Hong Kong is one of the world's most accessible jurisdictions for foreign entrepreneurs. There are no foreign ownership restrictions, no minimum capital requirements, no local director requirement, and the entire company formation process is fully remote. For foreign founders, it offers what most jurisdictions do not: a genuine business hub with simple rules.
This guide covers everything a foreign founder needs to know to set up and operate a business in Hong Kong: company structure, visas, banking, taxes, licences, and ongoing compliance.
Highlights of this article
- Any foreign national can own 100% of a Hong Kong company. No local partner, no local director, and no Hong Kong address beyond a registered office are required.
- Company registration takes 1 to 3 working days online. The process is fully remote. Government fees total HKD 3,895.
- Hong Kong's corporate tax is 8.25% on the first HKD 2 million of profits, 16.5% above. Profits generated entirely outside Hong Kong are typically exempt under the territorial tax system.
- Foreign founders who want to relocate to Hong Kong can apply for an Investment Visa, requiring either HKD 10 million in investment or sponsorship through the Quality Migrant Admission Scheme (QMAS).
- Business bank accounts can be opened remotely in 1 to 3 days via fintech providers (Airwallex, Currenxie), or within 2 to 4 weeks at traditional banks (often requiring a branch visit).
Why Hong Kong for foreign founders?
Low, simple taxes
Hong Kong taxes only locally sourced profits. If your customers, contracts, and operations are outside Hong Kong, there is a strong case that your profits are offshore and not subject to profits tax at all. The applicable rate when profits are taxable is 8.25% on the first HKD 2 million, 16.5% above — with no capital gains tax, no dividend withholding tax, and no VAT. For a full breakdown, see our Hong Kong corporate tax guide.
Full foreign ownership
Unlike many Asian jurisdictions (including mainland China, Indonesia, and Vietnam), Hong Kong places no restrictions on foreign ownership. A company can be 100% owned by foreign individuals or foreign corporate entities. You do not need a local partner or nominee shareholder.
No local director requirement
Singapore requires at least one locally resident director. Hong Kong does not. A foreigner living anywhere in the world can be the sole director. This makes Hong Kong significantly more accessible for founders who want a credible legal entity without relocating.
Strategic location and market access
Hong Kong is the gateway to mainland China through the Closer Economic Partnership Arrangement (CEPA), which provides Hong Kong-based companies with preferential access to mainland markets. It handles over 75% of global offshore RMB settlement. It is also a natural hub for Southeast Asia, Japan, and South Korea operations.
Strong legal framework
Hong Kong operates under English common law. Contracts, intellectual property, and dispute resolution follow internationally recognised standards. The judiciary is independent and the legal system is predictable — critical factors for business confidence.
Business structures for foreign founders
For most foreign founders, the private limited company is the right structure. Here is a brief comparison:
| Structure | Foreign ownership | Liability | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Private limited company | 100% permitted | Limited to share capital | Most businesses: technology, services, trading, holding |
| Sole proprietorship | N/A (individual) | Unlimited | Local individuals only; not suitable for most foreign founders |
| Partnership | Permitted | Unlimited (general) | Professional practices; unusual for foreign founders |
| Branch office | Parent company extends | Parent fully liable | Foreign companies testing the market without local incorporation |
For a full comparison, see our guide to types of business entities in Hong Kong. For comparing Hong Kong with other incorporation destinations, see Hong Kong vs Singapore and Hong Kong vs Delaware.
How to set up a company in Hong Kong as a foreigner
What you need before filing
- Company name: Must be unique. Search the Companies Registry e-Services portal. English names end with "Limited". Chinese names end with "有限公司". You can have both.
- At least 1 director: Any nationality, any country of residence. Must be an individual (at least 18 years old). No local director required.
- At least 1 shareholder: Can be the same person as the director. Corporate shareholders permitted. Up to 50 shareholders maximum.
- Company secretary: Mandatory from day one. Must be either an individual ordinarily resident in Hong Kong, or a licensed TCSP (Trust and Company Service Provider). The sole director cannot also be the company secretary.
- Registered address: A physical Hong Kong address (not a PO box). Professional registered address services qualify.
