Bulgaria: Public listed companies in Bulgaria

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Bulgaria: Public listed companies in Bulgaria

koleva.jpg

Rossitza Koleva

A public listed company in Bulgaria is a joint stock company (AD) which is initially entered in the Trade Register to the Entry Agency, later on in the Register of Public Companies, and supervised by the Financial Supervision Commission (FSC). Even though the procedure of setting up a new entity in Bulgaria is fast and well organised, the listing process is time consuming, complex and difficult. The application for listing must go through the approval of a prospectus for a public offering from the FSC.

The FSC's common practice stipulates that for a public company to be eligible for listing, it must have two to three years of business operations before its application to the FSC. The financial history of the company, combined with the fact that it already has an established line of operations, are the two main reasons behind the FSC's requirement. However, there is no legal provision for this requirement under Bulgarian law and it is just a matter of practice. Therefore, newly-incorporated companies can be registered as public listed companies as well.

The FSC requires a business plan to be included in the listing prospectus to accept a listing application. This requirement is applicable even for newly-incorporated companies. The latter should appoint an auditor approved and elected by the general assembly who will prepare the financial statements covering the period between the incorporation date of the company and the submission of the listing application.

The founders of the public listed company may be physical or legal persons of any nationality and its board of directors must consist of at least three and not more than nine persons. Its shares are traded on the Bulgarian Stock Exchange and are always dematerialised, registered and managed by the Central Depository. The minimum capital of a public listed company in Bulgaria is 50.000 BGN (approximately €25,800) and, according to the law, it ceases to be public, if the value of its assets, including the share capital, falls below 500000 BGN (approximately €258,000) according to the previous month's balance sheet, as well as according to the last two signed annual financial statements.

Rossitza Koleva (rossitza.koleva@eurofast.eu)

Eurofast Global, Sofia Office

Tel: +359 2 988 69 78

Website: www.eurofast.eu

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

US President Donald Trump’s tariffs may get thrown out by courts in the future and taxpayers should already be planning for that possibility, BDO’s Dustin Stamper tells ITR
Awards
ITR is delighted to reveal the first shortlisted nominees for the Middle East Tax Awards
The firm has appointed Deloitte’s former tax leader for Thailand to lead the new operation, which builds on considerable Asian investment in recent months
The Donald Trump administration could use legislation from 1930 if the Supreme Court blocks its tariffs; in other news, China has updated its VAT refund procedures
Braun gives ITR an exclusive insight into WTS Digital’s UK launch of its AI product, which can free up more than 1,500 hours per month by reducing routine tasks
Long tells ITR about her varied role, why curiosity is a key characteristic for the tax professional, and what she’d be doing if she wasn’t working in tax
The choice facing governments is not whether to adopt AI in taxation, but how to do so in a way that upholds the principles of tax fairness, writes Neil Kelley
As ITR’s client data reveals discontent with German tax advisers’ cost management, Grant Thornton’s local TP head insists it’s a two-way street
Uncertainty isn’t always a bad thing, but it’s easy to see how the Trump administration’s IRS commissioner merry-go-round may serve to undermine business confidence
The EU defended its ‘sovereign right’ to impose the tax in the face of US tariff threats; in other news, the US deputy Treasury secretary resigned after just five months
Gift this article