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Foreign investment Algeria is undergoing its most significant regulatory overhaul in over a decade. The Finance Law 2026, signed on 14 December 2025, together with the Revised Investment Law first enacted in 2022 and progressively implemented through subsequent executive decrees, have fundamentally redrawn the rules on foreign ownership ceilings, corporate taxation, company registration procedures and the repatriation of profits. For international investors, in-house legal teams and cross-border counsel, the combined effect of these reforms is a markedly more open Algerian market, but one that still demands careful structuring, rigorous compliance and awareness of sector-specific restrictions. This guide, current as of 18 May 2026, consolidates every material change into a single practical playbook and flags the implementing decrees that remain pending.
Two parallel legislative streams have converged to reshape the foreign investment Algeria landscape. The first is the Revised Investment Law (Law No. 22-18 of 24 July 2022), which replaced the prior 2016 investment promotion framework and has been progressively activated through executive and regulatory decrees issued between 2023 and 2025. The second is the Finance Law 2026 (Loi de finances pour 2026), signed into law on 14 December 2025 and effective from 1 January 2026, which introduces targeted tax and regulatory measures directly affecting both foreign and domestic companies operating in Algeria.
The investment law Algeria reforms removed the blanket 51/49 ownership requirement that had constrained foreign participation since 2009, established the Agence Algérienne de Promotion de l’Investissement (AAPI) as the single window for investment registration, and codified the principle of free transfer of invested capital and proceeds. The Finance Law 2026, as analysed by EY, layered additional fiscal incentives and compliance obligations on top of this structural liberalisation, adjusting withholding tax rates, clarifying permanent establishment rules and introducing new reporting requirements for certain cross-border transactions.
| Date | Law / Decree | Effect |
|---|---|---|
| June 2020 | Complementary Finance Law 2020 | Abolished the blanket 51/49 rule for non-strategic sectors; first opening to majority foreign ownership |
| 24 July 2022 | Law No. 22-18, Revised Investment Law | Created AAPI; codified free-transfer guarantees; established new incentive regimes (exploitation, zones, strategic) |
| 2023–2025 | Executive Decrees implementing Law 22-18 | Operationalised AAPI single-window registration; defined privileged-sector incentive lists; set application procedures |
| 14 December 2025 | Finance Law 2026 (Loi de finances pour 2026) | Adjusted withholding tax rates, PE rules, VAT provisions and reporting requirements effective 1 January 2026 |
| Q1 2026 (pending) | Draft Commercial Activities Law / Commercial Register reform decrees | Expected to modernise trader registration, digital filing and beneficial-ownership disclosure; not yet enacted |
Industry observers expect the draft Commercial Activities Law, currently under interministerial review, to further streamline company registration algeria procedures by introducing electronic filing through a modernised commercial register algeria platform. Until those decrees are published in the Journal Officiel, investors should continue to follow the existing paper-based registration process described later in this guide.
The question most frequently asked by prospective investors is straightforward: does Algeria now permit 100% foreign ownership? The answer, supported by AAPI guidance and confirmed in the KPMG Guide to Investing in Algeria (2026 edition), is a qualified yes, foreign investors may hold up to 100% of the equity in an Algerian company across the majority of economic sectors, but material exceptions remain for activities classified as strategic or involving national sovereignty.
Between 2009 and 2020, the so-called 51/49 rule required that Algerian nationals or entities retain at least 51% of the share capital in any company with foreign participation. This blanket restriction applied regardless of sector or investment size and was widely cited in U. S. Department of State investment climate reports as a primary deterrent to foreign direct investment. The Complementary Finance Law of June 2020 took the first step toward liberalisation by limiting the 51/49 requirement to a narrower list of “strategic” activities.
The Revised Investment Law of July 2022 then consolidated this opening and established a comprehensive new framework for foreign investment algeria, replacing the mandatory local-majority rule with a principle of freedom of investment subject only to specified exclusions.
The sectors that remain subject to ownership restrictions or prior ministerial authorisation are defined by executive decree and include activities linked to national defence, upstream hydrocarbon exploration and production (governed separately by the Hydrocarbon Law), certain mining titles, pharmaceutical distribution, and activities involving the management of public-service concessions. For these sectors, foreign participation may still be capped or require case-by-case approval from the relevant line ministry. The UNCTAD Investment Policy Hub summary of Algeria’s investment code notes that the government retains the right to define additional strategic activities by decree, meaning the restricted-sector list can be expanded without legislative amendment.
