How to start a company in Iraq – 2026

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Setting Up a Company in Iraq —
What Foreign Investors Need to Know

Horizon Law Firm March 2026 Corporate & Foreign Investment 13 min read

Iraq is a market that rewards preparation. For international companies — whether IOCs, contractors, traders, or professional services firms — the commercial opportunity is real and well-documented. But the process of establishing a legal presence in Iraq is one that consistently trips up foreign investors who approach it without local legal guidance, adequate lead time, or an accurate understanding of what the process actually involves.

This guide is written for practitioners: the in-house counsel at an IOC evaluating a new Iraq strategy, the international law firm looking to understand what their client is getting into, the regional investment manager weighing up Iraq against competing markets. We have tried to write the guide we would want to read — direct, accurate, and honest about both the opportunities and the friction points.

Scope note: This guide covers company formation in the Federal Republic of Iraq. The Kurdistan Region of Iraq operates under a distinct investment and regulatory framework in several respects. If your operations are focused on the KRI, contact us for specific advice on the Erbil or Sulaymaniyah investment environment.

The Iraq Market — A Realistic Assessment

The instinct to lead with superlatives about Iraq — fifth-largest proven oil reserves, immense reconstruction opportunity, 42 million consumers — is understandable but not always useful for a foreign investor trying to make a decision. What matters more is an accurate picture of what operating in Iraq actually involves.

Iraq’s energy sector is deeply international. The upstream is dominated by production sharing agreements and technical service contracts with IOCs — BP, Shell, TotalEnergies, ExxonMobil, CNOOC, and others have operated there for years. The downstream and midstream are developing. Around this core, an entire ecosystem of contractors, subcontractors, equipment suppliers, logistics providers, and professional services firms has established itself in Iraq — mostly through locally registered entities. Our oil and gas practice advises on the full range of upstream, midstream, and downstream legal requirements for international companies operating in this sector.

Outside energy, the reconstruction of Iraq’s infrastructure, housing, agriculture, and public services has generated substantial procurement activity — much of it channelled through government ministries and state-owned enterprises. International companies that can compete for this work need a registered Iraqi presence to do so effectively.

The honest assessment: Iraq is not an easy operating environment. Bureaucratic processes are slower than in comparable markets. Relationship capital matters. Documentation requirements are strict. But the companies that have invested in understanding the market — and in building credible local legal and commercial infrastructure — have found it commercially viable and, in many cases, highly profitable.

Legal Structures Available to Foreign Investors

Foreign investors have three principal options for establishing a legal presence in Iraq. The right choice depends on the nature of the commercial activity, the duration of the engagement, the intended ownership structure, and the regulatory environment of the relevant sector.

Iraqi Limited Liability Company (LLC)

The Iraqi LLC — governed by Companies Law No. 21 of 1997 (as amended) — is the most common structure for foreign investors seeking a permanent or long-term commercial presence in Iraq. It confers full legal personality, the ability to enter contracts in its own name, open bank accounts, employ staff directly, and hold assets. Our corporate and contract law practice handles the full formation process, from constitutional documents through to post-registration compliance.

Under Investment Law No. 13 of 2006, foreign investors may hold up to 100% of an Iraqi LLC in most sectors. In practice, many foreign investors opt for a structure with an Iraqi partner holding a minority stake — for commercial and relationship reasons rather than strict legal necessity. The choice of Iraqi partner, and the terms on which that partnership is structured, is one of the most consequential decisions a foreign investor will make in Iraq.

Branch Office of a Foreign Company

A branch office is not a separate legal entity — it is an extension of the foreign parent company, which bears full liability for all branch obligations. Branch registration is typically used by companies that have secured a specific Iraqi contract and need a registered local presence to perform it. It is less suitable for companies intending to operate across multiple clients or contracts over the long term.

One important practical point: branch registrations in Iraq are typically tied to a specific purpose or contract. Expanding the scope of a branch’s activities requires separate regulatory approval, which can be a friction point for companies whose Iraq footprint evolves over time.

Representative Office

A representative office permits market assessment, liaison, and marketing activities but cannot generate revenue or enter commercial contracts. It is appropriate for companies in the early stages of market evaluation — but it should not be treated as a substitute for a fully registered commercial presence once a company has decided to do business in Iraq.

