Opening a Bank Account in Belarus

Banking Support for Foreign Companies and Foreign Individuals Operating in or with Belarus.

Our clients

Banking in Belarus for Foreign Clients: A Workable Process

Belarusian banks still welcome foreign companies and foreign individuals. However, onboarding now follows a more deliberate path. First, banks run substantive AML and KYC checks. Next, they ask for a written rationale for the account. Then they screen ultimate beneficial owners against international sanctions and PEP lists. Meanwhile, the National Bank of the Republic of Belarus (NBRB) sets the currency control rules that govern cross-border transactions once the account goes live.

For an international client, the real question is not whether a Belarusian account is possible. It is. Instead, the question is how to choose the right bank, prepare the right documents, and clear onboarding without weeks of back-and-forth. As a result, we work with the corporate desks of the major Belarusian banks regularly and structure each engagement around that diligence.

Who This Service Is For

We work with two categories of non-resident clients:

  • Foreign legal entities — companies registered outside Belarus that need an account for trade settlement, project financing, support of a representative office, holding-structure operations, or funding of an existing Belarusian counterparty.
  • Foreign individuals — citizens of other jurisdictions opening personal accounts in connection with employment in Belarus, property ownership, family ties, longer-term residence, or other economic connection to the country.

Both tracks are addressed on this page in general terms. The specific documentary requirements, eligible identification, and onboarding timelines for each category are covered on dedicated pages — links throughout the text.

Two Tracks, Shared Architecture

The corporate and the private path share the same regulatory architecture — same KYC framework, same sanctions screening, same NBRB currency control regime — but differ materially in documentation, bank selection, and timeline.

For corporates, the workload sits in the constituent and authority documentation: charter, registration extract, beneficial ownership disclosure, signing powers, apostille, legalisation, and notarised translation. For private clients, the documentary set is shorter, but the source-of-funds dialogue is more detailed and the choice of bank narrower. We provide each as a separate, focused service rather than a single composite offering.

Corporate Accounts for Non-Residents

Open a Business Account in Belarus without a Local Entity.

Belarusian bank selection for non-residents — profile match, corporate desks, EU/UAE/Asia correspondents

Choosing the Right Bank

Not every Belarusian bank handles non-resident applicants in the same way. Some focus on retail and domestic SMEs and decline non-resident applications outright. Others maintain dedicated corporate desks with English-language documentation, experience in cross-border structures, and active correspondent relationships with banks in the EU, UAE, and Asia. A smaller group is open to private clients without a Belarusian residence permit.

Bank selection is the single largest determinant of onboarding speed. We match the client’s profile — jurisdiction, ownership structure, expected currencies, geography of counterparties — to the institution most likely to complete onboarding without unnecessary cycles.

Belarus bank account documentation — constituent docs, apostille, notarised translation, source-of-funds dialogue

Documentation and Legalisation

Most refusals trace back to documents — incomplete sets, expired extracts, missing apostilles, unverified translations.

For non-resident corporates, banks typically require constituent documents from the home jurisdiction, registration extracts, evidence of signing authority, identification of beneficial owners, apostille or consular legalisation, and notarised translation into Russian or Belarusian. For non-resident individuals, the documentary set is shorter, but the source-of-funds dialogue is more detailed.

We prepare the application in coordination with the client’s home counsel, manage the legalisation chain end-to-end, and submit a file the bank can review without follow-up requests.

Belarus personal bank accounts for foreign citizens — employment, property, family, residence with notarised translation

Personal Accounts for Foreign Individuals

Foreign citizens open personal accounts in Belarus across a range of situations: employment with a local entity, property purchase, family reasons, or longer-term residence. The application is centred on identification, residency or visa basis, and where relevant a confirmation of source of funds. Notarised translation into Russian or Belarusian is required for documents issued in other languages.

The detailed requirements, eligible identification documents, and current onboarding timelines for foreign individuals are covered on the dedicated page.

Personal Banking in Belarus

Accounts for Foreign Citizens, Prepared Properly.

NBRB currency control in Belarus — contract registration, transaction documentation, statutory reporting and back-office

Currency Control and Ongoing Compliance

Account opening is the start of the relationship, not its conclusion. Cross-border payments are subject to currency control rules administered by the NBRB: certain contracts above defined thresholds require registration before settlement, transactional documentation must accompany incoming and outgoing flows, and statutory reporting applies to specific categories of transfers.

For account holders connected to a Belarusian operating entity, the currency control layer runs in parallel with corporate accounting and tax reporting. We handle the ongoing compliance — transaction documentation, contract registration, reporting — under the same contract as the onboarding itself.

Remote Belarus bank account opening — notarised power of attorney, representative at the counter, US/UK/EU/UAE clients

Opening an Account Without Travelling to Belarus

Most Belarusian banks expect the authorised signatory or the individual account holder to appear in person during onboarding. For clients who cannot travel, the engagement is structured around a notarised power of attorney issued in the client’s home jurisdiction and legalised for use in Belarus. Under that mandate, our representative attends the bank, signs the specimen card, and completes onboarding on the client’s behalf.

