutional counterparties compared to a full GmbH, so founders who can afford the €12,500 deposit are generally advised to incorporate as a GmbH from the start.
How does the video notarisation procedure work for non-resident founders? +
Since August 2023, Germany's online GmbH formation procedure (authorized under the DiREG implementation act) allows non-resident founders to complete notarisation via a video conference with a German notary, without travelling to Germany. The appointment takes place through the official Federal Chamber of Notaries portal (onlineverfahren.notar.de). Founders must have a compatible ID document (most EU passports issued after August 2021 work; a biometric eID chip is required), and signatures are completed using a qualified electronic signature via the portal. For founders whose ID documents are older or who are forming a UG with contributions in kind, the in-person or Power of Attorney route may still apply. CompanyVista books the notary appointment and prepares all documents for the video session.
What is Germany's trade tax (Gewerbesteuer) and why does it vary? +
Germany's trade tax (Gewerbesteuer) is a municipal business tax that every GmbH operating in Germany must pay, in addition to the federal 15% corporate income tax. It is calculated by multiplying a base rate of 3.5% by a local multiplier (Hebesatz) set by each municipality. This multiplier ranges from around 200% in small towns (7% effective trade tax) to 475–580% in major cities (16.6–20.3% effective trade tax). In practice, most business locations in large German cities (Berlin, Frankfurt, Munich, Hamburg) result in a combined corporate + trade tax burden of approximately 29–33%. Choosing to register in a municipality with a lower Hebesatz can meaningfully reduce the ongoing tax burden, though this must be balanced against the practical need to have a genuine address in that location.
What is the realistic timeline to a fully operational Germany GmbH? +
CompanyVista's honest answer: budget 4–8 weeks from engagement to a registered, operational GmbH. The key steps in sequence are: Articles of Association drafted and translated into German (3–7 days); notary appointment completed via video or Power of Attorney (depends on scheduling, typically 1–3 weeks including preparation); bank account opened and share capital deposited (Qonto: 5–10 days; traditional bank: 4–10 weeks); Handelsregister registration processed by the district court (2–4 weeks after notary submission); Finanzamt tax registration (1–2 weeks); Gewerbeamt trade registration (a few days). The longest variable is Handelsregister processing time, which varies by location and the district court's workload.
Consider Also

Similar & Alternative
Jurisdictions to Consider

Depending on your priorities — tax rate, EU market access, notary complexity or compliance cost — one of these may be a better or complementary fit alongside or instead of Germany.

Company Registration — Germany

Register Your German GmbH
Free Written Quote in 4 Hours

GmbH or UG — Europe’s largest market. No resident director required. Video notarisation coordinated. CompanyVista manages notary, Handelsregister, banking and all registrations.

Free written quote Video notary coordinated No resident director needed Share capital deposit sequenced Handelsregister + all registrations No hidden fees

Germany GmbH Formation for Non-Residents — Complete 2025 Guide

CompanyVista provides comprehensive Germany GmbH (Gesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung) and UG (haftungsbeschränkt) formation for non-resident founders. Like the Netherlands, Germany requires notarisation by a licensed German notary — but since August 2023, the online video notarisation procedure (via the Federal Chamber of Notaries portal) allows most non-resident founders to complete formation remotely without travelling to Germany. No German residency is required for directors (Geschäftsführer) or shareholders; however, the absence of German substance makes banking at traditional German banks significantly harder. CompanyVista recommends Qonto for the initial share capital deposit — solving the sequencing requirement between banking and Handelsregister registration. Germany’s combined effective corporate tax rate is approximately 29–33% (15% federal CIT + solidarity surcharge + municipal trade tax / Gewerbesteuer), making it one of the EU’s higher-rate jurisdictions; a post-2028 reform plans to reduce this toward ~25% combined by 2032. The GmbH requires €25,000 minimum share capital (€12,500 paid in at formation); the UG can be started from €1. Germany is particularly well suited to manufacturing, engineering and industrial businesses accessing Mittelstand supply chains; B2B software and enterprise tech companies serving DACH-region enterprise customers; R&D-intensive pharma and life sciences businesses leveraging the 25% Forschungszulage; renewable energy and cleantech; and non-EU businesses needing a credible DACH market entry entity. Realistic formation timeline: 4–8 weeks end-to-end. CompanyVista manages the complete formation lifecycle including notary coordination, articles preparation, Handelsregister registration, Finanzamt and Gewerbeamt registrations, Transparenzregister filing and banking setup. All government and notary fees are passed through at exact cost, confirmed in a written quote before any payment.

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