In-depth views into Estonia's data. Who ties themselves to power, who wins public procurement, who attracts foreign investors and more. Each view is a live query, not an annual report.
Where public power meets private business · PEPs, senior officials, companies tied to ministers and MPs.
Politically exposed persons (PEPs) under Estonian law – President, members of the Riigikogu, cabinet, party boards, governing bodies of state-owned enterprises and foundations.
Sitting members of the Riigikogu ranked by the revenue of companies they're tied to via board roles or shareholdings.
Cabinet ministers' company affiliations and shareholdings, ranked by linked-firm revenue.
Trademarks whose owner is directly or one hop away from a person on the PEP list.
The revolving door: who left government for the private sector and how soon after their term ended.
The peaks of Estonia's economy · by revenue, profit, headcount and taxes, refreshed each quarter.
Companies ranked by national and payroll taxes actually paid to the Tax Board. Quarterly.
Largest employers based on quarterly Tax Board data, not annual-report snapshots.
Companies ranked by revenue from filed annual reports.
Companies with the largest net profit – by margin, not just scale.
Estonian legal entities ranked by the number of active registered trademarks. Sector chips filter by Nice classification.
Estonian banks ranked by balance sheet, commercial loan portfolio, deposits and profit – from filed annual reports.
Who owns Estonia's companies · residents, foreign investors, corporate groups, e-residents and beneficial owners.
Every group's full brand portfolio – not just the parent's trademarks, but everything owned by any member of the group.
Estonia's hidden conglomerates – clusters of legal entities under a single VAT payer, ranked by combined revenue.
Estonian companies grouped by foreign owners' country of origin – where the capital behind Estonian business actually comes from.
Companies ranked by ownership Gini – where no single party or small group holds a majority.
Companies with the most shareholders – broadly distributed cap tables and their structure.
Estonian companies founded by non-Estonian citizens – grouped by country of origin with sector breakdown, tax contribution and headcount.
Estonian companies registered in the last 12 months whose founders include non-Estonian citizens – a rolling view of international founder activity.
The largest Estonian companies founded via the e-Residency programme, ranked by revenue and headcount.
EMTAK activities where the foreign-citizen founder share exceeds the Estonian baseline – a view into the most international slices of the economy.
By country of origin, how much tax foreign-founder companies pay into the Estonian state budget.
Public procurement, grants and tax avoidance · where public money flows and who is behind it.
Companies ranked by total value of public contracts won, with top buyers and date range.
Recipients of EU structural-fund, PRIA, EIS and Unemployment Insurance Fund grants, ranked by amount.
Estonia's largest tax debtors per the Tax Board's current list – with debt-to-revenue ratio and payment-plan status.
Public-contract winners with politically exposed persons on the board or among beneficial owners – one-hop, at the time of refresh.
Companies that have won state contracts in recent years yet have missed the statutory deadline to file the previous fiscal year's annual report.
Regulated professions and sector views · banks, auditors, healthcare, education.
Estonia's audit firms and registered sworn auditors – active licence status, headcount and connected people.
Estonia's credit institutions, payment institutions, e-money issuers, investment firms and fund managers, plus foreign branches and cross-border providers – with their FinantsInspektsioon licensing status.
Crypto-asset service providers licensed by FinantsInspektsioon under MiCA – active, suspended, revoked – with their licensing-status history.
Estonia's private healthcare providers – GPs, dental clinics, specialist care, aesthetic clinics – with active licence status and owner transparency.
Estonia's private schools, kindergartens, language schools, vocational and higher-education providers with EHIS licensing.
Estonia's law firms and registered sworn lawyers – firm size, revenue and headcount of sworn lawyers.
The Estonian Chamber of Notaries' full directory – office location, contact details and area of practice.
Estonia's bailiffs – office, area of practice and contact. Public roster from the Chamber of Bailiffs and Trustees in Bankruptcy.
Anomalies, patterns and notable slices of the data · fresh trademarks, debtors, auditor swaps.
Estonian trademark applications filed in the last 12 months – new brands, new directions, early expansion signals.
Clusters where multiple trademarks have transferred between the same parties in a short window – often a signal of an unannounced acquisition or asset sale.
Every registered business address by active-company count – virtual offices, shared business buildings and mass-host clusters.
Companies ranked by consumer-disputes-commission rulings that went in the consumer's favour.
Industry comparison – company count, revenue, employment and taxes by EMTAK section.
The natural persons sitting on the most active Estonian-company boards – sometimes legitimate corporate-services practice, sometimes a shell-pattern signal.
Estonian companies whose entire active board consists of women – minimum two members, ranked by revenue.
Persons who were board members at the time of bankruptcy and are now active in the boards of newer companies. Requires at least two prior bankruptcies.
Companies whose signing auditor has changed over the last 24 months – an early indicator used by analysts and journalists.
Addresses hosting more than 50 companies that share at least 3 common directors – anti-fraud cross-pattern.
