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Starter accounting
Gain access to professional e-accounting software, with up to 10 transactions processed monthly. We’ll also handle your monthly tax declarations (turnover only, excluding workforce-related filings), keeping your finances organized and hassle-free!
Kirjeldus
Service Includes:
- Access to professional e-accounting software
- Processing of up to 10 transactions and entries per month
- Submission of monthly tax declarations (limited to turnover, excluding workforce-related declarations)
Service Overview:
- Pricing: 39 EUR per month
- Billing Cycle: 12 months
- Total Annual Cost: 468 EUR, payable through a monthly subscription
- Contract: A service agreement will be automatically sent to you along with the order confirmation. Kindly sign and return it to finalize your subscription.
- The annual report is not included. It is available as a separate product or is included in the upgraded package.
Bonus:
Enjoy a complimentary annual report preparation if the service is utilized for a minimum of 12 consecutive months.
FAQ
Accounting (5)
When the net assets (equity) of an Estonian private limited company (OÜ) fall below the statutory threshold, the board and shareholders must act quickly to avoid personal liability and, in the worst case, compulsory dissolution.
Below is a practical roadmap that reflects the requirements of the Commercial Code (Äriseadustik) and common solutions in the market.
1. When is equity “too low”?
Under Commercial Code § 176(2) the company’s net assets must be at least:
- 50 % of registered share capital, and
- not less than the minimum share‑capital requirement (currently € 2 500 for OÜs).
Example: An OÜ with a registered share capital of €10 000 must keep equity ≥ €5 000.
An OÜ with a registered capital of €2 500 must keep equity ≥ €2 500 (100 %).
If the balance sheet shows that equity is below either limit (often expressed as negative share capital), the board must, within three months after approval of the annual report, convene a shareholders’ meeting to decide on remedies.
2. Legal options (Commercial Code § 176)
# | Option | Typical use‑case | Key steps |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Increase share capital | Profitable business, owners willing to invest | – Cash or non‑monetary contribution |
– Register change with the Business Register | |||
2 | Reduce share capital | Company permanently downsized | – Adopt resolution (2/3 majority) |
– Creditor notice & 3‑month wait | |||
– Register reduction | |||
3 | Combine increase & reduction | Clean balance sheet and optimise capital structure | Sequence matters: usually reduce first, then increase |
4 | Merger or division | Part of group restructuring | Follow merger/division procedure; assets & liabilities move to new entity |
5 | Reorganisation (transformation) | Convert OÜ → AS, SE, etc. | Rare; governed by Ch. 10 of the Code |
6 | Voluntary liquidation | No future business planned | Two‑step shareholders’ resolution; liquidation takes ~6–9 months |
7 | Bankruptcy filing | Insolvent and cannot restore equity | Board must file immediately if insolvency is evident |
3. Practical ways to restore equity
- Issue new shares / owner cash injection – quickest textbook fix.
- Convert shareholder loans into equity (set‑off contribution).
- Revalue (upwards) real estate or IP – allowed if fair‑value report substantiates it.
- Cut costs & improve margins – demonstrate turnaround in the next financial year.
- Sell non‑core assets – realise gains, book profit.
- Reduce share capital to minimum (€2 500) and cover rest via profit or later capital increase.
Tip: Make sure any capital manoeuvre is properly documented, entered in the accounting ledgers and registered in e-Business Register.
4. Exit scenarios
- Sell the company – shares can be transferred to a buyer who is willing to recapitalise. Ensure the SPA allocates responsibility for past debts.
- Liquidate – a clean way to close down if there is no buyer or business rationale. Requires publishing a creditor notice and preparing a final balance sheet.
- Turnkey liquidation service – professional firms can handle filings, creditor notices, accounting & tax clearance (fees start around €300–€1 000).
5. Director’s liability
Failure to address negative equity may expose the board to personal liability for damages (Commercial Code § 187) and fines. Timely action and documented shareholder decisions are therefore crucial.
6. Frequently asked questions
Question | Answer |
Can I operate with negative equity until next year? | Legally you may, but board must call an EGM within 3 months of the annual report approval; ignoring may lead to compulsory dissolution. |
Does the €0 share‑capital option introduced in 2023 change the equity rule? | No. Even if the registered capital is €0, the moment you distribute dividends or raise capital to > €0, the net‑asset test and €2 500 minimum apply. |
Is shareholder loan conversion taxable? | Generally no income tax, but check VAT/tax implications if asset contributed. |
Need help?
We can assist with share‑capital operations, draft resolutions, Business Register filings, or a turnkey liquidation package.
This guide is provided for general information and does not constitute legal advice.
Estonian legislation lays down a minimum set of compulsory details.
