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foreign ownership rules in Iraq 2026

Foreign Ownership Rules and Company Formation in Iraq, What Investors Need to Know in 2026

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Understanding the foreign ownership rules in Iraq 2026 is the single most important step any international investor must take before committing capital to the country. Iraq’s legislative landscape has shifted markedly in recent years: the Companies Law has been amended to tighten Iraqi-shareholding requirements for certain entity types, the National Investment Commission (NIC) has reported a surge in new investment-licence applications, and the Kurdistan Region continues to operate under a separate, more permissive ownership regime. This guide cuts through the complexity, providing a practical, compliance-focused roadmap that covers federal and Kurdistan Region rules, step-by-step company formation procedures, post-incorporation obligations, and protective shareholder-agreement clauses, everything an in-house counsel or corporate development executive needs to make an informed market-entry decision.

Quick Decision Checklist for Foreign Investors

Before reading the detailed analysis below, use this five-point checklist to orient your initial planning:

  • Ownership ceiling. Under federal Iraqi law, limited liability companies (LLCs) and joint-stock companies (JSCs) generally require at least 51 % Iraqi shareholding following the Companies Law amendments. Exceptions exist for NIC-licensed investment projects and branches.
  • Kurdistan exception. The Kurdistan Region Investment Law generally permits 100 % foreign ownership for licensed projects, a critical structuring option for investors who can locate operations within the KRI.
  • NIC investment licence. If your project qualifies under Investment Law No. 13 of 2006, an NIC licence can unlock broader ownership rights, land-lease allocations, and profit-repatriation protections at the federal level.
  • Entity type matters. Branches and representative offices of foreign companies are not subject to the same local-shareholding rules as Iraqi-incorporated LLCs and JSCs, but they carry different operational and tax implications.
  • Act now. Gather notarised corporate documents, appoint local counsel, and confirm whether your sector triggers additional licensing requirements (oil and gas, banking, security) before filing any applications.

Quick Legal Framework: Investment Law and Companies Law, What Changed

Iraq’s framework for foreign investment sits on two pillars: Investment Law No. 13 of 2006 and the Companies Law No. 21 of 1997, as amended. Together, they define who may invest, in what form, and subject to which ownership ceilings. Grasping how these statutes interact, and how recent amendments have altered daily practice, is essential for every foreign investor in Iraq.

Primary Federal Statutes

Investment Law No. 13 of 2006 was enacted to attract foreign capital into Iraq’s reconstruction economy. It grants qualifying foreign investors the right to undertake investment projects in most sectors, provides guarantees against expropriation, allows profit and capital repatriation, and authorises the NIC to allocate land on long-term leases of up to 50 years. The law explicitly covers projects in industry, agriculture, tourism, health, education, housing and services, while excluding the extractive industries (oil and gas exploration and production) and certain security-sensitive sectors.

The Companies Law No. 21 of 1997 governs the incorporation, governance, and dissolution of commercial entities in Iraq, including LLCs, JSCs, sole proprietorships, and partnerships. It sets out minimum-capital requirements, board-composition rules, and the mechanics of share transfers and capital increases.

Iraq Companies Law Amendment, Recent Changes and Enforcement Trends

Amendment No. 17 of 2019 to the Companies Law introduced stricter foreign shareholding restrictions for Iraqi-incorporated entities. In practice, the amendment has been interpreted by the Company Registrar and the Ministry of Commerce as requiring that at least 51 % of shares in an LLC or JSC be held by Iraqi nationals or Iraqi-owned entities. This marked a significant shift from the pre-amendment environment, where foreign investors could, in certain circumstances, hold higher percentages. Industry observers expect enforcement of this threshold to remain rigorous through 2026, with the Ministry of Commerce actively scrutinising share-transfer applications.

The NIC’s Expanding Role

The National Investment Commission sits at the intersection of the two statutes. For projects that qualify under Investment Law No. 13, the NIC issues an investment licence that carries its own set of privileges, including potentially broader ownership rights than those available under the Companies Law alone. The NIC has reported a notable uptick in licence applications through 2025 and into 2026, reflecting renewed international interest in Iraqi infrastructure, housing, and industrial projects.

