Most guides about starting a business in Bangladesh push you straight toward a private limited company. For a freelancer billing clients abroad, a tutor running classes from her flat, or a single-owner shop in Mirpur, that’s overkill.

Sole proprietorship in Bangladesh is the simplest legal wrapper. One person, one trade license, one TIN, and you’re trading. No RJSC, no shareholders, no AGMs. The catch is that it’s also the most exposed structure when revenue grows or things go wrong. The guide below walks every registration step, the tax math you’ll actually owe, and the compliance pieces nobody warns you about until you’re knee-deep.

Quick answer: Sole proprietorship is Bangladesh’s simplest legal structure: get a trade license from your City Corporation (Tk 3,000 to Tk 10,000), register for an e-TIN with NBR (free), and add a BIN if turnover crosses Tk 30 lakh. Total setup runs Tk 5,000 to Tk 12,000 and takes 1 to 3 weeks. Profits are taxed as personal income.

Key Takeaways

• Sole proprietorship is the cheapest, fastest legal structure in Bangladesh. Setup runs Tk 5,000 to Tk 12,000 and takes 1 to 3 weeks.

• You don’t register with RJSC. RJSC is for companies and partnerships, not individual traders.

• The three core documents: trade license (City Corporation, Pourashava, or Union Parishad), e-TIN (NBR), and a current bank account in the business name.

• VAT registration (BIN) is only required if your annual turnover crosses Tk 30 lakh. Below that, you don’t owe VAT.

• Profits are taxed as personal income. Tax-free threshold is Tk 350,000 for general taxpayers in assessment year 2025-2026.

• A flat minimum tax of Tk 5,000 applies to anyone whose income exceeds the threshold (Tk 1,000 for new taxpayers).

• Sole proprietorship gives no liability shield. Your personal assets and business assets are legally the same thing.

• Past Tk 30 to Tk 50 lakh annual turnover, the case for switching to a private limited company gets stronger fast.

What a Sole Proprietorship Actually Is (and Who It Fits)

A sole proprietorship is a business owned and run by one person, where the business and the owner are legally the same entity. Think of it like running a food cart in your own name. The cart isn’t a separate “company” suing or being sued. You are the cart.

That has consequences. Profits land on your personal tax return. Debts and lawsuits land on your personal balance sheet. The trade license names you, not a corporate entity. Nobody else holds shares, votes on decisions, or signs cheques.

Who it fits well:

  • Freelancers and consultants billing local or foreign clients in their own name.
  • Single-owner retail shops, restaurants, salons, and small workshops.
  • Tutoring centres, tailoring units, small online sellers working under Tk 30 to Tk 50 lakh in turnover.
  • Anyone testing an idea before committing to the cost and paperwork of a private limited.

Who it doesn’t fit:

  • Anyone planning to take outside investment. Investors want shares, and sole proprietorships don’t have shares.
  • Anyone needing a liability shield. If a customer sues, your personal flat is on the line.
  • Multi-founder ventures. Two co-founders mean partnership or private limited, not sole prop.
  • Businesses crossing Tk 50 lakh in turnover, where the tax math starts tilting toward Pvt Ltd.

The decision often comes down to one question. Are you a one-person operation that mostly wants legitimacy and a bank account, or are you building something that needs corporate scaffolding? If it’s the first, sole prop. If it’s the second, look at the broader company structures available in Bangladesh.

Sole proprietorship registration steps in Bangladesh including business name trade license e-TIN bank account and BIN registration

How to Register a Sole Proprietorship in Bangladesh

The actual registration is shorter than the Reddit threads suggest. Five steps. Most of them sit in two government offices and one bank branch.

Step 1: Pick a business name and a place to operate

Sole proprietors in Bangladesh don’t need a name clearance from RJSC. You just pick a name and use it. Two soft rules. Don’t pick a name that’s obviously trademarked by someone else. And don’t put “Limited” or “Pvt Ltd” anywhere in it, because you aren’t one.

You’ll also need a physical address. A rented shop, a home address, a small workspace, anything with a written rental agreement or proof of ownership. The City Corporation issuing your trade license will check.

Step 2: Apply for a trade license

This is the document that says you’re a real business in the eyes of the local government. It’s issued by:

  • City Corporation (Dhaka North, Dhaka South, Chittagong, Khulna, etc.) if you’re inside one.
  • Pourashava if you’re in a municipal area.
  • Union Parishad if you’re rural.

Most applications now run online. Dhaka North uses erevenue.dncc.gov.bd. There’s a national portal at etradelicense.gov.bd. You’ll upload:

  • A copy of your NID (or passport for foreign nationals)
  • Recent passport-sized photos
  • A rental agreement or proof of ownership of the premises
  • A holding tax receipt for the address
  • TIN if you have one

Government fees range roughly Tk 3,000 to Tk 10,000 depending on business type and location. A retail trader pays less than a manufacturer. Add Tk 1,000 to Tk 2,500 for stamps and ancillary charges.

