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German register numbers change when a company moves its seat to another court district — the old sheet closes, a new one opens. The legal entity carrier document (UT) records the entity itself across those moves, proving continuity.
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A GmbH that transfers its statutory seat from one German city to another is re-recorded at the new court under a new HRB number, while remaining legally the same entity. Anyone tracing the company by its old number alone hits a dead end. The UT document bridges exactly this: it describes the entity and its register stations, past and present.
Typical users are enforcement lawyers executing older titles, notaries correcting land registers, and analysts reconstructing a group's relocation history.
Available as an add-on with any German company order: search the company, add the legal entity carrier document at checkout, and receive it by email together with the current extract, fetched live from the register.
Pair it with the chronological printout when you need both the entity-level continuity and the entry-by-entry history of the current sheet.
Old contracts, land-register entries or court titles may cite a register number that no longer exists because the company relocated. The UT links former and current register courts and numbers to one and the same legal entity, so you can prove the company in front of you is the one named in the old document.
The chronological printout (CD) is the history of one register sheet. The UT operates one level up: the legal carrier, which may have held several sheets at different courts over its life.
Whenever the target has moved its registered seat, merged, or appears in older documentation under a different court or number — common with growing companies that relocated to a major city.
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