A comprehensive, step-by-step guide for foreign investors — from market entry to full operations, regulatory compliance, and taxation.
Key investment advantages for foreign businesses
Bangladesh has maintained one of Asia’s fastest GDP growth rates (~6–7% annually), driven by manufacturing, remittances, and a booming services sector.
Macro StabilityMinimum wage in the garment sector is ~BDT 12,500/month (~USD 105). Overall labour costs remain among the lowest in Asia, ideal for manufacturing.
Cost Advantage100+ SEZs and EPZs with tax holidays (up to 10 years), duty-free import of machinery, and full profit repatriation for foreign investors.
Tax BenefitsGateway between South and Southeast Asia. Chattogram port handles 92% of country’s trade. Close proximity to India, Myanmar, and China supply chains.
Logistics HubUnder the Foreign Private Investment Act 1980, foreigners may repatriate capital, dividends, and profits freely without restriction.
Capital ProtectionBangladesh Investment Development Authority (BIDA) provides one-stop service. Multiple bilateral investment treaties (BITs) protect foreign investors.
Legal FrameworkChoosing the right legal structure for your business
| Entry Mode | Best For | Min. Capital | FDI Allowed | Setup Time | Complexity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Private Limited Company (Ltd.) | Manufacturing, services, tech startups | No minimum (recommend USD 50K+) | 100% | 4–8 weeks | Moderate |
| Branch Office | Existing foreign companies, testing market | USD 50,000 inward remittance | Yes | 6–10 weeks | Moderate |
| Liaison / Representative Office | Market research, promotion only | USD 50,000 (annual operating cost) | Non-Commercial | 4–6 weeks | Low |
| Joint Venture (JV) | Regulated sectors, local market penetration | As agreed | Up to 100% | 8–12 weeks | High |
| EPZ / SEZ Company | Export-oriented manufacturing | As per BEPZA guidelines | 100% | 6–10 weeks | Moderate |
| Sole Proprietorship / Partnership | Small trade, local retail (not for FDI) | No minimum | Not Applicable | 1–2 weeks | Very Low |
For most foreign investors, incorporating a Private Limited Company under the Companies Act 1994 provides maximum flexibility, limited liability, 100% foreign ownership capability, and ease of profit repatriation. You need a minimum of 2 shareholders and 2 directors (at least 1 Bangladeshi director is recommended for practical purposes, though not legally required). The company must register with RJSC (Registrar of Joint Stock Companies and Firms).
Complete incorporation guide with timelines and costs
Apply online at roc.gov.bd for your proposed company name. Submit 3 alternative names. RJSC will verify uniqueness against the existing database. Once approved, the name is reserved for 30 days.
Prepare the MOA (objects clause, share structure, liability) and AOA (internal governance rules). These must comply with the Companies Act 1994. It is strongly recommended to engage a local chartered accountant or lawyer (e.g., M A Fazal & Co.) at this stage to ensure correctness and avoid costly rejections.
All foreign investment projects must register with the Bangladesh Investment Development Authority (BIDA) via bida.gov.bd. Submit: project profile, proposed investment amount, product/service details, and shareholder details. BIDA issues a Registration Certificate which unlocks subsequent approvals (work permits, visa, machinery import, etc.).
File online: Form-I (MOA/AOA), Form-IX (Declaration of Compliance), Form-XII (Particulars of Directors), and pay the stamp duty. For foreign shareholders, apostilled/notarized and Bangladesh embassy-attested documents of the parent company/shareholders must be submitted. RJSC then issues the Certificate of Incorporation (COI).
Open a corporate bank account with a scheduled bank in Bangladesh. For foreign investment, bring capital in through proper banking channels (wire transfer). The bank will issue an “Encashment Certificate” confirming foreign currency received — this is critical for BIDA records and future profit repatriation. Recommended banks: Dutch-Bangla Bank, HSBC Bangladesh, Standard Chartered Bangladesh, BRAC Bank.
Register at the National Board of Revenue (NBR) e-TIN portal: etinbd.gov.bd. Both the company and its directors/shareholders must have TINs. The company TIN is needed for all contracts, bank accounts, imports, and tax filings. This process is now fully online and straightforward.
If annual turnover is expected to exceed BDT 30 lakh (≈ USD 27,000), VAT registration is mandatory. Register at nbr.gov.bd to obtain a Business Identification Number (BIN). Businesses in manufacturing, services, and trade must charge VAT and file monthly returns. Some sectors have specific VAT exemptions.
Obtain a Trade License from the local city corporation (e.g., DSCC/DNCC in Dhaka) based on the nature of business and location. This must be renewed annually. The license category (manufacturing, service, general trade) determines the applicable fee structure.
Foreign employees require a Work Permit issued by BIDA. Conditions: the company must employ a minimum of 20 local employees per foreign worker (in EPZs: 5:1 ratio). Sectors like IT allow more flexible ratios. Apply via BIDA One Stop Service (OSS). Duration: typically 2 years, renewable. Note: Visa (E-Visa or Business Visa with employment) is processed separately via the Department of Immigration.