The trade license is valid for one year. You renew it every July. Forget that and you’ll pay a small late fee plus the renewal cost.

Step 3: Get an e-TIN from NBR

A Tax Identification Number is mandatory for any business that earns above the personal exemption threshold, and it’s required to open a current account or pay VAT later. Apply free of cost at the NBR e-TIN portal. The form takes 15 minutes if you have your NID and address handy. The certificate prints instantly.

Quick heads up: don’t outsource this to a “consultant” charging Tk 2,000. The portal is in plain Bangla and English. You can do it yourself over a cup of cha.

Step 4: Open a current bank account in the business name

Once your trade license and TIN are in hand, walk into the bank you already use and ask for a current account in your business’s name. Bring:

  • Trade license (original + copy)
  • e-TIN certificate
  • NID (original + copy)
  • Two photos
  • A signed account opening form
  • An introducer (an existing customer of that bank, often any account holder)

Most private banks process the account in 3 to 7 working days. BRAC, EBL, City Bank, and Dutch-Bangla are common picks for small business owners because their digital tools are workable. The state-owned banks are cheaper but slower. For a fuller breakdown of options, see how to open a bank account in Bangladesh and the major private banks in Bangladesh.

Step 5: Register for VAT (BIN) if your turnover demands it

Below Tk 30 lakh annual turnover: you don’t need a BIN. Move on.

Above Tk 30 lakh: you must register for VAT and pull a Business Identification Number from NBR. The portal is vat.gov.bd. Registration is free. We cover the thresholds in detail further down.

Tax and compliance requirements for sole proprietorship in Bangladesh including tax return VAT BIN threshold trade license renewal and records

What It Costs and How Long It Takes

Here’s the realistic 2026 picture for a small sole proprietor in Dhaka:

ItemCost (Tk)Time
Trade license (small retailer/freelancer)3,000 to 7,0005 to 14 days
e-TINFreeInstant (online)
Stamps, photos, photocopies500 to 1,500Same day
Bank account openingFree, or Tk 500 to Tk 2,000 minimum balance3 to 7 working days
Optional: lawyer or filing assistant2,000 to 5,000N/A
BIN (only if over Tk 30 lakh turnover)Free7 to 14 days
Total setup, no consultantTk 4,000 to Tk 11,0001 to 3 weeks
Total setup, with helpTk 6,000 to Tk 16,0001 to 3 weeks

Trade license fees vary widely by city corporation and business category. A goldsmith pays more than a tutor. Manufacturing pays more than retail. Always check the current fee schedule on your local City Corporation site before assuming a number.

How Sole Proprietors Pay Tax

This is where most first-time founders get nervous. Here’s the actual structure for assessment year 2025-2026.

A sole proprietorship’s profit isn’t taxed as a separate entity. It flows to the owner’s personal income tax return. You file under the same form (IT-11GA) any salaried Bangladeshi files, just with your business income reported in the relevant section.

Tax-free thresholds:

  • General taxpayers: Tk 350,000
  • Women and senior citizens (65+): Tk 400,000
  • Persons with physical challenges: Tk 475,000
  • Third-gender taxpayers: Tk 500,000

Above the threshold, slabs climb in steps. The top rate is 30% on income above roughly Tk 35.75 lakh. Most small sole proprietors never reach the top slab; they sit comfortably in the 5% to 15% range.

Two extra rules worth knowing:

  1. Minimum tax. If your total income exceeds the exemption, you pay at least Tk 5,000 in tax for the year, even if the slab math says less. New taxpayers pay a Tk 1,000 minimum for their first return.
  2. Deductions and rebates. Investment in approved instruments (DPS, mutual funds, life insurance, government savings certificates) can earn you a tax rebate of up to 15% on eligible amounts. Worth claiming.

A sole proprietor’s tax life is just personal income tax with extra paperwork. Not a separate corporate machine.

Returns are due by November 30 each year for individual taxpayers (Tax Day). Miss it and the late filing penalty kicks in fast. The NBR e-Return portal lets you file online; many sole proprietors still drop a paper return at the local Taxes Circle office. Whichever you pick, keep your trade license, bank statements, and a basic income-expense log.

VAT and BIN: When You Cross the Tk 30 Lakh Line

VAT trips up sole proprietors more than income tax does. The rules:

  • Below Tk 30 lakh annual turnover: no VAT registration, no VAT collection, no VAT returns. You’re out.
  • Tk 30 lakh to Tk 50 lakh turnover: you must register for BIN and pay a 3% Turnover Tax on gross revenue.
  • Above Tk 50 lakh turnover: standard 15% VAT applies. You collect it from customers, file monthly returns, and remit to NBR.

