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corporate restructuring morocco

How Morocco's 2026 Finance Law Affects Corporate Restructuring, Practical Steps for Companies

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Corporate restructuring in Morocco entered a new regulatory era on 1 January 2026 when the Finance Law 2026 (Law No. 50‑25), published in the Bulletin Officiel on 16 December 2025, took effect. The legislation recalibrated corporate income tax (CIT) bands, broadened the scope of withholding tax (WHT), introduced electronic accounting obligations and reshaped several incentive regimes, all of which directly alter the deal math and compliance burden for mergers, demergers, spin‑offs and intra‑group reorganisations. For in‑house counsel, CFOs and tax directors conducting corporate restructuring in Morocco during 2026, the margin for error has narrowed significantly.

This guide translates the Morocco finance law 2026 headlines into a practical, step‑by‑step workflow, covering tax modelling, corporate governance actions, filing timelines and a downloadable company restructuring checklist.

Last reviewed: 18 May 2026. This article is intended as general information only. Companies should obtain tailored legal advice before acting on any of the measures described below.

Executive Summary: What Changed and What You Must Do Now

The Morocco tax changes 2026 introduced by Law No. 50‑25 touch virtually every lever that matters in a corporate restructuring. Below are the five headline changes and the immediate actions they require.

  • Revised CIT bands. The progressive CIT rate structure has been recalibrated, with adjustments to the rate applied to net profits below MAD 100 million and a distinct rate for profits above that threshold. Companies must re‑model post‑restructuring tax liabilities under the new schedule before finalising any transaction.
  • Expanded withholding tax scope. WHT now applies to a wider range of Morocco‑sourced payments to non‑residents, including certain service fees and royalties that previously benefited from narrower definitions. Treaty relief remains available but requires stricter documentation.
  • Electronic accounting obligations. Qualifying taxpayers are required to maintain accounting records in a prescribed electronic format and to transmit them to the Direction Générale des Impôts (DGI) on request. Non‑compliance carries penalties that compound per filing period.
  • Incentive regime adjustments. Several restructuring‑relevant incentives, including reduced‑rate regimes for newly created entities and export‑oriented companies, have been modified. Deal structures that relied on legacy incentive calculations must be revisited.
  • DGI administrative guidance. Note Circulaire 737, released by the DGI on 27 February 2026, provides the implementing guidance for the new tax measures. It clarifies calculation methods, documentation standards and transitional provisions that are essential for compliance planning.

Industry observers expect the combined effect of these changes to be a shift toward earlier, more detailed pre‑deal tax modelling and a heavier administrative burden during the post‑closing compliance window. Companies that have not yet audited their restructuring plans against the new rules should treat that exercise as urgent.

Background: Finance Law 2026, Legislative Facts and Effective Dates

Law No. 50‑25: Publication and Effective Date

Law No. 50‑25, Morocco’s Finance Law for the 2026 fiscal year, was published in the Bulletin Officiel on 16 December 2025 and entered into force on 1 January 2026. The law amends and supplements the General Tax Code (Code Général des Impôts) across multiple titles, with the most restructuring‑relevant provisions concentrated in the CIT, WHT and procedural compliance chapters. Practitioners should work from the official Bulletin Officiel text and cross‑reference with the DGI’s implementing guidance.

DGI Note Circulaire 737: What It Clarifies

On 27 February 2026 the DGI released Note Circulaire 737, its detailed commentary on the tax measures enacted by the Finance Law 2026. The circular addresses calculation methodology for the revised CIT brackets, the documentation required to claim WHT exemptions or reduced rates under bilateral tax treaties, the scope and phasing of electronic accounting requirements, and the transitional rules for taxpayers whose fiscal years straddle the effective date. For any corporate restructuring in Morocco planned or executed during 2026, Note Circulaire 737 is the primary administrative reference for interpreting and applying the new rules.

Key Tax Changes in the Morocco Finance Law 2026 That Affect Corporate Restructuring

Three clusters of Morocco tax changes 2026 have the most direct impact on restructuring transactions: CIT rate adjustments, the broadened WHT net, and the new electronic accounting regime. Each changes both the economic outcome of a deal and the compliance steps that must surround it.

