Armenia’s corporate legal framework is well-developed by regional standards, drawing from continental European traditions while incorporating elements tailored to the country’s own economic transition. For businesses considering market entry — whether through a greenfield setup, an acquisition, or a joint venture — understanding the basics of Armenian corporate law is the foundation of a sound entry strategy.
Entity Types and Their Implications
As noted, the LLC is the dominant vehicle for foreign-owned businesses in Armenia, but the choice of entity has ramifications that extend well beyond incorporation. LLC governance is regulated by both the Civil Code and the Law on Limited Liability Companies, which together dictate rules on shareholder meetings, profit distribution, management authority, and transfer of ownership interests.
For larger businesses or those anticipating external investment, the Closed or Open Joint Stock Company may be more appropriate. JSCs are subject to more stringent governance and disclosure requirements, but they also offer greater flexibility for capital raising and are required for certain licensed activities.
M&A Transactions in Armenia
Acquisitions in Armenia require careful legal structuring, particularly around the treatment of pre-existing liabilities, employee rights on transfer, regulatory change-of-control approvals, and the mechanics of consideration and payment. Representations and warranties frameworks, while increasingly standard in Armenian M&A practice, are not as developed as in Western jurisdictions — making careful contractual drafting all the more important.
Engaging a reputable
with genuine M&A transaction experience — not just familiarity with the theory — is the most reliable way to ensure a transaction closes cleanly and without post-closing surprises.
Corporate Governance and Compliance
Armenian law imposes certain mandatory governance requirements on companies: annual general meetings, financial statement preparation, and, for larger entities, audit obligations. Companies with foreign ownership or investment typically go beyond the statutory minimum, implementing governance frameworks that satisfy the expectations of their home-jurisdiction shareholders or lenders.
Corporate secretarial and compliance maintenance — keeping registrations current, filing required reports, maintaining accurate corporate records — is an ongoing operational requirement that is often delegated to legal counsel or specialist corporate service providers.
