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The company registration process in Iraq 2026 follows a defined sequence of filings with the Companies Registration Directorate under the Ministry of Trade, or, for entities operating in the Kurdistan Region, with the KRG Business Registration System. Whether you are an Iraqi entrepreneur forming a private limited company, a multinational opening a branch office, or a foreign investor establishing a subsidiary, understanding the correct order of steps, the documents each authority requires, and the realistic timelines involved is essential to avoiding costly delays. Iraq’s April 2026 digital‑platform rollout has shortened several filing stages, but core requirements around notarisation, legalisation, and capital verification remain unchanged.
This guide walks through each stage of the procedure from entity selection to post‑incorporation compliance, with verified tables covering documents, fees, and deadlines.
Registering a company in Iraq involves seven principal stages: choosing an entity type, reserving a company name, filing the incorporation pack with the registrar, opening a bank account and verifying paid‑in capital, obtaining tax registration, securing a trade licence (and any sector‑specific permits), and completing post‑incorporation filings such as social‑security registration and employment notifications. The primary regulator for Federal Iraq is the Companies Registration Directorate within the Ministry of Trade. In the Kurdistan Region of Iraq (KRG), filings are handled through the KRG Business Registration System, which operates its own digital portal and fee schedule.
Any Iraqi national or legal person wishing to carry on commercial activity must register. A non‑Iraqi company that intends to “carry on business”, as opposed to executing a single, isolated transaction, is generally required to register a branch or establish a local subsidiary. The 2026 digitalisation reforms, detailed in the dedicated section below, now allow name reservations and certain initial filings to be submitted electronically, reducing the timeline for straightforward domestic incorporations to as few as five business days.
Quick‑reference checklist: Jump to the sections you need, required documents, timeline and key deadlines, or costs and fees.
Iraqi law provides several corporate vehicles. The choice of entity determines the minimum capital, governance structure, and filing pathway:
Under Iraq’s Investment Law, foreign investors may hold up to 100 per cent ownership in companies operating in many sectors, including manufacturing, services, tourism, and information technology. However, significant sectoral restrictions apply. Banking and insurance companies are subject to separate licensing regimes with foreign‑ownership caps imposed by the Central Bank of Iraq and the Insurance Diwan. Oil and gas extraction is governed by production‑sharing contracts and service contracts with the Ministry of Oil, and direct foreign ownership of hydrocarbon resources is constitutionally restricted. Real‑estate ownership by non‑Iraqis is generally prohibited outside designated investment zones. Defence and media sectors may also carry additional limitations.
In the Kurdistan Region, the KRG Investment Law provides broadly similar foreign‑ownership provisions but with its own investment‑licence requirements administered by the KRG Board of Investment. Applicants should confirm current sector‑specific restrictions directly with the relevant regulator before committing to a structure, as secondary regulations and ministerial orders can change at short notice.
The following numbered steps apply to the standard incorporation of a locally formed company (LLC or JSC) in Federal Iraq. Variations for branch offices and KRG filings are noted within each step. The timeline table at the end of this section summarises durations and responsible parties.
Begin by selecting the appropriate entity type based on ownership structure, capital requirements, and operational scope. Once the entity type is confirmed, prepare the following founding documents:
All founding documents signed outside Iraq must be notarised in the country of execution, legalised by the Iraqi embassy or consulate in that country (consular legalisation), and officially translated into Arabic by a certified translator. Iraq is not a party to the Hague Apostille Convention, so apostille stamps are not accepted, full consular legalisation is required in every case. This legalisation stage is often the longest pre‑filing task and should be started as early as possible.
Branch office variation: Instead of an MOA/AOA for a new entity, the foreign parent submits a certified copy of its own constitutional documents, a corporate resolution to open the branch, and appointment documentation for the branch manager. All documents follow the same legalisation pathway.
The proposed company name must be reserved with the Companies Registration Directorate (Federal Iraq) or through the KRG Business Registration System portal (Kurdistan Region). The name must be unique, must not conflict with an existing registered entity, and must comply with naming conventions, it should include an indication of the entity type (e.g., “Limited” or its Arabic equivalent) and must not contain terms that could mislead the public or imply government affiliation.
Since the April 2026 digital‑platform launch, name reservations in Federal Iraq can be initiated electronically. The KRG digital portal has offered online name checks for several years and typically returns a decision on the same business day. In Federal Iraq, expect a response within 1–3 business days. Once approved, the name reservation is valid for a limited period, founders must file the incorporation pack before the reservation lapses.