CIT Band Changes and Immediate Impact

The Finance Law 2026 adjusted Morocco’s progressive CIT rate schedule. The standard rate structure now applies graduated rates to successive tranches of net taxable profit, with the top marginal rate reserved for profits exceeding MAD 100 million. Companies in the financial sector (banks, insurance companies, leasing entities) remain subject to a specific rate. For restructurings, the practical consequence is straightforward: any transaction that shifts profit between entities, creates a new taxable entity or alters the allocation of income among group members must be re‑modelled under the updated brackets.

Worked example, pre‑ vs. post‑restructuring CIT. Consider a Moroccan group that plans to merge two subsidiaries. Before the merger, Subsidiary A reports net profit of MAD 40 million and Subsidiary B reports MAD 70 million. Post‑merger, the combined entity reports MAD 110 million. Under the revised CIT bands, the top‑bracket rate now applies to the MAD 10 million that exceeds the MAD 100 million threshold, a marginal cost that did not arise when profits were split across two entities. The deal team must model this uplift and weigh it against operational efficiencies.

Worked example, demerger and rate arbitrage. Conversely, a demerger that separates a high‑margin division into a standalone entity may bring each resulting company’s profits into a lower CIT bracket. However, the DGI has signalled in Note Circulaire 737 that transactions structured primarily for bracket arbitrage may face scrutiny under anti‑abuse provisions. Documentation of commercial substance is essential.

WHT: New Scope, Rates, and Documentation for Exemptions

The withholding tax morocco regime has been materially expanded. Post‑2026, WHT applies to a broader category of Morocco‑sourced payments, including management fees, technical assistance fees and certain intra‑group service charges, made to non‑resident entities. The standard WHT rate on such payments remains at 10 %, but the conditions for claiming treaty‑based exemptions or reductions have been tightened.

Under the new rules, the payer must hold, before the payment date, a certificate of tax residence issued by the recipient’s home jurisdiction, a declaration confirming the beneficial ownership of the income, and evidence that the recipient does not have a permanent establishment in Morocco through which the income is effectively connected. Note Circulaire 737 specifies that these documents must be presented to the DGI upon request and that failure to produce them results in WHT being assessed at the full domestic rate, regardless of any applicable treaty.

For cross‑border restructurings, the practical implication is that every intra‑group payment flowing out of Morocco in connection with the transaction, advisory fees, management charges, licence fees, interest, must be mapped against the new WHT rules and supporting documents assembled in advance.

Electronic Accounting and Reporting: Who, When, Penalties

Electronic accounting in Morocco is no longer optional for qualifying taxpayers. The Finance Law 2026 requires companies above a prescribed turnover threshold to maintain their accounting records in a DGI‑approved electronic format and to be capable of transmitting those records electronically upon request. The DGI circular clarifies that the obligation applies from the fiscal year beginning on or after 1 January 2026. Penalties for non‑compliance are assessed per filing period and increase for repeated failures.

For restructuring transactions, the electronic accounting requirement adds a due‑diligence layer: the acquiring or surviving entity must verify that the target’s accounting systems meet the prescribed standard. If they do not, system migration or upgrade costs must be factored into the transaction timeline and budget.

Practical Legal Steps Before You Restructure: An 8‑Step Workflow

Every corporate restructuring in Morocco under the 2026 regime should follow a structured workflow. The eight steps below represent the minimum diligence and execution sequence.

Step 1, Pre‑deal tax and legal due diligence. Map the target’s tax position under the new CIT bands, its WHT exposure on intra‑group flows, and its compliance status with electronic accounting obligations. Identify any pending DGI audits or disputes.

Step 2, Model post‑restructuring CIT and WHT. Build a financial model that applies the revised CIT brackets and expanded WHT scope to the proposed post‑deal structure. Stress‑test for bracket creep (in mergers) and bracket arbitrage (in demergers).

Step 3, Check treaty implications. For any cross‑border element, review the applicable double‑taxation treaty and confirm that the documentation required under Note Circulaire 737 is available and current. Morocco has an extensive treaty network, but the new documentation standards mean that reliance on a treaty without paperwork in hand is a compliance risk.

