What is “UL”?
UL (unipersonal limited liability company) is a private limited liability company used primarily in Portugal. It signals limited liability and private ownership.
Where it's used
UL appears in company names registered in the following jurisdiction:
What it tells you about the company
Equivalent forms around the world
These are the closest structural equivalents to UL in other jurisdictions — same entity category, different national law.
Normalizing “UL” in your data
When matching or deduplicating company records, the legal suffix is noise — “Acme UL” and “Acme” should resolve to the same entity. One API call strips it and returns a stable canonical form:
curl -X POST https://api.ambect.com/v1/normalize/company \
-H "Authorization: Bearer $AMBECT_KEY" \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{"name": "Acme UL", "country": "pt"}'{
"data": {
"canonical": "acme ul",
"legal_type": null,
"tokens": [
"acme",
"ul"
]
},
"meta": {
"pipeline": [
"lowercase",
"legal_suffix"
],
"confidence": 0.99
}
}Frequently asked questions
What does UL mean?
UL means "unipersonal limited liability company".
Is a UL public or private?
A UL is a private entity — its shares are not publicly listed or traded on a stock exchange.
What is the liability in a UL?
Owners of a UL have limited liability. Their personal assets are protected, and their exposure is capped at the amount they invested.
Which countries use UL?
UL is used in Portugal.
Is a UL the same as a LLC?
Functionally comparable — both are private limited liability company forms — but they operate under different national laws with distinct formation, capital, and governance requirements.
Need to normalize UL at scale? The Ambect API handles it across 100+ countries in under 5 ms.
Try the live normalizer free →