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HK Company Secretary Services: The 2026 Buying Guide for Compliance

Government figures show that companies dissolved by striking-off increased from 27,773 in FY2023–24 to 37,103 in FY2024–25 — an increase of approximately 33.6%. Many strike-off cases arise from missed statutory filings, poor correspondence handling, or prolonged neglect of compliance obligations — areas where a competent company secretary can materially reduce risk. This guide covers the full decision spectrum — self-appointment, freelance options, traditional firms, and digital-first providers — so you can make an informed choice regardless of your company’s size, structure, or director location.


What a Company Secretary Actually Does

Under Section 475 of the Companies Ordinance (Cap. 622), every Hong Kong company must have a company secretary. The company secretary is a statutory officer with important compliance responsibilities, although the role is distinct from that of a director.

Core FunctionWhat It InvolvesStatutory Basis
SCR MaintenanceIdentifying and recording significant controllers, including individuals/entities holding more than 25% of shares or voting rights, those with rights to appoint or remove a majority of directors, or those exercising significant influence or controlPart 12, Cap. 622
Annual Return (NAR1)Filing within 42 days after the company’s incorporation anniversarySection 662
Registered OfficeMaintaining a registered office in Hong Kong for official communications and notices; good providers scan and forward government correspondence promptly, often within 1 business daySection 658
Statutory BooksMaintaining statutory registers, including registers of members, directors, company secretaries, significant controllers, and minute booksVarious provisions of Cap. 622
Corporate ChangesProcessing director appointments, share transfers, registered office changes, secretary changes, share allotments, and related statutory filings such as ND2A, NSC1, NR1 where applicableVarious

What falls outside the role: legal advice, tax computations, audit reports, and financial controllership. When providers bundle these with secretarial services, ensure you understand which deliverables are statutory mandatory items and which are advisory or optional services.

Red flag test: If your secretary has never proactively contacted you about an upcoming deadline, that silence may indicate neglect rather than efficiency. A functioning secretary should initiate contact well before your NAR1 deadline and promptly notify you upon receiving government correspondence.


Legal Requirements in 2026

Appointment mandate: Every Hong Kong company must have a secretary at all times. There is no intended gap in compliance for vacancies. An individual secretary must ordinarily reside in Hong Kong; a corporate secretary must maintain a registered office or place of business in Hong Kong.

Sole director prohibition: If your company has only one director, that director cannot simultaneously serve as secretary. This restriction under Section 475 is absolute.

TCSP licensing: Any person providing company secretarial services in Hong Kong by way of business must hold a valid TCSP licence under the Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorist Financing Ordinance, Cap. 615. A person carrying on a trust or company service business without a licence may commit an offence punishable by fine and imprisonment. Verify any provider at www.tcsp.cr.gov.hk.

Penalty Fee Table

ScenarioTimeframeFinancial Penalty / Fee
NAR1 filed on timeWithin 42 days after the company’s return dateHK$105
NAR1 late — Tier 1More than 42 days but within 3 months after the return dateHK$870
NAR1 late — Tier 2More than 3 months but within 6 months after the return dateHK$1,740
NAR1 late — Tier 3More than 6 months but within 9 months after the return dateHK$2,610
NAR1 late — Tier 4More than 9 months after the return dateHK$3,480
Criminal prosecutionLate filing may expose the company and responsible officers to prosecutionStatutory fines may apply in addition to higher registration fees
BR late renewalBeyond 30 days of expiryHK$300 penalty plus potential prosecution risk

2026 updates to watch: Companies Registry electronic filing and digital services continue to expand. eMPF onboarding continues across MPF schemes, and employers should check the applicable timetable for their own scheme administrator. Private companies should also monitor government digital reporting initiatives, although no universal iXBRL filing obligation for ordinary private companies has been confirmed.


The Real Cost in 2026

The most common budgeting error is conflating provider fees with total compliance cost. Here’s the complete picture:

Fixed Government Disbursements — All Providers

ItemCost
NAR1 filing feeHK$105
Business Registration renewal, 1-year certificate from 1 April 2026HK$2,350, comprising HK$2,200 registration fee and HK$150 levy
Other Companies Registry filingsConfirm the applicable government fee, if any, against the latest Companies Registry fee schedule

Provider Fee Comparison

ModelAdvertised FeeTypical Year-End Total*Predictability
Variable billing / low-lead pricingHK$1,000–1,500HK$4,500–6,000Low — surcharges may apply for courier, printing, certification, or admin handling
Flat-fee packageHK$2,500–4,000HK$2,500–4,000High — defined inclusions, no surprises
Institutional firmsHK$5,000–12,000HK$6,000–14,000Medium — premium, but structured

*Assumes 2–3 corporate changes per year plus standard compliance. Excludes audit, accounting, profits tax filing, legal advice, and banking charges unless expressly included.

