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Last updated: May 1, 2026, Draft stage. Cabinet advanced draft amendments on April 19, 2026. This guide will be updated when the Ministry of Investment publishes the final regulation in the Official Gazette.
On April 19, 2026, Jordan’s Cabinet advanced draft amendments to the Investment Environment Regulation, signalling the most significant set of Jordan investment regulation changes 2026 since the Kingdom introduced its Investment Promotion Strategy in 2023. The draft amendments expand incentive eligibility to cover development and expansion projects, streamline registration and licensing procedures for foreign investors, and recalibrate property-ownership and resale rules. For in-house counsel, fund managers, and project sponsors evaluating market entry, these changes create both new opportunities and fresh compliance obligations that demand immediate attention. This guide provides a plain-language, step-by-step breakdown of every material amendment, the bodies involved, and what investors should do right now, even before final promulgation.
The Cabinet session of April 19, 2026, approved the justifications for a package of draft amendments to the Investment Environment Regulation, as reported by the Jordan News Agency (Petra). The measures sit within the broader Investment Promotion Strategy 2023–2026, which aims to modernise incentive frameworks, reduce bureaucratic friction, and attract higher volumes of foreign direct investment into priority sectors.
The five headline impacts for foreign investors are:
Quick-action checklist for investors:
Jordan’s investment architecture rests on the Investment Environment Law and the implementing regulations issued under it. The Investment Environment Regulation, the instrument now being amended, is the operational regulation that governs registration procedures, incentive criteria, licensing requirements, and investor protections. Understanding its position in the legal hierarchy is essential: Cabinet approval of the draft justifications is a necessary procedural step, but the amendments do not carry legal force until they are formally promulgated and published in the Official Gazette.
The Jordan Times reported that the draft amendments are designed to “boost the investment climate” and “modernise key sectors.” Industry observers expect the final text to be substantively aligned with the Cabinet-advanced draft, although minor adjustments during the public-consultation phase remain possible.
Based on official announcements and published ministry strategy documents, the Investment Environment Regulation 2026 amendments touch several core areas. The following table summarises the affected regulatory provisions and the nature of each change:
| Regulatory area | Nature of amendment | Investor impact |
|---|---|---|
| Incentive eligibility criteria | Expanded to cover development and expansion projects | Existing investors can apply for incentives on project expansions, not just new investments |
| Registration and approval procedures | Consolidated touchpoints; shortened processing windows | Faster time-to-market; reduced administrative cost |
| Property ownership for foreign investors | Adjusted ceilings and revised resale-restriction periods | Greater flexibility in real-estate-linked investments |
| Repatriation of profits | Clearer procedural language and reinforced guarantees | Reduced structuring risk for cross-border capital flows |
| Sector-specific licensing | Accelerated timelines for priority sectors | Faster licensing in renewables, fintech, healthcare, manufacturing |
| Reporting and compliance obligations | Updated compliance calendar and reporting formats | New periodic reporting requirements for incentive recipients |
A critical question for foreign investors Jordan 2026 is whether amendments apply retroactively to projects already registered under the current regulation. Jordan’s legal tradition generally applies regulatory amendments prospectively, that is, existing registrations remain valid, but investors who wish to benefit from expanded incentives must apply under the new framework. The likely practical effect will be that investors with live projects should file supplementary applications once the final regulation takes effect, particularly to capture incentives that now extend to expansion activities. Early indications suggest that existing investor protections, including treaty-based guarantees and bilateral investment treaty (BIT) rights, remain undisturbed by the draft.
One of the most consequential Jordan investment regulation changes 2026 is the restructuring of the registration and approval process. The draft aims to reduce the number of separate interactions an investor must have with government bodies and to compress decision-making timelines. Below is a practical walkthrough of the process as it is expected to operate once the amendments take effect.
Before submitting any application, investors should complete the following preparatory steps to register an investment in Jordan under the 2026 rules:
The formal registration process under the Investment Environment Regulation involves multiple government bodies. The draft amendments aim to consolidate these interactions:
Under the current Investment Environment Regulation, the end-to-end registration process typically takes between 30 and 60 business days, depending on sector complexity and completeness of filings. Industry observers expect the 2026 amendments to target a reduction to 20–40 business days for standard applications, with an expedited track for projects in priority sectors (renewables, digital economy, healthcare). The Ministry of Investment’s Investment Promotion Strategy specifically identifies process simplification as a strategic pillar, lending credibility to these timeline objectives.
Investors should note that fast-track eligibility is expected to require that all documents be submitted in complete, certified form at the initial filing stage. Incomplete applications are likely to be routed to the standard track.
The expansion of the incentive framework is the centrepiece of the 2026 amendments. As confirmed by Petra and the Jordan Times, the draft explicitly extends incentive eligibility to development and expansion projects, a significant departure from the prior framework, which primarily targeted greenfield investments.