Year / Event Legislative Change Practical Effect for Foreign Investors
2006 Investment Law No. 13 enacted Created NIC licensing framework; guarantees on repatriation, land leases up to 50 years, and project-level ownership rights.
1997 (base law) Companies Law No. 21 Established LLC, JSC, and branch structures; set out baseline incorporation and governance rules.
2019 Companies Law Amendment No. 17 Introduced requirement for at least 51 % Iraqi shareholding in LLCs/JSCs; tightened Registrar enforcement on share transfers.
2025–2026 Enforcement and NIC practice updates Continued strict application of 51 % rule; surge in NIC licence applications; growing use of branch and NIC-licence structures by foreign investors.

Can Foreigners Hold Majority Ownership?, Federal Rules and Foreign Ownership Rules in Iraq 2026

The short answer is nuanced: under the standard Companies Law route, a foreign investor in Iraq generally cannot hold more than 49 % of an LLC or JSC. However, several legally recognised structures allow broader, and in some cases full, foreign ownership. The right structure depends on the investor’s sector, project scope, and appetite for regulatory engagement.

Branches and Representative Offices vs Local Companies

A branch office of a foreign company registered with the Iraqi Company Registrar is not a separate Iraqi legal entity. Because it remains part of the parent company, the 51 % Iraqi-shareholding requirement does not apply. Branches can conduct commercial activities, enter contracts, and employ local staff. However, they are taxed on Iraqi-source income and face additional reporting obligations. A representative office, by contrast, is limited to liaison, market research, and promotional activities, it cannot engage in revenue-generating commercial transactions.

Investment Project Licences and Transferability

Where a foreign investor’s project qualifies under Investment Law No. 13 of 2006, the NIC licence framework provides an alternative ownership pathway. Licensed investment projects benefit from guarantees that are intended to protect the investor’s ownership interest and allow the transfer of project ownership to another investor (subject to NIC approval). The practical effect is that an NIC-licensed entity can operate with foreign ownership arrangements that exceed the 49 % cap that would otherwise apply under the Companies Law, a critical distinction that many investors overlook.

Sectors with Special Rules

Certain sectors are carved out of the general Investment Law framework entirely. Oil and gas exploration and production are excluded from Investment Law No. 13 and are instead governed by service contracts, technical service contracts, or production-sharing arrangements negotiated directly with the Ministry of Oil. Banking and insurance are regulated by the Central Bank of Iraq and the relevant sectoral authorities. Private security companies face additional ownership and licensing requirements. Investors in these sectors must conduct sector-specific due diligence before assuming that general foreign shareholding restrictions Iraq applies uniformly.

Practical Structuring Options: Voting vs Economic Rights

Even within the 51/49 split, experienced practitioners structure shareholder agreements to give the foreign investor meaningful economic and governance protections. Techniques include weighted dividend distributions, veto rights over material decisions, management-committee appointments, and contractual pre-emptive rights on share transfers. These arrangements must be carefully drafted to comply with Iraqi law, a poorly structured side agreement risks being unenforceable before Iraqi courts. The likely practical effect of these structuring techniques, when properly implemented, is that the foreign investor retains effective economic control while the Iraqi partner holds the requisite legal shareholding percentage.

Kurdistan Region (KRI), Different Rules, Safe Harbour and Process

The Kurdistan Region of Iraq operates under its own investment legislation, administered by the Kurdistan Region Board of Investment (KRG BOI). For many foreign investors, the KRI represents a more straightforward ownership environment, and a strategic alternative to federal Iraqi structures.

How KRI Procedures Differ

The Kurdistan Region Investment Law generally permits 100 % foreign ownership for projects licensed by the KRG BOI. This applies across a wide range of sectors, including industry, agriculture, tourism, health, education, and housing. The KRG BOI operates its own application and licensing process, separate from the federal NIC. Projects licensed in the Kurdistan Region benefit from tax holidays, customs exemptions, and streamlined land-allocation procedures. The KRG BOI publishes its licensing requirements and general provisions through the official Kurdistan Regional Government portal.