That have to appear on every sales invoice so that it qualifies as a valid source document (raamatupidamisalusdokument) for accounting and tax purposes.
The key acts are:
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Accounting Act (Raamatupidamise seadus) § 7
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Value‑Added Tax Act (KMS) § 37(7)
1. Mandatory invoice details
# | Required information | Legal basis | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Title – e.g. Invoice, Credit Invoice | Accounting Act §7(3) | Must clearly indicate the nature of the document. |
2 | Unique invoice number | Accounting Act §7(3) | Sequential and gap‑free numbering system. |
3 | Date of issue | Accounting Act §7(2) | ‘Time of occurrence’ of the transaction. |
4 | Supplier (seller) details | Accounting Act §7(3) & VAT Act §37(7) | Legal name, registry code, address, VAT‑ID (if registered). |
5 | Customer (buyer) details | Accounting Act §7(3) & VAT Act §37(7) | Legal name, address, VAT‑ID (if applicable). |
6 | Description of goods/services | Accounting Act §7(2) | Should be sufficiently specific. |
7 | Quantity & unit price | Accounting Act §7(2) | For services describe scope or period. |
8 | Net amount (per line and total) | Accounting Act §7(2) | |
9 | VAT rate(s) and VAT amount(s) | VAT Act §37(7) | Zero‑rated or exempt must be marked as such. |
10 | Total amount payable | Accounting Act §7(2) | In euros unless another currency is justified. |
11 | Payment due date / terms | Best practice | Not mandatory but highly recommended. |
12 | Time of supply (if different from issue date) | VAT Act §11 | Required when delivery date differs. |
Tip: Electronic invoices (e‑invoices) are fully acceptable if integrity and authenticity are guaranteed.
2. Language of source documents
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Invoices may be issued in Estonian or English.
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Documents in any other language must be accompanied by a sworn translation into Estonian or English to be accepted by auditors or the Tax and Customs Board (MTA).
3. Proving the business purpose
Under both the Accounting Act and the Income Tax Act, an expense is deductible only if it is business‑related and substantiated.
If the invoice alone does not make the business purpose evident (e.g. taxi, parking, travel tickets), add explanatory information such as:
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project or client name;
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employee name & business trip dates;
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licence‑plate number of the company car, etc.
Lacking or incomplete documentation may lead to the expense being treated as a non‑business cost, subject to fringe‑benefit or dividend tax.
4. Special cases & simplified invoices
Scenario | Can input VAT be deducted? | Conditions |
Cash‑register receipt (kviitung) | No | A receipt alone is not a valid VAT invoice. |
Simplified invoice ≤ 160 € (incl. VAT) | Yes | Must still show: issue date, supplier’s data + VAT‑ID, goods/services description, VAT rate & amount, total. Recipient may write their own name & VAT‑ID on the invoice. |
Passenger transport, parking machine, unmanned fuel pump, etc. | Yes (limited) | Recipient must add their name & VAT‑ID; must prove business use. |
5. Checklist before posting an invoice
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Are all mandatory fields present and legible?
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Do the figures add up correctly (net, VAT, total)?
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Is the business purpose documented (if not obvious)?
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Is the invoice in Estonian or English (or accompanied by a sworn translation)?
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Is the invoice reviewed & approved according to your internal controls?
Non‑compliant invoices
If the source document is missing compulsory data, you may:
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ask the supplier to re‑issue or correct the invoice; or
-
annotate missing contextual info yourself (date, project, car number, etc.), provided the core data required by law are already present.
However, you cannot deduct input VAT or recognise the cost as tax‑deductible while key requisites are missing.
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. For complex situations consult a professional accountant or tax adviser.
Professional accountants usually need two separate sets of e‑service rights to act on behalf of your company:
- Tax declarations & VAT, excise, customs, payroll – granted in the Estonian Tax and Customs Board (MTA) self‑service.
-
Preparation and submission of the annual report – granted in the Business Register (Rik.ee) environment.
Below you will find step‑by‑step instructions for both systems.
(If you prefer a video, see the MTA walkthrough at the end of this article.)
1. Give an accountant access in the MTA self‑service
Prerequisites
• The board member has an Estonian ID‑card, Mobile‑ID or e‑Residency digital ID.
• You know the accountant’s Estonian personal identification code (isikukood).
Step‑by‑step
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Log in to the MTA self‑service at https://www.emta.ee.
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Choose your company from the top‑right drop‑down menu (if you have more than one).
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In the left‑hand menu click Settings → Access permissions → Access permissions of representatives → New access permission.
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Enter the accountant’s personal ID‑code and (optionally) set an expiry date.
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Select rights:
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Package method – scroll to the bottom, press Search, tick e.g. Accountant Package (includes submission of all tax returns) and press Add.