Depending on your industry: Factory Licence (Department of Inspection for Factories and Establishments — DIFE), Environment Clearance (Department of Environment — DoE), Fire Safety Certificate (Bangladesh Fire Service), Import/Export Registration Certificate (IRC/ERC) from Office of the Chief Controller of Imports & Exports (CCIE), drug/food licences (DGDA/BSTI) if applicable.
Week 1–2: Name clearance (3 days) + BIDA registration submission. Week 3–5: RJSC incorporation completed, COI received. Week 5–6: Bank account opened at Standard Chartered Dhaka, USD 200,000 capital remitted, encashment certificate obtained. Week 6–7: TIN and BIN (VAT) registered online. Week 7–8: Trade license obtained from DSCC. Week 9–12: Work permits for 3 Japanese engineers applied. Week 10–14: Import Registration Certificate (IRC) for machinery import. Total cost to fully set up: approximately BDT 3–5 lakh (USD 2,700–4,500) excluding professional fees.
Income Tax Ordinance 1984 & Finance Acts — current rates
Standard corporate income tax rate for privately held companies not listed on the stock exchange. Applicable to most foreign-owned subsidiaries and branch offices.
Reduced rate for companies listed on DSE or CSE. Incentive to encourage capital market participation and transparency.
Ready-Made Garments (RMG) companies with LEED certification or compliant factories enjoy a concessional 15% rate. Non-compliant RMG: 20%.
Software, ITES, and offshore outsourcing companies registered with Bangladesh Hi-Tech Park Authority (BHTPA) or Bangladesh Association of Software (BASIS) enjoy 10% tax (or may be fully exempt depending on classification).
New investors in EPZs/SEZs: up to 10-year tax holiday (0% corporate tax). Thereafter: 50% exemption for next 3 years. Available for approved industries.
Listed banks: 37.5%. Non-listed banks: 40%. Insurance companies: 37.5%. Merchant banks: 37.5%. (Subject to Finance Act amendments.)
| Tax Type | Rate | Filing Deadline | Authority | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Corporate Income Tax | 15% – 40% (sector dependent) | Within 6 months of fiscal year end (June 30) | NBR — Income Tax | Tax year: 1 July – 30 June |
| Withholding Tax (on dividends to foreigners) | 20% (or per DTAA) | Within 30 days of payment | NBR | Reduced under Double Tax Avoidance Agreements (DTAAs) |
| Withholding Tax (on service fees) | 10%–15% | Monthly deduction at source | NBR | TDS deducted by payer, deposited to govt treasury |
| Capital Gains Tax | 15% (non-listed); Exempt (listed shares within limits) | With income tax return | NBR | Gains on listed securities may be exempt |
| Advance Income Tax (AIT on imports) | 3%–5% of import value | At the time of import | Customs / NBR | Adjustable against final tax liability |
| Minimum Tax | 0.1%–0.6% of gross receipts | Quarterly advance payments | NBR | Applicable when normal tax falls below minimum |
Pay 25% of estimated annual tax liability as advance tax by September 15. Failure attracts interest of 2% per month.
Pay cumulative 50% of estimated annual tax by December 15.
Pay cumulative 75% of estimated annual tax by March 15. Review and adjust estimates if actuals differ significantly.
Submit audited accounts, tax computation, and return to the relevant tax circle. Extension can be requested from the Deputy Commissioner of Taxes (DCT).
Value Added Tax & Supplementary Duty — VAT Act 2012
| VAT Category | Rate | Examples | Input Credit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard Rate | 15% | General manufacturing, trading, services, restaurants, consultancy, hotels, advertising | Allowed |
| Reduced Rate — Services | 7.5% | IT-enabled services, English medium schools, beauty parlours, indenting agents, some construction | Partial |
| Reduced Rate — Services | 5% | Certain construction services, transformer manufacturing, some agricultural equipment | Partial |
| Reduced Rate — Services | 10% | Doctors/specialists, certain professional services, air-conditioned restaurants | Partial |
| Zero Rated (Export) | 0% | All export of goods and services — entitled to full input VAT refund | Full Refund |
| VAT Exempt | Nil | Raw food, agricultural produce, healthcare, non-commercial education, books, public transport | Not Allowed |
| Turnover Tax (Small Business) | 4% | Businesses with turnover BDT 30L – BDT 50L; simplified compliance, no input credit | Not Available |
VAT return (Mushak-9.1) must be filed by the 15th of each following month. Late filing: BDT 10,000 penalty per month. Electronic filing via VAT Online system is now mandatory for most registered businesses.
Mushak-9.1Every VAT-registered business must issue a proper VAT challan (Mushak-6.3) for each supply. The challan must include BIN, customer details, item description, value, and VAT amount. Failure is a VAT offence.
Mushak-6.3In addition to VAT, Supplementary Duty (SD) applies to luxury goods, tobacco, alcohol, mobile phone services (20%), and certain local products. SD ranges from 10% to 500% on select items. SD is applied before VAT.
Additional LevyA foreign-owned IT company sells software services worth BDT 1,000,000 to a local client.
