What Are Experts Expecting After EU Commission Presents The EU Inc. Legislative Proposal?

The European Commission has presented a proposal for EU Inc., described as a new 28th company law regime. It has one set of corporate rules that businesses can choose instead of dealing with 27 national systems and more than 60 company forms.

The Commission says that this legal patchwork can delay the setting up of a company for weeks or months. That delay costs money and time. EU Inc. comes as a regulation, meaning it would apply across the EU in the same way in each country.

The proposal follows calls in the March 2025 European Council conclusions for an optional 28th regime to help innovative companies grow across the Single Market.

 

How Would It Work In Practice?

 

Under the proposal, entrepreneurs could create a company within 48 hours, fully online, for less than €100 and without a minimum share capital requirement. The system would run on a once only principle. Companies would submit their information one time through an EU level interface that connects national business registers.

President Ursula von der Leyen said: “Any entrepreneur will be able to create a company within 48 hours from anywhere in the European Union, fully digitalized, for less than EUR 100 and without minimum share capital.”

She added: “Companies will provide their information to public authorities – their data – one time only. That information will then be shared automatically between relevant administrations.”

EU Inc. companies would also receive tax and VAT numbers without resubmitting paperwork. A new EU business register would store their information.

 

What About Talent And Risk?

 

The proposal allows EU wide employee stock option plans. Stock options would be taxed only when income is generated and sold. The Commission says this helps startups compete for skilled staff.

Von der Leyen said: “With EU Inc., employee stock options will be simpler to offer and easier to manage across borders.”

The framework also includes fully digital liquidation and a fast track insolvency process for startups. On labour law, she said: “The EU Inc. proposal will in every way respect existing social standards and labour law, including employees’ rights to participate in company boards.”

The Commission has asked the European Parliament and the Council to reach agreement on EU Inc. by the end of 2026.

 

 

What Are Experts Expecting?

 

Upon the proposal being presented, this is what experts think…

 

Jeppe Rindom, CEO and Co-Founder, Pleo

 

 

“EU-Inc represents a significant step toward reducing fragmentation and enabling true pan-European scale for startups and fintechs. The proposition emerged from a broader realisation that Europe has been weak on innovation, and that European countries are individually small on the global stage. Combine this with recent geopolitical and economic events, the urgency for Europe to become more independent and self-sufficient has only intensified.

“Operating across Europe has been costly and time-consuming, with expansion today requiring different partners, structures and processes in each market – much of which is still analogue. For companies like Pleo, a proposal like EU-Inc could have enabled faster expansion, lower costs and greater ambition, with the fragmentation of planning growth across borders removed. We could’ve scaled faster, and taken on US competitors, with far less friction.

“While it won’t solve every challenge – such as currencies, infrastructure and cultural differences – EU-Inc meaningfully lowers legal and operational barriers, and signals a shift in Europe’s mindset toward innovation and competitiveness. There will undoubtedly be necessary evolutions that take this further, moving Europe toward acting as a unified market on the global stage. But what we’re seeing announced today is a first step – and a hugely significant one.”

 

Sebastien Marchon, CEO, Rydoo

 

 

“The EU Inc initiative is a very positive step and I strongly support the direction the European Commission is taking.

“One of the biggest challenges for European startups today is fragmentation. Building a company across Europe still means navigating multiple legal systems, regulatory frameworks and administrative processes. Anything that reduces this friction and helps entrepreneurs scale faster across the continent is a step in the right direction.

“EU Inc should be seen as a starting point. If implemented well, it could help create a more coherent European market and give startups and scale ups the conditions they need to compete globally with the US, China and other innovation ecosystems.

“This is a race against time. Europe has an extraordinary opportunity to create a more founder-friendly environment that benefits everyone — entrepreneurs, employees, investors and governments alike – but it will need to move quickly.

“At the same time, reforms of this scale must be implemented carefully and thoughtfully. The goal should be to move fast, but without creating new layers of complexity, while ensuring that the benefits are shared across the entire ecosystem.

“If Europe gets this right, it could unlock a new era of innovation and entrepreneurship across the continent.”