Land Ownership and Leases in the KRI

While foreign investors in federal Iraq generally cannot own land outright and must rely on lease arrangements (typically up to 50 years under Investment Law No. 13), the KRI allows land allocation to licensed projects on favourable terms. Renewable long-term leases are common, and the KRG BOI actively promotes the availability of developed industrial zones and allocated plots. Investors should note that land allocation in the KRI is tied to the investment licence, if the licence lapses or the project fails to meet milestones, the land allocation may be revoked.

NIC vs KRG BOI: Interplay and Jurisdictional Boundaries

The federal NIC and the KRG BOI operate as parallel authorities. An investment licence issued by the KRG BOI is valid within the Kurdistan Region’s three governorates (Erbil, Sulaymaniyah, and Duhok) but does not automatically extend to federal Iraqi territory. Conversely, a federal NIC licence does not confer KRI-specific benefits. Investors with operations spanning both jurisdictions may need to secure separate licences and comply with two distinct regulatory regimes.

Practical Comparison: When to Use a KRI Vehicle vs Federal

The decision to incorporate in the Kurdistan Region versus federal Iraq depends on the project’s geographic scope, target market, sector, and the investor’s tolerance for regulatory complexity. The comparison table below summarises the key differences.

Rule / Topic Federal Iraq Kurdistan Region (KRI)
Maximum foreign ownership (standard LLC / JSC) Generally requires at least 51 % Iraqi shareholding following Companies Law amendments; exceptions via NIC-licensed investment projects and branches. KRI Investment Law generally allows 100 % foreign ownership for KRG BOI-licensed projects.
Licensing authority Ministry of Commerce (Company Registrar) / NIC for investment projects. KRG Bureau of Investment, separate licensing, land allocation, and incentive framework.
Land ownership / lease Foreigners generally cannot own land outright; long leases up to 50 years available under Investment Law No. 13 of 2006. KRI allows land allocation to licensed projects; longer renewable leases; policy actively promotes foreign project ownership.
Tax incentives Investment Law No. 13 provides tax holidays for qualifying projects (typically up to 10 years, with possible extensions). KRI Investment Law offers its own tax holidays and customs exemptions, often on terms perceived as more investor-friendly.
Profit repatriation Permitted under Investment Law No. 13; practical banking steps required. Permitted under KRI Investment Law; banking infrastructure in Erbil increasingly accommodates international transfers.
Best suited for Projects with nationwide scope; sectors excluded from KRI jurisdiction; investors with existing Baghdad relationships. Projects located within KRI; investors seeking full ownership without Iraqi-partner requirements; manufacturing and services.

Step-by-Step Company Formation in Iraq 2026, Registration Checklist

Registering a company in Iraq involves sequential filings with several government authorities. The precise steps vary depending on the entity type, LLC, JSC, branch, or NIC-licensed investment project, but the general workflow follows a consistent pattern. Below is a practical checklist for company formation Iraq 2026, focused on the most common structure: an LLC with foreign participation.

Pre-Filing Decisions

Before any documents are drafted, the investor must resolve several threshold questions:

  • Entity type. LLC (most common for SMEs and joint ventures), JSC (required for certain capital-intensive sectors), branch (no local-partner requirement, but limited structuring flexibility), or NIC-licensed investment project (broader ownership rights, sector-specific).
  • Capital structure. Minimum capital requirements apply. The investor must decide on the total authorised capital, the split between Iraqi and foreign shareholders, and any premium or shareholder-loan arrangements.
  • Shareholder composition. Identify the Iraqi partner (if required) early. Conduct due diligence on the proposed partner’s commercial track record, litigation history, and political-exposure profile.
  • Registered office. A physical address in Iraq is required. For company registration Baghdad, the address must be within a commercial zone acceptable to the Municipality.