A note on the 51/49 structure: You will frequently encounter references to a requirement for Iraqi entities to be majority-owned by Iraqi nationals. While this is a legal requirement in certain sectors and licensing contexts, it is not a universal requirement under Iraqi law for commercial LLCs in most industries. The prevalence of 51/49 structures reflects a combination of legal requirements in specific sectors, regulatory preferences, practical commercial considerations, and the genuine value of having a well-connected Iraqi partner. The right ownership structure depends on your sector and commercial objectives — it is not a one-size-fits-all answer.
StructureLegal PersonalityForeign OwnershipBest For
Iraqi LLC✔ FullUp to 49% (sector dependent)Long-term commercial presence
Branch OfficeExtension of parent100% (parent company)Specific contract execution
Representative OfficeLimited100% (parent company)Market assessment only

The Company Registration Process

Iraqi company registration is administered by the Companies Registration Directorate (CRD) under the Ministry of Trade. The process is sequential — each stage must be completed before the next can begin — and requires careful preparation of documentation at every step.

01

Name Reservation

Proposed company names are submitted to the CRD for availability check and reservation. Names must be in Arabic (an English transliteration may be added), must not conflict with existing registered companies, and must comply with Iraqi naming conventions. The reservation is time-limited.

02

Preparation of Constitutional Documents

The Memorandum and Articles of Association must be drafted in Arabic in compliance with the Companies Law — setting out the company’s name, registered address, share capital, shareholders, directors, scope of activities, and governance arrangements. These documents must be notarised before a licensed Iraqi notary.

03

Capital Deposit

A temporary bank account is opened at an Iraqi bank and the required minimum capital is deposited. The bank issues a capital deposit certificate, which is a mandatory document in the CRD submission. Note that the capital is locked until registration is complete.

04

CRD Filing and Review

The complete registration file — notarised constitutional documents, capital certificate, shareholder identification, and applicable fees — is submitted to the CRD. The Directorate reviews the file and may request additional documentation or clarification. Any deficiency in the file restarts the review clock.

05

Issuance of Registration Certificate

Upon approval, the CRD issues the company’s registration certificate — the document that constitutes the company’s legal existence in Iraq. The certificate includes the company number, registered name, and date of incorporation.

06

Post-Registration Steps

Depending on the sector and the nature of the company’s activities, post-registration steps include: tax registration and regulatory compliance with the General Commission of Taxes, social security registration and employment law compliance, sector-specific operating licences, and — for foreign-invested companies — potential registration with the National Investment Commission.

Realistic timeline: A straightforward Iraqi LLC registration typically takes between 4 and 10 weeks from the point all documentation is complete and in order. The most common source of delay is incomplete or incorrectly apostilled foreign documentation — see below. Companies that have gone through the process once understand why front-loading the document preparation phase is so important.
Company registration Iraq legal process
A process that rewards preparation — and punishes improvisation.

Foreign Shareholder Documentation — The Detail That Trips People Up

This is the section that most generic guides on doing business in Iraq gloss over — and it is where most delays originate. Iraqi law requires that all documents from foreign shareholders (whether corporate or individual) be properly authenticated before they can be submitted as part of a registration file.

The authentication chain for foreign corporate documents typically runs as follows: the document is officially issued in the country of origin → notarised by a local notary → apostilled (for Hague Convention countries) or legalised through the Iraqi embassy in the country of origin → translated into Arabic by a certified legal translator → notarised before an Iraqi notary.

Documents typically required from foreign corporate shareholders include:

  • Certificate of incorporation
  • Memorandum and Articles of Association
  • Board resolution authorising the Iraqi investment and appointing the company’s representative
  • Power of attorney in favour of the Iraqi representative or counsel
  • Good standing certificate (where applicable)

For foreign individual shareholders, the standard requirements are a certified copy of the passport and a criminal record certificate from the country of nationality or residence.

Horizon Law Firm — Practical Note

The apostille and embassy legalisation process can take anywhere from a few days to several weeks, depending on the country of origin and the document type. We consistently advise clients to begin preparing their foreign documentation in parallel with other preparatory steps — not after local registration has started. The cost of a two-week delay at this stage, in terms of commercial opportunity cost, is almost always greater than the cost of the legal advice that would have prevented it.

The National Investment Commission — When It Is Worth It

Foreign investors in Iraq have the option — but not in most cases the obligation — of registering their investment with the National Investment Commission (NIC) under Investment Law No. 13 of 2006. NIC registration is a separate process from company registration and carries a different set of benefits and requirements. Our foreign investment and market entry practice advises on NIC applications and the full range of investment structuring questions for foreign companies entering Iraq.

