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What EU Inc really means for Europe’s start-ups – a legal view
Ann O’Dea · 2026-04-30 · via Technology – Silicon Republic

Dorothy Hargaden, Dentons. Image: Connor McKenna/Silicon Republic

One of Ireland’s leading knowledge lawyers, Dorothy Hargaden of Dentons, takes a deeper look at the EU Inc proposal that the European Commission unveiled in March.

As the dust settles on the official announcement of EU Inc in March, we spoke to Head of Knowledge at Dentons Ireland Dorothy Hargaden, who has been sifting through the detail for SiliconRepublic.com.

EU Inc, Hargaden explains, is best understood as a digital-by-default, standardised company form for the single market.

“The legal building blocks will be familiar,” she says. “The innovation lies in combining them into a framework that is portable, interoperable and supported by EU digital infrastructure.”

The speed of the proposal’s arrival is attributed by many to sustained lobbying from the start-up ecosystem. Hargaden agrees that founders, investors and operators actively engaged with the Commission, and that the retention of the ‘EU Inc’ label in the final proposal supports that view.

“The fact that their label was retained is significant,” she says, but adds that the proposal is not purely market-driven, and instead “a hybrid of policy design and market input”.

The headline numbers: conditional, but real

The 48-hour incorporation promise and the sub-€100 cost are eye-catching, but Hargaden points out that “the headline is conditional”.

She says, “The 48-hour timeline and cost cap depend on using standard template articles and fully digital processes.”

For Irish founders in particular, the speed element is less revolutionary than it sounds.

“In an Irish context, this level of speed is not entirely new,” Hargaden notes.

“The CRO can already process straightforward incorporations within a tight timeframe. What EU Inc adds is this speed embedded in a more standardised and interoperable EU-wide system.”

Hargaden is measured on the removal of minimum share capital requirements, one of the key structural changes.

“Minimum capital has long been a limited proxy for financial strength,” she explains.

“EU Inc replaces it with a model based on solvency tests and director liability, which aligns more closely with how investors assess risk in practice. This is not deregulation, but a shift in how protection is delivered.”

Not a European Delaware, but closer

One of the questions hovering over EU Inc is how it compares to the gold standard for tech company incorporation: the Delaware C-Corp. Hargaden’s answer is nuanced.

“EU Inc’s proposed governance model is flexible, but it is not simply a European Delaware. It has features that founders and investors will recognise from US venture practice, including multiple share classes and instruments such as convertibles and warrants.

“Structures such as preference shares and anti-dilution provisions can potentially be applied consistently across member states.”

A notable feature is a proposed EU-wide employee stock option framework.

“If implemented effectively, that could make equity-based compensation more attractive for companies hiring across borders,” Hargaden says, pointing out that taxation would generally be deferred until disposal under the proposal.

The comparison with a UK Ltd is also instructive. “EU Inc is likely to feel familiar in terms of board structure and directors’ duties,” she says.

“EU Inc offers greater flexibility in capital structuring and, importantly, cross-border portability that a domestic UK company does not provide.”

One material gap, however, is noted by Hargaden: “A key difference from Delaware is the absence of a single specialised court system. EU Inc companies will still rely on national courts, which may affect predictability and enforcement in practice.”

The ‘once-only’ principle

One of the more quietly significant features of the proposal is the ‘once-only’ principle; founders submit information once and it can be reused across systems, with tax ID and VAT numbers issued without re-submitting paperwork. This is “potentially very significant”, according to Hargaden.

“On the ground, this is less about creating a central register and more about forcing national systems to work together. In Ireland, we have a modern and agile company law framework, but the experience across Ireland’s state agencies remains fragmented. EU Inc could act as a welcome catalyst for integration and modernisation in the domestic sphere.”

She is careful not to overstate this, though.

“The regime does not eliminate interaction with national systems altogether. Areas such as employment, payroll and tax remain national, so while incorporation and registration may become more seamless, operational complexity will not disappear overnight.”

Tax: the persistent gap

For all the harmonisation ambition, tax remains a national competence, and Hargaden identifies this as the regime’s defining constraint.

“It is workable, but it defines the limits of the regime. EU Inc introduces improvements such as harmonised timing for employee stock option taxation, which addresses practical challenges for scaling companies. However, tax rates and broader tax rules remain national.

“As a result, companies will still face jurisdiction-specific outcomes. EU Inc simplifies part of the system but does not eliminate cross-border complexity.”

The optional nature of the regime is relevant here. Hargaden sees it as clearly designed for cross-border businesses, particularly start-ups and scale-ups that expect to raise capital and operate across multiple member states.

“It is less compelling for purely domestic businesses or those that value familiarity over portability,” she says.

“The real test of its success will not be universal uptake, but whether EU Inc becomes the default for companies with ambitions to scale across Europe.”

Forum shopping and fragmentation risks

Hargaden flags a structural tension that has attracted less coverage – the potential for regulatory competition between member states.

“Although EU Inc harmonises core company law, strategic elements such as employment law, tax and enforcement remain national,” she points out. “This creates scope for regulatory competition and may lead to clustering in certain jurisdictions.”

A related concern, she adds, is that EU Inc could risk becoming European on paper but national in practice if national law continues to shape outcomes materially.

The 2026 timeline: ambitious but possible

The Commission is pushing for political agreement by the end of 2026, fast by EU standards. Hargaden thinks the timeline is achievable in principle, but flags where it could unravel.

“The main risk is not technical complexity, but political drift or dilution, particularly if the proposal becomes overloaded with exceptions or expands into more contentious areas,” she says.

“Key issues include employee participation, anti-abuse safeguards and maintaining the simplicity of the regime.”

She points to Ireland’s upcoming EU Presidency as a meaningful opportunity “to protect the core architecture and drive progress”.

Even with political agreement in 2026, real-world implementation is likely to follow later – “in 2028 at the earliest”, Hargaden says.

The bottom line

Overall, Hargaden is cautiously positive about what EU Inc can achieve.

“EU Inc is a credible attempt to modernise how companies are formed, scaled and financed in Europe,” she says. “It may not solve every friction point overnight, but it marks a clear shift in direction.

“The file now moves from concept to negotiation. The coming months will determine whether its core architecture –  simplicity, digital-by-default processes and genuine cross-border usability – survives the legislative process. If it does, EU Inc could become a meaningful tool for Europe’s next generation of innovators.”

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