When purchasing a ready-made (shelf) company, the corporate entity itself is frequently provided without an active bank account. Buyers should expect account opening to be a separate process driven by the buyer’s business model, compliance documentation and the bank’s own onboarding policies.
Key Points
- Ready-made companies often do not include an existing corporate bank account.
- Account opening is assessed against the buyer’s specific project and risk profile.
- Banks require documentation and may request enhanced due diligence (EDD) for certain activities or jurisdictions.
- Time to open an account varies by bank and complexity of the case.
- Some banks will not accept shelf companies without a clear ownership and activity plan.
- Professional onboarding support can improve acceptance chances but does not guarantee approval.
How it works
Typical steps when a buyer needs a bank account after buying a ready-made company:
- Define the company’s intended business activity, geographic scope and projected transaction volumes.
- Prepare corporate documents, shareholder/beneficial owner details, and KYC/AML evidence aligned to the bank’s requirements.
- Submit the account application to one or more banks; banks perform risk reviews and may request supplementary information.
- If approved, complete bank onboarding steps (signatures, mandates, security) and activate the account.
This is not legal advice. Requirements and acceptance policies vary by jurisdiction and by bank. For project-specific guidance and assistance with documentation or bank introductions, contact our team via vicorp.consulting/contact.