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company domiciliation morocco

Company Domiciliation in Morocco (2026): Formation, Governance & Restructurings

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

Company domiciliation in Morocco is now a front-line compliance concern for every business forming, restructuring or relocating within the Kingdom. Since Law No. 89‑17 overhauled the domiciliation framework in 2019, a series of tightening enforcement measures, culminating in the 2026 wave of stricter documentation checks, heavier penalties and expanded reporting obligations for domiciliation agents, has turned what was once a routine administrative step into a genuine legal risk point. This guide sets out the statutory rules, the documentary evidence now expected, the step-by-step procedures for formation and seat changes, and the due-diligence protocols that in-house counsel and investors must follow during corporate restructurings.

It is intended for founders, company secretaries, corporate service providers and international investors who need a single, practitioner-grade reference for Moroccan domiciliation law as it stands today.

Executive Summary, Key Compliance Decisions You Must Make Now

Before reading the detailed analysis below, identify which of the following situations applies to your business and take the corresponding action immediately:

  • New company formation. Appoint a registered domiciliation agent or secure a qualifying lease before filing statutes with the Central Trade Register (Registre Central du Commerce, RCC). Missing or defective domiciliation evidence is now a common cause of registration rejection.
  • Change of legal seat. Obtain board or shareholder approval, amend the statutes, publish the required legal notice, and file the updated domiciliation certificate with the RCC and the Directorate General of Taxes (DGI) within the statutory window. Failure to do so can trigger fines and joint tax liability.
  • Corporate restructuring or M&A. Include domiciliation verification in your due-diligence checklist. Confirm the domiciliation agent’s registration, review the domiciliation contract for indemnities and records-access rights, and check for pending tax exposures linked to the existing business address in Morocco.
  • Existing domiciliation agents. Verify that annual lists of domiciled companies have been filed and that all record-keeping obligations under Law 89‑17 are current. Non-compliant agents face administrative sanctions and potential joint liability.

Penalties for non-compliance range from statutory fines under the amended Commercial Code to joint liability for unpaid taxes, and in cases of fraud, criminal prosecution. The sections below explain every requirement in detail.

What Is Company Domiciliation in Morocco? Definition and Legal Basis

Domiciliation of companies in Morocco is the formal legal act of designating a specific address as a company’s registered office (siège social). This address determines the company’s legal seat, its tax jurisdiction, the court with jurisdiction over its disputes, and the register at which it must file. Under Moroccan law, every commercial company must have a single, identifiable registered office.

The domiciliation law in Morocco is principally governed by Law No. 89‑17, which amended and supplemented the Commercial Code (Code de Commerce) with a dedicated chapter on domiciliation. Law 89‑17 was promulgated by Dahir No. 1‑18‑110 and published in the Bulletin Officiel No. 6788 on 20 June 2019. It introduced, for the first time, a structured regulatory regime for both domiciled companies and domiciliation agents, covering eligibility, contractual requirements, record-keeping, reporting and penalties.

Before Law 89‑17, domiciliation was largely unregulated, leading to widespread use of fictitious addresses, shell arrangements and tax-avoidance structures. The 2019 statute, and the enforcement intensification that followed, sought to close those gaps by requiring formal domiciliation contracts, agent registration and ongoing compliance obligations.

2026 Regulatory and Enforcement Updates, What Changed and Why It Matters

While the statutory text of Law 89‑17 has not been replaced, the practical compliance landscape has shifted significantly since the law’s enactment. Industry observers expect that the 2026 enforcement stance will continue to tighten as Moroccan authorities pursue transparency objectives linked to international tax-information-exchange commitments and anti-money-laundering standards.

The key developments that companies and their advisers must understand are as follows:

  • Stricter documentary scrutiny at registration. OMPIC and the commercial courts now routinely reject company registration Morocco filings where the domiciliation certificate is incomplete, the underlying lease is missing or the domiciliation contract does not meet the content requirements of Law 89‑17.
  • Expanded annual reporting for domiciliation agents. Agents are required to maintain and file annual lists of all companies domiciled at their premises, including identification of beneficial owners and legal representatives. Failure to file triggers administrative sanctions.
  • Cross-referencing with DGI tax records. Tax authorities have increased cross-checks between declared domiciliation addresses and actual business activity, particularly targeting companies that use virtual offices without genuine commercial presence.
  • Higher penalty enforcement. Fines under the amended Commercial Code are now being actively enforced rather than treated as theoretical provisions.

