How to Set Up a Company in Argentina as a Foreign Investor (2026 Guide)
Operating in Argentina starts with one question: what legal structure do you need, and how long will it take? Here's the honest answer for 2026.
Argentina is attracting serious foreign capital in 2026 — energy, tech nearshoring, and regional expansion are all driving demand. But setting up a legal entity here is not like incorporating in Delaware. It requires coordination across notaries, the IGJ (Argentina's company registry), AFIP (the tax authority), and local banks — each on its own timeline.
This guide covers what foreign investors actually need to know before they start the process.
SRL vs SA: Which Structure for Foreign Companies?
Most foreign operators entering Argentina choose one of two structures:
- SRL (Sociedad de Responsabilidad Limitada) — the Argentine equivalent of an LLC. Simpler governance, fewer formalities, and faster to incorporate. Ideal for operating subsidiaries, nearshoring teams, and service entities. Maximum 50 shareholders.
- SA (Sociedad Anónima) — closer to a corporation. Required if you plan to issue shares publicly, have more than 50 investors, or are in regulated sectors like financial services. More paperwork upfront, but more flexibility at scale.
For most foreign tech and service companies entering Argentina: an SRL is the right call. It incorporates faster (30–45 days vs 45–60 for an SA), costs less to set up and maintain, and handles all standard operating needs.
For energy projects (Vaca Muerta, lithium, renewables): an SA is often required by concession agreements or joint-venture structures. Consult your legal team early.
Step-by-Step: How Incorporation Actually Works
1. Appoint a local representative
At least one director must have an Argentine DNI (national ID) or be a legal resident. Foreign companies typically appoint a local proxy director — a common, legal practice — while maintaining control through the shareholder structure.
2. Draft and notarize the statutes
The founding statutes define the company's purpose, governance, and capital structure. They must be drafted in Spanish, reviewed by an Argentine lawyer, and certified by a public notary (escribano). This step typically takes 5–10 business days and costs between USD 800 and USD 1,500 in legal and notary fees.
3. IGJ registration
The Inspección General de Justicia (IGJ) is Buenos Aires province's company registry. Filing with the IGJ takes 15–30 business days, depending on workload and whether your statutes require corrections. There is also a national IGJ for companies operating across provinces.
4. Obtain your CUIT
Once registered with the IGJ, you apply for a CUIT (Código Único de Identificación Tributaria) from AFIP. This is Argentina's tax ID — you cannot open a bank account, issue invoices, or hire employees without it. Processing time: 5–10 business days.
5. Open a bank account
The hardest step. Argentine banks are conservative with new foreign-owned entities. You'll need the full incorporation documentation, CUIT, proof of registered address, and in most cases, a personal relationship with a bank officer. Plan for 15–30 additional business days. See our guide on opening a bank account in Argentina as a foreign company.
Realistic Timeline
| Step | Duration |
|---|---|
| Statutes drafted and notarized | 5–10 business days |
| IGJ registration | 15–30 business days |
| CUIT from AFIP | 5–10 business days |
| Bank account opening | 15–30 business days |
| Total (typical) | 40–60 business days |
This assumes no corrections are requested by the IGJ and your bank relationship is already in place. With a strong local partner coordinating all steps simultaneously, 35–45 calendar days is achievable.
Common Mistakes Foreign Companies Make
- Underestimating the banking timeline. Companies often incorporate in 30 days and then spend 60 days waiting on banking. Start the bank relationship as early as legally possible.
- Wrong corporate purpose. The IGJ scrutinizes the stated purpose of the entity. If it's too broad or too narrow, you'll receive corrections that add weeks. Have a local lawyer draft it with the final operation in mind.
- Ignoring beneficial ownership filings. Argentina requires disclosure of the ultimate beneficial owner (UBO) to both the IGJ and AFIP. Failure to file correctly can block your CUIT issuance.
- Using a single vendor. Most Argentine law firms handle incorporation but not banking or accounting setup. You end up managing three vendors at once. A coordinated approach (one project lead) saves 2–4 weeks.
Real Costs in 2026
| Item | Cost (USD, approx.) |
|---|---|
| Legal fees (statutes, IGJ filing) | 1,500 – 3,000 |
| Notary fees | 300 – 700 |
| IGJ registration fee | 150 – 400 |
| Accounting setup (first 3 months) | 600 – 1,200 |
| Bank account opening (fees vary by bank) | 0 – 500 |
| Total setup cost | USD 2,500 – 5,800 |
These are direct out-of-pocket costs. The real cost of a slow incorporation is opportunity cost: every week without a CUIT is a week you can't invoice, hire, or receive funds locally.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a foreign company be the sole shareholder of an Argentine SRL?
Yes. A foreign legal entity can hold 100% of an Argentine SRL. The entity must be duly registered in its home country and provide apostilled documentation. However, at least one director must be locally present.
Do I need a physical office address in Argentina?
Yes. The IGJ requires a registered address in Argentina. This can be a virtual office address — a common and accepted practice for initial incorporation.
Can I operate before the bank account is open?
Partially. You can invoice and conduct some operations with the CUIT alone. But receiving payments locally and paying Argentine employees requires a local bank account. Many companies use an EOR (Employer of Record) arrangement for early hires while the entity is being set up.
Is Argentina politically stable enough for long-term investment?
The honest answer: Argentina has structural economic volatility that is well-documented. Foreign investors who succeed here treat it as an operational risk to be managed — through entity structure, FX planning, and local partners — not ignored. The upside (talent cost, resource access, market position) is real. So is the complexity.
Need help setting up operations in Argentina?
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