Company registration in Nepal can be straightforward if foreign companies prepare the correct documents from the start.
Most delays happen due to incomplete paperwork, incorrect notarisation, or missing approvals under Nepal’s foreign investment laws.
This guide provides the most authoritative, up-to-date document checklist for foreign companies registering in Nepal.
It covers private limited companies, foreign direct investment approvals, sector-specific clearances, and post-registration filings.
Whether you are expanding operations, setting up a cost centre, or hiring staff locally, this article shows you exactly what documents are required, why they matter, and how to prepare them correctly.
Nepal follows a document-driven corporate approval system.
Every authority relies on written, verified evidence.
Incomplete or poorly drafted documents can result in:
Rejection by the Office of Company Registrar (OCR)
Delays in foreign investment approval
Banking and capital repatriation issues
Compliance risk under FITTA 2019 and the Companies Act 2006
Preparing the right documents upfront protects timelines, capital, and regulatory standing.
Foreign companies must submit documents to multiple bodies:
Office of Company Registrar (OCR) – incorporation
Department of Industry (DOI) or Investment Board Nepal (IBN) – FDI approval
Nepal Rastra Bank (NRB) – capital inflow compliance
Inland Revenue Department (IRD) – tax registration
Local Ward Office – business location registration
Each authority has distinct documentation requirements.
This is the formal request to incorporate a company.
Key requirements:
Prescribed OCR application form
Company name approval reference
Proposed business activities
The application must align with Nepal Standard Industrial Classification (NSIC).
The MOA defines the company’s legal identity.
It must include:
Company name
Registered office address in Nepal
Objectives and permitted activities
Share capital structure
Liability clause
The objectives must be FDI-permissible under FITTA 2019.
The AOA governs internal management.
It typically covers:
Share issuance and transfers
Director powers and duties
Meeting procedures
Dividend and reserve policies
Foreign shareholders should ensure alignment with international governance standards.
Each foreign individual must submit:
Clear, notarised passport copy
Validity exceeding six months
If a corporate shareholder exists, additional documents apply.
Passport-size
White background
Recent (within six months)
Foreign companies cannot complete company registration in Nepal without FDI approval.
Submitted to DOI or IBN depending on investment size.
It outlines:
Investment amount
Sector classification
Ownership structure
Planned operations
Mandatory when the investor is a foreign entity.
The resolution must:
Approve investment in Nepal
Specify investment amount
Authorise a local representative
It must be notarised and apostilled.
Issued by the home country authority.
Requirements:
Notarised
Apostilled or embassy-attested
English translation if applicable
These include:
Memorandum and Articles
Bylaws or equivalent charter documents
They establish legal standing and authority.
Shows:
Ownership structure
Ultimate beneficial owners
Required for AML and compliance screening.
Details:
Capital amount
Timeline of remittance
Use of funds
This schedule must match bank inflows.
After approval, banks require:
FDI approval letter
Company incorporation certificate
Tax registration details
One of the following:
Rental agreement
Ownership certificate
Consent letter from property owner
Foreign investors must appoint a local authorised person.
The letter must specify:
Authority scope
Signing powers
Duration
Issued by Inland Revenue Department.
Required documents:
Company registration certificate
MOA and AOA
Lease agreement
Mandatory if turnover exceeds statutory threshold or for certain sectors.
Certain sectors require additional approvals.
Examples include:
IT and software services
Tourism and hospitality
Energy and infrastructure
Education and training
Each regulator may request feasibility studies or technical documents.
Issued to shareholders after incorporation.
Companies must maintain:
Share register
Director register
Minutes book
Mandatory for employers hiring staff in Nepal.
| Category | Documents | Authority |
|---|---|---|
| Incorporation | MOA, AOA, application | OCR |
| FDI Approval | Board resolution, passports | DOI / IBN |
| Banking | Investment schedule | NRB-regulated banks |
| Tax | PAN, VAT forms | IRD |
| Employment | SSF registration | SSF Office |
This table highlights why document sequencing matters.
Foreign investors often face delays due to:
Mismatch between MOA objectives and FDI approval
Improper notarisation or apostille
Inconsistent shareholder names across documents
Using residential addresses without consent letters
Professional review avoids these issues.
Accurate documentation can reduce registration timelines by 30–50%.
Incomplete submissions often result in:
Re-filings
Clarifications
Regulatory holds
Preparation is the fastest compliance strategy.
All document requirements are governed by:
Companies Act 2006
Foreign Investment and Technology Transfer Act 2019
Industrial Enterprises Act 2020
Income Tax Act 2002
Nepal Rastra Bank Foreign Exchange Regulations
These laws empower authorities to demand strict documentation.
Expert advisors help by:
Drafting compliant MOA and AOA
Managing apostille and notarisation
Coordinating approvals across authorities
Ensuring future repatriation compliance
This reduces risk for foreign companies entering Nepal.
If you are planning company registration in Nepal, do not risk delays or compliance errors.
Speak with a Nepal market-entry specialist to review your documents and manage the full registration process end-to-end.
👉 Book a free consultation to get your personalised document checklist.
Foreign companies need incorporation forms, MOA, AOA, FDI approval documents, passports, board resolutions, and tax registrations. Sector-specific approvals may apply.
Yes. Foreign documents must be notarised and apostilled or embassy-attested before submission in Nepal.
Verification typically takes one to three weeks if documents are complete and correctly prepared.
Initial filings are digital, but original signed and notarised documents are still required for final approval.
Yes. Any foreign ownership requires approval under FITTA 2019 before company registration is completed.
Company registration in Nepal depends heavily on accurate, legally compliant documentation.
Foreign companies that prepare the correct documents upfront enjoy faster approvals, lower risk, and smoother operations.
With the right guidance, Nepal can be a highly strategic and cost-effective expansion destination.