faqs.tw 台灣生活常見問題

Can foreigners start a business in Taiwan?

Yes, foreigners can start and own businesses in Taiwan. Taiwan actively encourages foreign investment and entrepreneurship, especially in technology, innovation, and industries that contribute to the local economy.

Key facts

Restricted industries for foreign investment

Most industries are fully open, but some require prior approval from the Investment Commission (投資審議委員會):

Prohibited industries for foreign ownership include power distribution and postal services. For a complete list, check the Investment Commission's website at www.moeaic.gov.tw.

What are the different company types available?

Choosing the right business structure is critical. Here are the main options for foreigners:

Company Type Minimum Capital Liability Best For
Company Limited by Shares (股份有限公司) NT$500,000+ (foreign-owned) Limited to investment Most common for foreign entrepreneurs
Limited Company (有限公司) NT$500,000+ (foreign-owned) Limited to investment Small businesses, fewer shareholders
Branch Office (分公司) No minimum Parent company liable Foreign companies expanding to Taiwan
Representative Office (辦事處) No minimum Parent company liable Market research only (cannot conduct business)
Sole Proprietorship (獨資) None Unlimited personal Only for ROC nationals or APRC holders

Company Limited by Shares is the most popular choice for foreign entrepreneurs because:

Important: While there's no legally mandated minimum capital for ROC nationals, the Investment Commission typically requires foreign-owned companies to demonstrate at least NT$500,000 (approximately US$15,000) in paid-in capital to approve the Foreign Investment Application (FIA). The actual requirement may vary based on your business plan and industry.

What is the step-by-step registration process?

Setting up a company in Taiwan as a foreigner involves several government agencies. Here's the complete process:

Step 1: Reserve your company name (1–3 days)

Step 2: Foreign Investment Application (FIA) (2–4 weeks)

Step 3: Open a preparatory bank account (1–2 weeks)

Step 4: Company registration (1–2 weeks)

Step 5: Tax registration (1 week)

Step 6: Apply for your work permit and ARC (2–4 weeks)

Step 7: Post-registration items

Total timeline: 2–4 months from start to ARC in hand.

What about minimum capital requirements?

Official rules vs. practical reality

Aspect Details
Legal minimum for ROC companies NT$0 (no legal minimum since 2009)
Practical minimum for foreign-owned NT$500,000 (Investment Commission requirement)
Recommended for visa sponsorship NT$500,000–1,000,000
Amount to show "serious intent" NT$1,000,000+

Why NT$500,000? The Investment Commission uses this as a benchmark to assess whether a foreign investment is "substantive." Amounts below this may face additional scrutiny or rejection.

Capital can be used after registration: Once your company is registered and the capital verification is complete, the money in the preparatory account is transferred to your company's operating account. You can use this capital for business expenses — it doesn't need to sit untouched.

Increasing capital later: If your business grows and needs more capital, you can go through a capital increase process (增資). This requires another Investment Commission approval for foreign-owned companies.

Foreign currency considerations: You can remit capital in foreign currency (USD, EUR, etc.) and convert to TWD at the bank. Keep all remittance receipts — you'll need them for repatriation of capital or profits later.

What are the tax obligations for businesses?

Understanding Taiwan's tax system is essential for running your business legally and efficiently.

Business Tax (營業稅) — Taiwan's VAT

Item Details
Standard rate 5%
Filing frequency Bi-monthly (every 2 months)
How it works Charge 5% on sales, deduct 5% paid on business purchases, pay the difference
Invoice system Must issue Uniform Invoices (統一發票) for all transactions
Exemptions Some services (medical, education, financial) are exempt

Profit-Seeking Enterprise Income Tax (營利事業所得稅) — Corporate Tax

Taxable Income Tax Rate
Up to NT$120,000 Exempt
NT$120,001–NT$500,000 Half of the amount exceeding NT$120,000
Over NT$500,000 20% flat rate

Withholding tax on dividends: When a company distributes profits to foreign shareholders, a 21% withholding tax applies. Tax treaties with certain countries may reduce this rate.

Other taxes and obligations

Tax/Obligation Details
Supplementary NHI premium 2.11% on dividends/bonuses exceeding NT$29,500
Labor insurance Employer pays ~11% of employee salary
National Health Insurance Employer pays ~5% of employee salary
Pension contribution (Labor Pension) Employer contributes 6% of employee salary
Withholding tax on salary Employer must withhold income tax from employee paychecks

Accounting requirements

What visa options exist for entrepreneurs?

Taiwan offers several pathways for foreign entrepreneurs to legally reside and work.