The principal benefits of NIC registration are:

  • Tax and customs duty exemptions for up to 10 years (extendable) on profits and imported capital equipment
  • A guarantee against nationalisation or expropriation without just compensation
  • The right to repatriate capital and profits freely
  • Facilitated work permit and residency procedures for foreign employees
  • Access to land allocation for investment projects

NIC registration is most valuable for capital-intensive projects in sectors such as infrastructure, manufacturing, hospitality, and healthcare — where the tax and customs exemptions represent a material financial benefit over the life of the project. For trading companies, professional services firms, or companies whose primary Iraq relationship is as a subcontractor to an IOC, the NIC registration process may add procedural overhead without proportionate benefit. The calculus depends on the investment profile.

Provincial Investment Commissions (PICs) in each governorate handle investments in their respective regions. For investments in Basra Governorate — the commercial and logistical heart of Iraq’s oil sector — the Basra Investment Commission is the relevant authority.

Iraq oil and gas investment legal counsel
“Counsel forged in the field, not just the courtroom.”

Tax and Regulatory Obligations — The Numbers You Need to Know

Once registered, foreign-invested companies in Iraq are subject to the following principal obligations. These figures should be treated as a starting point for financial modelling, not as a substitute for specific tax advice. Our regulatory compliance practice advises on the full spectrum of Iraqi tax, licensing, and reporting requirements for foreign-invested entities.

  • Corporate income tax: 15% on net taxable profits for most commercial entities. Oil and gas companies are subject to a higher rate of 35%.
  • Withholding tax: 7% on payments made to non-resident entities for services performed in Iraq. This is a significant consideration for international companies that invoice Iraq-registered entities from offshore.
  • Social security contributions: Employers must register with the Social Security Authority and contribute to the pension fund for Iraqi employees. For detail on employer obligations and workforce structuring, see our employment and labour law practice.
  • Annual filing obligations: Annual financial statements with the CRD and annual tax returns to the General Commission of Taxes. Deadlines are fixed and late filing attracts penalties.
  • Customs duties: Import of goods and equipment into Iraq is subject to customs duties that vary by product category. NIC-registered investors may be exempt from duties on capital equipment imports.
A note on withholding tax and IOC contracts: The 7% withholding tax on service payments to non-resident entities is one of the most frequently overlooked tax obligations for international companies that provide services into Iraq from outside the country. If your company provides engineering, consulting, or management services to an Iraq-registered entity and invoices from outside Iraq, this obligation applies to the Iraqi payer. It is not a trivial number on large contracts. Factor it into your commercial arrangements from the outset.

Why Local Legal Counsel Is Not Optional

There is a version of this guide that could be written as a DIY checklist. We have not written that guide — because the companies that approach Iraqi company formation as a checklist exercise are consistently the ones that experience the most delays, the most rework, and the most avoidable commercial exposure.

The Iraqi legal system, court structure, and regulatory framework are distinctive. They do not map neatly onto English law, civil law, or Gulf law frameworks. The Companies Law, the Investment Law, the Labour Law, the Tax Code, and the sector-specific regulatory regimes each have their own internal logic — and their own gap between the text of the law and how that text is applied in practice by the relevant authorities.

What experienced local counsel brings to a company formation engagement is not just knowledge of the law on paper — it is knowledge of how the process works at the CRD on a Tuesday morning, which documentation the tax authority is currently scrutinising, and how to structure a shareholders’ agreement in a way that will hold up if the relationship between foreign and Iraqi partners becomes strained. If a dispute does arise, our litigation and dispute resolution practice provides experienced advocacy in Iraqi courts and before arbitral tribunals.

Horizon Law Firm provides end-to-end company formation support for foreign investors entering Iraq, including:

