Expanding into a new country feels like momentum. Until you hit your first real decision.
Do you plan to open a representative office? Set up a branch? Or do you go all in with a subsidiary?
This is not admin. It is a strategy.
Choose wrong and you burn time, cash and credibility. Choose right and you move faster, with fewer surprises.
Why does your entity structure matter for international expansion?
Your entity structure decides what you can do on day one.
It defines:
- How do you make money
- How you hire
- What risks do you carry
- How fast can you move
- How easy it is to exit later
Think of it as your foundation. Too light and growth breaks it. Too heavy and cost slows you down.
What are the differences between a representative office, a branch office and a subsidiary?
Here’s the reality, side by side.
| Representative office | Branch office | Subsidiary | |
| What it is | Non-commercial presence | Extension of the parent | Separate legal entity |
| Revenue | Not allowed | Allowed | Allowed |
| Liability | Parent liable | Parent fully liable | Limited liability |
| Setup speed | Fast (4–6 weeks) | Moderate (~6 weeks) | Slower (2–8 weeks + setup) |
| Cost (annual) | $2K–$8K | $5K–$15K | $15K–$50K+ |
| Best for | Testing markets | Fast entry with revenue | Long-term growth |
What do the different entities mean in practice?
Representative office
- You are present, but not operating.
- You can research, build relationships and test demand.
- You cannot sell, invoice or hire directly.
Branch office
- You are operating, but still exposed.
- You can generate revenue and hire locally.
- But every risk flows back to the parent company.
Subsidiary
- You are local, fully.
- You get independence, protection and credibility.
- But you pay for it in time, cost and complexity.
How much does it cost to set up a representative office, branch office or subsidiary?
Here is the practical view on costs:
| Entity type | Setup timeline | Annual cost (USD) | Key restrictions |
| Representative Office | ~4 weeks | $2K–$8K | Cannot generate revenue |
| Branch Office | ~6 weeks | $5K–$15K | Parent holds full liability |
| Subsidiary | 2–8 weeks + 1–3 months for bank setup | $15K–$50K+ | Higher compliance and exit complexity |
These are indicative USD ranges based on common market conditions. Actual costs vary significantly by jurisdiction, industry, regulatory complexity and the preparedness of your documentation.
In highly regulated markets or sectors subject to foreign investment screening, both setup timelines and costs may increase.
Always confirm country-specific figures with an in-market advisor before budgeting.
Which entity structure works best for your business scenario?
This is where most decisions are won or lost.
The following is a use case breakdown:
| Scenario | Best entity type | Why it works |
| Scaling quickly in a new market | Subsidiary | Supports hiring, protects liability and builds long-term presence |
| Market research or early demand testing | Representative office | Low-cost, compliant way to explore without commitment |
| Acquisition strategy | Subsidiary | Holds assets, contracts and liabilities cleanly |
| Cautious market entry | Representative office / EOR as a bridge | Keeps investment light while testing viability. EOR enables compliant hiring before committing to an entity |
| Post-acquisition workforce integration or carve-out | Subsidiary | Creates legal separation, aligns payroll and supports operational control |
How do you choose the right entity structure for international expansion?
It helps to strip it back to five questions:
- Will you generate revenue locally?
- How much risk can the parent absorb?
- How fast do you need to hire?
- How long will you stay in the market?
- How complex is the regulatory environment?
Simple decision logic
- Testing the market? → Representative office
- Need revenue now, but moving fast? →Subsidiary (possibly starting with EOR)
- Building long-term presence? → Subsidiary
No one structure is “best.” There’s only aligned or misaligned.
What are the hidden costs of setting up a foreign entity?
The obvious costs of entity setup are rarely the problem. The ones that cause issues tend to be hidden.
Watch for:
- Local director requirements
- Payroll and benefits compliance
- Tax advisory and filings
- Banking setup delays and capital requirements
- Exit costs (often higher than setup)
Miss these and your forecasts fall apart fast.
Foreign investment screening and ownership restrictions
Screening and foreign ownership are where many companies get caught off guard.
More countries now require approval before foreign-owned entities can operate in certain sectors. The definition of “sensitive” keeps expanding.
Examples:
- The EU Foreign Subsidies Regulation adds notification requirements for large deals
- The Netherlands expanded screening into semiconductors and quantum tech
- Several Gulf states are moving the other way, allowing more foreign ownership
The general direction is clear: more regulation, not less.
These checks add time. Sometimes weeks. Sometimes months.
Plan for them early. Not after you commit to the budget.
Key takeaways
Your entity structure is a strategic decision, not an administrative one.
- A representative office lets you explore without commitment.
- A branch gets you generating revenue fast but keeps risk tied to the parent.
- A subsidiary gives you independence, credibility and long-term control.
Before choosing, map your structure to your goals:
- Revenue activity
- Risk tolerance
- Hiring plans
- Regulatory environment
- Exit timeline
The wrong structure costs more to unwind than to set up.
FAQS about international entity structures
What is the difference between a representative office and a subsidiary?
A representative office is non-commercial. It supports research and brand presence only.
A subsidiary is a full legal entity. It can operate, hire and generate revenue.
The difference is simple: one observes, the other operates.
Can a representative office generate revenue or sign contracts?
No. In most jurisdictions, a representative office cannot invoice, sell or enter commercial agreements.
If you plan to generate revenue or sign contracts locally, you need a branch or subsidiary.
How long does it take to set up a subsidiary abroad?
Entity incorporation usually takes 2–8 weeks.
Full setup takes longer. Banking, tax registration and payroll can extend timelines to 3–6 months.
Regulated markets may take longer.
Which is cheaper to set up: a branch office or a subsidiary?
A branch has lower costs upfront.
Typical annual costs:
- Branch: $5K–$15K
- Subsidiary: $15K–$50K+
But a branch carries full liability for the parent. That risk has a cost too.
When should a company use an Employer of Record (EOR) instead of setting up an entity?
Use an EOR when you need speed and flexibility.
It works well for:
- Small teams
- Short-term projects
- Market testing
But EOR is a bridge, not a destination. For long-term operations, an entity is the stronger move.
Do foreign investment screening rules affect entity setup timelines?
Yes. Many countries now require approval before foreign-owned entities can operate in certain sectors.
These checks can add weeks or months. Assess them early to avoid delays.
Build the right foundation for global expansion
Global expansion is not clean. It is complex, slow in places and full of edge cases.
But it is manageable if you make the right early decisions.
Your entity structure shapes everything that follows:
- Hiring
- Compliance
- Tax
- Risk
- Growth
If your foundation doesn’t hold, everything slows down or breaks. When it does, everything moves faster.
Get the structure right and the rest gets easier.
Schedule a call with our team to map the right entity structure for your expansion. We’ll help you move forward with clarity and control.