The arrangement is compliant with NBRB requirements and is used routinely by clients in the US, UK, EU, UAE, and Asia. The power of attorney is drafted to the specific bank’s expectations to avoid rejection at the counter.

Our Services

Bank Selection

Direct contact with corporate and private banking desks at the major Belarusian banks. We match the client to the institution most likely to onboard the profile efficiently.

Documentation and Legalisation

Preparation of the full application file: constituent documents, signing authorities, beneficial ownership disclosures, apostille and consular legalisation, notarised translation.

Onboarding Representation

Attendance at the bank under a power of attorney where the client cannot travel; coordination with bank officers throughout the review.

Currency Control and Reporting

Ongoing transaction documentation, contract registration, NBRB reporting, and integration with the client's accounting workflow.

Multi-Bank Account Setup

Parallel onboarding across more than one bank where the client's operations call for it — separate currencies, separate counterparty geographies, or redundancy for business continuity.

Account Restructuring and Refused Applications

Review of refused applications, redirection to a more suitable bank, and restructuring of ownership or signing arrangements where the original setup blocks onboarding.

Procedure for Opening a Bank Account in Belarus

Briefing and Bank Selection.

We discuss the client's profile and recommend the right bank. Most engagements complete this stage within three to five business days.

Document Preparation.

We list the required documents, coordinate with the client's home counsel, and manage apostille, consular legalisation, and notarised translation.

Application and Onboarding.

Submission to the bank, response to follow-up requests, and attendance at the counter — in person or under power of attorney.

Account Activation and Handover.

Specimen card, online banking access, signing keys, and a written summary of the account terms, currency control obligations, and ongoing reporting calendar.

Keep the Books in Order

Accounting, Payroll, and Statutory Reporting in Belarus.

Types of accounts

Current (Settlement) Account

The primary account for day-to-day operations: receiving revenue, paying expenses, holding working capital, conducting cross-border settlement. For private clients, the equivalent is a personal current account used for salary, remittances, and routine payments. There is no statutory limit on the number of current accounts a single client can hold across different banks.

Special Accounts

Accounts opened under specific legislation with a defined operational regime — for example, special accounts in Belarusian rubles for transfer and receipt of dividends and profit by foreign participants of Belarusian organisations under Decree No. 285 of 13 September 2023. Each special account follows the rules of the underlying decree.

Foreign-Currency Accounts

All major Belarusian banks offer accounts in US dollars and euros alongside Belarusian rubles, with additional currencies available at a subset of banks. The choice of currencies and conversion conditions varies and is part of the bank selection at briefing.

Why Clients Rely on Our Expertise?

Direct Bank Contacts

Working relationships with the corporate and private banking departments of the major Belarusian banks. Not through brokers, not through introducers.

Documentation Done Once

Application files prepared to the bank's actual review standard, reducing the cycle of requests and refusals that drives most onboarding delays.

Remote Onboarding Capability

Power-of-attorney structures used routinely for clients who cannot travel to Belarus, drafted to the specific bank's expectations.

Currency Control Expertise

In-house team handling NBRB compliance, contract registration, and ongoing transactional documentation.

Integrated Back Office

Banking work delivered alongside our accounting, payroll, EOR, and management company practices under a single contract.

English-Language Working Standard

Documentation, correspondence, and reporting in English. Russian on request.

FAQ

Can a non-resident open an account in Belarus?

Yes. Both non-resident legal entities and non-resident individuals can open accounts. The applicable bank, documentary set, and timeline differ between the two categories and depend on the client’s specific profile.

Do I need to travel to Belarus to open the account?

Not necessarily. Most onboardings can be completed under a notarised and legalised power of attorney issued in the client’s home jurisdiction. Some banks prefer at least one in-person visit at the start of the relationship; we identify this at briefing.

Which currencies can the account hold?

The major Belarusian banks offer accounts in Belarusian rubles, US dollars, euros, and a selection of additional currencies. The exact list depends on the bank.

How long does account opening take for a non-resident?

Typical onboarding ranges from three to eight weeks, depending on the bank, the complexity of the ownership structure, and the speed of legalisation in the home jurisdiction. We commit to a written timeline at briefing.

Can I hold accounts in more than one Belarusian bank?

Yes. There is no statutory restriction on the number of banks or accounts a single account holder can use.

Will the bank notify the tax authorities about the account?

Belarusian banks notify the tax inspection of new corporate accounts as part of the standard procedure. Personal accounts are not automatically reported to the tax authorities by the bank, though tax obligations apply to the account holder as a matter of substantive law.

What happens if the application is refused?

A refusal is not always final. We review the reason, address it where possible, and either resubmit or redirect the application to a more suitable bank. Most first-submission refusals are documentary; bank-level rejections are less common but do occur and are handled case by case.

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