Step 4, Board Approvals

Under Moroccan company law, the board of directors (or management board, depending on the corporate form) must formally approve the restructuring transaction. The board resolution should reference the specific transaction type (merger, demerger, partial asset transfer), identify the entities involved, authorise management to execute the transaction documents, and delegate authority for regulatory filings. The resolution must be documented in the minutes of the board meeting and filed with the company’s records.

Step 5, Shareholder Approvals

Mergers, demergers and certain asset transfers require approval by an extraordinary general meeting (EGM) of shareholders. The EGM must be convened with the notice periods prescribed by law (typically 15 days for SARLs and 30 days for SAs), and the resolution must be passed by the requisite majority, generally two‑thirds of shares present or represented for a société anonyme. The draft merger or demerger plan must be made available to shareholders in advance of the meeting, along with the auditor’s report where required.

Step 6, Trade Register Filings

Following approval, the restructuring must be registered with the Trade Register (Registre du Commerce). Filings include the deposit of the merger or demerger deed, amended articles of association, and updated shareholder registers. The filing must be made within the statutory deadline, generally 30 days from the date of the EGM resolution. Late filings attract penalties and may delay the legal effectiveness of the transaction.

Step 7, Tax Filings and DGI Notifications

The DGI must be notified of the restructuring within the timeframes set out in the General Tax Code, as supplemented by Note Circulaire 737. Notifications include the filing of the final tax return for the absorbed entity (in a merger), the declaration of any capital gains or losses arising from the transaction, and the updated registration of the surviving or newly created entity for CIT, VAT and WHT purposes. Failure to notify the DGI on time can result in penalties and, in some cases, the loss of favourable restructuring treatment.

Step 8, Post‑transaction compliance audit. Within 60 days of closing, conduct an internal compliance audit to verify that all filings have been made, all accounting records have been migrated to the surviving entity’s electronic system, and all WHT documentation is in order. This step is frequently overlooked and is the source of the most common post‑deal penalties.

Corporate Governance Morocco: Board, Shareholders, Filings and Sample Resolution Language

Corporate governance in Morocco for restructuring transactions is governed primarily by Law No. 17‑95 (société anonyme) and Law No. 5‑96 (other commercial companies), as amended. The governance checklist below applies to the most common restructuring forms.

Sample board resolution items:

  • Approval of the restructuring type and counterparties
  • Authorisation of management to negotiate and execute the transaction agreement
  • Appointment of an independent auditor (commissaire aux apports or commissaire à la fusion) where required
  • Delegation of authority for Trade Register and DGI filings
  • Approval of the timetable and conditions precedent

Shareholder resolution checklist (EGM):

  • Presentation and discussion of the merger/demerger plan and auditor’s report
  • Vote on the restructuring resolution (two‑thirds majority for SA; statutory majority for SARL)
  • Approval of amended articles of association
  • Authorisation for the board to implement all ancillary steps
  • Appointment of new directors or managers, if applicable

All resolutions must be recorded in minutes, signed by the chairman and secretary of the meeting, and deposited with the Trade Register. Timely filing is essential: industry observers note that delayed governance filings are one of the most frequent causes of post‑restructuring compliance issues.

Cross‑Border M&A and Intra‑Group Reorganisation Checklist

For transactions involving a non‑resident party, the Morocco m&a tax landscape after the 2026 Finance Law demands particular attention to WHT, transfer pricing, capital gains exposure and merger control. The comparison table below summarises the key obligations by entity type.