Before committing capital, investors should confirm sector classification directly with AAPI and, where the activity falls near a boundary between strategic and non-strategic, obtain written confirmation of the applicable ownership ceiling. Early indications suggest that AAPI has been responsive to pre-registration enquiries, but formal written clearances can take several weeks.
The Finance Law 2026 Algeria introduced a series of targeted fiscal adjustments that directly affect the after-tax returns available to foreign investors. According to the EY TaxNews analysis of the law, the changes touch withholding taxes on cross-border payments, corporate income tax rules for permanent establishments, and VAT treatment of certain imported services. Understanding these tax changes algeria 2026 measures is essential for accurate financial modelling and for ensuring that repatriation structures remain tax-efficient.
Algeria applies withholding tax at source on dividends, interest and royalties paid to non-resident entities. The Finance Law 2026 maintained the standard withholding tax rate on dividends paid to non-resident shareholders at 15%, while adjusting the rate applicable to certain categories of technical-service fees and management charges. Where a bilateral tax treaty is in force between Algeria and the investor’s home jurisdiction, the treaty rate, often 5% to 15% depending on the type of payment and shareholding threshold, may reduce the domestic withholding obligation, provided the non-resident supplies a valid certificate of tax residence.
Consider a practical illustration: a French parent company receiving a DZD 100 million dividend from its wholly owned Algerian subsidiary in 2026 would face a 15% domestic withholding (DZD 15 million) absent treaty relief. Under the Algeria–France tax treaty, the rate may be reduced to 5% where the parent holds at least 10% of the subsidiary’s capital, yielding a withholding of DZD 5 million, a DZD 10 million saving that underscores the importance of treaty-planning from the outset.
The standard corporate income tax (IBS) rate in Algeria remains at 26% for production activities and 19% for certain qualifying activities, with higher rates applying to trading, importation and service activities. The Finance Law 2026 clarified that foreign entities maintaining a fixed place of business, a dependent agent or a construction site exceeding a defined duration in Algeria will be treated as having a permanent establishment and taxed on profits attributable to that presence. Foreign investors establishing branches rather than subsidiaries should model their PE exposure carefully, as branch profits remitted abroad may attract an additional branch-remittance tax.
Algeria’s standard VAT rate is 19%, with a reduced rate of 9% applicable to specified goods and services. The Finance Law 2026 reinforced the obligation for non-resident service providers supplying digital or technical services consumed in Algeria to register for VAT or for the Algerian recipient to account for VAT under a reverse-charge mechanism. This provision is particularly relevant for technology-licensing arrangements, cloud-services agreements and management-fee structures commonly used by multinational groups.
| Tax Item | Pre-2026 Rule | 2026 Rule / Practical Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Withholding on dividends (non-resident) | 15% | 15% maintained; treaty relief at 5–15% where applicable |
| Withholding on technical-service fees | 24% (general rate on certain services) | Rates adjusted by service category; verify specific classification under Finance Law 2026 |
| Corporate income tax (production activities) | 19% | 19% maintained for qualifying production; 26% for other activities |
| VAT on imported digital/technical services | Obligation existed but enforcement inconsistent | Strengthened reverse-charge and registration requirements for non-resident suppliers |
| Investment-incentive tax holidays | Available under Investment Law regimes | Continued under AAPI-administered exploitation, zone and strategic regimes; durations of 3–10 years depending on category |
Foreign investors should also note that the Revised Investment Law established three tiers of tax-incentive regime, the exploitation phase, zone-based incentives for underdeveloped regions, and strategic-project incentives, each offering varying durations of corporate tax exemption, VAT relief on imported capital goods, and customs-duty reductions. These incentives are administered through AAPI and require a formal investment-registration decision before the incentive period begins.
Whether an investor is setting up a company algeria for the first time or restructuring an existing entity to increase the foreign shareholding above the former 51% ceiling, the process runs through Algeria’s commercial register algeria system. The two most common corporate vehicles for foreign investment algeria are the SARL (Société à Responsabilité Limitée, limited liability company) and the SPA (Société Par Actions, joint-stock company).
The following documents are typically required for the incorporation of a new SARL or SPA:
For existing companies increasing the foreign shareholding, for example, buying out a former mandatory local partner, the process requires a notarised amendment to the articles of association, an updated shareholder register, a filing with the commercial register to reflect the new ownership structure, and notification to the tax authorities of any change in the controlling interest. The commercial register typically processes amendment filings within two to four weeks, though delays can occur where supporting documents require apostille or consular legalisation from the foreign shareholder’s home jurisdiction.
