Corporate Service Providers Act 2024 to come into effect on 9 June 2025
16 May 2025
The Corporate Service Providers Act 2024 (“CSP Act”) and the Corporate Service Providers Regulations 2025 (“CSP Regulations”), which provide further details on the requirements under the CSP Act, will come into effect on 9 June 2025.
Key reforms
- All business entities carrying on a business of providing corporate services* in and from Singapore need to register with the Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority (“ACRA”) as registered corporate service providers (“CSPs”);
- All registered CSPs will need to comply with obligations under the CSP Act and CSP Regulations, including those on anti-money laundering, countering the financing of terrorism, and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction (“AML/CFT/PF obligations”);
- Persons acting as nominee directors by way of business will need to be arranged by registered CSPs, after they have been assessed as fit and proper by the registered CSPs; and
- Fines will be introduced for breaches of AML/CFT/PF obligations by registered CSPs and their senior management.
* The term “corporate service” means any of the following services: (a) forming, on behalf of another person, a corporation or other legal person; (b) acting, or arranging for another person to act - (i) as a director or secretary of a corporation; (ii) as a partner of a partnership; or (iii) in a similar capacity in relation to other legal persons; (c) providing a registered office, business address, correspondence or administrative address or other related services for a corporation, partnership or other legal person; (d) acting, or arranging for another person to act, as a nominee shareholder on behalf of any corporation, other than a corporation whose securities are listed on an approved exchange within the meaning of section 2(1) of the Securities and Futures Act 2001; (e) carrying out any designated activity in relation to the provision of any accounting service; (f) carrying out an ACRA transaction with the ACRA Registrar using the electronic transaction system - (i) on behalf of another person; or (ii) for one or more companies as a secretary of each of those companies.
Key legislative changes
Key changes |
Reasons for the amendments |
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Require all business entities carrying on a business of providing corporate services in and from Singapore to register with ACRA as registered CSPs |
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To require companies and other business entities that carry on a business in Singapore of providing any corporate service to be registered as registered CSPs, even if they do not file transactions on behalf of their customers with ACRA. This requirement includes companies and other business entities that carry on a business in Singapore of providing the corporate service of carrying out any designated activity in relation to the provision of any accounting service. Registered CSPs will be required to comply with AML/CFT/PF obligations.? A person who breaches the requirement to be registered as a registered CSP is guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding S$50,000 or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years or to both and, in the case of a continuing offence, to a further fine not exceeding S$2,500 for every day or part of a day during which the offence continues after conviction. [Section 7, CSP Act] |
Currently, companies and other business entities that do not file transactions on behalf of their customers with ACRA are not required to be registered as registered filing agents (“RFAs”) and consequently are not subject to AML/CFT/PF obligations. However, there is a regulatory gap as CSPs that are not RFAs may be engaged by customers to facilitate illicit activities. Therefore, the changes will enhance the regulatory regime for all CSPs, level the playing field for all CSPs carrying on business in Singapore, and enable ACRA to take enforcement action against registered CSPs that breach AML/CFT/PF obligations. ? |
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Require all registered CSPs to comply with obligations, including AML/CFT/PF obligations |
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To require registered CSPs to comply with obligations relating to financing of proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, in addition to obligations relating to anti-money laundering and counter terrorism financing. These obligations will be prescribed in subsidiary legislation. [Section 17, CSP Act] |
The changes will ensure consistency with the Financial Action Task Force’s (“FATF”) recommendations relating to AML/CFT/PF, and that registered CSPs comply with the requirements in the United Nations Act 2001. |
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Introduce fines for breaches of AML/CFT/PF obligations by registered CSPs and their senior management |
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To impose criminal liability on registered CSPs and their senior management for breaches of AML/CFT/PF obligations. A registered CSP which breaches the AML/CFT/PF obligations is guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding S$100,000 for each breach. The senior management of a registered CSP who fails to ensure that the registered CSP complies with its AML/CFT/PF obligations is also guilty of an offence and liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding S$100,000 for each breach. [Sections 16, 17, 29, and 30, CSP Act] |