Obligation / Requirement Domestic (Moroccan) Company Non‑Resident / Foreign Entity
Withholding tax on service fees (post‑2026) WHT may apply where recipient is a taxable entity, check exemptions and documentation per Note Circulaire 737 WHT applies on Morocco‑sourced payment at 10 %; treaty relief available but requires certificate of residence, beneficial ownership declaration and PE confirmation before payment date
Electronic accounting Required for qualifying taxpayers, maintain records in DGI‑approved electronic format from FY 2026 Non‑resident with a Moroccan permanent establishment may be required to maintain electronic records through the PE
Transfer pricing documentation Must maintain contemporaneous transfer pricing documentation for related‑party transactions Same obligation applies where the non‑resident transacts with a Moroccan related entity; DGI may request documentation during audit
Capital gains tax on share disposals Gains on disposal of shares are included in taxable income under the revised CIT bands Morocco may tax gains on shares in Moroccan companies held by non‑residents, check treaty for capital gains article and any exemptions
Merger control filing Filing required when parties meet combined turnover thresholds under the Competition Law Foreign acquirers with Moroccan turnover above the threshold must file; failure to notify can result in fines and transaction suspension

The likely practical effect of the 2026 changes is that cross‑border deal teams will need to involve Moroccan tax counsel earlier in the structuring process, particularly to map WHT flows, assemble treaty documentation, and confirm that electronic accounting standards are met on both sides of the transaction.

Compliance Timeline and Filings Matrix

Timely filing is non‑negotiable under the 2026 regime. The matrix below consolidates the key post‑restructuring administrative obligations, responsible parties and deadlines.

Filing / Obligation Responsible Party Deadline
Deposit of merger/demerger deed and amended articles with Trade Register Surviving or newly created entity 30 days from EGM resolution date
Final CIT return for absorbed entity Absorbed entity (or successor) Within the statutory filing period following the effective date of the merger (generally 3 months)
DGI notification of restructuring (tax registration update) Surviving entity Within 30 days of the transaction becoming legally effective
WHT declarations for payments made in connection with the restructuring Payer entity Monthly declaration due by the end of the month following the payment
Electronic accounting system migration / audit Surviving entity Before first DGI‑mandated transmission deadline (per Note Circulaire 737 schedule)
Social security (CNSS) notification of workforce transfer Surviving entity and absorbed entity Within 30 days of the transaction date
Merger control notification (if thresholds met) Parties to the transaction Before closing, no statutory deadline, but transaction cannot close until clearance is obtained or the review period lapses

When interacting with the DGI, practitioners should reference Note Circulaire 737 in all correspondence and retain proof of submission for each filing. The DGI has been increasingly active in enforcing filing deadlines, and early indications suggest that the 2026 compliance cycle will see heightened scrutiny of restructuring‑related filings.

Risk Areas and Common Pitfalls

Even well‑planned restructurings can be derailed by avoidable compliance failures. The most common pitfalls observed in the 2026 environment include:

  • WHT misclassification. Treating a payment as exempt from WHT without assembling the required treaty documentation before the payment date. Under the new rules, retroactive correction is difficult and penalties accrue from the original due date.
  • Missed electronic accounting deadlines. Failing to migrate the target entity’s accounting records to the prescribed electronic format before the first DGI transmission deadline. This is especially common in acquisitions of smaller companies that have not yet digitised their records.
  • Incomplete shareholder approvals. Proceeding with a merger or demerger without obtaining the required EGM majority or without making the auditor’s report available to shareholders within the prescribed timeframe. Defective approvals can render the restructuring voidable.
  • Mis‑timed asset transfers. Transferring assets before the restructuring is legally effective (i.e., before Trade Register filing), which can crystallise capital gains tax outside the restructuring regime and eliminate the benefit of any rollover relief.
  • Insufficient documentation for WHT exemptions. Relying on expired certificates of tax residence or failing to obtain a beneficial ownership declaration from the non‑resident recipient.

Practical Annex: Company Restructuring Checklist and Sample Resolution Snippets

The following company restructuring checklist consolidates the key actions described in this guide. Companies may adapt it to their specific transaction type and corporate form.

