Our Expert in Jordan
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Last reviewed: June 22, 2026
Understanding how to register a foreign company in Jordan is the critical first step for any international business looking to establish a presence in one of the Middle East’s most strategically connected markets. Jordan’s Companies Law draws a clear line between operating foreign companies, those that will execute contracts, employ staff and bid on tenders, and non‑operating branches limited to representation and liaison activities. The distinction shapes everything from tax obligations and visa quotas to tender eligibility and foreign‑exchange repatriation rights.
With the Companies Control Department (CCD) continuing to expand its e‑Services portal and the Ministry of Industry, Trade & Supply maintaining its Daleel procedural framework, the 2026 registration process is more digitised than in prior years, yet the documentation and legalisation requirements remain exacting. This guide walks in‑house counsel, founders and company secretaries through each stage, from the initial operating‑vs‑non‑operating decision through CCD submission, fee payment and post‑registration compliance.
Before collecting a single document, a foreign company entering Jordan must decide how it intends to operate. This decision is not merely administrative, it determines regulatory obligations, commercial privileges and ongoing compliance costs for the life of the branch.
Industry observers note that many foreign investors underestimate the commercial consequences of choosing the wrong category: a company registered as non‑operating that later signs a local contract or hires Jordanian staff risks penalties and retroactive tax assessments. Early indications suggest the CCD has grown more vigilant in auditing branch activity against the registered category.
| Criterion | Operating Foreign Company | Non‑Operating Foreign Company |
|---|---|---|
| Core purpose | Execute local contracts, employ staff, bid on tenders, generate Jordanian‑source revenue | Representation, liaison, market research, no commercial contracting |
| Tax registration | Mandatory, corporate income tax on local profits | Generally not required unless activity triggers taxable presence |
| Employee work permits | Available, subject to Ministry of Labour quotas | Limited or unavailable |
| Tender eligibility | Full eligibility for government and private‑sector tenders | Typically ineligible for contract execution |
| Annual audited accounts | Required and filed with CCD | Simplified reporting obligations |
| FX repatriation | Subject to Central Bank of Jordan banking rules | Limited transactional volume; fewer banking requirements |
Practical recommendation: If a foreigner can foresee any scenario in which the branch will sign contracts with Jordanian counterparties, hire local staff or participate in public procurement within the first 24 months, registering as an operating foreign company from the outset avoids costly re‑registration and the compliance exposure of operating outside the branch’s registered scope.
Jordan’s Companies Law governs the registration of foreign entities. Article 241 and its implementing regulations establish the framework under which a foreign company may register a branch, whether operating or non‑operating, with the Companies Control Department Jordan. The CCD, housed within the Ministry of Industry, Trade & Supply, serves as the primary registrar and gatekeeper for all company registration in Jordan.
Several other bodies play essential roles in the process:
Understanding which regulator handles which step, and in what sequence, prevents the most common delay: submitting an application to the CCD before obtaining prerequisite ministerial clearances.
The following workflow applies to both operating and non‑operating branch registrations, with specific differences noted at each stage. This sequence reflects the CCD’s current procedural requirements and the Daleel checklist published by the Ministry of Industry, Trade & Supply.
Before initiating any filing, confirm that the parent company’s sector of activity is open to foreign branch registration. Certain sectors, including banking, insurance, telecommunications, defence‑related industries and construction, require additional ministerial approvals or impose minimum capital thresholds. Nationals of specific countries must obtain a non‑objection certificate from the Ministry of Interior before the CCD will accept an application. The CCD’s published regulatory document details the nationalities subject to this requirement and the supporting documents needed for the non‑objection filing.
Name reservation is handled through the CCD e‑Services portal. The applicant, or an authorised local representative, submits the proposed branch name in both Arabic and English. The name must not duplicate or closely resemble any existing registered company. Name reservation is typically confirmed within the same business day, though complex or contested names may take longer. A nominal fee applies for the reservation.