Key Timeline

Date Event
20 June 2019 Law No. 89‑17 published in Bulletin Officiel No. 6788; Dahir No. 1‑18‑110 promulgated.
2019–2023 Implementing regulations and administrative circulars issued; domiciliation agents begin registration.
2024–2025 Enforcement ramp-up: increased rejection of non-compliant filings; DGI cross-checks intensified.
2026 Full enforcement posture: agent annual filings actively monitored; penalties enforced; tighter documentary evidence required for formation and seat changes.

Who Can Be Domiciled and What Addresses Are Acceptable?

Law 89‑17 distinguishes between companies that are domiciled at their own premises and those that use a third-party domiciliation agent. Every commercial entity registered in Morocco, including SARLs, SAs, branches of foreign companies and representative offices, must designate a qualifying business address in Morocco at formation.

Permitted Address Types

Address type Permissibility Notes
Commercial premises (owned or leased) Fully permitted Most common; lease must cover the company’s activity.
Registered domiciliation centre (agent) Fully permitted Agent must itself be registered under Law 89‑17; formal domiciliation contract required.
Residential address Permitted with restrictions Law 89‑17 allows use for a limited period or under specific conditions; municipal zoning rules may apply. Not suitable for all activity types.
Virtual office (mail-handling only) Restricted Must meet minimum requirements; DGI may challenge if no genuine presence exists.

Can a Residential Address Be Used for Company Domiciliation in Morocco?

In limited circumstances, yes. Law 89‑17 permits the use of a founder’s personal residence as the company’s registered office, but this is generally intended as a transitional arrangement. The company should plan to migrate to a commercial address or a registered domiciliation agent, and municipal zoning restrictions must be checked before relying on this option.

Company Domiciliation Requirements, Documents and Evidence (Detailed Checklist)

The company domiciliation requirements under the 2026 enforcement framework are significantly more demanding than the minimal standards that prevailed before Law 89‑17. Whether you are incorporating a new entity or regularising an existing domiciliation, the following documents and evidence are typically required:

  • Domiciliation certificate (attestation de domiciliation). Issued by the domiciliation agent or property owner, confirming the company’s right to use the address as its registered office.
  • Signed domiciliation contract. Must comply with the content requirements of Law 89‑17, including identification of the parties, duration, services provided and termination conditions.
  • Proof of property rights or lease. The domiciliation agent (or the company itself, if self-domiciled) must produce evidence of its right to occupy the premises, a title deed, lease agreement or authorisation from the property owner.
  • Identification of property owner. Copy of the owner’s national identity card or, for legal entities, the registration extract.
  • Company resolution on registered office. Minutes of the constitutive general assembly (for new companies) or an extraordinary general meeting resolution (for seat changes) approving the domiciliation address.
  • Notarised signatures. Where required by the nature of the entity (e.g., SA statutes), notarisation of signatures on the statutes and domiciliation-related documents.
  • Tax registration (identifiant fiscal and patente). Application to the DGI for a tax identification number referencing the domiciliation address.
  • Social security registration (CNSS). Where employees are involved, the CNSS declaration must match the domiciliation address.
  • Attestation of domiciliation agent registration. Evidence that the domiciliation agent is itself validly registered under Law 89‑17, an unregistered agent cannot issue a valid domiciliation certificate.
  • Identification of beneficial owners (UBOs) and legal representatives. Copies of identity documents for all UBOs, managers and authorised signatories, as required for both RCC filing and agent record-keeping.