Document requirements for foreign founders
| Document | What to provide |
|---|---|
| Identity | Valid passport |
| Proof of address | Utility bill or bank statement issued within 3 months |
| Certification | Documents typically need to be certified (notarised or attested by a Hong Kong solicitor, CPA, or notary public) |
The certification requirement is the main extra step for foreign founders compared to Hong Kong residents (who simply provide their HKID). Build in 3 to 5 extra days for document certification if you are preparing documents outside Hong Kong.
Registration process and timeline
- Day 1–2: Prepare documents and company name check
- Day 2–3: Submit application via Companies Registry e-Registry portal (online, remote)
- Day 3–5: Receive Certificate of Incorporation and Business Registration Certificate
- Day 5–8: Apply for business bank account (fintech options open within 1–3 days)
Total time from decision to operational company: typically 5 to 10 working days. For the full step-by-step walkthrough, see our complete guide to registering a company in Hong Kong.
Government fees: HKD 3,895 (HKD 1,545 incorporation + HKD 2,350 Business Registration Certificate, 1-year). Air Corporate's all-inclusive package from USD 1,070 covers government fees, company secretary, registered address, and banking support. See our Hong Kong company registration cost guide.
Visas for foreign founders
Setting up a Hong Kong company does not automatically entitle you to live or work in Hong Kong. Company directors can operate the company remotely from abroad without a visa. If you want to physically base yourself in Hong Kong, you need a visa.
Investment Visa (Capital Investment Entrant Scheme — CIES)
The CIES allows foreign nationals to obtain Hong Kong residency by investing at least HKD 30 million in permissible investment assets (Hong Kong stocks, bonds, real estate investment trusts) within 6 months of approval. This is primarily for high-net-worth individuals, not typical startup founders.
Employment Visa
If you are employed by your Hong Kong company in a genuine capacity (director or executive with defined responsibilities), you can apply for an Employment Visa. Requirements include:
- A job position that a qualified local cannot readily fill
- Relevant qualifications and experience
- The company must be operational and capable of generating revenue or demonstrating business activity
Employment Visa applications are processed by the Immigration Department and typically take 6 to 8 weeks.
Quality Migrant Admission Scheme (QMAS)
The QMAS is a points-based immigration scheme for highly skilled professionals. Points are awarded for age, academic qualifications, work experience, language ability, and family background. It does not require a prior job offer. Successful applicants receive an initial 2-year visa with the right to work in Hong Kong.
Business Visa (Short-term)
Foreign nationals from most countries can visit Hong Kong visa-free for up to 90 days (14–90 days depending on nationality). This is sufficient for initial setup trips, bank account opening meetings, and short-term business visits. It does not grant the right to work or reside.
For most foreign founders operating their company remotely from abroad, no Hong Kong visa is required. The company operates under Hong Kong law and the director exercises governance remotely. For companies that need founders based in Hong Kong, the Employment Visa is the standard route.
Business banking for non-residents
Banking is the step most foreign founders worry about. The good news is that the most accessible options are also the fastest.
Fintech payment accounts (fully remote, 1–3 days)
Airwallex, Currenxie, and Statrys all support complete remote onboarding with no Hong Kong visit required. These accounts handle international payments, multi-currency balances, FPS transfers (Currenxie), and FX conversions. They are the fastest and most accessible option for non-resident founders.
They are payment accounts, not bank accounts: no deposit protection, no lending, no trade finance. For most foreign founders starting out, they cover 90% of everyday banking needs.
Virtual banks (HKMA-regulated, fully remote, 3–7 days)
ZA Bank and WeLab Bank are HKMA-licensed and offer deposit protection up to HKD 800,000. Onboarding is app-based with no branch visit required. Slower than fintech accounts but provides the regulatory protection of a licensed bank.
Traditional banks (usually requires a visit)
HSBC, DBS, Hang Seng, and OCBC require non-resident directors to attend a Hong Kong branch for the account opening interview in most cases. DBS and OCBC offer video KYC for some applicant profiles. Traditional banks provide the full range of banking services including trade finance, lending, and letters of credit.
Recommended approach for most foreign founders: Open a fintech account immediately after incorporation (operational in days), then apply to a traditional bank if needed once you have trading history and can make a branch visit.
For the full comparison with timelines, fees, and approval odds by industry, see our guide to opening a business bank account in Hong Kong.