The changes will ensure that the maximum fines for breaches of AML/CFT/PF obligations by registered CSPs and their senior management are commensurate with the risks of money laundering, the financing of proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, and terrorism financing in Singapore. In addition, the new penalties are consistent with those for other designated non-financial businesses and professionals in Singapore. |
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Prohibit persons from acting as nominee directors by way of business unless the appointments are arranged by registered CSPs and they have been assessed as fit and proper by the registered CSPs |
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A person must not by way of business, act as a nominee director of a company, unless the appointment of the person as a nominee director of the company is arranged by a registered CSP. A person who breaches this requirement is guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding S$10,000. A registered CSP must not arrange for a person to act as a nominee director of a company unless he is satisfied that the person is fit and proper. In determining whether the person is a fit and proper person, the registered CSP must take reasonable steps to satisfy himself that the person is not disqualified from acting as a director of a company under any written law, and consider other factors prescribed in subsidiary legislation. A registered CSP which breaches this requirement is guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding S$100,000. [Sections 16 and 38, CSP Act] |
The changes aim to prevent misuse of nominee directorship arrangements by way of business, in creating shell companies to facilitate money laundering. This situation is observed to be largely created by CSPs who arrange for unqualified individuals to act as nominee directors for their customers. |
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Require nominee directors’ and nominee shareholders’ nominee status and the identities of their nominators to be disclosed to ACRA? |
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To require companies and foreign companies to file all information kept in their registers of nominee directors and nominee shareholders with ACRA, and for ACRA to maintain such information. Upon disclosure to ACRA, the nominee status of the director and shareholder will be made publicly available, including adding the nominee status to business profile extractions. Only public agencies may access the full information maintained by ACRA for the administration or enforcement of any written law. [Sections 10 and 13, Companies and Limited Liability Partnerships (Miscellaneous Amendments) Act 2024 (“CLLPMA Act”)] |
The changes will further mitigate money-laundering risks by enhancing the transparency of nominee arrangements, as it can trigger additional scrutiny and customer due diligence by AML-obligated entities if a company or foreign company has nominee directors or shareholders. It will also ensure Singapore’s continued compliance with the FATF’s update of its standards on beneficial ownership in March 2022, in which nominee directors and nominee shareholders are required to disclose the identity of their nominators to the Registrar, and to publicly disclose their nominee status. |
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Increase fines pertaining to the register of registrable controllers, register of nominee directors, and register of nominee shareholders? |
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To increase the maximum fines from S$5,000 to S$25,000, for offences pertaining to: 1.???? The register of registrable controllers, the register of nominee directors, and the register of nominee shareholders for companies; and ? 2.???? The register of registrable controllers for limited liability partnerships. [Sections 14 and 21, CLLPMA Act] |
The changes will ensure the accuracy of information maintained in entities’ register of registrable controllers, register of nominee directors, and register of nominee shareholders and that the accompanying fines are appropriately dissuasive and in line with the FATF’s recommendations. |
(Source: ACRA website )
? ACRA will provide information on the CLLPMA Act legislative amendments and Guidelines in due course.
For more information and related Frequently Asked Questions (“FAQs”) on the above amendments, please click .
New legislation / Legislative amendments
ACRA resources
FAQs
Please access the following links for the FAQs on the and .
Implementation timeline
The CSP Act will take effect on 9 June 2025.
? ACRA will provide sufficient lead time for the implementation of the CLLPMA Act legislative amendments.
ACRA webinar
ACRA hosted a series of webinar sessions on the Implementation of Corporate Service Providers Act on 15 and 30 April 2025.
For reference, you may refer to the .
Documents related to the passage of the Corporate Service Providers Bill through Parliament
Reference materials
The is available on the ACRA website .