  • Confirm transaction type (merger, demerger, partial asset transfer, share deal)
  • Complete pre‑deal tax and legal due diligence
  • Model post‑deal CIT under revised 2026 bands
  • Map all WHT‑relevant payment flows and assemble treaty documentation
  • Verify target’s electronic accounting compliance status
  • Obtain board approval (record resolution in minutes)
  • Convene and hold EGM; obtain shareholder approval
  • Appoint auditor (commissaire à la fusion / commissaire aux apports) where required
  • File merger/demerger deed and amended articles with Trade Register (within 30 days)
  • File final CIT return for absorbed entity
  • Notify DGI of restructuring and update tax registration
  • File WHT declarations for all relevant payments
  • Notify CNSS of workforce transfer
  • Submit merger control notification (if applicable)
  • Conduct post‑closing compliance audit (within 60 days)

Sample board resolution snippet (merger): “The Board of Directors, having reviewed the draft merger plan dated [date], the report of the commissaire à la fusion and the financial projections prepared by management, hereby resolves to approve the proposed merger of [Absorbed Entity] into [Surviving Entity] on the terms set out in the merger plan, and authorises the Chief Executive Officer to execute all documents and take all steps necessary to give effect to the merger, including filings with the Trade Register and the DGI.”

For a downloadable PDF version of this checklist and additional sample resolutions, contact Global Law Experts through our lawyer directory.

Conclusion

Corporate restructuring in Morocco after the 2026 Finance Law demands earlier planning, more detailed tax modelling and tighter compliance discipline than at any point in recent memory. The three most critical immediate actions for any company contemplating a restructuring are: first, re‑model all post‑deal CIT and WHT outcomes under the revised rules; second, audit the target’s electronic accounting compliance status; and third, assemble all WHT treaty documentation before any cross‑border payment is made. By following the structured workflow and company restructuring checklist set out in this guide, companies can navigate the new regime with confidence and minimise the risk of costly post‑transaction penalties.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Meriem Zamrane at Maddah Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Medias24, La loi de finances 2026 publiée au Bulletin Officiel
  2. AAFIR, Résumé Note Circulaire 737 DGI (Loi de Finances 2026)
  3. PwC, Morocco Tax Summaries
  4. Upsilon Consulting, Morocco Finance Law 2026
  5. Global Law Experts, Morocco Finance Law 2026 Corporate Restructuring Overview
  6. EBRD, Morocco Country Profile (Restructuring Framework)
  7. Orbitax, Morocco Provides Detailed Summary of Finance Law 2026

FAQs

What are the key corporate tax changes in Finance Law 2026 that affect restructurings?
The Finance Law 2026 (Law No. 50‑25) revised the CIT rate schedule, expanded the scope of withholding tax on Morocco‑sourced payments to non‑residents, introduced mandatory electronic accounting for qualifying taxpayers, and adjusted several incentive regimes. Note Circulaire 737, issued by the DGI on 27 February 2026, provides the detailed implementing guidance for these measures.
Yes. Companies above the prescribed turnover threshold must maintain their accounting records in a DGI‑approved electronic format from fiscal years beginning on or after 1 January 2026. Records must be transmittable electronically to the DGI upon request. Non‑compliance carries penalties that increase with repeated failures.
The expanded WHT scope means that a wider range of payments, including management fees, technical assistance fees and certain service charges, made to non‑residents in connection with a restructuring are now subject to WHT. Deal teams must map all cross‑border payment flows, confirm treaty relief availability, and assemble certificates of tax residence, beneficial ownership declarations and PE confirmations before any payment is made.
The board must formally approve the restructuring and authorise management to execute the transaction. An extraordinary general meeting of shareholders must then vote on the merger or demerger plan, typically requiring a two‑thirds majority for sociétés anonymes. The auditor’s report (where required) must be made available to shareholders in advance of the meeting. All resolutions must be minuted and filed with the Trade Register.
The merger or demerger deed and amended articles must be filed with the Trade Register within 30 days of the EGM resolution. The DGI must be notified of the restructuring, and the tax registration of the surviving entity must be updated, within 30 days of the transaction becoming legally effective. The final CIT return for the absorbed entity must be filed within the statutory period, generally three months from the effective date.
In principle, WHT that was over‑withheld or withheld in circumstances where a treaty exemption should have applied can be reclaimed through an application to the DGI. However, the process requires the payer to submit the full suite of documentation that should have been in place at the time of payment. Early indications suggest that the DGI is applying strict documentary standards under the 2026 regime, making prevention (i.e., having documents ready before payment) far more efficient than cure.

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How Morocco's 2026 Finance Law Affects Corporate Restructuring, Practical Steps for Companies

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