Archives March 2023

set up a Romanian LLC Company

Set up a Limited Liability Company in Romania

 

The most common forms of companies in Romania are the Limited Liability Company, the Joint Stock Company and Branches.

                                     The Limited Liability Company in Romania has:

  • The share capital is divided into equal shares and, according to Law no. 31/1990, it cannot be less than 1 RON.
  • A Limited Liability Company in Romania may have between 1 and 50 shareholders.
  • The shareholders are liable in the limit of the contribution to the share capital.

       Documents requested by the Trade Register for the company formation are:

  • Proof of reservation of company name
  • Articles of incorporation for the new Romanian company
  • Excerpts issued by the Trade Register where the shareholders are incorporated- legal entities (if they are)
  • The identity document of the shareholders natural persons (ID, Passport)
  • Passport or ID of the future director of the Romanian company
  • The document attesting the right of use over the space with destination of registered office ( e.g. lease agreement, property) and the ownership property documents
  • standard application.

                                    Taxation of LLC company in Romania 2023

The tax rates used for micro-company income tax are:

  • 1% for micro-companies with one or more employees.
  • 3% for micro-companies with no employees.

The standard corporate income tax rate is 16%. Taxpayers that are carrying on activities such as gambling and nightclubs are either subject to 5% rate of the revenue obtained from such activities or to 16% of the taxable profit, depending on which is higher.

Romanian micro company tax regime starting with the first fiscal year and will remain under this tax regime if it meets all of the following criteria:

  • The maximum threshold of annual turnover is EUR 500.000.
  • Income generated from consultancy and management activities is not more than 20% of the annual turnover;
  • It does not carry out any banking, insurance and reassurance, capital markets, gambling or upstream oil & gas activities;
  • The share capital must be held by entities other than the state or the local authorities.

Moreover, the Romanian company has to pay to the state the imposed social contributions (pensions, health, work contribution) and the income tax for each employee.

There are no citizenship or residency requirements in order to register a Limited Company in Romania.

Our team of Romanian Lawyers can assist you for the set up of a LLC in Romania and our team of Romanian accountants can take on the fiscal set up of your newly formatted company.

 

Contact us for more info in order to set up a Romanian Limited Liability Company.

property and real estate law in Romania

Buy a property in Romania

Depending on your citizenship, the procedure for purchasing a new property in Romania can vary.

Fortunately, as long as the property serves as your secondary residence, EU and EEA individuals will have no trouble purchasing real estate in Romania.

You will need a Fiscal Identification Number to complete the process if you are an EU citizen without a Romanian Personal Identification Number.

If you have your residency permit, getting this number is simple. The contract will be void if you don’t begin the procedure of obtaining this Fiscal Identity Number before you begin the purchasing process.

The procedure will be a little more challenging for a non-EU citizen because a non-EU citizen can typically possess a building or other structure but not the land on which it is constructed.

To utilize the home and land, they will instead need a permit; nevertheless, if the building is demolished, they will lose all legal rights to the property.

In order to confirm the seller owns the property and to check the land survey records for a report from the land registration, you will also need to locate a Romanian licensed attorney.

Also, a real estate Romanian lawyer can do a due diligence report of the property in order to analyze the legal situation.

Our Romanian lawyers can offer the legal help with a real estate due-diligence (information on the characteristics of the property, owners, risks and legal restrictions)  and also to draft a sale or purchase contract or real estate purchase promissory agreement, while providing assistance and representation in the negotiation process for concluding such contracts.

Both the buyer and the seller will be present at the closing together with a local notary. The property will then officially be yours after the deed has been recorded in the Romanian Land Registry.

The costs for the purchase will also include transfer tax, notary fees, local taxes, and registration fees.

Contact us for further information.

divorce Romanian law

Fault in the dissolution of the marriage explained by our Romanian Lawyers

 

According to article 373 of the Romanian Civil Code, the divorce can take place for several reasons, respectively:

By the agreement of the spouses, at the request of both spouses or of one of the spouses if it is accepted by the other spouse;

When, due to valid reasons, the relationship between the spouses is seriously damaged and the continuation of the marriage is no longer possible.

-At the request of one of the spouses, after a de facto separation lasting at least 2 years.

At the request of one of the spouses whose state of health makes it impossible to continue the marriage;

Divorce for good reasons that make it impossible to continue the marriage.

The reasons are not described by the Civil Code, but most divorce cases are initiated precisely because of such solid grounds.

If the fault belongs to both, that is, you no longer understand each other and the marriage is no longer a peaceful and harmonious one, nor can you fix it, the fault or guilt is shared (i.e, both spouses are to blame for the breakdown of the marriage). It means that you no longer love and want to be together so you are constantly fighting. If the fault belongs only to one spouse, that is, that spouse has a behavior or has done a certain deed that cannot be forgiven, the fault of the marriage is exclusive.

 

The rule in the Romanian law is that the divorce is pronounced on the joint fault of the spouses, given that (in general) both contribute to the breakdown of the marriage to a greater or lesser extent.

In the conditions where the divorce would be pronounced due to joint fault and there are no children in the relationship or there are no chlidren but you have agreed on parental authority, our team of romanian divorce lawyers advice is to opt for a divorce by agreement.

According to the provisions of art. 933 para. (1) of the Romanian Code of Civil Procedure “The court will pronounce the divorce due to the fault of the defendant spouse when, due to solid reasons attributable to him, the relations between the spouses are seriously damaged and the continuation of the marriage is no longer possible.”

In other words, if only one of the spouses is to blame for the breakup of the marriage, then the court will dissolve the marriage, considering the exclusive fault of this spouse.

The Romanian Law does not limit these cases (nor could it, given the complexity of relationships in a couple) but in practice we have identified the following cases of exclusive fault as usual reasons:

  • the infidelity of one of the spouses;
  • domestic violence of one of the spouses;
  • alcohol, drug or gambling addiction of one of the spouses;
  • bad treatment applied to children by one of the spouses; neglect of the family by one of the spouses;

Reasons why you should seek a dissolution of the marriage due to the sole fault of the defendant:

  • Moral damages – you can get compensation for the damage suffered as a result of the dissolution of the marriage.
  • Compensatory benefit – if the marriage lasted for more than 20 years and the dissolution of the marriage would produce a major imbalance in your life, you can obtain the obligation of the guilty spouse to pay periodic damages called compensatory benefit.
  •  Parental authority – since the grounds for dissolution of marriage partly overlap with those regarding sole parental authority, a valid reason for seeking dissolution of marriage due to the sole fault of the other spouse is to obtain sole parental authority and domicile of the minor.

Sole fault  would actually lead to more legal fight from the other spouse and a longer trial.

 

For more info on this subject, please contact us!