Where to incorporate in the EU?
Where to incorporate in the EU?
Author
Discussion

foliedouce

Original Poster:

3,094 posts

248 months

Wednesday 26th May 2021
quotequote all
I currently sell into France, Italy, Spain and Germany and have come to the conclusion that it would make life easier to incorporate in the EU.

Does anyone have any recommendations on where to do this? I want a jurisdiction where it is easy to manage the legal entity (I've heard Germany is really complex).

Many thanks

Jason

StevieBee

14,315 posts

272 months

Wednesday 26th May 2021
quotequote all
I'm partly involved with a European Cooperative Society (SCE) business we set up in Bulgaria in 2016 to mitigate the impact Brexit would have on our main source of revenue (i.e. various EU institutions).

We had a choice of - and looked at - Germany, Cyprus, Romania and Hungary. There exists great complexity in them all and opted for Bulgaria as that's where three of our group reside (and Sofia's quite a nice place to visit). Plus, corporation tax is quite friendly too (10% I think).

Even pre-Brexit, setting it up was not simple. Original documents needed notarising and we were required to present far more detail than is required in the UK. But day to day it is no more of a burden than running a company in the UK.

I believe that some EU countries do not permit companies to be owned 100% by foreign entities - some more than 50% owned.

The Department for International Trade offers a good service (sometimes free) assisting in setting up foreign companies so find your local DiT rep and have chat with them.

HTH


loafer123

16,037 posts

232 months

Wednesday 26th May 2021
quotequote all
foliedouce said:
I currently sell into France, Italy, Spain and Germany and have come to the conclusion that it would make life easier to incorporate in the EU.

Does anyone have any recommendations on where to do this? I want a jurisdiction where it is easy to manage the legal entity (I've heard Germany is really complex).

Many thanks

Jason
Are you mainly retail sub-€150, or bigger?

We do smaller, and have come to the conclusion we don't even need a VAT registration in the EU, despite having registered in 3 countries.

foliedouce

Original Poster:

3,094 posts

248 months

Wednesday 26th May 2021
quotequote all
loafer123 said:
Are you mainly retail sub-€150, or bigger?

We do smaller, and have come to the conclusion we don't even need a VAT registration in the EU, despite having registered in 3 countries.
Thanks for this, do you need to fill in a customs form for each order?

Some of our orders are under and some over 150 euros

loafer123

16,037 posts

232 months

Wednesday 26th May 2021
quotequote all
foliedouce said:
loafer123 said:
Are you mainly retail sub-€150, or bigger?

We do smaller, and have come to the conclusion we don't even need a VAT registration in the EU, despite having registered in 3 countries.
Thanks for this, do you need to fill in a customs form for each order?

Some of our orders are under and some over 150 euros
You can send via courier on a DDP (Delivery Duty Paid) basis, and the courier will bill you the import VAT and any Customs Charges.

You have to put the details of the goods (country of origin, type of goods) into their system to ensure the right charges are made and it goes smoothly.

We use DPD and they seem pretty good.

If you also sell via an online marketplace like Amazon, they will be responsible for the VAT, not you.

If your goods incur Customs Charges because they are outside the trade deal (from China, for example), it might pay you to import them into the EU at cost and then sell at retail over there.


foliedouce

Original Poster:

3,094 posts

248 months

Wednesday 26th May 2021
quotequote all
loafer123 said:
You can send via courier on a DDP (Delivery Duty Paid) basis, and the courier will bill you the import VAT and any Customs Charges.

You have to put the details of the goods (country of origin, type of goods) into their system to ensure the right charges are made and it goes smoothly.

We use DPD and they seem pretty good.

If you also sell via an online marketplace like Amazon, they will be responsible for the VAT, not you.

If your goods incur Customs Charges because they are outside the trade deal (from China, for example), it might pay you to import them into the EU at cost and then sell at retail over there.
Thank you, I'm ultimately planning to bring containers in directly from China and store them in an EU warehouse. It's just a bloody nightmare at the moment and I'm trying to find temporary workarounds.

foliedouce

Original Poster:

3,094 posts

248 months

Wednesday 26th May 2021
quotequote all
StevieBee said:
I'm partly involved with a European Cooperative Society (SCE) business we set up in Bulgaria in 2016 to mitigate the impact Brexit would have on our main source of revenue (i.e. various EU institutions).

We had a choice of - and looked at - Germany, Cyprus, Romania and Hungary. There exists great complexity in them all and opted for Bulgaria as that's where three of our group reside (and Sofia's quite a nice place to visit). Plus, corporation tax is quite friendly too (10% I think).

Even pre-Brexit, setting it up was not simple. Original documents needed notarising and we were required to present far more detail than is required in the UK. But day to day it is no more of a burden than running a company in the UK.

I believe that some EU countries do not permit companies to be owned 100% by foreign entities - some more than 50% owned.

The Department for International Trade offers a good service (sometimes free) assisting in setting up foreign companies so find your local DiT rep and have chat with them.

HTH
Thanks, I hadn't considered Bulgaria and one of my team is Bulgarian so that may work for us.

NorthDave

2,485 posts

249 months

Wednesday 26th May 2021
quotequote all
I'd be looking at Portugal - purely because they seem really keen to get investment from individuals via their Golden Ticket scheme. It makes me think they might be really hospitable to new companies too.