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Separate rights – open the Separate access permissions tab if you need custom scope (e.g. only VAT returns). Most useful rights are grouped under “Over‑areas”.
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(Optional) To allow your accountant to manage further user rights, search for “right of the representative … to administer user rights” and add it.
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Press Save. Access is active immediately.
### Troubleshooting
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If the person is not found, double‑check the ID‑code or ask the accountant to log in to MTA once (this creates a user profile).
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Remember to update or revoke rights if you switch service providers.
2. Authorise the accountant in the Business Register (annual report)
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Log in to https://rik.ee and open My undertakings.
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From the top bar select Annual Report → Defining persons entering data.
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Click Add new person for entering data.
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Enter the accountant’s personal ID‑code.
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Select the relevant company (if prompted).
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Tick “The person entering data is authorised to submit the report”.
-
Press Save.
Important: The filed report must still be digitally signed by at least one board member before it is deemed submitted.
3. Frequently asked questions
Question | Answer |
---|---|
Can I grant access to a foreign accountant without an Estonian ID? | Currently no. The representative needs an Estonian personal ID‑code and e‑ID. For non‑resident accountants consider granting limited view‑only access or exporting data. |
Can I limit rights to one service (e.g. payroll only)? | Yes – choose Separate access permissions and add only the needed modules. |
How do I check what rights are active? | In MTA go to Settings → Access permissions of representatives and click the person’s name. In Rik.ee check Persons entering data list. |
4. Video tutorial
MTA access‑rights setup – 3‑minute video
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Procedures may change – always refer to the latest instructions on the official websites of the MTA and the Business Register.
Every Estonian legal entity – including micro‑sized OÜs owned by e‑residents – must file an annual report (majandusaasta aruanne) with the Business Register within 6 months after the end of its financial year (Commercial Code § 60).
Typical deadline: If your financial year = calendar year, the report is due 30 June of the following year.
1. Financial‑year basics
Scenario | Financial year | Filing deadline |
---|---|---|
Standard case | 01 Jan – 31 Dec | 30 Jun next year |
Non‑calendar FY (e.g. 01 Jul – 30 Jun) | Custom period | 6 months after FY end |
First FY after incorporation | Incorporation date → chosen FY end (max 18 months) | 6 months after FY end |
To change the FY you must submit a shareholders’ resolution and amend the articles in the Business Register before the new FY starts.
2. What must be included?
Estonian GAAP (Estonia’s Good Accounting Practice) recognises four size categories. Reporting requirements scale with size:
Size class | Thresholds (any two exceeded → next class) | Core statements | Notes & other disclosures | Management report |
Micro | • Assets ≤ €175 k | |||
• Revenue ≤ €50 k | ||||
• Liabilities ≤ equity | ||||
• 1 shareholder who is also sole director | – Balance sheet | |||
– Income statement | – Accounting policies | |||
– Employee count | ||||
– Related‑party info | Not required | |||
Small | • Assets ≤ €4 m | |||
• Revenue ≤ €8 m | ||||
• Employees ≤ 50 (avg) | + Cash‑flow stmt (optional if indirect method impractical) | Full set of notes per Accounting Act | Yes | |
Medium | Assets ≤ €20 m; Revenue ≤ €40 m; Employees ≤ 250 | – BS, IS, CF, Equity changes | Notes + management report | Yes + Auditor if 2/3 thresholds exceeded |
Large | Exceeds medium | Same as medium | Notes + mgmt report | Yes + Statutory audit |
Most of our clients fall under micro or small category.
3. Penalties for late filing
Delay | Sanction |
Up to 3 months | Warning letter & initial fine (typically €200–€300) |
Over 3 months | Repeated coercive fines up to €3 200 total |
Persistent non‑compliance | Court‑ordered compulsory dissolution of the company |
Late filing also raises red flags with banks and partners; keep your compliance record clean.
4. Best‑practice timeline (calendar‑year FY)
Month | Task |
Jan‑Feb | Close previous FY in accounting software; reconcile balances |
Mar | Draft financial statements; collect supporting documents |
Apr | Management review; prepare notes & management report |
May | Board approves package; send to auditor (if required) |
Jun | Shareholders’ meeting adopts the report; board member signs; submit by 30 Jun |
Submitting early avoids last‑minute e‑system congestion.
5. Key accounting frameworks
- Accounting Act – bookkeeping, source documents, reporting.
- Estonia’s Good Accounting Practice – national GAAP.
- Accounting Board guidelines – interpretations & detailed rules.
Solid day‑to‑day bookkeeping is the foundation of a clean annual report. We help micro and small OÜs keep ledgers in shape and file on time.
Need assistance? Contact us for a fixed‑fee quote.
This overview is for general information only and not legal advice. Always check current laws and the Business Register instructions.