Template Checklist, Quick-Reference Summary

Use this condensed checklist when assembling a domiciliation dossier:

  1. Domiciliation certificate (signed, dated)
  2. Domiciliation contract (Law 89‑17 compliant)
  3. Proof of property right or lease
  4. Owner identification
  5. Company resolution (constitutive or EGM)
  6. Notarised signatures (where applicable)
  7. DGI tax registration application
  8. CNSS registration (if employees)
  9. Agent registration attestation
  10. UBO and representative identification

Practical Steps for Company Formation When Using a Domiciliation Agent

For international investors and first-time founders, the interplay between company formation Morocco procedures and domiciliation requirements can be confusing. The following step-by-step sequence reflects current market practice and the 2026 documentary standards:

  1. Select and appoint a registered domiciliation agent. Verify the agent’s registration under Law 89‑17 before signing any engagement letter. An unregistered agent cannot produce valid evidence for company registration in Morocco.
  2. Negotiate and sign the domiciliation contract. Ensure the contract includes all mandatory clauses: parties’ identification, address, duration (minimum one year is standard practice), services, obligations of each party and termination provisions.
  3. Obtain the domiciliation certificate. The agent issues the certificate confirming the company’s right to use the address. This document will be filed with the RCC.
  4. Draft the articles of association (statutes). Include the registered office clause. A standard formulation reads: “Le siège social de la société est fixé à [full address], dans les locaux de [agent name], en vertu d’un contrat de domiciliation conforme à la loi n° 89‑17.”
  5. Register at the Central Trade Register (RCC) via OMPIC. File the statutes, domiciliation certificate, domiciliation contract, identification documents and all other required evidence. OMPIC now cross-checks domiciliation documents against agent registration records.
  6. Open a bank account. Most Moroccan banks require the RCC registration extract and domiciliation certificate before opening the company’s account and accepting the share capital deposit.
  7. File with the DGI and obtain the tax identification number. The declared address must match the domiciliation certificate filed at the RCC.
  8. Register with the CNSS (if the company will have employees), again using the domiciliation address.

Common errors to avoid: filing statutes that reference a lease rather than a domiciliation certificate when using an agent; failing to verify the agent’s own registration; and omitting the UBO identification documents that are now routinely requested at the RCC.

Changing a Company’s Legal Seat (Change of Domicile), Procedure and Corporate Approvals

A decision to change the legal seat in Morocco involves corporate governance, notarial and administrative steps that must be completed in sequence. The procedure applies whether the company is moving to a new city, switching from its own premises to a domiciliation agent, or changing agents.

  • Corporate approval. Depending on the entity type, a change of registered office typically requires either a board decision (if the move is within the same jurisdiction) or a shareholder resolution at an extraordinary general meeting (if the move crosses jurisdictions). Check the statutes for any specific quorum or majority requirements.
  • Amendment of statutes. The registered office clause must be updated. For SARLs, the manager may be authorised by statute to effect the change, subject to ratification by the partners at the next general meeting.
  • New domiciliation certificate. Obtain the certificate from the new domiciliation agent or property owner.
  • Legal notice publication. Publish the seat-change notice in a journal of legal announcements (journal d’annonces légales) and in the Bulletin Officiel.
  • RCC filing. Deposit the amended statutes, new domiciliation certificate, corporate resolution and publication receipts at the RCC. The registrar will update the trade register.
  • Tax authority notification. Inform the DGI of the new address to ensure tax filings, assessments and correspondence are directed correctly. Failure to update the tax file can result in missed notices and default assessments.

The typical timeline for a straightforward seat change, from corporate resolution to updated RCC extract, is two to six weeks, depending on publication lead times and the responsiveness of the commercial court.

Domiciliation Due Diligence and Risk Mitigation During Restructurings

Corporate restructuring in Morocco, whether through M&A, mergers, demergers, or group reorganisations, demands specific domiciliation due diligence. The likely practical effect of the 2026 enforcement environment is that acquirers and investors will face increased scrutiny if the target company’s domiciliation history contains gaps or irregularities.

