Luxembourg is the world's second largest investment fund center after the United States and hosts over 150,000 registered entities β a remarkable number for a country of 660,000 inhabitants. A major European financial hub and home to numerous holding companies and fund structures, Luxembourg is essential for any professional working on cross-border transactions in Europe.
This guide explains how to verify a Luxembourg company in 2026.
Key Identifiers of a Luxembourg Company
The RCS number (Registre de Commerce et des SociΓ©tΓ©s) is assigned by the Luxembourg Business Registers (LBR). It follows the format "B" followed by digits for commercial companies (e.g., B 123456). It is the primary identifier.
The Luxembourg VAT number begins with "LU" followed by 8 digits. Verifiable via the European VIES system.
The matricule number is the tax identifier assigned by the Administration of Direct Taxes (ACD).
The Central Role of the LEI in Luxembourg
Luxembourg is a major jurisdiction for regulated financial entities. The majority of Luxembourg funds, banks, and financial companies hold an LEI (Legal Entity Identifier), a standardized 20-character code recognized internationally.
The LEI enables rapid cross-referencing: it contains entity information and group structure data (direct parent and ultimate parent). It is an indispensable tool for understanding the control structures of Luxembourg holdings and funds.
SYNTA-IQ works directly with official Luxembourg registries and integrates LEI data to automatically enrich entity profiles, supported by our network of local partners specialized in corporate law and capital markets.
The 5 Steps to Verify a Luxembourg Company
1
Identify by RCS number
Start with the RCS number. Every registered entity in Luxembourg must appear in the LBR registry. Check the status and the legal form.
2
Review RESA publications
The RESA (Electronic Register of Companies and Associations) publishes all documents filed by companies: articles of association, amendments, annual accounts, director appointments. It is the reference source for the legal history.
3
Verify the control structure via the LEI
For entities with an LEI, review the group structure. Luxembourg funds and holding companies are often wrapper structures whose ultimate parent is foreign. Identifying the ultimate parent is essential.
4
Analyze the annual accounts
Accounts filed with the LBR are public. Note: many Luxembourg holding companies have standalone accounts that do not reflect actual group activity β consolidated analysis is often necessary.
5
Check sanctions
As an international financial center, Luxembourg entities are particularly subject to sanctions screening (OFAC, EU, UN). Any entity with links to sensitive jurisdictions should be thoroughly investigated.
Luxembourg Specificities to Know
β Density of holdings and SPVs
Luxembourg is Europe's reference jurisdiction for fund structures (SICAV, SICAF, FCP) and holding companies. Many have no operational activity in Luxembourg. Analyzing standalone accounts alone is insufficient.
β Relative confidentiality
Luxembourg offers more discretion than France or the UK on certain information. The beneficial ownership register is less accessible to the general public.
β Investment funds
UCITS, AIFs, SIFs, and RAIFs follow different rules than commercial companies. Their verification requires knowledge of the Luxembourg regulatory framework.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Luxembourg an opaque jurisdiction?
No. Luxembourg has a public commercial registry, accessible annual accounts, and a beneficial ownership register. It is sometimes perceived as opaque due to the complexity of structures, but legal data is well available to professionals.
Can Luxembourg investment funds be verified?
Yes. SYNTA-IQ covers regulated Luxembourg entities, including funds. LEI data enables rapid identification and mapping of group structures.
What is an LEI and is it mandatory?
The LEI (Legal Entity Identifier) is mandatory for any entity conducting transactions on European financial markets. Managed by the GLEIF, it is an international standard for identifying legal persons.