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how to register a branch in oman for foreigners

How to Register a Branch in Oman for Foreigners (2026)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 days ago

Last updated: June 11, 2026

Understanding how to register a branch in Oman for foreigners is essential for any international company that has won, or is about to win, a contract with an Omani government or quasi-government entity. Unlike a standalone subsidiary, a branch office in Oman operates as a legal extension of the foreign parent, enabling direct contract execution on the ground without the need to incorporate a separate Omani company. The entire registration process now runs through the InvestEasy portal (Business Oman), and 2025–2026 updates have introduced mandatory ultimate beneficial owner (UBO) disclosures and revised authorised-signatory fields that every applicant must navigate.

This guide walks through every stage, eligibility, the InvestEasy steps, required documents, fees, timelines and post-registration compliance, so that foreign investors and in-house counsel can plan with precision.

Quick Summary, Can I Register a Branch in Oman?

Yes, a foreign company can register a branch in Oman, provided it meets the government contract rule. Under Omani commercial law, a foreign company is permitted to open a branch when it has concluded, or is about to conclude, a contract with a government ministry, public-authority body, or quasi-government entity. The application is filed digitally through the InvestEasy portal at business.gov.om, and the parent company remains fully liable for the branch’s obligations.

At a glance:

  • Eligibility. The parent company must hold (or be about to execute) a qualifying government or quasi-government contract. Proof of that contract is a mandatory upload during registration.
  • Key steps. Prepare certified parent-company documents, create an InvestEasy account, submit the electronic application with UBO and signatory data, pay government fees online, and collect the branch commercial registration (CR) certificate.
  • Typical timeline. Straightforward applications in non-regulated sectors are processed within 10–30 business days. Regulated industries (oil and gas, defence, telecommunications) may take 6–12 weeks owing to additional ministry referrals.

Who Can Register a Branch of a Foreign Company, the Government Contract Rule and Eligibility

Government Contract Rule Explained

The cornerstone requirement to register a branch of a foreign company in Oman is the government contract rule. According to official guidance published on gov.om, a foreign entity may register a branch only when it has entered into, or is in the process of entering into, a contract with a government body, a state-owned enterprise, or a quasi-government organisation such as Petroleum Development Oman, Oman Oil Company, or an authority established by Royal Decree.

Typical sectors where branches are common include oil and gas, infrastructure and construction, defence contracting, telecommunications and utilities. The qualifying contract itself must be uploaded during the InvestEasy application, and it must clearly identify the contracting parties, the scope of work and the contract duration. If the contract is still being negotiated, a letter of intent or award letter from the government entity may suffice at the initial stage, but the final executed contract must be provided before the CR is issued.

Other Eligibility Requirements

Beyond the government contract, the foreign parent must satisfy several additional criteria before it can open a branch office in Oman:

  • Valid commercial registration in the home jurisdiction. The parent company’s certificate of incorporation or commercial register extract must be current and certified.
  • UBO disclosure. Every individual who ultimately owns or controls 10 % or more of the parent company must be identified, consistent with Oman’s enhanced beneficial-ownership requirements introduced under recent anti-money-laundering directives.
  • Authorised signatory and branch manager. A nominated branch manager must hold a notarised power of attorney from the parent company’s board, granting authority to act on the parent’s behalf within Oman.
  • Parent liability undertaking. The parent company must furnish a written undertaking accepting full legal and financial responsibility for the branch’s operations and liabilities in Oman.
  • No sector-specific prohibition. Certain activities, including retail trade, personal services and some professional services, are reserved for Omani nationals or Omani-majority-owned companies and cannot be performed by a branch.

How to Register a Branch in Oman Online, InvestEasy Step-by-Step

The InvestEasy portal is the sole digital gateway for branch registration. All applications to register a branch in Oman online must be submitted through the Business Oman / InvestEasy system. The following InvestEasy Oman steps represent the complete workflow from document preparation to CR issuance.