Tax obligations for foreign-owned companies
Profits tax (corporate tax)
Hong Kong profits tax is territorial: only profits arising from transactions concluded and activities performed in Hong Kong are taxable. If your customers are overseas, your contracts are negotiated and signed overseas, and your services are performed outside Hong Kong, the profits are offshore and generally exempt.
The rates when profits are taxable: 8.25% on the first HKD 2 million, 16.5% above. No capital gains tax. No dividend withholding tax. No VAT.
Annual audit requirement: All Hong Kong limited companies must have their accounts audited annually by a Hong Kong CPA, regardless of revenue or whether profits are taxable. This applies even to dormant companies.
First tax return: The IRD typically issues the first Profits Tax Return approximately 18 months after incorporation. From year 2, returns are issued each April.
For the full calculation methodology, deductions, and filing obligations, see our profits tax guide.
Employer obligations (if hiring staff in Hong Kong)
If you hire staff based in Hong Kong:
- Register with an MPF scheme within 60 days of hiring the first employee
- Contribute 5% of monthly relevant income (capped at HKD 1,500/employee/month)
- File an annual Employer's Return (BIR56A) each May
- Comply with Hong Kong Employment Ordinance (minimum wage, annual leave, maternity leave)
Staff based entirely outside Hong Kong are subject to their home country's employment laws, not Hong Kong's.
Industry-specific licences and permits
Company incorporation and business registration cover the legal entity. Some industries require additional licences before operating:
| Industry | Licence required | Issuing authority |
|---|---|---|
| Financial services (fund management, brokerage) | SFC licence (Type 1–9) | Securities and Futures Commission |
| Money service / currency exchange | MSO licence | Customs and Excise Department |
| Trust and company services (company secretarial) | TCSP licence | Companies Registry |
| Import / export goods | Trader registration | Customs and Excise Department |
| Food and beverage | Restaurant licence, food factory licence | Food and Environmental Hygiene Department |
| Travel agency | Travel agent's licence | Travel Industry Authority |
| Pharmaceutical | Drug trading licence | Department of Health |
| Insurance | Insurer authorisation | Insurance Authority |
| Banking | Banking licence | HKMA |
Most B2B services, software, consulting, and trading companies do not require a sector-specific licence beyond the Business Registration Certificate. When in doubt, check the Business and Licensing Services (BALS) portal or seek legal advice.
Ongoing compliance obligations
After incorporation, a Hong Kong company has four core annual obligations:
| Obligation | When | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Business Registration Certificate renewal | Annually (1-year) or every 3 years | HKD 2,350 (1-year) |
| Annual Return (NAR1) | Within 42 days of incorporation anniversary | HKD 105 (on time) |
| Annual audit | After each financial year end | From HKD 5,000/year |
| Profits Tax Return | Issued each April; due within 1 month | Via accountant |
The company secretary handles BRC renewal and NAR1 filing. The accountant/CPA handles the audit and Profits Tax Return.
Air Corporate's company secretary service (USD 955/year) covers BRC renewal, NAR1 filing, registered address, statutory registers, and all change notifications. Accounting packages start from USD 580/year and include the annual audit and Profits Tax Return.
Mainland China access: CEPA and cross-border operations
Hong Kong companies benefit from CEPA (Closer Economic Partnership Arrangement), a free trade agreement between Hong Kong and mainland China. Key advantages for foreign-owned Hong Kong companies:
- Zero tariff: Most goods of Hong Kong origin can be exported to mainland China tariff-free
- Preferential services access: Hong Kong service providers in many sectors can operate in mainland China under conditions more favourable than other foreign providers
- Professional qualifications: Some Hong Kong professional qualifications are recognised in mainland China under CEPA
CEPA benefits apply to companies substantially operating in Hong Kong, not to shell companies with no local substance. Companies seeking CEPA advantages should ensure genuine Hong Kong operational presence.
For companies requiring a mainland China entity alongside the Hong Kong company, this typically involves setting up a Wholly Foreign-Owned Enterprise (WFOE) in China or a Joint Venture — a separate process outside the scope of this guide.
Air Corporate is a TCSP-licensed provider (TC008778) specialising in Hong Kong company registration for foreign founders. From USD 1,070 all-inclusive: incorporation, company secretary, registered address, and bank account opening support. 95%+ bank account success rate. Get started







