The following categories are normally available through the commercial register, the permanent certificate or related official systems, subject to the type of certificate requested, statutory restrictions and data-protection rules.
Basic registered information
This typically includes the company name and any registered prior names or amendments; legal type (sociedade por quotas, Lda.; single-member private limited company; sociedade anonima, S.A.); NIPC and registry identification; registered office and its changes; corporate object and, in many cases, economic-activity classification; share capital and its changes; rules on binding the company; identity and office of the members of the management and supervisory bodies, including the statutory auditor, where applicable; appointment, resignation or termination of officeholders; dissolution, liquidation, transformation, merger, demerger and other registered structural changes; and certain pending applications, rectifications or registry irregularities shown on the certificate.
Information on shareholders or quotaholders
The answer differs significantly depending on the company type, and this is one of the points where the Portuguese system most surprises the foreign lawyer.
Private limited companies (sociedades por quotas). Quota ownership and many related acts are, as a rule, visible through the commercial register or the documents supporting registration. Transfers, divisions, unifications, encumbrances, attachments, seizures or amortisation of quotas may be subject to registration or deposit and may therefore appear in registry information.
Public limited companies (sociedades anonimas). The commercial register does not operate as a current public register of all shareholders. The capital of an S.A. is divided into shares and shareholders are, in principle, liable only up to the value of the shares they subscribed. A notion that persists in much of the older literature needs updating: following Law no. 15/2017 of 3 May and Decree-Law no. 123/2017 of 25 September, bearer shares are no longer permitted, and all shares are now nominative (Article 299 of the Companies Code, CSC). [5] Ownership is recorded in the relevant share-registration system (certificated or book-entry shares, under Articles 274 et seq. of the CSC and the Securities Code), but that system is not, in general, accessible to the public. [6]
Listed or open companies. Where the company is admitted to trading or otherwise subject to securities-market disclosure duties, CMVM disclosures may provide information on issuers, qualifying holdings, regulated information and market communications.
In short, for an S.A., the incorporation documents may reveal the founding shareholders and some later acts may reveal shareholder information, but they are not a reliable source of current ownership. Current ownership is generally established through the company's share register, confirmations from financial intermediaries, contractual disclosure in due diligence, or disclosures applicable to open companies. RCBE information may identify ultimate beneficial owners or controlling persons, but it does not list every shareholder.
Beneficial ownership: the RCBE
The Central Register of Beneficial Ownership (RCBE) is the central register designed to identify the natural persons who, even indirectly or through a third party, ultimately own or control the entities concerned. It was established by Law no. 89/2017 of 21 August (amended, in particular, by Law no. 58/2020 of 31 August), which transposed Chapter III of Directive (EU) 2015/849, and is regulated by Ministerial Order no. 233/2018 of 21 August. [7] Entities must declare and keep this information up to date; confirmation may be annual and, for entities filing the IES, may be linked to that annual reporting cycle.
The RCBE should be treated as a source distinct from the commercial register. It does not constitute proof of the entity's legal status, it does not replace the permanent certificate, and it does not operate as a complete shareholder register. [8]
As to access, a decisive development should be recorded. In its Judgment of 22 November 2022 in WM and Sovim SA (Joined Cases C-37/20 and C-601/20, ECLI:EU:C:2022:912), the Court of Justice of the European Union, sitting as a Grand Chamber, declared invalid the provision of Directive (EU) 2015/849 (as amended by Directive (EU) 2018/843) requiring Member States to ensure that beneficial-ownership information was accessible in all cases to any member of the general public, for breach of Articles 7 and 8 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union (respect for private life and protection of personal data). [9] Following that case law, the Portuguese legislature amended the RCBE regime through Decree-Law no. 115/2025 of 27 October, so that third-party access to beneficial-ownership information now depends on the demonstration of a legitimate interest. [10]
As at the date of this guide, access by third parties demonstrating a legitimate interest covers, broadly, the following.
- As to the entity: NIPC/NIF, company name, legal nature, registered office, economic-activity code, legal entity identifier (where applicable) and institutional e-mail, where available.
- As to the beneficial owner: name, month and year of birth, nationality, country of residence and the nature of the economic interest held.
More detailed information, such as full date of birth, full address, identification documents, tax numbers or chain-of-control supporting details, is not, as a rule, open to the public. Access is broader for competent authorities and, in defined terms, for entities subject to anti-money-laundering and counter-terrorist-financing obligations, but it remains governed throughout by statutory purpose, necessity and data-protection principles. Access may also be restricted in exceptional cases, for instance where disclosure would expose the beneficial owner to risks of fraud, coercion, intimidation or violence, or where the beneficial owner is a minor or otherwise lacks legal capacity.
Annual accounts
Entities required to file accounts do so through the IES/DA system, on the Tax Authority's portal, as a rule by the 15th day of the 7th month following the end of the tax period (for companies whose financial year coincides with the calendar year, normally by 15 July). The registration of the annual accounts consists of the electronic deposit of the information forming part of them (Article 42 of the CRC) and is integrated into the IES filing, being automatic once the filing is submitted, the accounts are approved and any fee is paid. [11]
The IES brings together, in a single act, obligations of a fiscal, commercial and statistical nature (towards the Tax Authority, the registry, the INE, the Bank of Portugal and the DGAE), and also includes confirmation of beneficial-ownership information. [12] The filed accounts typically provide the financial statements and the accounting information for the relevant year, with the content and level of detail varying according to the entity, the accounting framework, audit requirements and the filing package.
Data-protection and privacy limits
Portuguese registry publicity is not equivalent to unlimited access to personal data. The CRC contains its own data-governance rules, and the principles of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) apply cumulatively. [13] Registry databases may contain personal data, such as names, marital status, spouse identification, addresses or professional domicile, identification details, tax numbers, nationality and e-mail addresses, but not all such data is publicly disclosed.
In practice, users should expect access to legal-status information, but not to private addresses, full identification numbers, tax numbers, full dates of birth, e-mail addresses or other personal data, unless there is a specific legal basis. The same logic applies, with particular force, to RCBE information and to court information.