The hidden cost of “cheap”: A provider charging HK$800/year who responds only after your NAR1 deadline may cost you HK$870 or more in higher registration fees alone — exceeding the annual service fee. Over several years, accumulated late fees from slow processing can exceed HK$5,000.


5-Point Evaluation Framework

#CriterionWhat to VerifyMinimum Standard
1TCSP LicenceSearch provider at www.tcsp.cr.gov.hkCurrent, not expired or suspended
2Fee TransparencyRequest full fee schedule including likely annual cost and chargeable scenariosWritten breakdown with all common scenarios
3Processing SpeedAsk for SLA on filing submission after receiving complete signed documents≤2 business days; ≤24 hours for enquiry response
4Digital AccessConfirm online retrieval of statutory documentsBank-ready document set producible quickly, ideally within hours
5Cross-Border CapabilityVerify full service without requiring physical presence in Hong KongDigital KYC where accepted, remote document execution, multi-timezone communication

Eight red flags in your current provider: unexplained penalties appearing on your Companies Registry record; response times exceeding 48 hours; inability to produce documents within 24 hours; undisclosed fee increases; failure to notify upcoming deadlines; loss of original documents; merged government and service invoicing without itemisation; and excessive exit fees when you enquire about switching.


Overseas Directors: Remote Management Essentials

Hong Kong imposes no residency requirement on directors. You can own and direct a company without ever visiting the territory. However, every private company must have at least one natural person director, and your secretary acts as your local compliance anchor for statutory filings, registered office correspondence, and official document maintenance.

Director LocationKey ConsiderationDocumentation Requirement
United StatesTime zone gap; courier logistics; bank-specific requirementsWet-ink signatures or accepted e-signatures depending on the document; bank-specific forms, certified copies, or authorisations may be required
Mainland ChinaAdditional certification steps may applyNotarisation by China-appointed attesting officer, PRC notary documents, or bank-specific certification may be required
Singapore / APACProximity advantage; easier courier logisticsOriginal signed documents via courier where e-signature is not accepted

Your secretary should: digitise all government correspondence promptly, ideally within one business day; advise on accepted execution methods for each specific filing; coordinate bank account opening where included in the service scope; and maintain jurisdiction-specific documentation checklists.


Bank Readiness: Protecting Your Account

Banks conduct periodic and event-driven compliance reviews under a risk-based AML/CFT approach. Higher-risk accounts are typically reviewed more frequently, and document deadlines can be short. Your company secretary should be able to maintain or coordinate most bank-requested corporate documents, except financial statements, which are handled by auditors or accountants.

DocumentWho Usually Maintains / Coordinates ItTypical Bank Deadline
Latest NAR1 filing confirmationCompany SecretaryOften 48–72 hours
Current Business Registration CertificateCompany Secretary / Registered Office ProviderOften 48–72 hours
Register of DirectorsCompany SecretaryOften 48–72 hours
Significant Controllers RegisterCompany Secretary / Designated RepresentativeOften 48–72 hours
Certificate of Incumbency, if requestedCompany Secretary, CPA, lawyer, or service provider depending on bank requirementsOften 48–72 hours
Audited Financial StatementsAuditor / AccountantOften longer, commonly around 14 days if not already prepared

The failure pattern: Bank issues request → company forwards to slow secretary → secretary misses deadline → bank restricts account → company loses access to operating funds for weeks.

Prevention: Your secretary should maintain a bank-ready document set updated in real time, producible quickly upon request. If your current secretary has ever taken more than 3 business days to produce standard corporate documents for a bank review, your account may be at risk.


