What the 28th Regime means
The European Union is built on 27 national legal systems, one for each member state. A company today is always a creature of national law: a German GmbH, a French SARL, an Estonian OÜ, an Irish LTD. The 28th Regime proposes a 28th option that sits on top of those 27, a single body of EU company law that a founder can opt into instead of picking one country's rules.
Two things make it different from a normal reform. It is optional: founders who prefer a national entity keep it, and nothing is forced on existing companies. And it is additive: it does not replace or override national company law, it simply adds one more choice, a company governed by EU-level rules and recognised by default across every member state.
"EU Inc" is the popular name for this idea. The 28th Regime is the legal mechanism that would make EU Inc real. For the wider picture, start with our overview of EU Inc.
Where the 28th Regime came from
The concept of a 28th regime has circulated in Brussels for years, but it gained real momentum in 2024. Two influential reports put it firmly on the agenda:
- Enrico Letta's report on the Single Market, "Much more than a market" (April 2024), argued that fragmentation across 27 legal systems holds European companies back, and floated a common European legal status.
- Mario Draghi's report on European competitiveness (September 2024) went further, explicitly recommending a 28th regime so innovative companies can scale across the EU without re-incorporating country by country.
In parallel, a founder-led campaign, the EU Inc initiative, gathered tens of thousands of signatures calling for exactly this. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen picked up the thread in her political guidelines, and the Commission's EU Startup and Scaleup Strategy (May 2025) committed to bringing a proposal forward. The draft regulation followed on 18 March 2026.
What the 28th Regime would change
The draft regulation describes a company that is digital by default and consistent across borders. The headline features founders care about:
- One online incorporation, valid EU-wide. Register once through a single EU-level digital interface and operate in all 27 member states, instead of forming a new entity in each country.
- Fast and cheap setup. The target is formation in around 48 hours for at most €100 when you use the EU standard templates (five working days without them), with identity verified through eIDAS and a once-only data principle.
- No minimum capital. You would not lock up any capital to incorporate. Instead of a capital buffer, every distribution must pass a balance-sheet and a 12-month solvency test, and modern instruments like SAFEs and convertibles are explicitly allowed.
- Startup-ready shares and governance. A fully digital share register, multiple voting rights that member states cannot prohibit, and a codified business judgment rule for directors.
- One EU-wide employee stock option (EU-ESO) framework, so a startup can grant options across countries under one structure, with tax deferred until the shares are sold.
- A digital second chance. A fast-track liquidation for solvent companies and a simplified, fully online winding-up for insolvent startups.
Because it is proposed as an EU Regulation (not a Directive), the rules would apply directly and identically in every member state, with no national transposition step to fragment them again. The Commission based it on Article 114 TFEU, the internal-market article, which lets the Council decide by qualified majority rather than the unanimity older EU company forms required. That legal-basis choice is deliberate, and genuinely contested: some legal scholars argue a different basis is needed, especially for anything touching tax.
One detail matters for founders: under Article 4, anything the Regulation does not cover is filled by the national company law each member state designates as the EU Inc's foundation (a German EU Inc would sit on GmbH law, for example). So the label is uniform across all 27 states, even though the underlying law is not identical.
It changes company law, not tax.
The 28th Regime harmonises how you incorporate and govern a company. Your business would still pay tax where it operates and is tax-resident, exactly as today. We explain this in detail in EU Inc taxes.
Who the 28th Regime is for
The proposal is aimed at innovative, cross-border companies: startups that raise from investors in several countries, remote-first teams, and founders who sell across the EU from day one. It is deliberately reachable by non-EU founders too, since the whole point is a single, digital, location-light entity.
You would not need to be a large company to use it. The no-minimum-capital, low-cost, fully digital design is the opposite of the EU's existing cross-border vehicle, which is exactly why that older option never reached startups.
How it differs from the Societas Europaea (SE)
The EU has had a pan-European company since 2004: the Societas Europaea (SE). In practice it never reached founders, because it was built for large corporates. The Commission's own proposal says the SE needs €120,000 of capital, "making it not appropriate to newly created startups." The 28th Regime is designed to fix precisely the things that kept the SE out of reach.
| Feature | Societas Europaea (SE) | 28th Regime (EU Inc) |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum capital | €120,000 | None proposed |
| Cross-border presence | Generally required in 2+ states | Not required |
| Setup | Slow, lawyer-heavy | Fully digital, target ~48h |
| Built for | Large corporates, holdings | Startups and scaleups |
Where the SE harmonised the holding company, the 28th Regime aims to harmonise the starting line.
Status, and what happens next
The 28th Regime is not law yet. The Commission's proposal (COM(2026) 321), presented by Commissioner Michael McGrath on 18 March 2026, now moves through the EU's ordinary legislative procedure: the European Parliament, where René Repasi is the lead rapporteur, and the Council of the EU negotiate and must agree on a final text. The target is political agreement by the end of 2026, with the rules applying roughly 12 months after adoption. Realistically, founders can expect to register an EU Inc around 2027-2028.
We track every step on the EU Inc timeline and post developments as they happen in EU Inc news.
Need an EU company before the 28th Regime arrives?
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