The following due-diligence checklist should be integrated into any restructuring workstream:

  • Verify the domiciliation contract. Confirm it exists, is signed by both parties, complies with Law 89‑17 and has not expired.
  • Confirm agent registration. Obtain evidence that the domiciliation agent is validly registered. An unregistered agent creates a latent compliance defect.
  • Check for pending tax liabilities. Request a tax clearance certificate (quitus fiscal) and verify that the DGI address on file matches the domiciliation certificate.
  • Review UBO and AML records. Confirm that the domiciliation agent holds current UBO identification and that the records are consistent with the company’s own beneficial-ownership declarations.
  • Examine the domiciliation contract’s indemnity and records-access clauses. During a restructuring, the buyer may need access to correspondence, official notices and tax documents received at the domiciliation address. Ensure the contract grants this right.
  • Identify red flags. Multiple companies domiciled at the same address without clear business rationale; expired or month-to-month domiciliation contracts; agents that cannot produce annual filings, all warrant deeper investigation.

Where deficiencies are identified, the acquiring party should negotiate contractual protections (indemnities, escrow holdbacks) and, where possible, insist on regularisation as a condition precedent to completion.

Enforcement, Penalties and Administrative Risks

The penalty regime under the amended Commercial Code, as introduced by Law 89‑17, covers both domiciled companies and domiciliation agents. Enforcement has historically been uneven, but early indications suggest that 2026 marks a turning point in active prosecution of violations.

  • Fines for non-compliant domiciliation. The Commercial Code imposes statutory fines on companies that operate without a valid domiciliation certificate or that provide false information regarding their registered office. Fine ranges are set out in the penalty articles inserted by Law 89‑17.
  • Sanctions against domiciliation agents. Agents that fail to register, that do not maintain the required records, or that fail to file the annual list of domiciled companies face administrative penalties and potential prohibition from operating.
  • Joint tax liability. In certain circumstances, the domiciliation agent may be held jointly liable for taxes owed by the domiciled company, a provision designed to deter complicit arrangements.
  • Criminal exposure. Where domiciliation is used to facilitate fraud, money laundering or tax evasion, the individuals involved may face criminal prosecution under the general provisions of the Criminal Code.

Mitigation steps: If you discover a domiciliation deficiency, act immediately. File for regularisation at the RCC, update the DGI records, obtain a compliant domiciliation certificate and, where necessary, change to a registered agent. Voluntary regularisation before enforcement action will generally reduce exposure.

Comparison Table, Obligations and Timeline by Entity Type

Entity type Core domiciliation obligation Typical timeline to register / regularise
SARL / LLC (Moroccan registered company) Domiciliation certificate or valid lease; update statutes; register at RCC and OMPIC where required. 2–6 weeks (agent appointment → certificate → RCC updates)
Branch of foreign company Evidence of parent company authority plus Moroccan domiciliation; register branch at RCC; file translated and legalised parent documents. 3–8 weeks (translation and legalisation add time)
Representative office Domiciliation plus administrative filings; limited commercial activity restrictions apply. 2–6 weeks
Domiciliation agent (service provider) Register under Law 89‑17; file annual list of domiciled companies; maintain records; comply with tax reporting obligations. Ongoing; annual filings typically by 31 January

Practical Appendix: Sample Clauses and Templates

The following model wording and clause checklists are provided as starting points. They must be adapted to the specific facts of each transaction and reviewed by Moroccan counsel before use.

Sample Domiciliation Certificate Wording

“[Agent name], société [form], au capital de [amount] MAD, immatriculée au Registre du Commerce de [city] sous le numéro [RC number], représentée par [representative name], atteste par la présente que la société [company name], en cours de constitution / immatriculée sous le numéro [RC number], est domiciliée dans ses locaux sis à [full address], en vertu d’un contrat de domiciliation conclu conformément aux dispositions de la loi n° 89‑17.”

Key Clauses to Include in a Domiciliation Contract

  • Full identification of both parties (agent and domiciled company), including RC numbers.
  • Precise description of the domiciliation address.
  • Duration of the contract (minimum one year is standard; renewal terms).
  • Services included (mail handling, meeting room access, signage, telephone).
  • Obligations of the domiciled company (notification of changes, UBO updates, payment terms).
  • Obligations of the agent (record-keeping, annual filings, cooperation with authorities).
  • Indemnity and liability clauses (tax liability allocation, records-access rights on termination).
  • Termination provisions (notice period, consequences for the domiciled company’s registration).
  • Governing law and dispute resolution clause.

