Our Expert in Burkina Faso
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Last updated: May 10, 2026
Burkina Faso’s corporate regulatory landscape shifted decisively on 1 January 2026 when Finance Law No. 021‑2025/ALT took effect, introducing sweeping direct and indirect tax measures alongside a policy framework requiring large firms to establish permanent local headquarters. The Council of Ministers formalised that policy on 12 February 2026 by adopting a decree that compels every company whose average annual revenue equals or exceeds CFA 5 billion to submit construction plans within six months and complete a compliant headquarters within 36 months.
For corporate lawyers in Burkina Faso, CFOs, general counsel and in‑house teams at multinationals and mining companies, the combined effect of the Finance Law and the February decree creates an urgent compliance programme that demands immediate legal, tax and governance action.
The local headquarters requirement applies to companies operating in Burkina Faso whose average annual turnover over the preceding three fiscal years meets or exceeds CFA 5 billion (approximately EUR 7.6 million). The decree adopted by the Council of Ministers on 12 February 2026 does not distinguish between domestic and foreign‑owned entities: any company, whether a locally incorporated société anonyme (SA) or société à responsabilité limitée (SARL), a registered branch of a foreign parent, or a regional holding with Burkinabè operations, falls within scope once it crosses the revenue threshold.
For corporate lawyers in Burkina Faso advising group structures, the critical question is how turnover is measured. Revenue is calculated from the entity’s local statutory financial statements prepared under OHADA accounting standards (SYSCOHADA), based on figures declared in annual corporate tax returns filed with the Direction Générale des Impôts (DGI). Where a foreign branch books revenue locally, only the turnover attributable to Burkina operations is counted. However, industry observers expect that borderline cases, particularly regional holdings that allocate revenue across multiple WAEMU jurisdictions, will require a formal tax ruling to confirm whether affiliate revenues should be consolidated for the threshold test.
| Entity Type | How the Threshold Is Measured | Immediate Action Required |
|---|---|---|
| Local subsidiary (SARL / SA) | Average annual turnover per local GAAP / tax returns over 3 fiscal years; group attribution rules may apply | Verify past 3‑year revenue; if ≥ CFA 5 billion, prepare HQ construction plan and filings |
| Foreign branch | Turnover attributable to Burkina operations (booked locally in branch accounts) | Confirm revenue allocation methodology; engage counsel to assess headquarters implication |
| Regional holding company | Consolidated revenue rules may apply, inclusion of affiliates to be determined on a case‑by‑case basis | Model consolidated figures; seek formal tax ruling from DGI if threshold result is borderline |
Companies that currently fall below the CFA 5 billion line but are on a growth trajectory should monitor their three‑year rolling average closely. Industry observers expect the authorities to apply the threshold prospectively, meaning that a company crossing the line in any future fiscal year could be brought within scope. Early engagement with experienced corporate services advisers is essential to model different revenue scenarios and avoid a compressed compliance timeline later.
The compliance framework established by the February 2026 decree operates on two sequential deadlines that corporate lawyers in Burkina Faso must calendar immediately. First, every affected company has six months from the date it is formally notified (or from the decree’s effective date, for companies that already meet the threshold) to submit detailed headquarters construction or refurbishment plans to the relevant government authority. Second, from the date those plans receive official validation, the company has 36 months to complete construction and obtain a certificate of conformity.
Government reporting indicates that the Ministry of Urban Planning and Housing, in coordination with the Ministry of Economy and Finance, will oversee the technical validation of submitted plans. Municipal building‑permit offices (mairies) in Ouagadougou and other cities will process local construction authorisations in parallel.