Every industry and every county as its own view · by revenue, profit and employment. Auto-generated, refreshed with the data.
Where public power meets private business · PEPs, senior officials, companies tied to ministers and MPs.
Politically exposed persons (PEPs) under Estonian law – President, members of the Riigikogu, cabinet, party boards, governing bodies of state-owned enterprises and foundations.
Sitting members of the Riigikogu ranked by the revenue of companies they're tied to via board roles or shareholdings.
Cabinet ministers' company affiliations and shareholdings, ranked by linked-firm revenue.
Trademarks whose owner is directly or one hop away from a person on the PEP list.
The revolving door: who left government for the private sector and how soon after their term ended.
The peaks of Estonia's economy · by revenue, profit, headcount and taxes, refreshed each quarter.
Companies ranked by national and payroll taxes actually paid to the Tax Board. Quarterly.
Largest employers based on quarterly Tax Board data, not annual-report snapshots.
Companies ranked by revenue from filed annual reports.
Companies with the largest net profit – by margin, not just scale.
Estonian legal entities ranked by the number of active registered trademarks. Sector chips filter by Nice classification.
Estonian banks ranked by balance sheet, commercial loan portfolio, deposits and profit – from filed annual reports.
Who owns Estonia's companies · residents, foreign investors, corporate groups, e-residents and beneficial owners.
Every group's full brand portfolio – not just the parent's trademarks, but everything owned by any member of the group.
Estonia's hidden conglomerates – clusters of legal entities under a single VAT payer, ranked by combined revenue.
Estonian companies grouped by foreign owners' country of origin – where the capital behind Estonian business actually comes from.
Companies ranked by ownership Gini – where no single party or small group holds a majority.
Companies with the most shareholders – broadly distributed cap tables and their structure.
Estonian companies founded by non-Estonian citizens – grouped by country of origin with sector breakdown, tax contribution and headcount.
Estonian companies registered in the last 12 months whose founders include non-Estonian citizens – a rolling view of international founder activity.
The largest Estonian companies founded via the e-Residency programme, ranked by revenue and headcount.
EMTAK activities where the foreign-citizen founder share exceeds the Estonian baseline – a view into the most international slices of the economy.
By country of origin, how much tax foreign-founder companies pay into the Estonian state budget.
Public procurement, grants and tax avoidance · where public money flows and who is behind it.
Companies ranked by total value of public contracts won, with top buyers and date range.
Recipients of EU structural-fund, PRIA, EIS and Unemployment Insurance Fund grants, ranked by amount.
Estonia's largest tax debtors per the Tax Board's current list – with debt-to-revenue ratio and payment-plan status.
Public-contract winners with politically exposed persons on the board or among beneficial owners – one-hop, at the time of refresh.
Companies that have won state contracts in recent years yet have missed the statutory deadline to file the previous fiscal year's annual report.
Regulated professions and sector views · banks, auditors, healthcare, education.
Estonia's audit firms and registered sworn auditors – active licence status, headcount and connected people.
Estonia's credit institutions, payment institutions, e-money issuers, investment firms and fund managers, plus foreign branches and cross-border providers – with their FinantsInspektsioon licensing status.
Crypto-asset service providers licensed by FinantsInspektsioon under MiCA – active, suspended, revoked – with their licensing-status history.
Estonia's private healthcare providers – GPs, dental clinics, specialist care, aesthetic clinics – with active licence status and owner transparency.
Estonia's private schools, kindergartens, language schools, vocational and higher-education providers with EHIS licensing.
Estonia's law firms and registered sworn lawyers – firm size, revenue and headcount of sworn lawyers.
The Estonian Chamber of Notaries' full directory – office location, contact details and area of practice.
Estonia's bailiffs – office, area of practice and contact. Public roster from the Chamber of Bailiffs and Trustees in Bankruptcy.
Anomalies, patterns and notable slices of the data · fresh trademarks, debtors, auditor swaps.
Estonian trademark applications filed in the last 12 months – new brands, new directions, early expansion signals.
Clusters where multiple trademarks have transferred between the same parties in a short window – often a signal of an unannounced acquisition or asset sale.
Every registered business address by active-company count – virtual offices, shared business buildings and mass-host clusters.
Companies ranked by consumer-disputes-commission rulings that went in the consumer's favour.
Industry comparison – company count, revenue, employment and taxes by EMTAK section.
The natural persons sitting on the most active Estonian-company boards – sometimes legitimate corporate-services practice, sometimes a shell-pattern signal.
Estonian companies whose entire active board consists of women – minimum two members, ranked by revenue.
Persons who were board members at the time of bankruptcy and are now active in the boards of newer companies. Requires at least two prior bankruptcies.
Companies whose signing auditor has changed over the last 24 months – an early indicator used by analysts and journalists.
Addresses hosting more than 50 companies that share at least 3 common directors – anti-fraud cross-pattern.