A shelf company is a business entity that was incorporated some time ago and then left “on the shelf,” no trading activity, no liabilities, just a clean corporate history. Buying one puts a registered entity with an established incorporation date in your hands right away, which can matter when tenders, banks, or partners look favourably on companies with a longer track record. When people search for a dormant company for sale, this is precisely what they’re looking for: a vetted, debt-free, inactive entity ready to be reactivated under new ownership.
then a shelf company is the more sensible choice. Knowing this upfront helps you brief your provider correctly and avoid paying for age you don’t actually need.
Ask for the company’s UEN (Unique Entity Number) and independently verify its status on ACRA’s BizFile+ portal. A provider that hesitates to share this is not one you should work with.
Most providers handle this entirely online through secure document portals and video verification calls, so a physical visit to Singapore isn’t required.
These filings are usually completed within a few business days, and you’ll receive updated incorporation documents reflecting your ownership.
Most providers offering shelf companies also offer these compliance services as a package, which is worth negotiating into your purchase price upfront.
Buying a shelf company in Singapore for foreigners is not a shortcut around due diligence, it’s a shortcut around time. Done correctly, with a credible provider and proper KYC documentation, the entire process from initial enquiry to a fully reactivated, bank-ready company can be completed in under two weeks, entirely from outside Singapore. The key is choosing a provider who treats transparency as non-negotiable, not optional.
If you’re evaluating shelf companies currently available for purchase, ask for ACRA-verified documentation before committing, it’s the single best filter for separating credible providers from the rest.
Yes. KYC, ownership transfer, and ACRA filings can all be completed remotely through certified documents, video verification, and digital signatures. A physical visit is generally not required unless your chosen bank insists on it for account opening.
Yes, buying a dormant or shelf company is fully legal in Singapore, provided the transfer of shares, directors, and registered details is properly filed with ACRA and the company has no hidden liabilities or unresolved compliance issues.
Typically a certified passport copy, proof of residential address, a source-of-funds declaration, and a brief description of your intended business activity. Requirements can vary slightly between providers.
No. The company itself has no existing bank account tied to it. Opening a new corporate account is a separate step you’ll complete after ownership transfer, and it can usually be initiated remotely with digital-first banks.
Yes. Singapore law requires at least one director who is ordinarily resident in Singapore (a citizen, permanent resident, or holder of an Employment Pass with a local address). Most providers offer nominee director services if you don’t have one.
The terms are commonly used interchangeably, but a dormant company specifically refers to one with no accounting transactions during a financial year, while a shelf company more broadly refers to any pre-registered entity sitting idle and ready for sale. In practice, most shelf companies are also dormant companies.
Once KYC is cleared, ACRA filings for director and shareholder changes are usually completed within a few business days. The entire process from enquiry to a reactivated company in your name typically takes one to two weeks.
Yes. A name change can be filed with ACRA as part of the post-purchase resolutions, alongside any updates to the company’s business activity codes (SSIC) or constitution.