| Event | Date / Deadline | Action / Note |
|---|---|---|
| Finance Law No. 021‑2025/ALT promulgated | 27 December 2025 (effective 1 January 2026) | Legal basis for HQ policy and all 2026 tax measures enters force |
| Council of Ministers decree adopted | 12 February 2026 | Sets CFA 5 billion threshold, technical standards, six‑month plan submission window and 36‑month completion deadline |
| Plan submission deadline | Six months from notification / effective date (indicative: August 2026 for companies already above threshold) | Submit architectural plans, environmental compliance documentation and project timeline to Ministry of Urban Planning |
| Plan validation by government | Ongoing (expected within 60–90 days of submission, based on standard administrative timelines) | Obtain formal validation letter; this triggers the 36‑month construction window |
| Headquarters completion | 36 months from plan validation | Complete construction; schedule inspection; obtain certificate of conformity |
The enforcement mechanism has not yet been codified in a separate penalty schedule, but government communiqués signal that non‑compliant firms could face administrative sanctions, including potential restrictions on government contract eligibility and adverse treatment in future licensing and permit applications. This aligns with the broader trend of global corporate law trends where governments increasingly tie operational privileges to local compliance milestones. Companies should treat the deadlines as hard targets.
Finance Law No. 021‑2025/ALT is not limited to the headquarters mandate. It introduces a comprehensive package of corporate tax measures for 2026 that directly affect the cost structure, reporting obligations and strategic planning of every large company operating in Burkina Faso. Corporate counsel should analyse the following measures in conjunction with the HQ requirement.
The Finance Law maintains the standard corporate income tax (impôt sur les bénéfices industriels, commerciaux et agricoles, IBICA) rate framework while introducing targeted surcharges and base‑broadening provisions. According to the KPMG tax alert summarising the law, adjustments include tighter restrictions on the deductibility of certain intercompany management fees and royalties, a measure designed to limit base erosion by multinationals. Transfer‑pricing documentation requirements have also been reinforced: companies with related‑party transactions exceeding defined thresholds must now maintain contemporaneous documentation and file an annual transfer‑pricing declaration with the DGI.
The 2026 Finance Law modifies VAT treatment in several sectors. Certain previously exempt supplies, particularly in digital services and telecommunications, are brought within the VAT net, reflecting the government’s effort to capture revenue from the expanding digital economy. Simultaneously, targeted VAT exemptions have been introduced for construction materials imported specifically for approved infrastructure projects. Early indications suggest that companies constructing headquarters under the February decree could benefit from this exemption, provided they obtain prior approval from the customs directorate (Direction Générale des Douanes).
The Finance Law introduces or modifies several special contributions, including an enhanced contribution to the national development fund payable by companies in the extractive industries. Mining and petroleum companies, many of which will simultaneously face the local headquarters requirement, should model the combined impact of the new contribution rates and the capital expenditure required for headquarters construction. The likely practical effect will be a material increase in the total compliance cost for large extractive‑sector operators.
Companies planning new‑build headquarters should conduct a customs audit on the materials and equipment they intend to import. Burkina Faso applies the WAEMU Common External Tariff (TEC), and certain categories of construction materials attract duties of up to 20 per cent. However, the Finance Law and existing investment‑code provisions may allow duty reductions or suspensions for approved investment projects. Engaging customs counsel early in the plan‑preparation phase to identify eligible tariff relief is a practical step that can yield significant savings.
Burkina Faso is a member state of the Organisation for the Harmonisation of Business Law in Africa (OHADA), and any change to a company’s headquarters triggers a cascade of governance obligations under the Acte Uniforme relatif au droit des sociétés commerciales et du groupement d’intérêt économique (AUSCGIE). The interaction between the new local headquarters requirement and OHADA corporate governance rules is an area where experienced corporate lawyers in Burkina Faso add critical value.
Under OHADA, the siège social (registered office) of a company must be a real, operational address, not merely a postal box. Relocating or establishing headquarters in Burkina Faso means the registered office recorded in the Trade and Personal Property Credit Register (RCCM) must be updated. This is not a formality: an incorrect or outdated registered office can invalidate service of legal process, affect jurisdiction in disputes, and expose directors to personal liability under AUSCGIE provisions on corporate governance failures.
