MmowWScribe Blog › l2-director-checker-nominee-director-guide
TOOL INTRODUCTION · PUBLISHED 2026-05-17Updated 2026-05-17

Nominee Directors: A Practical Guide for Founders

TS行政書士
監修: 澤井隆行行政書士(総務省登録・国家資格)MmowWの全コンテンツは、国家資格を持つ法令遵守の専門家が監修しています。
What is a nominee director, when do you need one, and what are the risks? The free Director Checker explains requirements and helps you assess your options. Nominee directors are widely used in international company formation — and widely misunderstood. Many founders treat a nominee director as a paperwork placeholder, a name to put on the register to satisfy a legal requirement while the "real" control remains with the beneficial owner. This understanding is dangerously incomplete.
Table of Contents
  1. The Problem
  2. How the Director Checker Solves It
  3. Real-World Scenarios
  4. Country-by-Country Requirements
  5. Try It Now — It's Free
  6. Frequently Asked Questions

TL;DR: A nominee director is a person appointed primarily to satisfy a legal requirement. They carry the same legal duties as any director. Both the nominee and the appointing person must understand these duties. Use the Director Checker to see if you need one.

The Problem

Nominee directors are widely used in international company formation — and widely misunderstood. Many founders treat a nominee director as a paperwork placeholder, a name to put on the register to satisfy a legal requirement while the "real" control remains with the beneficial owner. This understanding is dangerously incomplete.

A nominee director is a director. They carry every legal duty that applies to any director under the company law of the relevant jurisdiction: the duty to act in good faith in the best interests of the company, the duty to exercise reasonable care and skill, the duty to avoid conflicts of interest, and in some jurisdictions, the duty to ensure the company complies with its filing obligations. If the company incurs debts it cannot pay, the nominee director may face personal liability. If the company files fraudulent documents, the nominee director may be criminally prosecuted.

This doesn't mean nominee directors can't work well in practice — many professional nominee director services operate successfully and responsibly. It means that the arrangement must be structured correctly, with the nominee's role clearly defined, the beneficial owner's instructions documented through appropriate legal instruments, and the nominee given the information and access they need to discharge their duties.

For founders who discover they need a local director to meet residency requirements in Australia, Canada, or France, understanding how nominee directorships work — and the responsibilities all parties carry — is essential before engaging a service.

How the Director Checker Solves It

The MmowW Scrib🐮 Director Checker helps founders understand when a nominee director is necessary, what structure is appropriate, and what due diligence should be conducted on a nominee director service.

How the Director Checker approaches nominee director scenarios:

  1. Identifies when a nominee is needed — if your director profile doesn't meet local residency or other requirements, the checker explains this and identifies nominee directorship as one solution among several options.
  2. Explains the legal framework — the checker provides a structured explanation of nominee director duties in each jurisdiction, including shadow director risks (where the beneficial owner who gives instructions may themselves be treated as a de facto director).
  3. Suggests the appropriate legal instruments — a nominee director arrangement typically requires a Nominee Director Agreement, a Power of Attorney, a signed undated resignation letter (held by the beneficial owner), and a Register of Beneficial Ownership entry. The checker identifies the documents relevant to each jurisdiction.
  4. Due diligence checklist — when evaluating a professional nominee director service, the checker provides a checklist of questions to ask: Are they insured? Do they have professional indemnity cover? Do they require information about the company's activities? How do they handle compliance obligations?

Use our free tool: Director Checker

Try it free →

Real-World Scenarios

Scenario 1: The Australian Pty Ltd with a Non-Resident Founding Team

Two UK-based founders are establishing an Australian Pty Ltd. Neither is an Australian resident, and neither plans to relocate. They engage a professional nominee director service in Australia.

The Director Checker's output for their scenario includes: the legal requirement for at least one Australian-resident director under the Corporations Act, the key documents required for a nominee arrangement (Nominee Director Agreement, undated resignation letter, POA), the nominee's ongoing compliance obligations (they must receive and can respond to ASIC correspondence, must be available to sign company documents, must be notified of significant company events), and the due diligence checklist the founders should run through when selecting their nominee service.

Scenario 2: The Shadow Director Risk for a Beneficial Owner

A French entrepreneur installs a French-resident friend as the nominal president of her SAS while she (a non-EU national) runs the company from outside France. The Director Checker explains the shadow director risk clearly: if the friend is accustomed to following her instructions in running the company, she may be treated as a de facto or shadow director under French law, with all the associated liabilities — despite not being formally registered as a director.

