Introduction
Deciding to incorporate a company with multiple founders brings important governance, operational and legal questions. Incorporating a company with multiple founders: shareholders’ agreements and founder roles must be clear from the outset to reduce future disputes and ensure smooth decision-making.
This article explains the practical steps and key considerations for founders in Singapore, including how to prepare a shareholders’ agreement, define founder roles, and comply with ACRA, IRAS and other statutory requirements.
Who this applies to
This guide is intended for entrepreneurs, startup founders, investor groups and advisers planning to incorporate a company in Singapore with two or more founders. It is also helpful for existing companies formalising relationships among equity holders.
Key rules and requirements in Singapore
Founders should be familiar with the regulatory landscape that affects company formation and governance in Singapore.
- Companies Act: Governs incorporation, director duties, share capital and statutory filings.
- ACRA: All incorporations and ongoing filings (annual returns, changes in directors, registered office) are processed via the ACRA BizFile+ portal.
- Directors and company secretary: Every company must appoint at least one resident director and a company secretary within six months of incorporation.
- Share capital and register: Details of shareholdings and share transfers must be maintained and available for inspection.
- IRAS and tax: Companies should register for Corporate Income Tax and, where applicable, GST via IRAS myTax Portal. Proper accounting records must be kept for audit and tax purposes.
- Employment and immigration: If founders or staff are non-residents, relevant passes such as Employment Pass, S Pass or Work Permit must be obtained; payroll and CPF obligations apply for Singapore employees.
- Privacy and data: PDPA obligations apply when processing personal data of employees, customers or suppliers.
Step-by-step process
Below is a practical workflow for incorporating a company with multiple founders and setting out shareholders’ agreements and founder roles.
1. Early discussions and decisions
- Agree on the business purpose, proposed company name and basic capital structure.
- Decide initial equity split, founder roles, voting rights and any special share classes.
- Consider vesting schedules, founder remuneration and intellectual property ownership arrangements.
2. Pre-incorporation checks
- Check name availability on ACRA BizFile+ and reserve the name if required.
- Confirm directors meet residency requirements and that proposed activities are permitted under immigration rules.
3. Incorporation filings
- Prepare constitution (formerly articles of association), particulars of directors, shareholders and company secretary.
- File incorporation documents with ACRA via BizFile+ and pay the statutory fees.
- Obtain the company registration number, business profile and corporate bank account setup.
4. Post-incorporation matters
- Issue share certificates and update the register of members.
- Register for GST if expected taxable turnover exceeds the registration threshold or voluntarily where beneficial.
- Set the Financial Year End and ensure accounting systems are in place for IRAS compliance.
- Set up payroll, CPF contributions and employment contracts in accordance with the Employment Act and CPF rules.
5. Drafting and agreeing a shareholders’ agreement
A shareholders’ agreement records the commercial and governance arrangements between founders and investors. Key clauses to consider:
- Equity allocation, share classes and rights (voting, dividend, liquidation preference).
- Director appointment and removal, board meeting procedures and reserved matters requiring supermajority approval.
- Vesting schedules for founders to protect against early departures.
- Pre-emption rights, transfer restrictions, drag-along and tag-along provisions.
- Dispute resolution mechanisms and exit arrangements (buy-sell provisions, valuation methods).
While the Companies Act governs certain statutory aspects, a shareholders’ agreement supplements the constitution and protects commercial expectations. Seek tailored advice when drafting to reflect the specific needs of the founders and any investors.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Leaving founder roles and responsibilities informal — this can lead to disputes and operational gaps.
- Failing to implement vesting for founders — leads to concentration of equity without commitment.
- Overlooking statutory filings after incorporation — missing ACRA or IRAS deadlines can attract penalties.
- Not addressing IP ownership and assignment — unclear ownership can hinder fundraising or sale.
- Neglecting immigration and CPF obligations for non-resident founders or employees.
Practical examples
Two hypothetical scenarios illustrate common approaches.
Example 1 — Three co-founders, complementary roles
Three founders contribute skills in technology, sales and operations. They agree an initial equity split of 40/30/30, with a four-year vesting schedule and a one-year cliff. The shareholders’ agreement reserves hiring, capital raises and material contracts as board-level reserved matters. This balances incentive and governance.
Example 2 — Founders with an early investor
A single investor acquires 20% for seed funding. The investor negotiates anti-dilution protection, board observer rights and tag-along rights. Founders retain control but agree clear exit valuation mechanisms and buy-back options for founder departures.
How a corporate secretary can help
A corporate secretary experienced in Singapore corporate law plays a central role in ensuring compliance and good governance.
- Preparing and filing incorporation documents on ACRA BizFile+ and maintaining statutory registers.
- Advising on constitution drafting and ensuring consistency with a shareholders’ agreement.
- Assisting with minute-taking, board and shareholder resolutions, and annual compliance filings.
- Coordinating with accountants for IRAS filings, GST registration and payroll/CPF setup.
- Helping to manage employment pass or S Pass documentation where founders or key hires require work passes.
If you require practical support, Raffles Corporate Services can assist with filings, compliance, accounting, tax and payroll support to make incorporation and ongoing governance straightforward.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a shareholders’ agreement when incorporating with multiple founders?
While not legally mandatory, a shareholders’ agreement is strongly recommended. It records commercial understandings, governs transfers of shares and provides dispute resolution mechanisms beyond the Companies Act.
Can founder shares be subject to vesting in Singapore?
Yes. Vesting schedules are contractual arrangements commonly used to incentivise founders. These should be set out clearly in the shareholders’ agreement and reflected in share issue documentation.
Who must be the company secretary and when should they be appointed?
A company must appoint a qualified company secretary within six months of incorporation. The secretary should be resident in Singapore and knowledgeable about ACRA filing requirements.
How do CPF contributions apply to founders?
CPF contributions are required for Singapore citizen and permanent resident employees. Whether a founder is an employee for CPF purposes depends on their working relationship and remuneration arrangements; seek professional advice to confirm obligations.
Key takeaways
- Clarify founder roles, equity splits and governance early to reduce future disputes.
- Draft a shareholders’ agreement to supplement the constitution and protect commercial expectations.
- Comply with ACRA filings, IRAS requirements and CPF/employment obligations promptly.
- Use vesting, transfer restrictions and reserved matters to align incentives and control.
- Engage a corporate secretary and professional advisers to handle filings, accounting, tax and payroll.
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
Requirements may change, so always check the latest guidance from ACRA, IRAS or MOM, or consult a professional adviser.
Disclaimer: This does not constitute legal advice. If you require legal advice, please contact a lawyer.