With the name reserved, the applicant (or authorised agent) submits the full incorporation pack to the registrar. The pack includes:
The registrar reviews the pack for completeness and legal compliance. If queries arise, the applicant is typically given 15 business days to respond before the application is shelved. Processing times depend on the filing method and entity complexity: electronic filings submitted through the 2026 digital platform are being processed in 3–7 business days for straightforward domestic LLCs, while paper filings and more complex structures (foreign subsidiary, JSC) may take 7–15 business days.
Branch office variation: Branch‑registration applications are filed with the same directorate but require the additional parent‑company documents noted in Step 1. The registrar may request proof that the parent company is validly existing and in good standing in its home jurisdiction.
KRG variation: In the Kurdistan Region, the full incorporation pack is filed through the KRG Business Registration System. The KRG eRegulations portal publishes a step‑by‑step procedure specifying the exact documents, forms, and fee amounts for each entity type.
Once the registrar accepts the incorporation filing, the founders open a corporate bank account in the company’s name at a licensed Iraqi bank. Where the entity type requires a minimum paid‑in capital (as is the case for JSCs and certain regulated activities), the founders deposit the required amount and obtain a bank deposit certificate. This certificate is submitted to the registrar to complete the capital‑verification step. Bank account opening typically takes 1–7 business days, depending on the bank’s internal compliance (KYC/AML) procedures. Foreign‑national founders should expect more extensive documentation requests from the bank.
Following incorporation, the company must register with the General Commission for Taxes (Federal Tax Authority) to obtain a tax‑identification card. Value‑added tax (sales tax) registration is triggered once revenue exceeds the applicable threshold. Tax registration typically takes 3–10 business days.
A trade licence is issued by the relevant municipal or governorate commerce office and authorises the company to conduct the commercial activities specified in its MOA. Sector‑specific permits, for example, from the Central Bank of Iraq (banking/financial services), the Communications and Media Commission (telecoms), or the Ministry of Health (pharmaceuticals/healthcare), must be obtained before commencing regulated activities. Timelines for sector permits vary widely, from one week to several months.
With the company registered and licensed, remaining compliance tasks include:
These filings typically take 1–7 business days each and can often be handled concurrently.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration (2026, where digitalised) |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Entity selection & draft MOA/AOA; notarise founders’ signatures | Applicant + corporate lawyer / notary | 3–10 days (depends on translations & legalisation) |
| 2. Name reservation (Companies Registrar or KRG portal) | Applicant or authorised agent | 1–3 business days (often same day via KRG digital portal) |
| 3. File incorporation pack with Companies Registration Directorate | Applicant / local agent or lawyer | 3–15 business days (digital filing shorter; paper filing longer) |
| 4. Bank account opening & capital deposit verification | Company + licensed Iraqi bank | 1–7 business days |
| 5. Tax registration / obtain tax card & trade licence | Company or authorised agent | 3–10 business days |
| 6. Sector permits (if applicable) | Company; sector regulator | 1 week to several months (sector dependent) |
| 7. Post‑incorporation filings (social security, statistical, employee registrations) | Company / HR department | 1–7 business days |
The table below lists the core documents required for a standard LLC incorporation and notes the additional items needed for branch‑office registrations. All documents originating outside Iraq must be notarised, consularly legalised, and translated into Arabic by a certified translator.
| Document | Notes (issuer, format, validity) |
|---|---|
| Company name reservation certificate | Issued by Companies Registration Directorate (electronic or paper). Valid for a limited period, file incorporation pack before it expires. |
| Memorandum & Articles of Association (MOA/AOA) | Signed by all founders; notarised. Foreign signatures must be legalised via Iraqi consulate and translated to Arabic. |
| Founders’ passports or national IDs | Certified copies. Notarisation required for foreign nationals. |
| Board resolution to incorporate / appoint branch manager | Notarised. For foreign companies: include corporate PoA and certified board minutes authorising incorporation. |
| Certificate of good standing (foreign parent) | Issued by the parent company’s home jurisdiction. Must be translated, notarised, and consularly legalised. |
| Bank deposit proof / paid‑in capital certificate | Bank statement or deposit slip confirming the required capital deposit. Submitted after bank‑account opening. |
| Lease agreement or proof of registered office address | Commercial lease or ownership deed for the company’s principal place of business. Required for trade‑licence issuance. |
| Tax registration forms / owners’ tax IDs | Completed forms for the General Commission for Taxes. Iraqi‑national founders provide existing tax IDs; foreign founders obtain new ones. |
| Power of Attorney (PoA) to local agent or lawyer | Notarised and legalised. Must specify signatory authority for all filing and registration acts. |
| Trade licence application forms | Issued by the municipal or governorate commerce office. Attach sector permits if the activity is regulated. |
| Branch‑specific: Certified copy of parent company’s constitutional documents | Notarised, consularly legalised, and translated. Must show current share capital and authorised objects. |
| Branch‑specific: Corporate resolution to open branch & branch manager identification | Resolution authorising branch operations in Iraq; manager’s passport/ID with notarised signature specimen. |
Iraq is not a signatory to the Hague Apostille Convention. Every document executed abroad must pass through a three‑stage authentication chain: (1) notarisation by a public notary in the country of origin, (2) legalisation by the Iraqi embassy or consulate in that country (consular legalisation), and (3) official translation into Arabic by a certified translator recognised by the Iraqi authorities. Some bilateral agreements between Iraq and certain countries may simplify authentication, but applicants should confirm the applicable procedure with the nearest Iraqi consulate before relying on any shortcut. Failure to complete any stage of the legalisation chain is one of the most frequent causes of rejection or delay at the registrar.