Our background includes extensive in-house experience working alongside leading international oil companies in Iraq. We understand how international companies are structured, how they think about risk, and what they need from local counsel — clear advice, responsive communication, and commercial awareness.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a foreign company own 100% of an Iraqi LLC? +
Under Investment Law No. 13 of 2006, foreign investors may hold up to 100% of an Iraqi LLC in most commercial sectors. However, certain regulated sectors — including oil and gas upstream activities, defence, and some areas of media — impose Iraqi ownership requirements or require specific ministerial approvals. In practice, many foreign investors opt for a structure with an Iraqi partner for commercial and relationship reasons rather than strict legal necessity. The right structure for your company depends on the sector, the nature of the activity, and your commercial objectives. Our foreign investment practice advises on ownership structuring across all sectors.
How long does company registration in Iraq take? +
A straightforward Iraqi LLC registration typically takes between 4 and 10 weeks from the point all documentation is complete and in order. The most common source of delay is incomplete or incorrectly apostilled foreign shareholder documentation. The timeline can extend significantly if documents need to be re-apostilled or re-translated, or if the CRD raises queries requiring additional materials. Front-loading document preparation — particularly the authentication of foreign corporate documents — is the single most effective way to manage the overall timeline.
What is the minimum share capital required to register an Iraqi LLC? +
The minimum share capital requirements for Iraqi LLCs are set by the Companies Law and vary depending on the company’s scope of activities and sector. Capital must be deposited in a temporary account at an Iraqi bank prior to filing with the Companies Registration Directorate, and a bank certificate evidencing the deposit is a mandatory part of the registration file. The deposited capital remains locked until registration is complete. We advise on the appropriate capital structure for your specific company type and activities as part of our company formation service.
Is NIC registration mandatory for foreign investors in Iraq? +
Registration with the National Investment Commission (NIC) under Investment Law No. 13 of 2006 is optional for most foreign investors — it is a separate process from company registration at the CRD and is not a prerequisite for operating in Iraq. The principal benefits of NIC registration are tax and customs exemptions, repatriation guarantees, and facilitated residency procedures for foreign staff. It is most valuable for capital-intensive projects in infrastructure, manufacturing, hospitality, and healthcare. For subcontractors to IOCs, trading companies, or professional services firms, the procedural overhead of NIC registration may not be justified. Our foreign investment team advises on whether NIC registration is appropriate for your investment profile.
What taxes does a foreign-owned Iraqi company pay? +
Foreign-invested Iraqi companies are subject to corporate income tax at 15% on net taxable profits (35% for oil and gas companies), annual filing obligations with the General Commission of Taxes, employer social security contributions for Iraqi employees, and customs duties on imported goods and equipment. A 7% withholding tax applies to payments made to non-resident entities for services performed in Iraq — a frequently overlooked obligation that applies to the Iraqi payer, not the offshore recipient. NIC-registered companies may benefit from tax and customs exemptions for up to 10 years. Our regulatory compliance practice advises on the full range of Iraqi tax obligations.
Do foreign employees need a special visa or work permit to work in Iraq? +
Yes. Foreign nationals employed by or seconded to an Iraqi-registered company require work authorisation and the appropriate residency documentation to work legally in Iraq. The process involves the Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs as well as immigration authorities. Companies registered with the NIC benefit from a facilitated process for their foreign staff. For those not on the NIC track, the standard work permit and residency process applies. Our residency and immigration practice handles work permit and residency applications for foreign employees across Iraq, including Basra.
Can a foreign company operate in Iraq without registering locally? +
Technically, a foreign company can provide certain cross-border services to Iraqi entities without a local registration — but doing so carries meaningful legal and commercial risks, including exposure to Iraqi withholding tax, inability to compete for government procurement, inability to hold assets or employ staff directly in Iraq, and vulnerability to disputes without standing in Iraqi courts. For any company with a sustained commercial relationship with Iraqi entities, establishing a proper local presence — whether as an LLC or branch office — is strongly advisable. If a dispute does arise in a cross-border context, our litigation and dispute resolution team can advise on enforcement options in Iraq.

Conclusion — Getting the Foundation Right

Iraq is a serious market for serious investors. The commercial opportunity — in energy, infrastructure, trade, and services — is real. The legal and regulatory environment is navigable. But it rewards those who approach it with the right preparation and the right local support.

The investment in proper legal structuring at the outset — choosing the right entity type, getting the documentation right the first time, understanding the tax and regulatory landscape before operations begin — is consistently one of the highest-return investments a foreign company can make in its Iraq strategy.

If you are in the process of evaluating or executing an Iraq market entry, we would welcome an initial conversation. Contact Horizon Law Firm for a free consultation — we respond to all international enquiries within 24 hours.

H
Horizon Law Firm Iraqi Legal Counsel · Baghdad

Specialist Iraqi legal counsel for international companies, IOCs, and foreign investors. Extensive in-house experience working alongside leading international oil companies in Iraq’s energy sector.

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