Shareholder Resolution Template (Seat Change)

“L’assemblée générale extraordinaire, statuant aux conditions de quorum et de majorité requises, décide de transférer le siège social de la société de [old address] à [new address], et de modifier en conséquence l’article [X] des statuts. Tous pouvoirs sont conférés au gérant pour accomplir les formalités de publicité et de dépôt au Registre du Commerce.”

Next Steps

Company domiciliation in Morocco is no longer a formality, it is a compliance milestone that directly affects company formation, governance, tax exposure and restructuring outcomes. Whether you are establishing a new entity, relocating a registered office, or conducting due diligence on a Moroccan target, the 2026 enforcement environment demands careful preparation and proper documentation.

For jurisdiction-specific guidance, consult the international business practice area or search the Global Law Experts lawyer directory to connect with a qualified Moroccan corporate lawyer.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Meriem Zamrane at Maddah Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. WIPO Lex, Law No. 89‑17 (text and Bulletin Officiel reference)
  2. Bulletin Officiel No. 6788, 20 June 2019 (official publication of Dahir / Law 89‑17)
  3. OMPIC, Central Trade Register (RCC) services and guidance
  4. AMDE, Explainer on Law 89‑17 (domiciliation obligations)
  5. CasaInvest, Domiciliation guide for businesses in Morocco (PDF)
  6. Baker Tilly Maroc, Professional commentary on domiciliation
  7. AuditIA, Morocco business domiciliation guide
  8. Fiscal & Legal Team, Law 89‑17 commentary

FAQs

What is company domiciliation in Morocco and why does it matter?
Domiciliation is the legal appointment of an address as a company’s registered office. It determines the legal seat, tax jurisdiction and regulatory filings. Since Law No. 89‑17 (promulgated by Dahir No. 1‑18‑110 and published in Bulletin Officiel No. 6788 on 20 June 2019), domiciliation is regulated and non-compliance carries administrative fines and tax risks.
The standard dossier includes a domiciliation certificate, signed domiciliation contract complying with Law 89‑17, proof of the agent’s property rights or lease, a company resolution designating the registered office, identification of beneficial owners and legal representatives, and the agent’s own registration attestation. The full checklist is set out above.
In limited circumstances, yes. Law 89‑17 permits use of a residential address, but this is generally intended as a transitional arrangement. Municipal zoning rules may restrict certain commercial activities, and the company should plan to migrate to commercial premises or a registered domiciliation agent.
Penalties include statutory fines under the Commercial Code as amended by Law 89‑17, administrative sanctions against unregistered or non-compliant domiciliation agents, joint tax liability in certain cases, and criminal prosecution where fraud or money laundering is involved. Immediate regularisation reduces exposure.
Domiciliation is a core procedural step: the statutes must be amended, notices published, and filings made with both the RCC and the DGI. In a restructuring context, buyers must verify the target’s domiciliation history, the agent’s registration, pending tax liabilities and the contractual terms of the existing domiciliation arrangement.
Costs vary depending on the service level and location. Basic virtual domiciliation in Casablanca typically ranges from MAD 3,000 to MAD 12,000 per year for a standard package. Full-service packages, including meeting rooms, telephone answering and mail management, can exceed MAD 20,000 annually. The agent’s registration status and the quality of the premises influence pricing.
Yes. Under Law 89‑17, domiciliation agents must register with the authorities, maintain a register of all domiciled companies, file an annual list of domiciled entities (including UBO information) and cooperate with tax and regulatory authorities. Failure to meet these obligations carries administrative sanctions.
A straightforward seat change, from corporate resolution through publication to updated RCC extract, typically takes two to six weeks. Delays can arise if legal-notice publication slots are limited or if the commercial court requests additional documentation.

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Company Domiciliation in Morocco (2026): Formation, Governance & Restructurings

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