City Guide · Milan

Company Formation Milan: SRL Costs, Timeline & UBO 2024

Form an SRL in Milan: €4,000–€9,000 all-in, 3–6 weeks. Milan-specific costs, 2023 UBO register guide, banking options for foreign founders. Get a quote.

📍 Milan · Rome · Florence ⏱ 15 min read Updated 2026-05-25
Italy — Why Incorporate Here
1.1M
Active SRLs
24h
Codice fiscale
4–10
Weeks to open
27
EU tax treaties

Company Formation in Milan: SRL Costs, Timeline & 2024 Guide

Setting up in Milan? You're looking at Italy's most active business registry, the country's deepest pool of professional talent, and the city where 40% of all Italian foreign direct investment is concentrated. Milan registers 35,000–40,000 new companies every year — more than any other Italian city — and its Chamber of Commerce is the fastest in the country at processing new registrations.

But foreign founders searching for Milan-specific guidance find only generic Italy guides. There's no local cost data, no Camera di Commercio di Milano Monza Brianza Lodi processing times, and no honest account of what the UBO register means for newly incorporated companies. This guide fixes that. Here you'll find itemized Milan SRL formation costs, a step-by-step process mapped to local institutions, and a practical banking guide that names the real bottleneck most articles skip.

Company Italy operates from Via Monte Napoleone 8, Milan — within walking distance of the notaries and Chamber of Commerce our clients use every week. The numbers in this guide reflect what our clients actually pay.

Why Milan for Your Italian Company

Milan is Italy's financial capital. Full stop. The Camera di Commercio di Milano Monza Brianza Lodi registers approximately 340,000 active companies across its jurisdiction — the largest chamber in Italy. Lombardy absorbs roughly 40% of total Italian FDI, a figure consistently tracked by MISE and Invest in Lombardy across 2022–2023. No other Italian region comes close.

For foreign founders, Milan offers something no other Italian city can match: an established international business community. You'll find corporate HQs, international law firms, multinational banks, and logistics networks built over decades of serving foreign-owned companies.

The sectors where Milan makes a real commercial difference:

Milan vs Rome vs Florence — Which City Fits Your Business?

SectorBest City
Finance, fintech, B2B, fashionMilan
Government contracting, tourism, hospitalityRome
Luxury artisan, wine/food, creative industriesFlorence

For most foreign founders building a corporate or financial structure, Milan is the answer. For those needing proximity to government, embassies, or public procurement, Rome has clear advantages. Florence is the right choice for luxury artisan, agri-food, and creative sectors.

SRL vs SRLS vs SpA: Which Entity for Milan?

For the vast majority of foreign founders incorporating in Milan, the SRL (Società a Responsabilità Limitata) is the right choice. Here's a clear comparison:

EntityMin. CapitalCorporate ShareholdersNotary RequiredBank CredibilityBest For
SRL€10,000 (€2,500 deposit)YesYesHighMost foreign founders
SRLS€1 symbolicNoYesLowerIndividual founders, simple structures
SpA€50,000 (€12,500 deposit)YesYesHighestRegulated sectors, institutional investment

The SRL offers limited liability (shareholders are only liable up to their capital contribution), allows corporate shareholders — meaning your foreign holding company can own shares directly — and is accepted by every Italian bank without question.

The SRLS trap: the €1 symbolic capital sounds attractive. It isn't. Corporate shareholders are prohibited, which disqualifies most foreign holding structures. Italian banks treat SRLS less favorably during KYC review, which can extend your bank account timeline significantly. The "savings" on capital disappear quickly when you add the cost of restructuring later.

The SpA is appropriate if you're operating in a regulated sector (financial services, insurance), planning institutional investment rounds, or building toward a listed-company structure. It requires €50,000 total capital.

For further detail on entity choice, see our guide to SRL formation for non-residents.

Step-by-Step: Milan Company Formation Process

Here is the exact sequence to register an SRL in Milan. Each step is mapped to the specific Milan institution responsible.

Step 1 — Obtain your Codice Fiscale

The Codice Fiscale (Italian tax identification number) is required before any Italian legal action. You can obtain it at the Italian consulate in your home country (3–10 days) or at the Agenzia delle Entrate office in Milan (same day if you're already in Italy). EU founders can apply online via the Agenzia delle Entrate portal.

