Virtual Office FAQ

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Accounting (1)

Below is a practical roadmap that reflects the requirements of the Commercial Code (Äriseadustik) and common solutions in the market.


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 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.


  1. Issue new shares / owner cash injection – quickest textbook fix.
  2. Convert shareholder loans into equity (set‑off contribution).
  3. Revalue (upwards) real estate or IP – allowed if fair‑value report substantiates it.
  4. Cut costs & improve margins – demonstrate turnaround in the next financial year.
  5. Sell non‑core assets – realise gains, book profit.
  6. 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.


  • 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 – we can handle filings, creditor notices, accounting & tax clearance (fees start around €300–€1 000).

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.

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Company formation (1)

The Estonian Business Law provides two bases for this.

Either pay it during the establishment process or pay it later. So a company can be set up without an immediate share capital down payment.

The shareholder shall pay for the share in full within one year, but at the latest share capital must be paid when dividends will be paid. No share capital paid, no dividends.

Category: Company formation
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Company liquitation (1)

Below is a practical roadmap that reflects the requirements of the Commercial Code (Äriseadustik) and common solutions in the market.


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 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.


  1. Issue new shares / owner cash injection – quickest textbook fix.
  2. Convert shareholder loans into equity (set‑off contribution).
  3. Revalue (upwards) real estate or IP – allowed if fair‑value report substantiates it.
  4. Cut costs & improve margins – demonstrate turnaround in the next financial year.
  5. Sell non‑core assets – realise gains, book profit.
  6. 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.


  • 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 – we can handle filings, creditor notices, accounting & tax clearance (fees start around €300–€1 000).

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.

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