Bolivia Overview

Cost of Opening a Company in Bolivia

Andean resource-rich market · 6–10 weeks · NIT · Local director required

Est. Formation Cost

$850–$1,200 (One-time formation costs only)

Cost of Opening a Company in Bolivia

Bolivia's commercial registry (SEPREC) replaced Fundempresa in April 2022 and now issues the Matrícula de Comercio via an online portal. A public notarized deed is required for all entity types. All costs below are third-party fees, separate from NavviPal's service fees.

Estimated Cost Breakdown

ComponentDescriptionEstimated RangeNotes
SEPREC Registration (Matrícula de Comercio)Registration with SEPREC (Servicio Plurinacional de Registro de Comercio), which replaced Fundempresa in 2022. The Matrícula de Comercio is issued via the online portal.$200–$300 USDOne-time official government fee.
Notary & Legal FormalizationA public notarized deed of incorporation (escritura pública) is required. Professional and notary fees for full setup are bundled in the total formation cost.Included in total formation range ($850–$1,200 all-in)One-time. Notary + legal preparation is typically bundled in Bolivia.
NIT Registration (SIN)The NIT (Número de Identificación Tributaria) is Bolivia's tax ID, issued by SIN (Servicio de Impuestos Nacionales) via the SIAT en Línea portal at no government fee.$0 government feeOne-time.
Recommended Opening DepositThere is no strict legal minimum capital for most entity types. A deposit of approximately $1,000 is commonly recommended to activate the corporate bank account.~$1,000 USD (retained capital, not a fee)Not a fee — this is your company's capital, retained by the company.
Municipal Operating License (Padrón Municipal)A municipal operating license (inscripción en el Padrón Municipal de Contribuyentes) is required to operate commercially in Bolivia.Varies by municipality and business activityOne-time registration; some municipalities charge annual renewal fees.
Apostille & Sworn Translation of Foreign DocumentsForeign shareholder and corporate documents must be apostilled and translated into Spanish.Apostille costs vary by issuing jurisdiction and document origin.One-time. Scales with number of foreign shareholders.

Est. Formation Cost

$850–$1,200 USD

$850–$1,200 USD in one-time formation costs (SEPREC, notary, legal preparation, apostille, and translation). Municipal license and accounting are additional costs.

Figures are approximate, in USD. Bolivia's boliviano (BOB) is pegged to the USD at a managed rate; local-currency fees are relatively stable.

What Affects the Cost

Several variables can push your total formation cost toward the lower or upper end of these ranges:

1

Entity type — An S.A. requires 3 directors (one must be a Bolivian resident), a síndico, and an auditor, significantly increasing professional fees.

2

Municipality — Municipal license fees and processing times vary across La Paz, Santa Cruz, Cochabamba, and other cities.

3

Number of foreign shareholders — More shareholders increase apostille, translation, and notary costs.

These are estimated third-party costs and do not include NavviPal's service fees. Actual costs may vary by notary and provider. Figures are for reference only and subject to change.

Get an Exact Quote for Your Bolivia Entity

These are estimated third-party costs. NavviPal can give you a precise, itemized quote for your specific structure, shareholder composition, and timeline.