Crisis Scenarios: Quick Reference

CrisisImmediate ActionTimeline
Secretary resigned or disappearedAppoint new secretary immediately; file ND2A showing cessation and appointmentCompany should maintain a secretary at all times; file change within statutory deadline
Late filing fee receivedFile the overdue document with the applicable higher registration fee; engage proactive provider to prevent recurrenceLate filing fees are generally not waived merely because of oversight or delay
Strike-off warning or Companies Registry noticeFile all outstanding returns; pay applicable fees or penalties; respond to the Registry promptlyAct within the response period stated in the notice
Previous secretary filed errorsNew secretary prepares corrective filing or replacement form where permittedCorrect promptly; SCR errors should be updated within the statutory period
2+ years of non-filingFile all outstanding NAR1s, with late registration fees up to HK$3,480 per return depending on delay; bring BR current; appoint or regularise secretaryCriminal exposure increases with continued non-compliance

When you need a lawyer vs a new secretary: If you face active prosecution proceedings, a court order, or a dispute over company ownership, engage legal counsel. For administrative remediation — catching up on filings, correcting register errors, regularising statutory records, or coordinating restoration after strike-off — a competent secretary can usually assist with the process, subject to the case complexity.


How to Switch Providers: 4 Steps

StepActionTimeframe
1Review existing contract: identify notice period, usually 30–60 days, and exit fees. Question unusually high exit fees unless tied to genuine work or disbursementsDay 1
2Engage new provider: supply Certificate of Incorporation, latest NAR1, Articles of Association, Business Registration Certificate, and identification documents where requiredDay 1
3Execute board resolution: arrange simultaneous cessation of outgoing secretary and appointment of incoming secretary to avoid a compliance gapDay 1–2
4File Form ND2A with Companies Registry within 15 days of the change; confirm the applicable government fee, if any, against the latest Companies Registry fee scheduleWithin 15 days of change

Your new provider should coordinate document handover — company chop, statutory registers, minute books, correspondence archive, and other records — directly with the outgoing firm where possible, and verify no filing deadlines fall within the next 90 days.


DIY vs Outsource: Decision Matrix

FactorDirector as SecretaryDigital-First ProviderInstitutional Firm
Legal requirementGenerally only possible if the company has at least two directors and the secretary ordinarily resides in Hong KongTCSP licensed if providing services by way of businessTCSP licensed if providing services by way of business
Annual costHK$0 service fee + your timeHK$2,000–4,000HK$5,000–12,000
Time investment15–30 hours/yearNear zeroNear zero
Suitable forDormant or simple holding companies with Hong Kong-based compliance capabilityActive SMEs, overseas directors, private companies needing predictable complianceListed companies, regulated businesses, complex groups
Risk profileHigh if deadlines, correspondence and statutory records are not professionally managedLow — professional compliance bufferLow — institutional compliance buffer
Can AI replace this?No — law requires a named person or entity meeting statutory requirementsNo — AI can augment workflows but cannot hold legal responsibilityNo

2026 Compliance Calendar

ObligationDeadlinePenalty for Breach
Annual Return (NAR1)Within 42 days after incorporation anniversary / return dateHigher registration fees from HK$870 to HK$3,480, plus potential prosecution
Business Registration renewalWithin 30 days of certificate expiryHK$300 penalty plus prosecution risk
SCR updatesRelevant particulars should be entered or updated within the statutory timeframe after confirmation or changeFines may apply for non-compliance
Form ND2A — officer or secretary changesWithin 15 days after effective dateDefault may expose company and responsible persons to penalties
Employer’s Return (BIR56A)Within 1 month from the date of issue, commonly in early May if issued in early AprilPenalties and prosecution risk may apply
MPF / eMPF contributionsGenerally on or before the 10th day of the following month, subject to applicable rules where the date falls on a holidaySurcharge of 5% of outstanding amount may apply

Streamline Your 2026 Compliance with EasyCorp

easyCorp was founded in 2009 and provides Hong Kong company incorporation, company secretarial, registered office, bank account opening assistance, accounting, taxation, and business consulting services for a predominantly international client base.

Radical pricing transparency. Every service has a fixed HKD price. No undisclosed administrative handling surcharges, no unexpected courier fees added after the fact, and no undisclosed markups on government disbursements. Your invoice should match your quote.

Fast processing commitment. Subject to receipt of complete and properly executed documents, standard corporate change filings — such as director appointments, registered office updates, secretary changes, and share allotments — are submitted to the Companies Registry promptly, typically within one business day. Government processing times are outside our control.

Full remote-management capability. Our service scope is designed to function without clients needing to visit Hong Kong. We support digital KYC where accepted, remote document execution where applicable, and defined response standards across major time zones. Clients receive a dedicated contact who understands cross-border documentation requirements.

Complimentary bank account opening assistance. We guide directors through documentation requirements and application procedures with major Hong Kong banks and virtual banks at no additional cost where included in the selected package.

We’re not for everyone. If you need on-site teams, complex group restructuring advisory, regulated-sector legal advice, or litigation support, an institutional firm or specialist adviser may serve you better. We are purpose-built for private limited companies that need fast, reliable, predictable compliance — delivered primarily online.