The following table summarises the key Jordan investor incentives 2026 categories as indicated by published government strategy documents and official announcements. Final rates and conditions remain subject to promulgation:
| Incentive category | Description | Eligible project types (2026 draft) |
|---|---|---|
| Income-tax reductions | Reduced income-tax rates for qualifying investments in designated development zones and priority sectors | Greenfield, expansion, and development projects |
| Customs-duty exemptions | Exemptions on imports of machinery, equipment, and raw materials for qualifying projects | Greenfield and expansion projects in manufacturing and renewables |
| Land allocation | Government land allocated at preferential rates within special economic zones and development areas | Large-scale industrial and infrastructure projects |
| Wage and training subsidies | Subsidies for hiring and training Jordanian employees as part of local-content commitments | All qualifying projects meeting employment thresholds |
| Sales-tax exemptions | Exemptions on sales tax for specific inputs and services in priority sectors | Greenfield and expansion projects in designated zones |
The practical significance of extending incentives to expansion projects is substantial. Existing investors who have already established Jordanian operations can now structure plant expansions, capacity upgrades, or new product-line launches as qualifying investment projects, potentially accessing customs and tax incentives that were previously available only at initial market entry.
Jordan’s investment framework has long guaranteed foreign investors the right to repatriate profits, dividends, and capital in foreign currency. The Investment Promotion Strategy 2023–2026, as documented by UNCTAD, reaffirms these guarantees as a core pillar of the Kingdom’s investor-attraction policy.
The 2026 draft amendments are expected to reinforce repatriation of profits Jordan guarantees by providing clearer procedural language. Key points for investors include:
Foreign property purchase Jordan 2026 rules are among the amendments most closely watched by real-estate-linked investors, hospitality developers, and mixed-use project sponsors. The current framework imposes nationality-based ownership limits, purpose restrictions, and mandatory resale periods that can complicate project structuring.
Under the existing rules, foreign investors must obtain prior approval from the Council of Ministers (or its delegate) before acquiring real property in Jordan. The 2026 draft amendments are expected to maintain this approval requirement but streamline the process by:
Jordan maintains restrictions on the total area of land a foreign investor may own, and imposes minimum holding periods before resale is permitted. The 2026 amendments are expected to adjust these parameters:
The 2026 amendments do not operate in isolation. Several sector-specific regulatory initiatives are proceeding in parallel, and together they reshape the licensing for foreign investors Jordan across the Kingdom’s priority sectors.
Jordan’s renewable-energy sector continues to attract significant foreign investment, particularly in solar and wind. The Energy and Minerals Regulatory Commission (EMRC) issues sector licences, and the 2026 amendments are expected to introduce parallel processing so that investment registration and energy-sector licensing can proceed concurrently. Investors should expect that projects in designated renewable-energy zones will qualify for the expanded incentives framework, including customs exemptions on equipment imports.
Jordan has taken a significant step toward regulating virtual-asset activities. Draft Executive Instructions for Virtual Asset Activities have been published for public consultation on the Tawasal platform, the government’s official consultation portal. As analysed by Tamimi & Company, Law No. 14 positions Jordan within the global digital-economy landscape and establishes a regulatory framework for virtual-asset service providers. Foreign fintech investors should monitor these implementing instructions closely, as they will define licensing conditions, capital requirements, and consumer-protection obligations for the sector.
Healthcare and pharmaceutical manufacturing remain high-priority sectors under the Investment Promotion Strategy. The Jordan Food and Drug Administration (JFDA) and the Ministry of Health maintain sector-specific licensing requirements that operate alongside the Investment Environment Regulation. The 2026 Jordan investment regulation changes are expected to accelerate coordination between the Ministry of Investment and sector regulators, reducing the sequential delays that have historically added months to healthcare-project timelines. Manufacturing projects meeting local-content and employment targets are expected to qualify for the full suite of expanded incentives.
While the 2026 amendments are designed to attract investment, they also carry compliance obligations that investors must not overlook. Understanding the risk and protection landscape is essential for responsible market entry.
Investors who receive incentives under the amended regulation will be subject to periodic reporting requirements. Based on ministry strategy documents and existing practice, these are expected to include:
Failure to meet reporting obligations can result in incentive clawback, fines, or, in serious cases, revocation of the investment registration certificate. Investors should build compliance-management processes into their operational planning from the outset.
Jordan’s investment-protection framework operates at multiple levels. As documented by legal commentators, investor protections include:
The 2026 amendments are not expected to diminish existing protections. The UNCTAD Investment Policy Hub confirms that the Investment Promotion Strategy 2023–2026 reaffirms Jordan’s commitment to international investment-protection standards.
The following table sets out the known and anticipated milestones for the 2026 amendments, alongside recommended investor actions at each stage:
| Event | Government action / source | Recommended investor action |
|---|---|---|
| April 19, 2026, Cabinet advances draft amendments | Cabinet approved draft justifications (Petra; Jordan Times) | Review draft text; begin project impact assessment; notify local counsel |
| Public consultation period (TBD) | Ministry of Investment / Tawasal consultations (when published) | Submit stakeholder comments; monitor JEIC updates; prepare revised business case |
| Final promulgation and effective date (TBD) | Publication in the Official Gazette / Ministry announcement | File registrations per new rules; apply for incentives before any sunset clauses expire |
Investors should treat the Cabinet-advancement date as their planning trigger. Experience with previous Jordanian regulatory amendments suggests that final promulgation typically follows within two to four months of Cabinet advancement, although timelines can vary. Building flexibility into project schedules is advisable.
The following consolidated checklist summarises the essential actions for foreign investors preparing for the 2026 amendments:
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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