Required Documents

The following documents are typically required for an LLC formation with foreign participation:

  • Notarised and apostilled copies of the foreign shareholder’s certificate of incorporation, articles of association, and board resolution authorising the Iraqi investment.
  • Notarised power of attorney (POA) in favour of a local agent or lawyer authorised to act before Iraqi authorities.
  • Passport copies of all shareholders and proposed directors (translated into Arabic and notarised).
  • Draft articles of association (memorandum of association) for the Iraqi entity, prepared in Arabic.
  • Proof of registered office (lease agreement or title).
  • Bank reference letter or evidence of available capital (for capital-deposit requirements).
  • NIC application package (if applying for an investment licence concurrently).

Filing Steps: Ministry of Commerce, Tax, and Municipality

  1. Name reservation. Submit a proposed company name to the Company Registrar at the Ministry of Commerce (MOCI) for approval. The name must be unique and comply with naming conventions.
  2. Draft and notarise articles of association. The articles must be executed before a public notary in Iraq. All shareholders (or their authorised attorneys) must appear.
  3. Capital deposit. Deposit the required minimum capital into a local bank account opened in the name of the company under formation.
  4. File with the Company Registrar. Submit the full application package, notarised articles, capital confirmation, POAs, passport copies, and registered-office proof, to the MOCI Company Registrar.
  5. Tax registration. Once the company is registered, apply for a tax identification number with the General Commission for Taxes.
  6. Municipal licence. Obtain a municipal operating licence from the relevant local government authority (Baghdad Municipality or equivalent).
  7. Chamber of Commerce registration. Register with the relevant Iraqi Chamber of Commerce.
  8. NIC filing (if applicable). If the project qualifies for an investment licence, submit the NIC application concurrently or immediately after incorporation.

Timeline and Typical Costs

Step Authority Typical Timeframe
Name reservation MOCI Company Registrar 3–7 business days
Notarisation of articles Public Notary 1–3 business days
Capital deposit Local bank 1–5 business days
Company registration MOCI Company Registrar 2–4 weeks (varies by caseload and completeness of documents)
Tax registration General Commission for Taxes 1–2 weeks
Municipal licence Baghdad Municipality / local authority 1–3 weeks
Chamber of Commerce registration Iraqi Chamber of Commerce 1–2 weeks
NIC investment licence (if applicable) National Investment Commission 4–12 weeks (project-dependent)

Industry observers expect the total end-to-end incorporation timeline for a straightforward LLC in Baghdad to range from six to twelve weeks, assuming all documents are properly prepared and no regulatory objections arise. Delays are most commonly caused by incomplete or improperly notarised documents, name-reservation conflicts, or the need for supplementary approvals in regulated sectors.

Post-Incorporation: Capital Increases, Shareholder Transfers and Reporting

Formation is only the first milestone. Foreign investors must navigate ongoing compliance requirements, particularly around capital increases in Iraq, share transfers, and regulatory notifications, to maintain their Iraqi entities in good standing.

Capital Increase Approvals and Notary Procedures

A capital increase in an Iraqi LLC requires a shareholders’ resolution (passed by the requisite majority under the articles of association and the Companies Law), notarisation of the amended articles, filing of the amendment with the Company Registrar, and deposit of the additional capital into the company’s bank account. Where the company holds an NIC investment licence, the NIC should be notified of any material change in capital structure. Failure to follow the correct sequence, particularly the notarisation step, can result in the Registrar rejecting the filing.

Transfer of Shares, Documentation and NIC Notifications

Share transfers in an Iraqi LLC must comply with both the articles of association (which typically include pre-emptive rights for existing shareholders) and the Companies Law. The transfer must be executed before a public notary, filed with the Company Registrar, and, if the company is NIC-licensed, notified to the NIC. The Iraq Companies Law amendment introduced by Amendment No. 17 of 2019 means that any transfer resulting in foreign shareholding exceeding 49 % in an LLC or JSC will be refused by the Registrar unless an applicable exception (NIC licence, branch structure) is in place.

