A company secretary is the compliance gatekeeper of an enterprise. Galaxy APAC's company secretarial services ensure your business fully complies with local legal requirements in markets like Hong Kong, Singapore, and mainland China, avoiding fines, administrative penalties, and even corporate dissolution.
A company secretary is a corporate compliance officer responsible for ensuring the company meets all legal and regulatory requirements. In Hong Kong and Singapore, a company secretary is legally mandatory; in mainland China, while not explicitly required by title, related compliance functions are essential. The main responsibilities of a company secretary include: annual filings and returns submission, company registration information maintenance, director/shareholder change declarations, financial document custody, compliance audits, and meeting management. Non-compliance with these duties results in daily fines (thousands of Hong Kong dollars), blacklist registration, damage to enterprise credit, and in severe cases, company dissolution and personal legal liability for directors.
| Requirement | 🇭🇰 Hong Kong | 🇸🇬 Singapore | 🇨🇳 Mainland China |
|---|---|---|---|
| Secretary Required? | Yes (Statutory) | Yes (Statutory) | No (but practically essential) |
| Annual Return Deadline | 42 days from incorporation (first time) | 5 months after financial year-end | Before Jan 31 each year |
| Late Filing Penalties | HK$200/day (max HK$10K) | SGD 100-500/day | CNY 1,000/day+ |
| Blacklist Risk | Auto-deregistration after 3 years of inactivity | Blacklist after 2 years of non-filing | Enterprise exception status after 1 year of non-filing |
Daily fines ranging from hundreds to thousands of Hong Kong dollars. A Hong Kong company overdue by 1 month can be fined HK$3,000+; by 3 months, HK$6,000+. Fines do not automatically cancel and continue to accumulate.
Non-compliance results in blacklist registration at the Business Registration Office (Hong Kong) or enterprise exception status (mainland China), affecting enterprise credit ratings, financing options, and partner willingness to cooperate.
Directors can face personal legal liability and even criminal prosecution. In Hong Kong, directors violating the Companies Ordinance can be fined HK$50,000+ or imprisoned.
Long-term non-filing (exceeding 3 years) may result in forced company deregistration. After dissolution, recovery is difficult and requires re-registration, causing loss of business continuity and brand value.
Banks discovering compliance issues may freeze accounts or refuse further services, impacting day-to-day operations.
Yes. A company secretary can simultaneously serve as a director or shareholder, but to avoid conflicts of interest and legal risks, it is recommended that an independent third party (usually a professional service provider) assume this role.
Theoretically yes, but not recommended. It requires deep knowledge of local laws, continuous attention to regulatory changes, and timely document submission. A single mistake can result in fines or even company dissolution. The cost of a professional secretary team is far lower than the risks and penalties from non-compliance.
An annual return includes: financial statement audits, annual return form completion, director declaration, bank deposit proof, etc. In Hong Kong, it must be filed within 42 days of incorporation (first time) or before the annual deadline.
Hong Kong: HK$200/day (max HK$10,000), Singapore: SGD 100-500/day, Mainland China: CNY 1,000+/day. Fines do not automatically cancel, and prolonged late filing results in blacklist status.
Typically includes annual return preparation, change notifications, document custody, meeting organization, compliance reviews, and regulatory update notifications. Some services such as audits and tax filing may incur additional fees.
Although mainland China law does not explicitly mandate a "company secretary" position, enterprises must still fulfill annual filing and change registration compliance obligations. Professional agency services are equally critical to avoid administrative penalties and enterprise exception status.
Annual filing costs vary by market: Hong Kong requires at least 1 shareholder meeting annually, with annual filing fees approximately HK$105 (government fee) + HK$1,000-3,000 (agent fee); Singapore ACRA annual filing costs around SGD 60 (government fee) + SGD 500-1,500 (agent fee); mainland China annual filing is free but must be submitted through the National Enterprise Credit Information Disclosure System, with penalties typically HK$/SGD 300-3,000/day.
Common compliance errors are costly: Missing filing deadlines results in daily fines of hundreds of Hong Kong dollars, failing to update director addresses causes company compliance violations, poor management of company seals leads to signature disputes. Prevention costs (annual secretary services HK$8,000-18,000 or SGD 1,500-3,500) are far lower than remediation costs.
Galaxy APAC's secretarial team ensures your enterprise is 100% compliant, avoiding fines, blacklisting, and enterprise risks.