Ready to switch? Most secretary switches can be prepared within one business day after receipt of complete documents, with completion typically taking 1–3 business days depending on signatures, outgoing provider handover, and document readiness. Contact us for a fixed-price quote with no obligation.


Frequently Asked Questions

Is it mandatory to have a company secretary in Hong Kong?

Yes, Section 475 of the Companies Ordinance requires every Hong Kong company to appoint a company secretary. This officer manages statutory compliance and ensures the company meets its legal obligations with the Companies Registry. If you do not appoint one or fail to maintain the position, your business may face prosecution and financial penalties. Our HK company secretary services help your company stay compliant through efficient document management and statutory filing support.

Can a director also be the company secretary in a HK company?

A director can serve as the company secretary provided they are not the sole director of the company and, if appointed as an individual secretary, they ordinarily reside in Hong Kong. Section 475 of the Companies Ordinance prohibits a sole director from also holding the secretary position. If your company has two or more directors, one may take the role if the statutory requirements are met. Many entrepreneurs prefer professional HK company secretary services to handle filings and reduce the administrative burden of local compliance.

What is the difference between a TCSP licensed provider and a standard consultant?

A TCSP licensed provider holds a licence from the Registrar of Companies under Hong Kong’s anti-money laundering regulatory regime. Consultants without the required licence cannot legally provide company secretarial services in Hong Kong by way of business. Using an unlicensed provider may expose your business to regulatory and operational risks. Always verify a provider’s TCSP licence status to ensure they meet current professional and regulatory requirements.

How much do company secretary services typically cost in Hong Kong?

Annual fees for professional secretarial compliance generally range from HK$1,000 to HK$4,500 based on service depth, responsiveness, document access, and whether registered office support is included. This cost may include the named secretary role and preparation of the Annual Return, depending on the package. You must also budget for the HK$105 government filing fee for the NAR1 form and the applicable Business Registration renewal fee. We maintain transparent pricing with no hidden charges, allowing you to manage your corporate budget effectively.

What happens if my company fails to file an Annual Return (NAR1) on time?

Late filing of the NAR1 form results in escalating higher registration fees from the Companies Registry. If filed more than 42 days but within 3 months after the return date, the fee increases from HK$105 to HK$870. This rises to HK$3,480 if the delay exceeds 9 months. Beyond these costs, the company and responsible officers may face prosecution for failing to meet statutory filing obligations.

How long does it take to change my company secretary to a new provider?

Changing your company secretary can often be prepared within 1 business day once complete documents are received. You will typically need to approve or sign documents confirming the cessation of the outgoing secretary and appointment of the new provider. Once the ND2A form is filed with the Companies Registry, the statutory record is updated according to the Registry’s processing. We facilitate this transition rapidly to help ensure your corporate compliance remains uninterrupted during the handover process.

Does the company secretary need to be a Hong Kong resident?

Yes, an individual company secretary must ordinarily reside in Hong Kong to fulfil statutory requirements. If you appoint a corporate secretary, it must have a registered office or place of business located within Hong Kong. This local presence is required under the Companies Ordinance and ensures that authorities have a reliable local point of contact for official communications and regulatory correspondence.

What documents do I need to provide for the Significant Controllers Register (SCR)?

You should provide identification documents, address details, and control information for all registrable persons or legal entities that qualify as significant controllers. A significant controller may include anyone who directly or indirectly holds more than 25% of shares or voting rights, has the right to appoint or remove a majority of directors, or otherwise exercises significant influence or control over the company. Since the SCR regime came into effect in 2018, Hong Kong companies have been required to maintain these records and make them available for inspection by law enforcement officers upon demand.


About easyCorp

Founded in 2009, we were awarded as the “Best Business Partner” by HANG SENG Bank. Our customers spread throughout Europe, the United States, the Middle East, Asia, Africa and other regions.

Contact us now for more details about 1-day company incorporation:

https://www.easycorp.com.hk/en/incorporations


Authorship

This blog article is created by the easyCorp business team and reviewed by qualified professionals before publication. We are dedicated to sharing useful information about setting up businesses, maintaining company compliance, and managing taxation matters in Hong Kong. Founded in 2009, easyCorp provides taxation, accounting, company secretarial, incorporation, and business consulting services for international entrepreneurs and private limited companies. easyCorp differentiates itself through practical problem-solving experience and a wide range of client scenarios handled over the

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