That 30 lakh line moves a lot of small businesses. Crossing it changes your monthly admin from “send an invoice” to “collect VAT, issue Mushak-6.3 invoices, file Mushak-9.1 monthly, reconcile inputs and outputs.” It’s not impossible. It is meaningfully more work. Many freelancers cap their billed turnover deliberately, or switch to a Pvt Ltd structure, the year they see Tk 30 lakh on the horizon.

Sole Proprietorship vs Private Limited Company

Here’s the head-to-head most Bangladeshi founders actually weigh:

FeatureSole ProprietorshipPrivate Limited Company
Setup costTk 5,000 to Tk 12,000Tk 25,000 to Tk 60,000+
Setup time1 to 3 weeks4 to 8 weeks
Registration bodyCity Corporation + NBRRJSC + City Corporation + NBR
Number of ownersOneTwo to fifty
LiabilityUnlimited personalLimited to share capital
TaxPersonal income tax slabs27.5% corporate (standard)
Annual filingsTax return, trade license renewalTax, AGM, RJSC, audit, more
Investor friendlinessNone. Cannot issue shares.High. Shares, equity rounds.
Bank credibilityLower for big-ticket loansHigher
Sells well to corporate clientsSometimesYes

Rule of thumb: stay sole prop while you’re a one-person operation under Tk 30 to Tk 50 lakh in turnover. The moment you take a co-founder, raise outside money, or court corporate buyers who care about formality, the private limited route earns its extra cost.

Annual Compliance and the Mistakes That Trip Up Founders

Registration is the easy part. Compliance is where founders bleed quietly.

The annual checklist for a sole proprietor:

  1. Renew the trade license every July. Late renewal carries a fine.
  2. File income tax return by November 30. Don’t miss Tax Day.
  3. File VAT returns monthly if you’re BIN-registered. Even nil months need filing.
  4. Keep records for at least six years. NBR can audit back that far.
  5. Pay holding tax on the business address if applicable.
  6. Renew any sector licences (food handling, drug licence, fire safety) on their own cycles.

The recurring mistakes:

  • Mixing personal and business money. Use the business current account for business inflows and outflows. Always. Audits hate co-mingled accounts.
  • Skipping the e-TIN return because “I didn’t earn enough.” Once you have a TIN, you generally have to file, even at zero income. The minimum tax of Tk 5,000 may still apply once you’re above the threshold.
  • Forgetting the trade license is annual. Two years missed and renewal turns into a regulatory headache.
  • Letting turnover drift past Tk 30 lakh without a BIN. NBR can backdate the VAT liability and add penalty interest. Painful.
  • Not informing the bank when business activity changes substantially. Banks flag pattern shifts on current accounts. A sudden spike without explanation can get an account frozen.

Most sole proprietors don’t lose money on tax. They lose it on the small fines that pile up because nobody told them the trade license expired in July.

Final Thoughts

Sole proprietorship is the t-shirt of Bangladesh business structures. Cheap, comfortable, fits most situations under Tk 30 lakh in turnover. It won’t impress a venture investor, and it won’t shield your savings if a customer sues. Past a certain point, you outgrow it. Until then, it’s the cleanest way to go from idea to invoice.

If the paperwork starts to feel heavier than the work itself, Business Globalizer handles formation and compliance support across Bangladesh and beyond.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. Do I need to register a sole proprietorship with RJSC in Bangladesh?

No. RJSC handles companies and partnerships. A sole proprietorship is registered through your local City Corporation, Pourashava, or Union Parishad via the trade license, plus your e-TIN with NBR. That’s it.

2. How much does it cost to start a sole proprietorship in Bangladesh in 2026?

Roughly Tk 5,000 to Tk 12,000 for most small operators. The trade license is the biggest single line (Tk 3,000 to Tk 10,000 depending on business type and city), the e-TIN is free, and the bank account opening is free or close to it.

3. At what turnover do I have to register for VAT as a sole proprietor?

Tk 30 lakh annual turnover is the threshold. Above that, you must register for BIN. Between Tk 30 lakh and Tk 50 lakh, you pay 3% Turnover Tax. Above Tk 50 lakh, standard 15% VAT applies.

4. Can a sole proprietor in Bangladesh hire employees?

Yes. You can hire staff, pay salaries, and deduct employee tax at source. You’ll need to handle relevant employment compliance, but the structure itself doesn’t cap your headcount.

5. Do I get personal liability protection as a sole proprietor?

No. The business and the owner are legally the same. Business debts are your debts. If a customer sues the business and wins, your personal assets are reachable. That’s the single biggest reason founders graduate to a private limited company.

6. Can a foreigner register a sole proprietorship in Bangladesh?

Generally no. Sole proprietorship in Bangladesh is reserved for Bangladeshi citizens. Foreign nationals route through a private limited company, branch office, or liaison office, depending on the activity.