  1. Step 0, Prepare parent-company documents. Before accessing the portal, compile all certified documents: the parent’s commercial register, articles of association (AoA), a board resolution authorising the branch opening, and the signed government contract. Each document requiring certification should be apostilled (for Hague Convention countries) or legalised through the Omani embassy in the parent’s home jurisdiction, then translated into Arabic by a certified translator.
  2. Step 1, Create a Business Oman / InvestEasy account. Navigate to the InvestEasy portal and complete the Business Oman login registration. You will need the branch manager’s passport details, a valid email address and a mobile number for OTP verification. Corporate applicants should register under the “Foreign Branch” entity category, not “Oman LLC.”
  3. Step 2, Initiate the branch registration application. From the dashboard, select “Register Branch of Foreign Company.” The form requires entry of the parent company’s full legal name (matching the CR exactly), country of incorporation, authorised capital and the commercial activities the branch intends to perform in Oman (using the ISIC activity codes).
  4. Step 3, Enter UBO and authorised-signatory data. The 2025–2026 updates to InvestEasy now require mandatory fields for each UBO, full name, nationality, date of birth, passport or national ID number, and percentage of ownership or control. Authorised signatories must also be listed with specimen-signature uploads.
  5. Step 4, Upload certified documents. The portal accepts PDF uploads (maximum 5 MB per file). Upload each required document, the apostilled CR, AoA, board resolution, government contract, POA, UBO declaration and lease agreement. File naming should follow the portal’s conventions (e.g., “CR_ParentCompany_2026.pdf”) to avoid processing delays.
  6. Step 5, Pay government fees. Once the application passes initial validation, InvestEasy generates a payment request. Fees are payable online via credit card, bank transfer or the Oman government e-payment gateway. Payment must be completed before the application advances to the review stage.
  7. Step 6, Government review and agency referrals. The Ministry of Commerce, Industry and Investment Promotion (MoCIIP) reviews the application. If the branch’s activities fall within a regulated sector, oil and gas, telecommunications, financial services, the application is referred to the relevant sector regulator for additional clearance. Applicants receive status updates via the InvestEasy dashboard and registered email.
  8. Step 7, Provisional approval and corrections. If documents are incomplete or require amendment, the portal returns a correction request. Common reasons include mismatched entity names, missing Arabic translations, or UBO data that does not reconcile with uploaded documents. Corrections can be resubmitted digitally.
  9. Step 8, CR issuance and municipal registration. Upon final approval, the branch commercial registration certificate is issued electronically through InvestEasy. The CR number is then used for Oman Chamber of Commerce registration, municipal licensing and bank-account opening.

Navigation Tips and Common UX Pitfalls

The InvestEasy portal is functional but has several interface quirks that can cause delays if not anticipated. Upload files strictly in PDF format, JPEG or Word documents are rejected silently. Activity codes (ISIC) must be selected from the portal’s drop-down list and must match the activities described in the government contract; mismatches trigger manual review. Session timeouts occur after approximately 15 minutes of inactivity, so it is advisable to prepare all data in a separate spreadsheet before beginning data entry. Arabic-language fields must use the correct Unicode character set, copy-pasting from some word processors introduces encoding errors that flag the submission.

When an Offline Application or Authorised Representative Is Needed

While the InvestEasy portal handles most of the process digitally, there are circumstances where offline assistance is necessary. If the parent company’s documents originate from a non-Hague Convention country, embassy-level legalisation (rather than apostille) must be arranged in person. Industry observers expect that many foreign companies still engage a local Omani lawyer or corporate-services agent to act as authorised representative, particularly for managing the power-of-attorney attestation at the Omani Ministry of Foreign Affairs and coordinating with notary publics for Arabic translations.

Required Documents for a Branch Office in Oman, Complete Checklist

The required documents for a branch office in Oman are extensive. Each item must be properly certified, apostilled or legalised, and translated into Arabic. The table below provides the complete checklist.