Organise documents in the order listed above. Label electronic files descriptively (for example, MOA_AOA_signed_notarised_English_and_Arabic.pdf). Prepare at least two certified copies of every document, the registrar retains originals, and the bank and tax authority will each request their own certified sets. Start the legalisation process at least two to four weeks before you plan to file, particularly if documents must travel between consulates in different countries.
The total time from name reservation to receipt of the trade licence varies significantly depending on whether the founders are Iraqi or foreign, whether sector permits are required, and whether filings are submitted digitally or on paper.
| Scenario | Typical end‑to‑end time (name reservation → trade licence) | Critical‑path items |
|---|---|---|
| Domestic private company (no sector permits) | 7–21 business days (digital filing: 5–10 days) | Name reservation → incorporation filing → tax registration → bank verification |
| Foreign subsidiary (foreign documents to legalise) | 3–8 weeks | Legalisation of foreign documents, certified translations, bank capital verification |
| Foreign branch office | 4–10 weeks | Parent‑company document legalisation, appointment of branch manager, local PoA execution |
Once the registrar issues a query or deficiency notice, the applicant typically has 15 business days to respond with corrected or supplementary documents. Failure to respond within this window may result in the application being shelved, requiring a fresh filing and a new name reservation. Industry observers expect the 2026 digital platform to introduce automated deadline reminders, but until that feature is confirmed, applicants should maintain a weekly follow‑up cadence with the registrar’s office. After incorporation, annual compliance filings, including audited accounts and any changes to the shareholder register, must be submitted to the Companies Registration Directorate within the deadlines prescribed by the Iraqi Companies Law.
| Item | Typical amount (IQD / USD range) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Name reservation fee | IQD 5,000–25,000 (nominal) | Varies between Federal registrar and KRG portal. |
| Company registration fee (registrar) | Formula‑based (calculated per million IQD of share capital) | Confirm the current formula with the Companies Registration Directorate or KRG Business Registration System. |
| Inspection / publication fee | IQD 25,000–50,000 | One‑off administrative charge at time of registration. |
| Notary & consular legalisation (per document) | USD 50–300 per document | Cost depends on the issuing consulate’s fee schedule and number of documents. |
| Bank capital‑verification fee | Bank‑specific charges apply | Varies by institution; factor in KYC/AML processing costs for foreign founders. |
| Lawyer / agent fee (end‑to‑end) | USD 800–5,000+ | Depends on complexity: domestic LLC at the lower end; foreign branch with sector permits at the upper end. |
| Sector permit costs | Variable | Licensing fees for regulated industries (banking, telecoms, healthcare), confirm with the relevant sector regulator. |
In April 2026, the Companies Registration Directorate launched a new digital platform for company registration in Iraq. The platform allows applicants to submit name‑reservation requests and initial registration forms electronically, eliminating the need to attend the registrar’s offices in person for those stages. Early indications suggest that straightforward domestic LLC incorporations filed through the platform are being processed in approximately half the time of equivalent paper filings. The KRG Business Registration System, which has operated an online portal for several years, has also upgraded its interface in 2026, expanding the range of post‑registration amendments that can be filed digitally.
Applications that were submitted on paper before the digital platform went live continue to be processed under the pre‑existing manual workflow. Applicants with pending paper filings are not required to resubmit electronically, but any supplementary documents requested by the registrar may now be uploaded through the portal. The likely practical effect is a gradual migration to fully digital workflows over the course of 2026, though notarised originals and consularly legalised documents will still need to be presented in physical form for verification.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Furat Kuba at Al-Nesoor Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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