Published: 03-04-2023, modified on:
25-01-2024
When you are a foreign legal entity with a Dutch branch, i.e., you are based outside the Netherlands and have a branch in the Netherlands, you are required to file your financial statements with the Chamber of Commerce in the Netherlands. This applies to both European and non-European legal entities. Failure to comply is subject to major fines.
Filing obligation
The filing obligation ensures that certain financial information about your business, as provided in the law, is available to anyone who is interested. This includes your balance sheet, profit and loss account and explanatory notes. This information paints a picture of the situation at your rganization from a business perspective. It gives third parties a good understanding of the business, for instance when entering into an agreement or engaging in a (m&a) transaction.
Registered office
The filing obligation applies to foreign legal entities with a branch in the Netherlands. When does an entity qualify as foreign? To establish this, we look at the entity’s registered office, in other words, the official address where your rganization has its legal headquarters based on its articles of association. The location of the registered office determines the legal entity’s country of origin. If the company has its registered office located in a country other than the Netherlands, your rganization will qualify as a foreign legal entity.
Foreign filing
If your rganization qualifies as a foreign legal entity with a branch in the Netherlands and the company is required to file its financial statements in the country of origin, it is expected to file its financial statements in the Netherlands as well. The financial statements can be filed in the same form as the original foreign financial statements. When the foreign financial statements are in German, French or English, there is no need to have these translated into Dutch.
Formally foreign company
If your rganization qualifies as a formally foreign company, the rules are a little stricter. The company is required to file its financial statements in accordance with Dutch law. A company qualifies as a formally foreign company if:
- it has been incorporated outside the Netherlands, under non-Dutch law; and
- it operates exclusively or almost exclusively in the Netherlands; and
- it has no real ties with the state in which it was incorporated (and the law of that state).
Failure to file
Compliance with the filing obligation is not self-evident for all legal entities, whereas failure to file can have far-reaching consequences. If the company do not file its financial statements or file them late, it can be accused of an economic offence, which makes it liable to a fine of up to € 21,750. The company can also be taken to court.
Need help?
In recent years, the Dutch Tax and Customs Administration has announced on several occasions that they will be cracking down on non-compliance. To avoid unwelcome surprises, we urge you to duly file your financial statements. Please do not hesitate to contact one of our International advisers if you have any questions or require assistance. Connect with us by filling in the form.
International business
Flynth has been in business for almost one hundred years. It currently boasts over fifty offices employing over two thousand staff in the Netherlands. This makes us the sixth biggest accountancy firm in the Netherlands. Flynth employs staff who are accountants, tax experts, legal experts, pay-roll experts and advisers on subsidies. We are a member of BKR International, an international accounting association that provides us with a network of accountants and advisers made up of over one hundred and fifty members in eighty countries.