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The European Commission has unveiled EU‑INC, a proposed optional EU‑wide company regime intended to cut through 27 national corporate law systems and make it easier for firms to start and scale across the bloc.
Announced by President Ursula von der Leyen at the World Economic Forum on Jan. 20, 2026, the ‘28th regime’ would allow companies to incorporate online in 48 hours via a single digital portal and operate across all member states under one standardised rulebook.
The Commission says EU‑INC would not change tax or labour rules and is designed to lower legal costs, simplify stock option schemes and make the single market more attractive to investors.
Brussels seeks parliamentary approval by the end of March, with the first EU‑INC entities targeted to launch in 2027.
The initiative has gained grassroots support from the start‑up community — a petition grew from about 15,000 to over 23,000 backers — but member states have yet to formally respond.
Supporters say it could help retain European unicorns and attract capital; critics warn it risks eroding national supervisory powers and raises questions about enforcement and cross‑border oversight.
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