Understanding how to transfer shares in an Oman LLC online is now essential for every corporate secretary, in-house counsel and M&A advisor operating in the Sultanate. Oman’s Ministry of Commerce, Industry and Investment Promotion (MOCIIP) has consolidated the share-transfer workflow within its InvestEasy platform, enabling sellers and buyers to complete ownership changes digitally, from application through e-signature to updated commercial registration (CR). This guide walks through each InvestEasy step, maps the pre-emption rules under the Commercial Companies Law (CCL), details fees and approval timelines, and covers the post-transfer Ultimate Beneficial Owner (UBO) disclosure obligations that took on renewed enforcement significance in 2026.
Whether you are restructuring a joint venture or onboarding a new foreign investor, the process outlined below will help you avoid common compliance pitfalls and complete your LLC share transfer efficiently.
Yes. Share transfers in an Oman LLC are processed entirely online through the InvestEasy portal at business.gov.om. The seller initiates a transfer-of-ownership request, the buyer approves it and provides an e-signature, the applicable MOCIIP fees are paid electronically, and the commercial register is updated, all without a physical visit to a government office.
Before you log in, confirm three things:
A successful share transfer in Oman requires coordination between the seller, the buyer, the company itself and, in many cases, a legal adviser who can confirm that the CCL pre-emption mechanics have been satisfied. The checklist below covers the documents both parties should prepare before touching the InvestEasy portal.
| Phase | Typical Duration |
|---|---|
| Offline preparation (SPA, board resolutions, pre-emption waivers) | 1–3 weeks |
| InvestEasy submission and buyer e-signature | 1–3 business days |
| MOCIIP review and fee payment | 1–5 business days |
| Updated CR issuance | Same day after fee payment (typically) |
| UBO register update | Within the statutory deadline after CR amendment |
Industry observers note that straightforward transfers between Omani nationals are often processed in under a week once all documents are in order, while cross-border transactions involving POAs and foreign-investor KYC may take longer.
The InvestEasy share transfer steps below follow the workflow that Oman Business, the government’s digital services arm, launched for commercial registry ownership transfers. The request is initiated by the seller, passed to the buyer for approval and e-signature, returned to the seller for fee payment, and concluded when an updated CR is issued in the buyer’s name.
Before logging in, ensure every offline prerequisite is complete:
Navigate to the Oman Business Platform at business.gov.om/ieasy. The authorised signatory logs in using the company’s CR number and their registered credentials. Access is tied to the signatory recorded on the company’s commercial registration, so verify that the current signatory details are up to date before initiating the transfer.
Within the InvestEasy dashboard, select the ownership-transfer e-service. Complete the required fields:
Review every field carefully. Errors at this stage cause MOCIIP to return the application, resetting the processing clock.
Once the seller submits the request, InvestEasy routes it to the buyer (or the buyer’s authorised representative) for review. The buyer logs into their own InvestEasy account, reviews the transfer details, and provides an electronic signature to confirm acceptance. This dual-signature mechanism, seller initiates, buyer confirms, mirrors the workflow described in the official Oman Government announcement of the commercial-registry transfer service.
After both parties have e-signed, the system generates a fee invoice. The seller (or whichever party the SPA designates) pays the MOCIIP registry fee electronically through InvestEasy’s integrated payment gateway. Payment triggers MOCIIP’s final review. In a routine case, confirmation follows promptly once the fee is received and all documents are verified.
Upon MOCIIP approval, the commercial register is amended to reflect the new shareholding structure. An updated commercial registration certificate is issued in the buyer’s name, or, more precisely, the company’s CR is re-issued showing the revised shareholder list. A transfer of shares in an LLC is complete once this recording takes place in the commercial register maintained by MOCIIP.
At this point the company should also update its internal shareholder register, re-issue share certificates (if applicable) and proceed immediately to the UBO disclosure update described below.
The Oman Commercial Companies Law imposes pre-emption mechanics that can delay or block a share transfer if not handled correctly. Any practitioner advising on an LLC share transfer in Oman must map these rules before touching the InvestEasy portal.
For most LLCs, existing shareholders hold a right of first refusal over shares proposed for transfer to a third party. The company’s MOA may modify, expand or (in limited circumstances) waive these rights, but the CCL default applies where the MOA is silent. The practical effect is that the selling shareholder must formally offer the shares to existing members, typically in writing, specifying price and terms, and allow a response period before proceeding with an outside buyer.
Article 256 of the CCL confirms that transfers of shares to legal heirs are not subject to these pre-emptive rights of other shareholders, providing an important exception for succession planning and estate transfers.
Best practice is to send a written offer notice to each existing shareholder (or to the company for circulation), setting out the number of shares, the proposed price and the identity of the intended buyer. Shareholders who wish to exercise their pre-emption right must respond within the period stipulated in the MOA or, if the MOA is silent, the period prescribed by the CCL. Those who choose not to exercise the right should provide a signed waiver letter, which the seller then uploads to InvestEasy as a supporting document.