Step 2 — Draft the statuto (articles of association)

Work with a Milan-based notary or law firm to draft the company statuto. This document defines your company name, registered address, business purpose (oggetto sociale), share capital, governance structure, and director powers. Before drafting, check company name availability via the Registro delle Imprese portal at RegistroImprese.it — names must not be identical or confusingly similar to existing registrations in the Milan chamber.

Step 3 — Deposit share capital

You must deposit at least €2,500 (25% of €10,000 stated capital) at an Italian bank before the notary deed is executed. The bank issues a capital deposit certificate, which the notary requires. A sole-shareholder SRL must deposit 100% (€10,000). Some notaries accept neobanks like Qonto or Finom for the capital deposit — verify with your notary before proceeding.

Step 4 — Execute the notary deed

The Milan notary market has 500+ licensed professionals. Once all documents are ready, the notary can schedule the deed signing within 1–5 days. EU founders can complete this via a digital video session under D.Lgs. 183/2021. Non-EU founders use an apostilled Power of Attorney — your Italian representative signs the deed at the notary on your behalf.

Step 5 — Camera di Commercio di Milano Monza Brianza Lodi registration

The notary must file the incorporation deed with the Camera di Commercio di Milano Monza Brianza Lodi within 20 days of execution (Art. 2463(3) Codice Civile). The Milan chamber is Italy's busiest and processes registrations in 5–7 business days — faster than most other Italian cities.

Step 6 — Partita IVA + UBO registration

The Agenzia delle Entrate issues your VAT number (Partita IVA) in 1–5 business days after registration. Separately, you must file a beneficial ownership (UBO) declaration via the MIMIT digital platform within 30 days of registration. This is mandatory and actively enforced — non-compliance carries fines of €103–€1,033. For more on compliance obligations, see our SRL compliance guide.

Itemized Costs: What a Milan SRL Actually Costs

Here is a full cost breakdown using 2024 Milan market rates. These figures reflect what our clients pay — not low-balled estimates designed to attract enquiries.

Government fees (fixed by statute — these do not vary):

ItemCost
CCIAA registration fee€200–€300
Stamp duty (bollo)€65
Government concession fee (tassa di concessione governativa)€309.87
Annual CCIAA fee (first year)€200–€500
Sub-total mandatory fees~€775–€1,175

Professional and service fees (market-variable):

ItemCost Range
Notary fee (SRL formation, Milan)€1,500–€3,000
Law firm / formation agent€1,500–€4,000
Accountant setup (first-year compliance)€500–€1,500
Virtual office (Via Monte Napoleone area)€800–€2,000/year

Share capital (a company asset, not a cost):

ItemAmount
Minimum cash deposit at formation€2,500
Remainder (callable after registration)€7,500

Total all-in range (excluding share capital): €4,000–€9,000

For non-EU founders, add: apostille + certified translation €300–€1,200; Power of Attorney notarization €200–€800. Total additional: €500–€2,000.

Milan professional fees are 15–25% above the national average — the price of working with Milan's highest-concentration notary and advisory market. The Chamber of Commerce processing speed and international bank credibility offset this premium for most foreign founders.

The Bank Account Problem — and How to Solve It

This is the section most guides skip. The Italian business bank account — not the notary, not the Camera di Commercio — is the primary real-world bottleneck for foreign-owned companies in Milan.

Italian banks are subject to D.Lgs. 231/2007 (anti-money laundering legislation). Foreign-owned SRLs trigger enhanced due diligence. Banks require source of funds documentation, UBO identification, business plan summaries, and often in-person branch visits. The result: 4–12 weeks for a traditional bank to onboard a newly formed, foreign-owned SRL.

FeatureTraditional Banks (Intesa, UniCredit)Neobanks (Qonto, Finom)
Onboarding time4–12 weeks1–3 weeks
KYC requirementsExtensiveStreamlined
Credit facilitiesAvailableNot available
Sector licensing depositsAcceptedGenerally not accepted
Best forLong-term banking relationshipsDay-to-day operations

The practical solution: Open a neobank immediately after registration to become operational for invoicing. Apply to a traditional bank in parallel. Use the neobank while the traditional bank completes its KYC process — this cuts months off your time to first invoice.

One critical step before applying to any bank: file your UBO declaration. Most Italian banks now require a UBO register certificate (from MIMIT or the Registro delle Imprese) before they will open a company account. File within 30 days of registration — not as an afterthought.

