Sagar Mahatara

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Required Documents for Company Registration in Nepal

September 20, 2025 Registration
Required Documents for Company Registration in Nepal

Introduction

To register a company in Nepal, you must submit a core set of corporate documents (MOA, AOA, application), identity documents for promoters/directors (citizenship or passport), proof of registered office (lease or ownership + utility bill/ward registration), witness consents, and — before commencing business — tax (PAN/VAT) registration (Required Documents for Company Registration in Nepal) . Foreign promoters require additional statutory permissions. The Office of the Company Registrar (OCR) administers registration through CAMIS.


1 — Quick checklist (one-page)

  • Name approval / reservation slip (OCR CAMIS confirmation).
  • Company registration application (prescribed OCR form / Anusuchi-1).
  • Memorandum of Association (MOA) (signed).
  • Articles of Association (AOA) (signed).
  • Subscriber list with number of shares and signatures.
  • Directors’ consent letters and ID copies (citizenship/passport).
  • Citizenship certificate/passport copies of promoters & witnesses (notarised)
  • Registered office proof — rental agreement or land ownership certificate + utility bill.
  • Power of Attorney (if an agent files on your behalf).
  • Foreign investor approvals/permissions where applicable (FIPB equivalent / OCR guidance).
  • Fees.

2 — Detailed document list, with practical notes

2.1 Name reservation/approval

What: CAMIS/OCR name approval confirmation or reservation token.
Why: OCR will not accept the incorporation application without an approved name. The approval is evidence that your proposed name is not deceptively similar to an existing company.
Note: Reserve alternate names if yours is generic; OCR often rejects names on similarity or public policy grounds.


2.2 Application for registration (prescribed form)

What: Standard form prescribed by OCR (often referred to in guides as “Anusuchi-1” or the online registration form).
Why: The form collects statutory particulars: company type, registered office, authorised capital, objectives, promoters, and directors. OCR uses this to index the company.
Format tip: If filing through CAMIS, fill online and upload signed PDFs; if filing physically, attach the required stamp and signatures.


2.3 Memorandum of Association (MOA)

What: The MOA sets out the company’s name, registered office, objectives, authorised capital, subscriber details and share allotment. Typically 2 copies signed by subscribers.
Why: The MOA defines the company’s legal scope. Courts and regulators refer to it when testing whether a corporate act is ultra vires (beyond power).
Common pitfalls: Vague objects clause; inconsistent authorised capital figures; missing subscriber signatures; failure to conform with Companies Act mandatory clauses. Always match the MOA’s capital figures with the OCR application.


2.4 Articles of Association (AOA)

What: The AOA governs internal management — directors’ powers, meeting quorum, share transfer mechanics, dividend policy, etc.
Why: AOAs are the company’s internal constitution; poorly drafted AOAs cause governance conflicts.
Practical note: Consider bespoke clauses (pre-emptive rights, tag/alley provisions, quorum rules) if you expect investment or shareholder disputes.


2.5 Subscriber / Promoter particulars (share allocation)

What: List of subscribers with full names, addresses, ID numbers, signatures and the number/type of shares subscribed.
Why: Establishes initial ownership — critical for opening bank accounts and later shareholder disputes.
Tip: For corporate promoters, attach the corporate promoter’s board resolution authorising the investment and a certified copy of its registration certificate.


2.6 Directors’ consents & declarations

What: Written consents to act as director, plus statutory declarations (no prior disqualification), and ID copies (citizenship/passport).
Why: The Companies Act requires directors’ consent and disclosure of interest. OCR checks director eligibility.
Pitfall: Missing or unsigned consent letters cause registration rejection.


2.7 Identity documents (NID/citizenship/passport) & witness IDs

What: Notarised copies of NID, citizenship certificates for Nepali promoters/directors; passport copies for foreign nationals; witness IDs where required.
Why: OCR uses these to verify promoter identity and nationality (important for FDI rules).
Translation note: Documents in local languages are accepted, but foreign documents require certified translation and legalisation (apostille where applicable) if from jurisdictions that have that regime.


2.8 Registered office evidence

What: Rental agreement (lease) + landlord’s citizenship/NID copy or land ownership certificate + utility bill in the name of the premises.
Why: OCR needs an address for service and to confirm proper local presence; municipal/ward registration may also depend on this.
Red flag: Using a PO box only is insufficient. OCR and banks insist on a physical address with proof.


2.9 Power of Attorney (PoA) / Authorisation letter

What: PoA when a legal practitioner or agent files on behalf of promoters. Should be notarised and, for foreign signatories, legalised.
Why: Allows a representative to sign the MOA/AOA and submit documents. The PoA must be specific about powers (filing, signing, collecting certificates).
Tip: Where possible, have the principals sign originals of MOA/AOA themselves to avoid notarization chains.