This stage is where most delays occur. The parent company must provide:
All parent company documents originating outside Jordan must be:
The legalisation and translation process typically takes one to three weeks depending on the home jurisdiction, postal timelines and the responsiveness of consular services. This is the single largest variable in the overall registration timeline.
With all documents prepared, legalised and translated, the authorised representative submits the complete application file to the CCD. According to the Daleel procedural checklist, the submission must include:
The CCD reviews the application for completeness and compliance. If documents are missing or deficient, the CCD issues a deficiency notice and the clock resets until the applicant remedies the shortfall.
Once the CCD approves the application, it issues a registration certificate and assigns a company registration number. This certificate is the foundational document for all subsequent steps, opening a bank account, registering with tax authorities, obtaining municipal licences and joining the relevant Chamber of Commerce.
After receiving the CCD registration certificate, the foreign company must complete several additional registrations to become fully operational:
A foreign investor may alternatively choose to incorporate a Jordanian limited liability company (LLC) rather than register a branch. The LLC is a separate legal entity under Jordan’s Companies Law, requiring its own Articles of Association, a share capital deposit into a local bank, and at least two founding shareholders. The procedural path diverges significantly: an LLC follows the domestic incorporation route through the CCD, with a different application form and share capital verification step. Industry observers note that an LLC structure can be advantageous for investors seeking cleaner liability separation, simpler visa processing and greater tender eligibility, though it carries higher ongoing compliance obligations including full corporate governance and annual audit requirements.
The following table consolidates the documentation requirements published by the Companies Control Department and the Ministry of Industry, Trade & Supply’s Daleel portal. Every document originating outside Jordan requires legalisation and certified Arabic translation.
| Document | Issuing authority | Legalisation required? | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Certificate of incorporation (parent company) | Home‑jurisdiction company registrar | Yes, apostille or consular legalisation + MoFA authentication | Must be current and valid |
| Articles / memorandum of association (parent) | Home‑jurisdiction company registrar | Yes | Full document including any amendments |
| Board resolution to open Jordan branch | Parent company board of directors | Yes | Must specify operating or non‑operating status and name the authorised representative |
| Power of attorney for local representative | Parent company; notarised in home jurisdiction | Yes | Scope must cover CCD, MoITS, tax and banking dealings |
| Audited financial statements (latest year) | Parent company’s external auditor | Yes | Some sectors require multiple years |
| Passport / ID copy of local representative | Applicant | No | Certified copy sufficient |
| CCD name reservation confirmation | CCD e‑Services portal | No | Obtained online; valid for a limited period |
| Non‑objection certificate (if applicable) | Ministry of Interior | No (domestic document) | Required for nationals of certain countries per CCD regulations |
| CCD branch registration application form | CCD | No | Completed in Arabic; available at CCD offices and through e‑Services |
| Certified Arabic translations of all foreign documents | Licensed Jordanian legal translator | Translator stamp and court certification | Translations must mirror originals exactly |
Practical tip: Prepare all parent‑company documents simultaneously and have them notarised and legalised in a single batch. Sending documents for legalisation piecemeal is the most common cause of multi‑week delays when applicants attempt to register a foreign company branch in Jordan.
Official fees for foreign company branch registration are published by the Ministry of Industry, Trade & Supply through the Daleel procedural portal. The principal registration fee for a foreign company branch is JOD 5,000, as listed on the Daleel checklist. Additional smaller fees apply throughout the process.