All company documents submitted to Algerian authorities must be in Arabic. French-language documents are widely used in practice and accepted by notaries, but the official filing with the commercial register requires Arabic-language originals or sworn translations. Foreign shareholders who are not resident in Algeria are advised to appoint a local legal representative with a power of attorney authorising them to sign documents and appear before the notary and the commercial register on the shareholder’s behalf.
| Entity Type | Key Registration and Reporting Steps | Primary Compliance / Tax Obligations |
|---|---|---|
| SARL (Ltd) | Draft notarised statutes; deposit minimum capital (DZD 100,000); register with commercial register; obtain NIF; register with CNAS | Annual corporate tax return (IBS); VAT filings (monthly or quarterly); payroll tax and social-security contributions |
| SPA (Joint Stock) | Notarised statutes; appoint board of directors or management board; deposit minimum capital (DZD 1,000,000); register; publish statutory notices | Stricter disclosure and corporate-governance requirements; mandatory statutory audit; annual audited financial statements filed with commercial register |
| Branch / Representative Office | Register as foreign-company branch; appoint Algerian-resident representative; file parent-company incorporation documents (legalised and translated) | Permanent-establishment tax exposure on Algerian-source income; limited commercial capacity for representative offices; branch-remittance tax on repatriated profits |
For many foreign investors, the ability to freely repatriate profits, dividends and capital proceeds is the decisive factor in committing to a market. The Revised Investment Law codified the principle that foreign investors are entitled to the free transfer of invested capital and the proceeds generated by their investment, including dividends, capital gains on disposal, and liquidation proceeds. This right, confirmed in AAPI investor guidance and analysed in detail by Norton Rose Fulbright, represents a significant legislative improvement over the prior regime, which left repatriation subject to opaque administrative approvals.
The practical process for repatriation of profits algeria involves the following steps:
Where an investor elects to reinvest profits rather than repatriate them, no transfer formalities are required, but the reinvestment should be documented and reported in the entity’s financial statements to preserve the right to repatriate the accumulated amount in the future. Intra-group loan repayments (principal and interest) may be transferred abroad provided the loan was properly registered with the Bank of Algeria at inception and interest payments comply with transfer-pricing rules. Liquidation proceeds are transferable upon completion of all tax and creditor-settlement obligations, with the liquidator’s final report serving as the primary supporting document for the bank’s compliance review.
Industry observers expect that a routine dividend repatriation, where all documents are in order and the entity’s tax record is clean, takes approximately four to eight weeks from board resolution to receipt of funds abroad. Delays most commonly arise from incomplete tax-clearance documentation, discrepancies between the audited accounts and the declared distribution, or lapsed AAPI registration certificates. Maintaining a permanent, up-to-date compliance file with the domiciliary bank significantly reduces processing times for repeat transfers.
Selecting the right corporate structure and embedding protective contractual provisions at the outset can materially reduce operational friction and dispute exposure over the life of an Algerian investment.
Joint-venture and shareholder agreements governing Algerian entities should address the following areas to mitigate the risks most commonly encountered by foreign investors:
The U.S. Department of State’s 2025 Investment Climate Statement for Algeria identifies several recurring risk areas for foreign investors, including bureaucratic delays in administrative approvals, inconsistent enforcement of tax rules across regional tax offices, and historical instances of foreign-exchange restrictions during periods of low hydrocarbon revenue. Mitigation strategies include structuring the investment through a BIT-covered jurisdiction to access international arbitration (Algeria is party to over 40 bilateral investment treaties), selecting ICC or ICSID arbitration as the contractual dispute-resolution venue rather than relying solely on Algerian courts, and maintaining meticulous documentary records of every regulatory interaction to support potential treaty claims.
The combined effect of the Revised Investment Law and the Finance Law 2026 is that Algeria is materially more accessible to foreign capital than at any point in the past fifteen years. Investors evaluating entry or restructuring should confirm three things before committing: that their target sector permits 100% foreign ownership Algeria without ministerial pre-approval; that their financial model accounts for the applicable withholding-tax rates, treaty-relief opportunities and available incentive regimes; and that they have appointed qualified Algerian counsel to manage commercial register filings, tax compliance and repatriation documentation from day one. For those who plan carefully, the 2026 reforms represent a genuine inflection point in the Algerian investment landscape.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Rabah Macha at Droit penal, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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