This doesn't mean the arrangement can't work, but it means the legal advice needed is about structuring the arrangement correctly, not just checking whether a nominee is legally permitted.

Scenario 3: The Professional Nominee Service Due Diligence

A Canadian company is appointing a nominee director service to provide the Canadian-resident director required for its federal incorporation. They use the Director Checker's due diligence checklist to assess two nominee services.

Key questions from the checklist: Do they require KYC information about the company? (They should — a nominee who knows nothing about the company cannot discharge their duties.) Do they carry professional indemnity insurance? (Essential for protecting both the nominee and the company.) What is their process for handling ASIC/Corporations Canada correspondence? (They must actively manage compliance, not just be a name on the register.) What are the exit provisions if the relationship needs to end? (An orderly transition to a new director is important for continuity.)

Country-by-Country Requirements

Country Nominee Director Permitted? Common Use Case Key Legal Instrument Source
UK Yes Privacy, international structures Nominee Agreement + POA gov.uk
France Yes, with care Non-EU nationals needing local president Accord de prête-nom + procuration service-public.fr
Sweden Yes Non-EEA founders needing local board member Nominee Agreement + POA bolagsverket.se
Australia Yes Non-resident founding teams Nominee Agreement + undated resignation asic.gov.au
New Zealand Not typically needed No local director requirement N/A (not typically needed) companies.govt.nz
Canada Yes Non-resident founding teams Nominee Agreement + POA canada.ca
USA Not typically needed No federal residency requirement N/A (registered agent suffices) sba.gov

Try It Now — It's Free

Director Checker is completely free — no signup required. Find out if you need a nominee director and what's involved.

Other MmowW Scrib🐮 free tools:

Ready to prepare your documents? Start your Scrib🐮 pass — unlimited document preparation across 7 countries from $149/month.

MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a qualified attorney or solicitor for advice specific to your situation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: How much does a professional nominee director service cost?

A: Costs vary by jurisdiction and service provider. In Australia, nominee director services typically cost AUD $500-2,000/year depending on the level of service and the provider's risk assessment of the company. In Canada, costs are similar in CAD terms. In the UK (where nominees are used more for privacy than residency), costs are generally lower — around £150-500/year. These costs should be included in your annual compliance budget. Always obtain quotes from multiple providers and assess their credentials and insurance status before engaging.

Q: Can a nominee director refuse to sign a document they don't agree with?

A: Yes — and a responsible nominee will refuse to sign documents they believe are improper, fraudulent, or that would breach their duties as a director. The nominee director is not an agent who must do whatever the beneficial owner instructs. They exercise independent judgement within the scope of their role. A nominee director service that will sign anything on instruction is not providing a legitimate service — it's participating in potential misconduct. Beneficial owners should understand that the nominee's independent judgement is part of what makes the arrangement legitimate.

Q: Is beneficial ownership information kept confidential in jurisdictions requiring nominee directors?

A: This varies by jurisdiction. In the UK, beneficial ownership of companies above certain thresholds must be disclosed in the Persons with Significant Control (PSC) register, which is publicly accessible. In Australia, while the nominee director appears on the register, ASIC may require information about beneficial ownership in certain circumstances. International anti-money laundering regulations increasingly require that beneficial ownership be disclosed to financial institutions even where public registers don't require it. A nominee director arrangement does not guarantee privacy of beneficial ownership — consult a qualified attorney for advice on your specific situation.

Loved for Safety. MmowW Scrib🐮 — Document preparation made simple across 7 countries.

Try it free — no signup required

Open Director Checker →
TS
Takayuki Sawai
Gyoseishoshi
Licensed compliance professional helping businesses navigate regulatory requirements worldwide through MmowW.

Ready for complete document preparation?

MmowW Scribe prepares your formation documents, compliance filings, and business paperwork across 7 countries.

Start 14-Day Free Trial →

No credit card required. From $149/month.

Loved for Safety.

Important disclaimer: MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice. For legal questions, consult a qualified attorney in your jurisdiction.
Loved for Safety.

法律の壁で立ち止まらないで!

愛ちゃん🐣が24時間AIで法令Q&Aに回答します

無料で試す