Document Required Certified Version Notes (Apostille / Notary / Translation)
Parent company’s commercial register (CR) or certificate of incorporation Certified copy, not older than 6 months Apostille (Hague countries) or embassy legalisation; Arabic translation by certified translator
Articles of Association / Memorandum of Association Certified copy Apostille or legalisation; Arabic translation required
Board resolution authorising the branch Original signed copy, notarised Must name the branch manager and specify Oman; English + Arabic
Government / quasi-government contract Executed copy with all schedules Must identify parties, scope, value and duration; Arabic translation if the original is not in Arabic
Power of attorney (POA) for branch manager Notarised original Attestation by Omani Ministry of Foreign Affairs required; Arabic translation
Branch manager’s passport copy Colour copy, notarised Valid for at least 6 months beyond anticipated registration date
Authorised signatories’ identification Passport copies + specimen signatures, notarised Each signatory must be listed in the InvestEasy application
UBO declaration Completed form listing all individuals with ≥ 10 % ownership or control Must include full names, nationalities, passport numbers and ownership percentages; 2025–2026 enhanced requirements apply
Parent company liability undertaking Signed and notarised letter on parent company letterhead Declares the parent accepts full liability for branch operations in Oman
Lease agreement / office address proof Signed lease contract Must be for commercial premises; municipal registration may be required before or after CR issuance
Banking reference letter (if requested) Original from parent’s bank Not always mandatory but frequently requested during review; confirms parent’s financial standing

Important note on UBO requirements: Under Oman’s enhanced beneficial-ownership rules, the UBO declaration must be completed with full accuracy. Any discrepancy between the UBO data entered in InvestEasy and the information in the supporting documents is a common cause of rejection. Practitioners should verify that the ownership chain is fully documented up to the level of natural persons, including through intermediate holding structures.

Fees, Professional Costs and Taxation

Registration costs for a branch office in Oman consist of government fees paid through InvestEasy plus professional and administrative expenses. The tables below outline typical ranges. Actual amounts may vary based on the branch’s authorised activities and capital.

Fee Type Typical Range (OMR) Notes
Government fees (Part A)
Branch CR registration fee 200–500 Paid via InvestEasy; varies by activity category
CR issuance / stamp duty 50–150 One-time issuance charge
Municipal licence fee 100–300 Payable to relevant municipality upon CR issuance
Oman Chamber of Commerce (OCCI) membership 50–200 Annual membership; mandatory for all commercial registrations
Professional fees (Part B)
Legal / agent services 500–3,000 Depends on complexity; includes POA attestation, liaison and filing
Document translation (Arabic) 100–500 Per-document basis; certified translators charge per page
Notarisation and apostille 50–300 Costs vary by home jurisdiction; embassy legalisation may be higher

Total estimated cost: A straightforward branch registration typically costs between OMR 1,000 and OMR 5,000 all-in. Complex multi-activity registrations with sector-regulator referrals may exceed this range.

Tax context: Oman levies a 15 % corporate income tax on taxable income earned in the Sultanate, which applies equally to branches. There is currently no value-added tax (VAT) in Oman, although GCC-wide VAT implementation remains under discussion. Branches should register with the Oman Tax Authority promptly after CR issuance.

Banking: Opening a corporate bank account in Oman for the branch typically takes 3–10 business days once the CR is issued. Banks require the CR certificate, POA, specimen signatures of authorised signatories, board minutes authorising account opening, and UBO documentation. Know-your-customer (KYC) processes at Omani banks can be thorough, and early engagement with the bank’s relationship team is advisable.

Timelines and Common Sequences

The total time from decision to operational branch depends on three phases: document preparation abroad, InvestEasy processing, and post-registration formalities. The table below summarises typical durations.

Stage Typical Duration Fast-Track Options
Document preparation (apostille, translation, notarisation) 2–4 weeks Engage local counsel early; use express apostille services where available
InvestEasy application submission and initial review 3–7 business days Ensure all fields are complete and documents correctly named to avoid rejection
Government review (MoCIIP + sector referrals if applicable) 5–15 business days Non-regulated sectors process faster; regulated sectors (oil & gas, telecom) add 3–6 weeks
CR issuance 1–3 business days after approval Digital issuance via InvestEasy
Post-registration (OCCI, municipality, bank account, tax) 1–3 weeks Parallel processing of OCCI and bank account opening saves time

Total realistic timeline: For a well-prepared application in a non-regulated sector, the process from document preparation to operational branch takes approximately 6–10 weeks. Regulated-sector branches should budget 10–16 weeks. Delays almost always originate in document preparation abroad or correction requests on InvestEasy, rather than in the Omani government review itself.