| Fee item | Approximate amount (JOD) | Payable to |
|---|---|---|
| Branch registration fee | 5,000 | CCD / Ministry of Industry, Trade & Supply |
| Name reservation fee | 10–20 | CCD |
| Document certification and stamp fees | 10–50 per document | Various (court, MoFA, translator) |
| Chamber of Commerce membership (annual) | Varies by sector and branch category | Relevant Chamber of Commerce |
| Municipal licence fee (annual) | Varies by municipality and premises size | Local municipality |
| Stage | Typical duration |
|---|---|
| Name reservation (CCD e‑Services) | Same day to 2 business days |
| Parent document preparation, notarisation & legalisation | 1–3 weeks (jurisdiction‑dependent) |
| MoI non‑objection certificate (if required) | 1–2 weeks |
| CCD application review and approval | 7–30 business days (complete application) |
| Post‑registration formalities (tax, Chamber, bank account) | 1–2 weeks |
| Total end‑to‑end (best case to typical) | 3–8 weeks |
Tips to accelerate the process:
Choosing between an operating and a non‑operating registration is not simply a regulatory formality, it has tangible commercial consequences that affect the branch’s ability to generate revenue, employ staff and repatriate profits.
| Entity type | Key registration & reporting obligations | Commercial consequences (tax / visa / tender) |
|---|---|---|
| Operating foreign company (branch conducting business) | Register with CCD; submit parent corporate documents; local tax registration; payroll & social security; annual audited accounts | Subject to Jordan corporate income tax on local profits; employee work permits available through Ministry of Labour; eligible to bid on and execute local contracts and government tenders; FX repatriation subject to Central Bank of Jordan banking rules |
| Non‑operating foreign company (representation only) | CCD branch registration for representation; limited annual filings; local POA and Chamber membership typically required | Generally limited to representation, marketing and sales support; not usually subject to payroll or social security if no local employees; limited or no tender eligibility; minimal tax obligations unless activity triggers taxable presence |
| Foreign subsidiary (Jordan LLC) | Full incorporation under Companies Law; Articles of Association; share capital deposit; local board and/or resident director(s); annual audit and full corporate governance | Full corporate obligations identical to domestic companies; easier to obtain employee visas and work permits; full tender eligibility; higher ongoing compliance costs (audit, tax, corporate filings) |
Tender eligibility, the hidden differentiator. Government and semi‑government procurement in Jordan typically requires bidders to hold an operating branch registration or a fully incorporated Jordanian entity. A non‑operating branch is, in practice, unable to execute contracts and therefore excluded from most competitive tenders. For foreign companies entering Jordan primarily to pursue infrastructure, construction or services contracts, the operating branch or LLC route is the only viable path.
Banking and FX. Jordanian commercial banks require an operating branch registration or LLC certificate, together with a tax registration number, before opening a corporate current account. Non‑operating branches may face more restrictive banking arrangements, including limitations on transaction volumes and foreign‑currency handling.
Once registration is complete, the branch enters an ongoing compliance cycle. Understanding these obligations from the outset prevents penalties and preserves the registration in good standing.
After the CCD issues the registration certificate, the branch’s details become searchable in the Companies Control Department’s registry. A Jordan company register search can be performed through the CCD portal, allowing counterparties, banks and government bodies to verify the branch’s registration status, registered name, authorised representative and scope of activity. Maintaining accurate and current registry information is essential, discrepancies between the register and actual operations can trigger CCD inquiries.
Failure to file annual returns with the CCD can result in administrative penalties, suspension of the registration and, ultimately, de‑registration of the branch.
Not all sectors are equally open to foreign branch registration. Jordan maintains a framework of sector‑specific restrictions and additional approval requirements that must be satisfied before, or in parallel with, the CCD application.
For nationals of certain countries, the Ministry of Interior non‑objection process is a prerequisite across all sectors. The CCD’s published regulatory guidance details which nationalities are subject to this requirement. Applicants should initiate the non‑objection filing at the earliest stage of the registration process to avoid delaying the CCD submission.
Use this consolidated checklist to track progress from initial planning through to full operational readiness. Each item maps to the corresponding step described above.
Sample POA wording guidance: The power of attorney should explicitly authorise the local representative to act before the CCD, Ministry of Industry, Trade & Supply, Income and Sales Tax Department, Social Security Corporation, any relevant Chamber of Commerce, Jordanian commercial banks and any other governmental authority in connection with the registration, licensing and operation of the branch. Overly narrow POA language is a frequent cause of rejected submissions.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Rawan Noubani at RN Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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