1. Investor/Entrepreneur Work Permit + ARC

The standard pathway if you're setting up a company:

Requirement Details
Minimum investment NT$500,000+
Work permit Apply through Ministry of Labor after company registration
ARC validity 1–3 years, renewable
Path to APRC After 5 continuous years of legal residence
Can hire foreign employees Yes, after meeting capital and revenue thresholds

2. Entrepreneur Visa (創業家簽證)

Designed for startup founders, with lower capital requirements:

Requirement Details
Eligibility Must meet at least ONE of 8 qualifying criteria (see below)
Initial visa 1 year, renewable
Capital requirement Varies by qualifying criteria
Conversion to ARC Can convert to regular work-based ARC after meeting milestones

Qualifying criteria (meet at least one):

  1. Accepted into a Taiwan government-approved incubator or accelerator
  2. Received NT$2 million+ in funding from Taiwan government programs
  3. Obtained a patent in Taiwan or major markets (US, EU, Japan)
  4. Participated in a recognized international startup competition
  5. Invested NT$1 million+ in a registered Taiwan company
  6. Graduated from a designated Taiwan university entrepreneurship program
  7. Received NT$2 million+ in venture capital investment
  8. Approved by government review committee based on innovation potential

3. Employment Gold Card (就業金卡)

A premium 4-in-1 card (work permit + work visa + resident visa + re-entry permit):

Requirement Details
Eligibility Outstanding professionals in 8 designated fields
Validity 1–3 years
Key benefit No employer sponsorship needed — you can work for anyone or yourself
Monthly salary threshold NT$160,000+ (or recognized expertise)
Application fee NT$3,500 (1 year) to NT$5,500 (3 years)
Tax benefit First 3 years: salary over NT$3 million is 50% exempt from income tax

Designated fields: Science & Technology, Economy, Education, Culture & Arts, Sport, Finance, Law, Architecture. "Economy" is the broadest category and covers most entrepreneurs.

The Gold Card is the most attractive option if you qualify, because:

Frequently asked questions

How much does it cost in total to set up a company?

Typical costs for a foreign-owned Company Limited by Shares:

Item Cost
Company name reservation NT$150
TECO document authentication (in home country) US$15–50 per document
Registered address (if using a virtual office) NT$3,000–8,000/month
Company chop (stamps) NT$500–2,000
Company registration fee NT$1,000–5,000
CPA/agent fees for setup assistance NT$15,000–40,000
Total (excluding capital) NT$25,000–60,000

Many entrepreneurs use a setup agent (公司登記代辦) who handles all paperwork for NT$20,000–40,000. This is highly recommended for first-time founders unfamiliar with Taiwan's bureaucracy.

Do I need to speak Chinese to run a business?

Not strictly, but it helps enormously. All government documents, tax filings, and official correspondence are in Chinese. You can hire bilingual staff or work with an English-speaking CPA and lawyer. In Taipei's tech and startup community, English is widely used. Outside Taipei, Chinese becomes more necessary for day-to-day business operations.

Can I run a business on a visitor visa or tourist visa?

No. You cannot legally conduct business activities on a tourist/visitor visa. You need either a work permit + ARC (through your company), an Entrepreneur Visa, or a Gold Card. Running a business without proper authorization can result in fines and deportation.

What support is available for foreign startups?

Taiwan has a strong startup ecosystem:

Can I hire foreign employees?

Yes, but with conditions:

What about freelancing without a company?

If you want to freelance in Taiwan, your legal options are:

Frequently Asked Questions

Can foreigners start a business in Taiwan?

Yes. Taiwan actively encourages foreign entrepreneurship and investment. Foreigners can own 100% of a company in most industries without needing a local partner. The most common structure is a Company Limited by Shares (股份有限公司), which provides limited liability protection and is required for most visa sponsorships. The entire setup process takes approximately 2–4 months. Some restricted industries (telecommunications, broadcasting, certain financial services) require prior government approval, but most business sectors are fully open to foreign ownership. Taiwan ranks 15th globally in the World Bank's Ease of Doing Business index.

What is the minimum capital requirement for foreigners?

While there is no legal minimum capital for ROC-national-owned companies (removed in 2009), the Investment Commission typically requires foreign-owned companies to demonstrate at least NT$500,000 (approximately US$15,000) in paid-in capital to approve the Foreign Investment Application. This amount is a practical benchmark to show "substantive" investment intent — amounts below this face additional scrutiny or rejection. For visa sponsorship purposes, NT$500,000–1,000,000 is recommended. The capital can be used for business expenses after registration is complete; it does not need to sit untouched in the account. You can remit capital in foreign currency and convert to TWD at the bank.

Do I need a local Taiwanese partner to start a business?

No. Foreigners can own 100% of a company in Taiwan in most industries without any local partner requirement. You can be the sole shareholder and director. However, having local connections is practically very helpful — a local CPA/accountant (NT$3,000–10,000/month) is strongly recommended for navigating tax filings and government paperwork, which are all in Chinese. Many entrepreneurs also use a setup agent (公司登記代辦, NT$20,000–40,000) to handle the registration process. For day-to-day operations outside Taipei, Chinese language ability or bilingual staff becomes increasingly important.

How long does company registration take?

The complete process from start to receiving your ARC takes approximately 2–4 months. Here is the typical timeline: company name reservation (1–3 days), Foreign Investment Application with the Investment Commission (2–4 weeks), opening a preparatory bank account and depositing capital (1–2 weeks), company registration with MOEA (1–2 weeks), tax registration and obtaining your Unified Business Number (1 week), and applying for your work permit and ARC (2–4 weeks). The most time-consuming steps are the Foreign Investment Application and the ARC process. Using a setup agent can speed things up by ensuring paperwork is correct the first time, avoiding delays from rejected applications.

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