Tax, Currency, and Repatriation Considerations

Investment Law No. 13 of 2006 guarantees the right of foreign investors to repatriate profits and capital from Iraq. In practice, repatriation requires the investor to comply with Central Bank of Iraq currency-transfer procedures, provide supporting documentation (audited financial statements, tax-clearance certificates, board resolutions), and work through an authorised Iraqi bank. Early indications suggest that banking infrastructure in Baghdad and Erbil has improved in recent years, but investors should budget additional time for compliance checks and potential delays in large-value transfers.

Structuring Ownership: Shareholder Agreements and Protective Clauses in Iraq

Because most foreign investors in federal Iraq are limited to a 49 % stake, the shareholder agreement becomes the primary tool for protecting the investor’s economic and governance interests. Well-drafted shareholder agreements Iraq can bridge the gap between legal ownership and practical control, but they must be enforceable under Iraqi law.

Minority Protection Clauses

Key clauses that practitioners routinely recommend for foreign minority shareholders in Iraqi entities include:

  • Veto rights. Reserve specified material decisions (capital changes, asset disposals, new indebtedness, related-party transactions) for unanimous or supermajority approval, effectively giving the 49 % holder a blocking vote.
  • Tag-along and drag-along rights. Ensure the foreign investor can exit alongside the majority holder (tag-along) or compel a joint sale (drag-along) on equivalent terms.
  • Pre-emptive rights. Grant the foreign investor the right of first refusal on any new share issuance or transfer by the Iraqi partner.
  • Deadlock resolution. Include a structured escalation mechanism, mediation, then expert determination, then arbitration, to resolve governance disputes without court proceedings.
  • Board and management composition. Contractually allocate board seats, management-committee appointments, and signatory rights to ensure the foreign investor has day-to-day operational oversight.
  • Dividend distribution. Specify minimum dividend policies and weighted-distribution formulas that allocate a greater share of profits to the foreign investor relative to its legal ownership percentage.

Enforcement Considerations in Iraq

Iraqi courts will generally enforce shareholder agreements that do not conflict with mandatory provisions of the Companies Law. However, enforcement can be slow, and judicial familiarity with sophisticated international-style shareholder protections varies. Many investors therefore include international arbitration clauses (ICC, LCIA, or ICSID for treaty-based claims) and choose a governing law that supplements Iraqi mandatory rules, though any clause conflicting with Iraqi public policy may be set aside. Escrow arrangements, where the Iraqi partner’s shares are held by a neutral escrow agent pending performance milestones, can provide an additional layer of practical security.

Practical Due Diligence Red Flags

Before executing a shareholder agreement, foreign investors should investigate:

  • Whether the proposed Iraqi partner has existing encumbrances, pledges, or court orders against their assets or shares.
  • The partner’s political-exposure profile and any sanctions-screening issues.
  • Whether the partner’s existing businesses create conflicts of interest or non-compete concerns.
  • The adequacy of the partner’s financial resources to meet capital-call obligations.

Approvals, Practical Pitfalls and Enforcement Risks

Compliance failures in Iraq can result in rejected filings, fines, or, in severe cases, forced dissolution of the entity. The most common pitfalls for foreign investors include:

  • Failure to secure the correct licence. Operating a project that qualifies for an NIC investment licence without actually obtaining one forfeits the investor’s access to ownership protections, land-lease rights, and tax incentives.
  • Improper share-transfer filings. Attempting to transfer shares without following the notarisation and Registrar-filing sequence, or without maintaining the 51 % Iraqi-shareholding threshold, will result in rejection and potential penalties.
  • Entity-type mis-classification. Registering a branch when the business model requires a locally incorporated entity (or vice versa) creates tax, liability, and operational complications that are expensive to unwind.
  • Neglecting NIC notification obligations. Changes in capital structure, shareholder composition, or project scope in an NIC-licensed entity must be reported to the NIC. Failure to notify can jeopardise the licence.
  • Currency and repatriation errors. Attempting to repatriate profits without Central Bank of Iraq clearance or adequate supporting documentation can trigger regulatory scrutiny and banking delays.

The most effective mitigation strategy is straightforward: engage experienced local counsel before initiating any filing, maintain a compliance calendar for all notification deadlines, and build a document-management system that tracks notarisations, Registrar filings, and NIC submissions in real time.