Practical Hurdles, Risks and Counsel Tips

Most Common Rejections and How to Avoid Them

Industry observers note that the majority of InvestEasy rejections for branch applications stem from a handful of recurring issues:

  • Incomplete or expired notarisation. Certified documents must be dated within the preceding six months. An apostille dated more than six months before submission is frequently rejected.
  • Name mismatches. The parent company name entered in InvestEasy must match the CR certificate character-for-character, including punctuation and legal-form abbreviations (e.g., “Ltd.” versus “Limited”). Even minor discrepancies trigger manual review.
  • Missing government contract details. The uploaded contract must clearly state both contracting parties. Redacted or partially uploaded contracts are returned for completion.
  • UBO reconciliation failures. The UBO data entered in the portal must exactly match the ownership structure disclosed in the supporting documents. If the parent company has a multi-layered holding structure, each layer must be documented up to the natural-person level.
  • Incorrect activity codes. ISIC codes selected on InvestEasy must align with the activities described in the government contract. Selecting overly broad codes or codes outside the contract scope causes referral to additional ministries.

Banking and Signatory Practicalities

Opening a bank account is a critical post-registration step that can stall operations if not handled proactively. Omani banks require board minutes specifically authorising the bank-account opening and naming each signatory. Specimen signatures must be provided in person at the bank’s branch, which means at least one authorised signatory must be physically present in Oman during the account-opening process. Multi-signatory mandates (e. g. , dual-signature requirements for transactions above a threshold) should be documented in the board minutes from the outset, as amending signatory mandates post-opening can take several weeks.

Anti-money-laundering (AML) and KYC procedures at Omani banks have become more rigorous following the country’s enhanced compliance framework, and banks may request additional documentation, such as audited financial statements of the parent company, beyond the standard CR and POA.

Comparison, Branch vs LLC vs Representative Office in Oman

Not every foreign company should register a branch. The right entity structure depends on the nature of the planned activities, the duration of presence and contracting needs. The comparison table below provides a concise summary to help investors and counsel make an informed choice.

Criterion Branch Office Oman LLC (SAOC / LLC) Representative Office
Ownership 100 % foreign-owned (extension of parent) Up to 100 % foreign ownership in many sectors under FCIL 100 % foreign (liaison only)
Government contract required? Yes, must hold or be entering into a government / quasi-government contract No No
Legal personality No separate personality; parent is fully liable Separate legal entity with limited liability No separate personality
Commercial contracting Can execute the specific government contract and related activities Full commercial contracting ability within licensed activities Cannot sign commercial contracts or generate revenue locally
Tax treatment 15 % corporate tax on Oman-source income 15 % corporate tax on Oman-source income Generally not taxable if no revenue-generating activities
Employment / visas Can sponsor employee visas and hire locally Can sponsor employee visas and hire locally Limited employee sponsorship (typically 2–3 staff)
Typical registration time 10–30 business days 5–20 business days 2–6 weeks
Best suited for Executing specific government project contracts Long-term market entry, broad commercial activities, hiring Market research, liaison, pre-entry assessment

The likely practical effect for most foreign companies is that a branch is the appropriate vehicle when the sole purpose of the Oman presence is to deliver a specific government contract, while an LLC provides greater flexibility for companies seeking a permanent, diversified commercial footprint.

