One Europe. One standard.
25,000 founders, investors, and operators across 27 countries are asking for one thing:
Keep EU—INC useful.
01
Free choice of registered office
02
One central EU registry
03
Access for all companies
The clause that matters
The Commission’s proposal includes useful features: a single corporate form, 48-hour digital registration, harmonised stock options, and recognition across the Single Market.
EU—INC only works if founders can choose where they incorporate while operating, hiring, and paying taxes wherever the company actually runs.
That is how US founders use Delaware. Europe needs the same ability to converge on a trusted default.
The decision
Council and Parliament vote in the coming weeks. One clause decides whether EU—INC becomes useful infrastructure or collapses into symbolism: free choice of registered office.
Keep free choice of registered office intact.
Without it, EU—INC fragments into 27 national regimes sharing a logo.
The line to defend
Keep one central EU registry. Not 27 national registers with 27 different standards for identity verification, anti-money-laundering, and beneficial ownership.
Keep it open to all companies. Founders and capital decide what counts as “innovative,” not politicians.
Modern EU-level registration makes 48-hour incorporation credible, closes loopholes, and enables one-click bank account creation.
What it does not change
Tax follows operations. Employment law follows where people work.
EU—INC standardizes company formation and financing — not local obligations.
05
Europe needs EU—INC with free choice of registered office, one central EU registry, and access for all companies. Don’t water it down. Tag your MEP.
Make noise where your network can see it.















































































