Using a Nominee Director in Singapore: Legal Requirements, Risks and Best Practices

Published on: 26 Mar, 2026

Introduction

Using a nominee director in Singapore raises questions about legality, director duties and corporate governance. This article, Using a Nominee Director in Singapore: Legal Requirements, Risks and Best Practices, explains the general rules and practical considerations for companies and stakeholders.

The use of a nominee director can sometimes assist with company incorporation or local representation requirements. However, it is essential to understand ACRA requirements, the Companies Act duties, and the potential risks before proceeding.

Who this applies to

This guidance is aimed at:

  • Foreign investors and shareholders considering company incorporation in Singapore;
  • Start-ups and small businesses needing a local director for regulatory compliance;
  • Advisers, corporate secretaries and in-house teams managing company compliance;
  • Any person or entity evaluating the use of a nominee director arrangement.

Key rules and requirements in Singapore

The legal and regulatory framework in Singapore sets clear expectations for directors and corporate governance. Key points include:

Local director requirement:
Under the Companies Act and ACRA rules, a private company limited by shares must have at least one director who is ordinarily resident in Singapore (a Singapore citizen, permanent resident, or person with an appropriate work pass such as an Employment Pass, S Pass, or EntrePass).

Director duties:
All directors—nominee or otherwise—owe fiduciary duties and statutory duties under the Companies Act, including duties to act honestly and use reasonable diligence in the company’s interest.

Beneficial ownership disclosure:
Companies must maintain a register of registrable controllers and file records as required by ACRA. Nominee arrangements must not be used to obscure beneficial ownership or to evade reporting obligations.

KYC and AML obligations:
Banks and professional advisers will perform Know Your Customer checks. Using nominee directors may complicate banking relationships if the arrangement is not transparent.

Employment and tax implications:
A nominee who is resident and receives fees/salary will be subject to IRAS tax rules. The company must also consider CPF contributions, payroll obligations, GST registration thresholds and IRAS filing obligations where relevant.

Public policy and legality:
Nominee arrangements that facilitate illegal conduct, concealment of crime, or tax evasion are unlawful. The Ministry of Manpower (MOM), ACRA and IRAS all expect honest disclosure when required.

Step-by-step process

The following general steps outline how a company might lawfully use a nominee director while meeting regulatory requirements:

  • Assess the need: Determine why a local director is required and whether an employee, founder, or third-party nominee is most appropriate.
  • Choose a candidate: Select a nominee who understands the role, accepts statutory duties and can satisfy KYC checks from banks and regulators.
  • Document the arrangement: Prepare a written nominee director agreement that clarifies the scope of authority, remuneration (if any) and confidentiality, while ensuring it does not seek to contract out of statutory duties.
  • Complete statutory appointments: File director appointment details on ACRA BizFile+ within the prescribed timeframe. Ensure accurate particulars of the director and keep registers updated.
  • Ensure transparency: Maintain registrable controllers records and be prepared to disclose the arrangement to banks, auditors and regulatory authorities when required.
  • Manage ongoing compliance: Ensure the company complies with filing deadlines, annual returns, IRAS tax filings via myTax Portal, CPF contributions and Employment Act obligations if the nominee is employed by the company.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Using a nominee director to hide the true beneficial owner or to circumvent anti‑money laundering checks.
  • Failing to document the nominee arrangement in writing or to clarify the legal limits of the nominee’s authority.
  • Assuming a nominee can avoid statutory duties; directors cannot contract out of Companies Act obligations.
  • Neglecting to update ACRA BizFile+ or the register of registrable controllers when circumstances change.
  • Overlooking tax, CPF and employment law consequences when a nominee receives remuneration or participates in company operations.

Practical examples

Three brief scenarios illustrate common uses and issues:

  • Scenario 1 — Foreign founder needs local director: A foreign entrepreneur engages a nominee who is a trusted local director. The nominee accepts statutory duties, the arrangement is documented and the founder is named as the beneficial owner. The company maintains transparent records and complies with ACRA and IRAS reporting.
  • Scenario 2 — Banking challenge: A company appoints a nominee but fails to disclose the arrangement to a bank. The bank delays account opening pending clarity on beneficial ownership, affecting cash flow. Transparent KYC would have avoided the delay.
  • Scenario 3 — Improper delegation: A nominee director signs decisions under instruction without exercising independent judgement. If the company faces a dispute, both the nominee and instructing shareholders may face legal and reputational risks under the Companies Act.

How a corporate secretary can help

A corporate secretary in Singapore plays a central role in ensuring compliance and good governance. Typical assistance includes:

  • Preparing and filing director appointment forms on ACRA BizFile+ and updating the register of registrable controllers.
  • Advising on Companies Act duties and corporate governance best practices to avoid improper use of nominee arrangements.
  • Drafting nominee agreements that clarify expectations without attempting to negate statutory responsibilities.
  • Coordinating with accountants for IRAS tax filing via myTax Portal, payroll, GST registration advice and CPF compliance where remuneration applies.
  • Assisting with KYC documentation for banks and ensuring PDPA-compliant handling of personal data.

Raffles Corporate Services can provide discreet support with filings, compliance, accounting, tax and payroll services to help manage the practical aspects of nominee arrangements.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a nominee director avoid director duties?

No. A nominee director remains subject to statutory duties under the Companies Act. A written agreement cannot lawfully absolve a director of legal responsibilities such as acting honestly and exercising reasonable care.

Is it legal to use a nominee director in Singapore?

Yes, provided the arrangement is lawful, transparent and not used to conceal beneficial ownership or evade regulatory obligations. All appointments must be properly filed with ACRA and comply with KYC requirements.

Will banks accept companies with nominee directors?

Many banks will accept companies with nominee directors, but robust KYC and full disclosure of beneficial ownership are typically required. Failure to provide clear documentation can delay account opening.

Are there tax or CPF implications for a nominee who receives fees?

Yes. Remuneration for a nominee director is subject to IRAS tax rules and, if employment-like, CPF contributions may be required. Seek tax and payroll advice tailored to the situation.

Key takeaways

  • Nominee directors are lawful in Singapore when used transparently and not to obfuscate beneficial ownership.
  • Nominee directors retain statutory duties under the Companies Act and cannot contract out of these obligations.
  • Document the arrangement, file appointments on ACRA BizFile+, and maintain registrable controllers records.
  • Consider tax, CPF, payroll and banking implications; coordinate KYC and AML requirements.
  • Engage a corporate secretary or professional adviser for compliance, filings and governance support.

Requirements may change, so always check the latest guidance from ACRA, IRAS or MOM, or consult a professional adviser.

If you are considering using a nominee director or want to ensure an existing arrangement complies with Singapore regulations, specialist help can reduce risk. Raffles Corporate Services offers corporate secretarial, compliance, accounting, tax and payroll support to assist with filings and ongoing obligations.

If you would like to find out more about how Raffles Corporate Services can assist with your company’s compliance and corporate secretarial requirements, please get in touch with the team at [email protected].

Yours sincerely,
The editorial team at Raffles Corporate Services

Disclaimer: This does not constitute legal advice. If you require legal advice, please contact a lawyer.