Starting a Business · Bolivia
Starting a Business - Bolivia
Foreign investors may own 100% of most Bolivian companies and can register online through SEPREC, but the process still involves multiple sequential steps — notarisation, tax enrollment, and municipal licensing — typically taking 4–6 weeks. Strategic sectors (hydrocarbons, mining, broadcasting) carry significant state-ownership requirements or foreign-equity caps, and the overall investment climate is rated poorly due to bureaucratic complexity, weak judicial enforcement, and acute macroeconomic instability as of 2025–2026.
100% foreign ownership is permitted in most non-strategic sectors. However, natural-resource sectors (hydrocarbons, mining) are reserved for the state; private parties may only enter service contracts with state entities. Foreign equity in broadcasting associations is capped at 25%. Foreigners may not own land within 50 km of international borders.
SEPREC (seprec.gob.bo) is the sole official commercial registry. An online portal (tramites.seprec.gob.bo) accepts filings via Bolivia's digital-identity system; the Matrícula de Comercio certificate is issued within 24 business hours of confirmed payment for standard filings.
Key sequential steps: (1) name-availability check (homonimia) via SEPREC portal; (2) notarise articles of incorporation and bylaws; (3) register the entity with SEPREC and publish in the Gaceta Electrónica; (4) obtain a Tax Identification Number (NIT) from the Servicio de Impuestos Nacionales (SIN); (5) obtain a municipal operating licence (Licencia de Funcionamiento) from the relevant municipality.
The Sociedad de Responsabilidad Limitada (SRL, minimum 2 shareholders) is the most common vehicle; there is no statutory minimum paid-in capital for an SRL. The Sociedad Anónima (SA) requires at least 3 shareholders. Official SEPREC registration fees are Bs 455.00 (SRL) or Bs 584.50 (SA), plus Bs 192.00 for electronic gazette publication.
End-to-end incorporation (notarisation through NIT and municipal licence) typically takes 4–6 weeks. SEPREC's own certificate step is 24 hours post-payment, but notarial drafting and municipal processing add the bulk of elapsed time. Physical presence in Bolivia is not legally required.
The U.S. State Department's September 2025 Investment Climate Statement flags 'cumbersome bureaucratic procedures,' inconsistent regulatory enforcement, and a weak judiciary as material impediments. Bolivia's sovereign credit was downgraded to Ca (Moody's, April 2025) and CCC− (Fitch, January 2025), reflecting currency shortages and depleted reserves that also affect corporate banking access.
Machine-assisted translation · verified 5/24/2026 · orientation, not legal advice. English version →