Output VAT (15% on sales): BDT 150,000
Input VAT paid on office rent, equipment purchase, etc.: BDT 40,000
Net VAT Payable to NBR: BDT 110,000 (filed by 15th of next month)
If the same company exports software internationally (zero-rated), output VAT = 0, but it can claim a refund of the BDT 40,000 input VAT paid — making Bangladesh export-oriented businesses highly VAT-efficient.
Bangladesh Labour Act 2006 (amended 2013, 2018) — key provisions for employers
| Provision | Requirement | Penalty for Non-Compliance |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum Wage (Garment) | BDT 12,500/month (≈ USD 105) | Criminal prosecution + back-pay |
| Working Hours | 8 hrs/day, 48 hrs/week max. Overtime: 2 hrs/day max, paid at 2× rate | BDT 5,000–25,000 per violation |
| Annual Leave | 1 day per 18 days worked (≈ 14–18 days/year) | Leave encashment required |
| Festival Holidays | 11 gazetted public holidays (minimum) | Pay for working on holidays: 2× basic |
| Gratuity | 1 month’s last basic salary per year of service (after 5 yrs) | Mandatory on termination/resignation |
| Provident Fund | Not mandatory, but common. If established: 10% employer + 10% employee contribution | Violation of fund rules: prosecution |
| Maternity Benefit | 16 weeks paid leave (8 weeks pre, 8 weeks post) | BDT 25,000 penalty |
| Factory Act Registration | Required if 5+ workers in a factory | BDT 25,000 fine, closure order |
High-growth opportunities with government support
World’s 2nd largest apparel exporter. $47B+ annual export. Strong backward linkages. Special GSP+ access to EU markets. Government offers rebates, bonded warehouses, and back-to-back LCs.
Established100% tax exemption for IT companies until 2024 (extensions likely). 39 Hi-Tech Parks under development. 650,000+ freelancers. Growing BPO, software, and fintech sectors.
High GrowthBangladesh needs 24,000 MW by 2030. Government actively invites IPPs (Independent Power Producers). Sovereign guarantee on payment. Renewable energy targets ambitious.
InfrastructureLeading generic pharma exporter. Growing medical device sector. Health tourism potential. Government encouraging hospital investment in Tier-2 cities.
EmergingLarge agricultural base. Growing demand for processed, packaged food. Significant export potential to diaspora markets in UK, USA, Middle East. Cold chain investment incentivised.
PriorityChattogram port expansion, Matarbari deep sea port (in development), Padma Bridge opening new trade corridors. Huge warehousing and 3PL opportunities emerging.
InfrastructureApproximate setup and operational costs for budgeting purposes
| Cost Item | Amount (BDT) | Amount (USD approx.) | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| RJSC Name Clearance | 200 – 500 | ~$2 – $5 | One-time |
| RJSC Registration (Stamp duty + fees) | 10,000 – 50,000 | ~$90 – $450 | One-time |
| BIDA Registration | 5,000 – 30,000 | ~$45 – $270 | One-time |
| Trade License (Annual) | 1,000 – 50,000 | ~$9 – $450 | Annual |
| TIN Registration | Free | Free | One-time |
| VAT/BIN Registration | Free | Free | One-time |
| Work Permit (per person) | ~13,000 – 28,000 | ~$110 – $250 | Biennial |
| Professional Fees (CA/Lawyer) | 50,000 – 200,000 | ~$450 – $1,800 | One-time |
| Annual Audit (Mandatory) | 50,000 – 300,000 | ~$450 – $2,700 | Annual |
| Annual Tax Return Filing | 30,000 – 150,000 | ~$270 – $1,350 | Annual |
| Office Rent — Dhaka (per sqft) | 80 – 200/sqft/month | ~$0.70 – $1.80 | Monthly |
| Mid-level Local Staff Salary | 30,000 – 80,000/month | ~$270 – $720/month | Monthly |
| TOTAL SETUP COST (Typical SME) | 3,00,000 – 6,00,000 | ~$2,700 – $5,400 | One-time Total |
Essential regulatory bodies for foreign investors
| Agency | Role | Website |
|---|---|---|
| BIDA (Bangladesh Investment Development Authority) | Primary investment facilitation, FDI registration, work permits | bida.gov.bd |
| RJSC (Registrar of Joint Stock Companies) | Company incorporation, annual return filings | roc.gov.bd |
| NBR (National Board of Revenue) | Tax (income, VAT, customs) administration | nbr.gov.bd |
| BEPZA (Bangladesh Export Processing Zones Authority) | EPZ investment approvals and management | bepza.gov.bd |
| BEZA (Bangladesh Economic Zones Authority) | SEZ investment approvals | beza.gov.bd |
| Bangladesh Bank | Foreign exchange regulation, FDI/repatriation approvals | bb.org.bd |
| CCIE (Chief Controller of Imports & Exports) | IRC/ERC (import/export registration certificates) | mincom.gov.bd |
| BHTPA (Bangladesh Hi-Tech Park Authority) | IT/ITES park allocations, sector incentives | bhtpa.gov.bd |