Post-Registration Compliance and Local Registrations

Once the branch CR is issued, several additional registrations and compliance steps must be completed before the branch becomes fully operational. These include:

  • Oman Chamber of Commerce and Industry (OCCI) registration. Membership is mandatory for all entities holding a commercial registration. The OCCI registration process requires submission of the CR certificate and payment of the annual membership fee.
  • Municipal licence. The branch must obtain a municipal operating licence from the relevant governorate municipality, confirming that the office premises meet zoning and health-and-safety requirements.
  • Tax registration. The branch must register with the Oman Tax Authority and obtain a tax card. Annual tax returns must be filed, and the 15 % corporate income tax applies to all Oman-source income.
  • Labour and immigration. To hire employees, the branch must register with the Ministry of Labour, obtain a labour licence and apply for employee work visas through the Royal Oman Police. Omanisation quotas, requiring a minimum percentage of Omani national employees, apply based on the branch’s sector and size.
  • Social security. Omani employees must be enrolled in the Public Authority for Social Insurance (PASI) scheme. Employer and employee contributions are mandatory from the date of employment.
  • Annual filing obligations. The branch must renew its CR annually, file audited financial statements (where required by the parent’s contract or sector regulator), and maintain compliance with ongoing UBO disclosure requirements.

Conclusion

Knowing how to register a branch in Oman for foreigners requires navigating a structured but achievable process, from confirming eligibility under the government contract rule, through the InvestEasy digital workflow, to completing post-registration compliance. The critical decision points are clear: confirm that a qualifying government or quasi-government contract exists, assemble and certify the required documents well in advance, and budget 6–10 weeks for the full process in non-regulated sectors. For companies whose Oman presence will extend beyond a single contract, an LLC may offer greater long-term flexibility, while a representative office serves those still evaluating the market.

Whichever structure is chosen, engaging experienced Oman corporate counsel at the outset, particularly for power-of-attorney attestation, UBO documentation and InvestEasy navigation, materially reduces the risk of rejection and delay.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. Oman Government, Register Branch of Foreign Company (Gov.om)
  2. Business Oman / InvestEasy Portal
  3. Omani Lawyer, Open a Branch in Oman
  4. Setup in Oman, Company Formation
  5. Pro Partner Group, Branch Office in Oman
  6. GSPU Oman, Open Branch Office

FAQs

How do I open a branch in Oman?
You open a branch by preparing certified parent-company documents (CR, AoA, board resolution, government contract), creating an InvestEasy account at the Business Oman portal, submitting the electronic application with UBO and signatory data, paying government fees online, and collecting the CR certificate once approved. The full step-by-step process is detailed in the InvestEasy workflow section above.
Yes. Under Omani commercial law, a foreign company must have concluded, or be in the process of concluding, a contract with a government ministry, state-owned enterprise, or quasi-government body in order to register a branch. The executed contract (or a formal letter of intent) must be uploaded as part of the InvestEasy application.
Government fees for branch registration typically range from OMR 400 to OMR 1,150 (including CR registration, municipal licence and OCCI membership). When professional fees for legal services, translation, notarisation and apostille are added, total costs generally fall between OMR 1,000 and OMR 5,000 depending on complexity. See the fees table above for a full breakdown.
A well-prepared application in a non-regulated sector typically takes 10–30 business days from InvestEasy submission to CR issuance. Including document preparation abroad and post-registration steps, the total process usually spans 6–10 weeks. Regulated sectors may take 10–16 weeks due to additional ministry referrals.
Yes. Under the Foreign Capital Investment Law (FCIL), foreigners can own up to 100 % of an Omani LLC in many sectors without requiring an Omani partner. A branch office is fully foreign-owned by definition, as it is a direct extension of the parent company. The comparison table above outlines when a branch, LLC, or representative office is most appropriate.
Key documents requiring apostille (or embassy legalisation for non-Hague Convention countries) include the parent company’s commercial register, articles of association, board resolution and power of attorney. All apostilled or legalised documents must also be translated into Arabic by a certified translator. The complete documents checklist is set out in the table above.
No. A branch of a foreign company does not require a local Omani sponsor or partner. The parent company itself acts as the sponsoring entity, and it provides a liability undertaking accepting full responsibility for the branch. This distinguishes branches from certain older LLC structures where local sponsorship was previously required under pre-FCIL rules.
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How to Register a Branch in Oman for Foreigners (2026)

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