Practical Investor Checklist and Immediate Next Steps

The following 90-day action plan provides a structured approach for a foreign investor evaluating market entry into Iraq under the current foreign ownership rules in Iraq 2026:

  1. Week 1–2: Jurisdiction decision. Determine whether the project is better suited to federal Iraq or the Kurdistan Region. Review the comparison table above and assess sector-specific requirements.
  2. Week 2–3: Entity-type selection. Choose between LLC, JSC, branch, or NIC-licensed project based on ownership needs, tax implications, and operational scope.
  3. Week 3–4: Local counsel engagement. Appoint qualified Iraqi corporate counsel. Ensure they have current experience with the Company Registrar and the NIC (or KRG BOI for KRI projects).
  4. Week 4–6: Document preparation. Prepare, notarise, and apostille all corporate documents. Draft the articles of association and shareholder agreement concurrently.
  5. Week 6–8: Filing and registration. Submit the incorporation package. File for tax registration, municipal licence, and Chamber of Commerce registration in parallel where possible.
  6. Week 8–12: NIC licence (if applicable). Submit the NIC investment-licence application and engage with NIC officers on project-specific requirements.
  7. Ongoing: Compliance monitoring. Establish a compliance calendar covering annual filings, tax returns, NIC notifications, and shareholder-register updates.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Furat Kuba at Al-Nesoor Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. National Investment Commission, Republic of Iraq (NIC)
  2. Kurdistan Regional Government, Board of Investment
  3. UNCTAD Investment Policy Hub, Iraq Investment Law
  4. Legal 500, Iraq Corporate Governance (2026)
  5. Chambers Practice Guides, Iraq (2026)
  6. Practical Law (Thomson Reuters), Doing Business in Iraq
  7. Salt & Associates, Doing Business in Iraq: A Legal Guide for Foreign Investors
  8. Iraq Oil Report, Foreign Investors Recoil as Iraq Restricts Company Ownership
  9. Muayad & Associates, Insight into Investment Law in Iraq

FAQs

Can foreign investors own a majority stake in Iraqi companies in 2026?
Under federal law, LLCs and JSCs generally require at least 51 % Iraqi shareholding following Companies Law Amendment No. 17 of 2019. Exceptions include NIC-licensed investment projects, foreign-company branches, and entities in the Kurdistan Region. Investors should obtain legal advice on the specific structure that applies to their sector and project.
The main steps are: reserve a company name with the MOCI Company Registrar, notarise the articles of association, deposit minimum capital, file the registration application, obtain tax registration and a municipal licence, and register with the Chamber of Commerce. An NIC licence application runs concurrently if the project qualifies.
Amendment No. 17 of 2019 tightened the process: capital increases require a shareholders’ resolution, notarisation of amended articles, Registrar filing, and, for NIC-licensed entities, NIC notification. Any increase that would shift the foreign-shareholding ratio above 49 % will be refused absent an applicable exception.
Typical requirements include notarised and apostilled certificates of incorporation, board resolutions authorising the investment, powers of attorney for local agents, passport copies of shareholders and directors (translated and notarised), draft articles of association in Arabic, proof of registered office, and bank reference letters.
The Kurdistan Region Investment Law generally allows 100 % foreign ownership for KRG BOI-licensed projects. The KRI also offers separate tax holidays, customs exemptions, and land-allocation procedures. A KRI licence is valid only within the three Kurdistan governorates and does not extend to federal Iraqi territory.
Yes. Investment Law No. 13 of 2006 guarantees the right to repatriate profits and capital. In practice, investors must comply with Central Bank of Iraq transfer procedures, provide audited financial statements and tax-clearance certificates, and work through authorised Iraqi banks.
The most frequent errors are: failing to secure an NIC licence when one is required, filing share transfers without proper notarisation, mis-classifying entity type, neglecting NIC notification obligations after changes in capital or ownership, and attempting to repatriate funds without Central Bank clearance. Engaging experienced local counsel is the most effective mitigation.

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Foreign Ownership Rules and Company Formation in Iraq, What Investors Need to Know in 2026

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