Realistic timeline to first invoice: 6–12 weeks (registration 3–6 weeks + banking 1–5 weeks with neobank).

For a full guide to business banking in Italy, see our business bank account Italy guide.

Post-Incorporation Compliance Calendar (First 90 Days)

Most foreign founders focus entirely on the formation process and miss the day-1 compliance obligations. Here is what you need to do immediately after your Milan SRL is registered.

TimelineActionAuthority
Day 1–30File UBO beneficial ownership declarationMIMIT platform
Day 1–5 (concurrent)Activate Partita IVAAgenzia delle Entrate
Day 1–30INPS/INAIL enrollment (if hiring employees)INPS
Day 1–30VIES opt-in (if trading intra-EU VAT-free)Agenzia delle Entrate
Day 1–30Appoint a commercialista
MonthlyF24 tax paymentAgenzia delle Entrate
QuarterlyVAT communication (LIPE)Agenzia delle Entrate
Within 12 monthsApprove bilancio (financial statements)Shareholders' meeting
Within 120 days of year-endFile bilancioRegistro Imprese

The UBO filing and Partita IVA activation are urgent — they unlock banking and invoicing respectively. Everything else follows in the first 30 days.

Mandatory e-invoicing via the SDI (Sistema di Interscambio) platform applies to all Italian VAT numbers. All B2B invoices must be issued in XML format via SDI. Configure this before your first invoice — penalties for non-compliance are 90%–180% of the VAT value per transaction.

FAQ

Q: Can a foreigner open a company in Milan?

Yes. There is no Italian residency requirement for SRL shareholders or directors. EU citizens can incorporate digitally via a video session with a licensed Italian notary (operative since August 2023 under D.Lgs. 183/2021). Non-EU founders use a notarized and apostilled Power of Attorney — their Italian representative signs the deed in Milan on their behalf. Company Italy manages both paths from our Via Monte Napoleone 8 office.

Q: How long does it take to register a company in Milan?

The Camera di Commercio di Milano Monza Brianza Lodi processes registrations in 5–7 business days after the notary deed — faster than most Italian cities. Total timeline from Codice Fiscale to registration certificate: 3–6 weeks for EU founders using digital incorporation; 6–10 weeks for non-EU founders using a Power of Attorney. Bank account opening with a traditional bank adds a further 4–12 weeks on top.

Q: What is the minimum capital to form an SRL in Milan?

€10,000 total share capital, of which €2,500 (25%) must be deposited in cash at an Italian bank on the day of the notary deed. The remaining €7,500 is callable after registration — it becomes the company's own working capital. A single-shareholder SRL must deposit 100% (€10,000) at formation.

Q: Do I need to be present in Italy to incorporate a company in Milan?

No. EU residents can use Italy's digital incorporation platform under D.Lgs. 183/2021 — a video session with a licensed Italian notary from any location. Non-EU founders can authorize a representative via an apostilled Power of Attorney and never travel to Italy. The entire process can be completed remotely in both cases.

Q: What is the UBO register and does it apply to my Milan SRL?

The UBO (Ultimate Beneficial Owner) register records the individuals who ultimately own or control a company — those holding 25% or more of shares, or exercising effective dominant control. All Italian SRLs must file a UBO declaration within 30 days of incorporation via the MIMIT digital platform. The register became publicly searchable in October 2023. Non-compliance carries administrative fines of €103–€1,033.

Start Your Milan SRL

Milan combines Italy's deepest business infrastructure with the country's highest concentration of foreign-founder companies. The Camera di Commercio di Milano Monza Brianza Lodi is Italy's fastest-processing chamber. The professional network — notaries, accountants, banks, law firms experienced with foreign clients — is unmatched in Italy.

The next step is a free 30-minute consultation to confirm your entity structure, get an itemized cost quote, and set a realistic formation timeline. Company Italy's Milan office at Via Monte Napoleone 8 handles the complete process from Codice Fiscale to operational bank account.

Contact us at info@company-italy.com or call +39 02 8088 1240 to book your consultation.

You may also want to read our company formation Florence guide to compare city options for your sector.


This guide provides general legal information only. Italian regulations change frequently — always verify with a qualified Italian legal professional. Contact our team for a free consultation.

Legal disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or tax advice. Italian law changes frequently — always consult a qualified Italian legal professional before making business decisions.
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