As noted above, the CCL exempts transfers to legal heirs from the pre-emption framework. This means that upon the death of a shareholder, the shares pass to the heirs without triggering the other members’ right of first refusal. Some MOAs also carve out intra-group transfers (e.g., between affiliates within the same corporate group), but these carve-outs are contractual rather than statutory and must be verified on a case-by-case basis.
| Entity Type | Pre-Emption Rights (CCL) | Practical Implication for Share Transfer |
|---|---|---|
| LLC (Closed LLC) | Default pre-emption under the CCL; may be modified by the MOA | Must offer shares to existing members or obtain written waivers before filing on InvestEasy |
| SPC (Single Person Company) | No co-shareholders to hold pre-emption; transfer may effectively convert entity type | Transferring part of the sole shareholder’s interest may require conversion to LLC; verify MOA and CCL provisions |
| SAOG / SAOC (Public companies) | Market-based rules; transfers governed by securities regulations and MCD procedures | Cannot use InvestEasy for listed-share transfers; process flows through the Muscat Stock Exchange and MCD |
Understanding the distinction between LLC and SPC structures is critical: a single-person company that admits a second shareholder through a share transfer may need to re-register as an LLC, triggering additional filings and amendments to the MOA.
The table below consolidates the typical approval chain, responsible parties and estimated costs for a standard LLC share transfer processed through InvestEasy. Fee amounts should be confirmed directly on the InvestEasy platform or with MOCIIP, as they are subject to periodic revision.
| Step | Responsible Party | Typical Timeline | Estimated Fee |
|---|---|---|---|
| SPA execution and pre-emption clearance | Seller, buyer, existing shareholders | 1–3 weeks | Legal costs (variable) |
| InvestEasy submission | Authorised signatory (seller side) | 1 business day | Nil (submission is free) |
| Buyer e-signature | Buyer or authorised representative | 1–2 business days | Nil |
| MOCIIP registry fee payment | Designated paying party (per SPA) | Same day | MOCIIP schedule (confirm on InvestEasy) |
| CR amendment and issuance | MOCIIP | 1–3 business days post-payment | Included in registry fee |
| UBO register update | Company / compliance officer | Within statutory deadline | Nil (administrative filing) |
The InvestEasy process described above applies to private LLC shares, those that are not listed or traded on the Muscat Stock Exchange. Where shares are tied to investor accounts at the Muscat Clearing and Depository (MCD), different rules apply. The MCD FAQ confirms that transfers between different investor accounts are generally not permitted unless there is immediate kinship between the transferor and the transferee. Practitioners should verify early in the transaction whether any MCD registration exists for the company’s shares before relying exclusively on the InvestEasy pathway.
Oman’s UBO requirements demand that companies update their beneficial-ownership records whenever there is a change in the persons who ultimately own or control the entity. A share transfer that alters the UBO structure triggers mandatory disclosure obligations, and the 2026 enforcement environment means non-compliance carries real risk.
Where the incoming shareholder is a foreign individual or entity, additional KYC requirements may apply. These can include enhanced due-diligence documentation, legalised corporate documents from the investor’s home jurisdiction, and confirmation that the investment complies with Oman’s Foreign Capital Investment Law. Early engagement with MOCIIP or a qualified corporate lawyer in Oman is strongly recommended for cross-border transactions to avoid delays at the UBO filing stage.
The CCL provides that transfers of LLC shares to legal heirs are allowed and are not subject to the pre-emptive rights of other shareholders. The heirs must still register the transfer through InvestEasy and obtain an updated CR, but they do not need to offer the shares to existing members or obtain pre-emption waivers. A probate order, inheritance certificate or Sharia court ruling will typically be required as a supporting document for the InvestEasy submission.
For shares that are registered in the MCD system, transfers between different investor accounts are restricted. The MCD FAQ states that such transfers are not permitted unless there is immediate kinship between the carrier and the transferee. This limitation is important for investors who hold both a personal account and a company account, transferring shares between these two accounts may not be possible absent the kinship exception.
Share gifts follow the same InvestEasy process, but the SPA is replaced by a deed of gift, and the consideration field on the transfer form may show a nominal or zero value. Share pledges do not transfer ownership and are not processed through the ownership-transfer e-service; instead, they are typically registered as security interests. Nominee arrangements, where a registered shareholder holds shares on behalf of a beneficial owner, must be carefully documented and disclosed through the UBO framework to avoid regulatory exposure.
Not every LLC share transfer in Oman requires legal counsel, but several scenarios carry enough complexity or risk that professional guidance becomes essential:
For complex transactions, engaging a qualified corporate lawyer early in the process can prevent costly delays and compliance failures.
Knowing how to transfer shares in an Oman LLC online is no longer optional, it is a core compliance skill for anyone involved in corporate transactions in the Sultanate. The InvestEasy platform has streamlined the mechanics, but the legal framework around pre-emption rights, UBO disclosures and entity-type distinctions still demands careful navigation. Start by confirming your shareholders’ pre-emption positions, prepare the full document pack before logging into InvestEasy, and schedule the UBO update immediately after the CR is amended. For transactions involving foreign investors, pledged shares or disputed pre-emption rights, early legal counsel is the most cost-effective safeguard against delays, rejected filings and post-completion disputes. To connect with a qualified corporate practitioner, visit the Global Law Experts Oman directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ahmed Al Barwani at Al Tamimi, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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