Starting a business in Guatemala is cheaper, faster, and more foreigner-friendly than most people expect. The problem is that 90% of online advice points you to a traditional Sociedad Anonima (S.A.) because that is what lawyers recommend — and S.A. formation is the most expensive option. The right structure depends entirely on your situation. This hub walks you through every legal form, the actual costs, and the full registration process.

Four legal structures are worth considering for most businesses:

  1. Sociedad Emergente (S.E.) — No minimum capital, no notary, online registration. Created by Decreto 20-2018 for startups and small businesses. 5-year preferential regime. ~Q325 total cost.
  2. Sociedad Anonima (S.A.) — Traditional corporation. Required for VC-backed startups. Notarized formation. ~Q3,000-6,000 total cost.
  3. Sociedad de Responsabilidad Limitada (SRL) — Partnership structure common for professional practices. Simpler governance than S.A. ~Q2,500-5,000 total cost.
  4. Comerciante Individual — Sole proprietor. No entity, no liability protection, simplest setup. ~Q325 total cost.

The quick answer for most founders: If you are bootstrapping a software company, consulting practice, restaurant, retail store, or e-commerce site without imminent VC plans, the Sociedad Emergente is almost certainly the right choice. It gives you liability protection and a registered entity at the cost of a sole proprietorship.

Decision Guide: Which Structure Fits You?

Your situationBest structure
Bootstrap founder, software or servicesSociedad Emergente
E-commerce or online storeSociedad Emergente
Freelancer or one-person service businessComerciante Individual (simplest)
Raising seed/VC in next 12 monthsSociedad Anonima
Professional practice with 2-5 partners (law, accounting, medicine)SRL
Family business with multi-generation horizonSociedad Anonima
Restaurant, retail, physical goodsSociedad Emergente first 5 years, convert to S.A.
Foreign parent company expanding to GuatemalaSucursal de sociedad extranjera (branch)
Financial services, insurance, regulated utilitiesSociedad Anonima (required)

For a full breakdown of each structure including tax treatment, governance rules, and conversion options, see our entity types comparison.

What It Actually Costs

Here is the real all-in cost for each entity type, as of April 2026. These numbers include everything: notary fees (where required), Registro Mercantil fees, publication, timbres fiscales, and SAT registration.

ItemSociedad EmergenteSRLS.A.Comerciante Individual
Minimum capitalQ0Q200Q200Q0
Notary feesQ0Q1,500-3,000Q2,000-5,000Q0
RM feesQ275Q500-700Q550-800Q275
PublicationQ0 (exempt)Q300-500Q300-500Q0
Timbres fiscalesQ50-150Q100-250Q100-300Q50
NIT + RTU + FELFreeFreeFreeFree
Total minimum~Q325~Q2,500-4,500~Q3,000-6,600~Q325
Time to register7-15 days15-30 days20-45 days5-10 days

Add a firma electronica certificate (~Q500/year) if you do not already have one — required for self-service online filing.

Full Registration Process

No matter which structure you choose, the process has roughly the same steps. The order and complexity vary.

  1. Choose and reserve a name at the Registro Mercantil portal (consulta de nombre)
  2. Prepare the constitutive document — notarized escritura for S.A./SRL, standard template for Sociedad Emergente, DPI only for comerciante individual
  3. File with Registro Mercantil — online portal for all entity types, fees Q275-800
  4. Publish in Diario de Centro America — required for S.A. and SRL, exempt for Sociedad Emergente and individual
  5. Register NIT and RTU with SAT — see our NIT setup guide
  6. Activate FEL (electronic invoicing) — mandatory for all taxpayers; see FEL habilitacion
  7. Get municipal licencia de operacion — fees Q100-500 depending on zone and activity
  8. Register as patrono with IGSS — only if hiring employees
  9. Industry-specific licenses — sanitary (MSPAS), tourism (INGUAT), environmental (MARN), etc., as applicable

Foreigner-Specific Considerations

Non-residents can fully own and operate businesses in Guatemala. There is no requirement for a Guatemalan partner, no minimum local ownership, and no restriction on repatriation of profits. The main friction points are:

  • Legal representative must be a Guatemalan resident — or you must designate a Guatemalan-resident apoderado via notarized power of attorney
  • Apostille chain for foreign documents — DPI substitutes (passport + residence proof), corporate documents (if a foreign parent), and powers of attorney must be apostilled and translated by a Guatemalan-licensed traductor jurado
  • Bank account opening — most Guatemalan banks require physical presence or a notarized PoA to open a corporate account. Plan a 1-week trip or hire a local gestor
  • IGM residency — not required to own a business, but required if you will be physically working in Guatemala more than 90 days per year

Full details in our foreigner’s guide to starting a business.

Common Pitfalls

  • Letting a notary pick your structure — notaries make money on S.A. formation, so S.A. gets recommended even when a Sociedad Emergente would save you Q2,000-5,000
  • Skipping the simplified SAT regime — the preferential Sociedad Emergente tax treatment is not automatic, you must request it when registering RTU
  • Underestimating the NIT window — you have 30 days after Registro Mercantil approval to register with SAT; missing this triggers penalties
  • Ignoring FEL setup — electronic invoicing is mandatory from day one, you cannot legally issue invoices until FEL is activated
  • Missing the 5-year clock on Sociedad Emergente — the preferential regime expires; plan conversion in year 4, not year 5

Our Full Business Formation Library

Core guides

Registration walkthroughs

Operating

Need Help?

Business formation is self-service, but many founders use a gestor or lawyer for their first company. We can connect you with vetted professionals who specialize in the entity type you need — Sociedad Emergente gestores, S.A. notaries, accountants, and payroll services. The referral is free and you pay the professional directly.

All information verified April 2026. Legal and tax landscapes change — verify current requirements before acting.