Worth a look anyway!

loafer123

16,037 posts

232 months

Wednesday 26th May 2021
quotequote all
foliedouce said:
loafer123 said:
You can send via courier on a DDP (Delivery Duty Paid) basis, and the courier will bill you the import VAT and any Customs Charges.

You have to put the details of the goods (country of origin, type of goods) into their system to ensure the right charges are made and it goes smoothly.

We use DPD and they seem pretty good.

If you also sell via an online marketplace like Amazon, they will be responsible for the VAT, not you.

If your goods incur Customs Charges because they are outside the trade deal (from China, for example), it might pay you to import them into the EU at cost and then sell at retail over there.
Thank you, I'm ultimately planning to bring containers in directly from China and store them in an EU warehouse. It's just a bloody nightmare at the moment and I'm trying to find temporary workarounds.
On that basis, DDP courier in the short term, then either use a EU based dropshipper or get your own warehouse in the longer term.

skwdenyer

18,430 posts

257 months

Sunday 30th May 2021
quotequote all
loafer123 said:
foliedouce said:
loafer123 said:
You can send via courier on a DDP (Delivery Duty Paid) basis, and the courier will bill you the import VAT and any Customs Charges.

You have to put the details of the goods (country of origin, type of goods) into their system to ensure the right charges are made and it goes smoothly.

We use DPD and they seem pretty good.

If you also sell via an online marketplace like Amazon, they will be responsible for the VAT, not you.

If your goods incur Customs Charges because they are outside the trade deal (from China, for example), it might pay you to import them into the EU at cost and then sell at retail over there.
Thank you, I'm ultimately planning to bring containers in directly from China and store them in an EU warehouse. It's just a bloody nightmare at the moment and I'm trying to find temporary workarounds.
On that basis, DDP courier in the short term, then either use a EU based dropshipper or get your own warehouse in the longer term.
Temporary workarounds depend upon your margin position. If you've got margin to burn, it is easy smile

DPD DDP (it is actually not DDP, it is DT1) is fine, but:

- you're paying a handling fee for the privilege;
- the surcharges are pretty awful;
- you're hit for duty at the actual selling price.

If you're selling B2B, DT1 won't work - the VAT will be irrecoverable by your customers. For some context of costs, the business I'm working on this with have had to put EU P&P up to €34 per delivery (typical order values around £150) just to break even...

If you're in the garment space, I can help with a ready-made solution with an EU company, warehouse, logistics, etc. I'm not touting for trade, just we've done all of this over the last few months so we could work out a deal to share the benefit.

loafer123

16,037 posts

232 months

Monday 31st May 2021
quotequote all
Thanks, but we have to cut each order to size so unless we set up a full EU operation with stock and staff, it won’t work for us.

On the bright side, this is a barrier to competition and stops people like Amazon from moving in on us, so margins are maintained.

As for DPD, you do pay charges, but we do enough volume and use the cheaper offering they don’t publicise as much, so it is a little more bearable.

cjt1979

28 posts

51 months

Saturday 19th June 2021
quotequote all
I ended up setting up in Malta. Companies law based on UK system and English is main language... Definitely worth a second look IMO

williaa68

1,538 posts

183 months

Tuesday 22nd June 2021
quotequote all
I have been looking at the Estonian digital nomad scheme:

https://e-resident.gov.ee/become-an-e-resident/

it seems quite attractive for my business, but that is services not goods.

skwdenyer

18,430 posts

257 months

Tuesday 22nd June 2021
quotequote all
williaa68 said:
I have been looking at the Estonian digital nomad scheme:

https://e-resident.gov.ee/become-an-e-resident/

it seems quite attractive for my business, but that is services not goods.
It doesn’t of course change the place of supply rules, nor the place of business. There appear to be some tax risks

captain.scarlet

1,891 posts

51 months

Friday 25th June 2021
quotequote all
I appreciate I'm late to this topic, but I'm surprised nobody has mentioned the Republic of Ireland.

I don't know the ins and outs, but are there reasons why Ireland, given the current deal between the UK and the EU involving the North, is not top on anyone's lists?

I anticipated geographical proximity, language, the same time zone and a similar legal system would be some of a variety of reasons for.

Redarress

717 posts

224 months

Friday 25th June 2021
quotequote all
For logistics it’s cheaper to have containers come into mainland Europe for breakdown and the onwards distribution through Europe. Poland is popular

loafer123

16,037 posts

232 months

Saturday 26th June 2021
quotequote all
captain.scarlet said:
I appreciate I'm late to this topic, but I'm surprised nobody has mentioned the Republic of Ireland.

I don't know the ins and outs, but are there reasons why Ireland, given the current deal between the UK and the EU involving the North, is not top on anyone's lists?

I anticipated geographical proximity, language, the same time zone and a similar legal system would be some of a variety of reasons for.
Probably because anyone who exports to the EU has found the most difficult country to get goods to since 1st January has been Ireland.

They may be brothers, but they haven’t been very helpful. Leo has a lot to answer for.

Would you believe we ended up choosing France (!) for IOSS? I’m still surprised myself!

rdjohn

6,761 posts

212 months

Saturday 26th June 2021
quotequote all
I thought the Netherlands would be an obvious choice. Ship into Rotterdam, everyone speaks English, is well educated and the nation is enterprising in nature, as well as being culturally similar to the UK.

Less good if you are in need of cheap unskilled labour.