2.10 Bank reference or incorporation fees duty evidence

What: Fee payment receipts, evidence of stamp required under law (e.g., certain forms require stamp paper affixed.
Why: OCR will not process an incomplete fee payment. Stamp duties (if any) must be attached.
Practice: Confirm current fee schedule from OCR — it varies with authorized capital and company type.


2.11 Foreign investor documentation (if any)

What: Passport, proof of source of funds, prior regulatory approvals (if the sector requires), and any permission from relevant ministries. For corporate foreign investors: certified copy of incorporation and board resolution
Why: Compliance with FDI rules and foreign exchange controls; some sectors are restricted or require approval.
Crucial: Repatriation rules and sectoral limits may affect structuring — get legal advice before signing MOA/AOA.


2.12 Corporate investor documentation

What: Certificate of incorporation, memorandum and articles of the foreign/corporate investor, board resolution authorizing investment, and an authorized signatory’s ID.
Why: OCR needs to verify that the corporate investor has the authority to invest and the investing entity exists in good standing.


2.13 Special industry permissions / environmental clearances

What: Sectoral permissions for regulated activities (financial services, hydropower, healthcare, food processing, telecommunication, etc.). Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) where applicable.
Why: Some licenses must be obtained before or immediately after incorporation; OCR may request proof for certain activities.


3 — Notarization, legalization and translations (practical rules)

  • Notarised copies: OCR commonly requires notarised copies of citizenship/passports and signatures. Local notary public or lawyer-certified copies are acceptable.
  • Foreign documents: Must be legalized at Nepali embassy/consulate or apostilled where treaty provisions allow, and accompanied by certified translations to Nepali/English.
  • Scanned vs originals: CAMIS accepts scanned uploads, but OCR often insists that promoters deliver original signed MOA/AOA and certain certified documents to the OCR office or produce them on request. Keep originals organised and available.

4 — Common mistakes that delay registration (and how to avoid them)

  1. Inconsistent capital figures between the application and MOA/AOA — reconcile them before filing.
  2. Unsigned subscriber signatures or directors’ consent letters — get wet signatures and notarize where necessary.
  3. Incorrect registered office proof (utility bill older than 3 months or not in the landlord’s name) — verify current utility records.
  4. Wrong format for MOA/AOA — use current templates consistent with Companies Act mandatory clauses.
  5. Failure to attach foreign investor permissions when required — check sectoral rules early.

Pre-emptively cross-check every page, make a filing checklist, and do a pre-submission QA pass.


5 — Post-registration: immediate documents you will need

After you receive the Certificate of Incorporation you will immediately need:

  • Company Registration Certificate (OCR issued) — used to open bank account.
  • Application for PAN/tax registration at the Inland Revenue Office (use the company registration certificate and shareholders’ IDs).
  • Trade license from the local municipality/ward (requires company registration and office proof).
  • VAT registration — if turnover threshold met — requires MOA/AOA and company cert.

6 — Special considerations for particular company types

  • Private limited companies: simpler shareholder disclosure; MOA/AOA suffice.
  • Public companies: additional promoter agreements, prospectus requirements and larger disclosure obligations. See Companies Act sections on public companies.
  • Non-profit / Not-for-profit companies: distinct objectives, and proof of charitable purpose/beneficiaries. OCR may demand additional documentation.

7 — Practical workflow I use as counsel (recommended)

  1. Name search & reservation (capture 3 alternates).
  2. Draft MOA & AOA using a template aligned with the client’s objectives and investor protections.
  3. Prepare board resolutions, consent letters, subscriber list, and PoA as needed.
  4. Collate identity documents, notarise, translate and legalise foreign papers.
  5. Pre-file a document checklist with OCR via CAMIS; upload scanned copies and submit originals on appointment.
  6. Track OCR comments, correct, and respond promptly.

8. Frequently asked questions:

Q — How many promoters are required to register a private limited company?
A — A private company in Nepal typically requires at least two promoters/shareholders. Check OCR guidance and the Companies Act for exact thresholds for different company types.

Q — Can I use scanned citizenship copies?
A — OCR accepts scanned copies for online filing, but they must be properly certified/notarised; originals should be available if OCR or other authorities request verification.

Q — What if a promoter’s name differs across documents?
A — That invites delay or rejection. Standardise the name exactly as shown in the national ID or passport across MOA, AOA and application forms.

Q — Do I need to notarise foreign documents?
A — Yes. Foreign documents usually require notarisation and consular/legalisation (apostille or embassy attestation) depending on the country of origin and the OCR’s present policy.

Q — How long does OCR take to process?
A — Processing times vary with completeness and volume; a mature file with clear, certified documents will be faster. Always monitor CAMIS for status updates.


9. Next steps for me to help you (choose any)

  1. I prepare MOA + AOA customised to your business (template + lawyer review).
  2. I built a document pack (fillable PDFs + notarisation checklist + CAMIS checklist).
  3. I review a draft bundle you already have and produce a redlined/approved submission set ready for CAMIS.
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