| Governance Action | OHADA Reference | Recommended Timing |
|---|---|---|
| Board resolution authorising HQ establishment and registered‑office change | AUSCGIE Art. 23–24 (registered office), Art. 435 ff. (board powers) | Before plan submission (within first 3 months) |
| Extraordinary general meeting to amend articles of association (if registered‑office clause is statutory) | AUSCGIE Art. 551 (SA), Art. 356 (SARL) | Within 30 days of board resolution |
| Filing of updated articles and board minutes with RCCM | AUSCGIE Art. 262–264 | Within 30 days of shareholder approval |
| Update of beneficial‑ownership filings (if applicable under national AML regulations) | National AML Law + OHADA requirements | Concurrent with RCCM filing |
| Notification to tax authorities (DGI) and social security fund (CNSS) | Tax Procedures Code; CNSS regulations | Within 15 days of registered‑office change |
For foreign‑owned companies, shareholders’ agreements often contain consent or veto clauses relating to changes to the registered office. Legal counsel should review these agreements early to identify any shareholder approvals that must be obtained before filing construction plans with the government. Failure to secure shareholder consent before committing to an HQ plan could expose the local management team to contractual liability.
This section provides the core compliance roadmap that corporate counsel, CFOs and project managers can use to move from initial assessment to certificate of conformity. Each step identifies the responsible function, the key documents involved and an indicative time estimate.
Companies that engage qualified local counsel from the outset, particularly for the plan‑submission and government‑validation phases, are far more likely to avoid delays and rejections. The Burkina Faso local HQ rules, official summary published on this site provides additional context on the decree’s technical requirements.
Burkina Faso is one of Africa’s top gold‑producing nations, and many mining operations are structured through offshore holding companies in jurisdictions such as Canada, Australia or the United Kingdom. For these groups, the local headquarters requirement creates a dual compliance challenge: the HQ decree mandates a physical presence, while the Mining Code (Code minier) already imposes local‑content obligations, including local procurement targets, mandatory community‑development spending and state participation rights, that intensify when headquarters functions are onshored.
The likely practical effect for mining companies is that headquarters construction will need to be coordinated with existing mine‑site infrastructure planning and local‑content investment programmes. Where the state holds a free‑carried interest in a mining project, authorities may scrutinise the allocation of headquarters costs between the operating entity and the parent. Corporate lawyers advising mining clients should ensure that the HQ investment is ring‑fenced in project‑finance models and that intercompany cost‑allocation agreements withstand transfer‑pricing scrutiny under the new Finance Law provisions.
Major telecom operators in Burkina Faso typically generate revenues well above the CFA 5 billion threshold. The compliance challenge for these companies centres on revenue allocation: where a regional licence covers multiple WAEMU countries, the revenue attributable to Burkina operations must be precisely disaggregated. This exercise requires close collaboration between the finance team, regulatory counsel and the DGI.
Industry observers expect that telecom multinationals will prioritise relocating legal, finance and regulatory‑compliance functions to the new Burkinabè headquarters first, retaining technical network‑operations centres in their current locations. This phased approach satisfies the decree’s intent, demonstrating substantive local presence, while minimising operational disruption. It also aligns with the broader trend of African governments requiring local decision‑making substance from large foreign operators.
The February 2026 decree does not, at the time of writing, publish a detailed penalty schedule for non‑compliance. However, government communiqués have signalled that firms failing to submit plans within the six‑month window or failing to complete construction within 36 months could face a range of administrative consequences. These may include exclusion from public‑procurement processes, denial or non‑renewal of sector‑specific operating licences, and adverse treatment in tax audits. The reputational risk is equally significant: in the current political environment, visible non‑compliance with a high‑profile government directive carries commercial consequences that extend well beyond the legal penalty.
Where a company’s plan is rejected or a dispute arises during the validation process, the recommended first step is administrative recourse, filing a formal request for review with the relevant ministry. If administrative remedies are exhausted, the matter may proceed to the administrative courts. For foreign investors, bilateral investment treaties (BITs) and the OHADA arbitration framework under the Acte Uniforme relatif à l’arbitrage provide additional dispute‑resolution pathways, though the practical utility of treaty arbitration in this context will depend on the specific facts and the applicable BIT.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Bobson COULIBALY at SCP YANOGO BOBSON, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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