TL;DR: Australia and New Zealand offer some of the world's most straightforward business registration processes, common law legal systems, and strong IP protections — making them attractive first markets for Asia-Pacific expansion.
The Asia-Pacific region spans some of the world's most diverse and dynamic economies — from the developed anglophone markets of Australia and New Zealand to the rapidly growing economies of Southeast Asia and the established industrial powers of Japan, South Korea, and China.
For English-speaking businesses expanding internationally, Australia and New Zealand are natural starting points. Both operate common law legal systems familiar to UK, Canadian, and US businesses. Both have efficient online business registration processes. Both have strong rule of law, transparent regulatory environments, and robust IP protection frameworks. And both are members of the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), providing preferential market access to additional Asia-Pacific economies.
This guide focuses on Australia and New Zealand — the two Asia-Pacific markets where MmowW Scrib🐮 provides document preparation services — while also providing context for the broader regional landscape.
Australia is the 13th largest economy globally (2024 IMF data). Key industries include mining, financial services, education, healthcare, and technology. The main entry options are:
Registering a proprietary company (Pty Ltd) with ASIC (asic.gov.au) is the standard approach for a locally incorporated subsidiary. Requirements:
Registration is online and typically processed within 1–2 business days. The registered company receives an Australian Company Number (ACN) and must then register for an Australian Business Number (ABN) with the ATO (ato.gov.au).
Foreign company registration (branch) is also available. A foreign company must register with ASIC before carrying on business in Australia. The registration documents include a certified copy of the company's constitution, a list of directors, and the appointment of a local agent.
Tax registrations required:
State and territory licensing: Many industries (building and construction, real estate, financial services, health) require state or territory-specific licenses in addition to national registration. Australia has six states and two territories, each with its own licensing regimes.
New Zealand ranks consistently among the world's easiest places to do business (World Bank Doing Business index). Its small population (5 million) is offset by high per capita income and a sophisticated consumer market.
Registering a limited company with the Companies Office (companiesoffice.govt.nz) takes minutes online and costs NZD 116 (2024). Requirements:
New Zealand does not have a federal corporate tax (income tax only). GST registration is required at NZD 60,000 annual turnover threshold.
NZBN (New Zealand Business Number): All businesses operating in New Zealand are encouraged to register for a NZBN (nzbn.govt.nz), which is a unique identifier used across government systems.
For businesses seeking to expand further into Asia after establishing an Australia/NZ beachhead, key considerations include:
Singapore: Major financial and logistics hub; English common law; 17% corporate tax; relatively straightforward registration. Often used as a regional holding company location.
Japan: Large economy (4th globally); complex regulatory environment; language barrier significant; foreign ownership restrictions in certain sectors.
China: Requires either a Wholly Foreign-Owned Enterprise (WFOE) or a joint venture with a local partner for most business activities; complex licensing; foreign ownership restrictions in many sectors; capital controls limit profit repatriation.
Southeast Asia (Vietnam, Thailand, Indonesia): Rapidly growing markets; typically require local partner or have foreign ownership caps; variable rule of law; significant opportunities in manufacturing and technology.
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Try it free →| Factor | 🇦🇺 Australia | 🇳🇿 New Zealand |
|---|---|---|
| Company form | Proprietary Limited (Pty Ltd) | Limited Company (Ltd) |
| Registration body | ASIC (asic.gov.au) | Companies Office (companiesoffice.govt.nz) |
| Registration time | 1–2 business days | Same day (online) |
| Local director required? | Yes (ordinarily resident in Australia) | Yes (resident in NZ or Australia) |
| Minimum share capital | None | None |
| Corporate income tax | 30% (large companies) / 25% (base rate entities) | 28% |
| GST rate | 10% | 15% |
| GST threshold | AUD 75,000 | NZD 60,000 |
| Mandatory pension | Superannuation: 11.5% employer | KiwiSaver: 3% employer min |
| Annual filing | ASIC annual review fee; ATO company tax return | Annual return to Companies Office + IR4 tax return |
| Key tax authority | ATO (ato.gov.au) | IRD (ird.govt.nz) |
MmowW Scrib🐮 helps businesses prepare the document packages for Australian and New Zealand company registration and ongoing compliance.
MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice. Always consult a qualified attorney in Australia or New Zealand for legal and tax structuring advice.
Q: Can I run an Australian business entirely remotely from overseas?
A: You can be a shareholder entirely from overseas, but you need at least one director who is ordinarily resident in Australia. This director need not be involved in day-to-day operations, but they take on legal responsibilities under the Corporations Act 2001. Many businesses use professional director services for this requirement, though this arrangement requires careful governance to be effective.
Q: Is there a free trade agreement between Australia/NZ and my country?
A: Australia and New Zealand have extensive FTA networks. Australia-UK FTA (entered into force 2023), CPTPP (Australia, NZ, plus 9 others), RCEP (Australia, NZ, plus 13 others), Australia-EU FTA (under negotiation). FTAs reduce tariffs on goods but generally do not simplify business registration or employment law compliance. Check DFAT (dfat.gov.au) for Australia's current FTA status.
Q: How are Australian company profits taxed if the parent is overseas?
A: Australian subsidiaries pay Australian corporate income tax on their Australian-sourced profits. Dividends paid to the foreign parent may be subject to Australian withholding tax (generally 30%, reduced to 0–15% under applicable tax treaties). Australia has extensive double tax agreements — check the ATO website (ato.gov.au) for the applicable treaty. Transfer pricing rules apply to transactions between the Australian subsidiary and related overseas entities.
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