Oman free zones have undergone their most significant regulatory overhaul in a decade, and the 2025–2026 legislative cycle has reshaped the economics of every inward-investment decision. Royal Decree 38/2025, which issued the consolidated Law of Special Economic Zones and Free Zones, established a unified governance framework under the Public Authority for Special Economic Zones and Free Zones (OPAZ) that directly affects ownership caps, tax incentives, customs treatment and mainland trading rights. This guide is written for CFOs, general counsel and overseas in-house teams who need a practical, step-by-step playbook, not a headline summary, before committing capital to a zone project.
It covers the five questions that matter most: which zone suits your project, whether you can hold 100 per cent equity, what fiscal incentives apply, how to trade with the mainland, and exactly which visas and permits your team will need.
Before reading further, run through these five threshold questions. If three or more point toward “free zone,” this guide will show you how to execute.
| Question | Free zone indicated | Mainland indicated |
|---|---|---|
| Do you need 100% foreign ownership without a local partner? | Yes, most Oman free zones permit full foreign ownership under OPAZ rules. | Possible under the Foreign Capital Investment Law, but sector restrictions and minimum-capital conditions apply. |
| Is your primary revenue from exports or re-exports? | Yes, customs exemptions on imports of raw materials and equipment are a core free-zone benefit. | Standard customs duties apply; export orientation is not rewarded with duty relief. |
| Do you need to sell directly into the Oman domestic market? | Possible, but goods entering the mainland attract customs duties and require approvals. | Yes, no additional mainland-access approvals needed. |
| Is your project capital-intensive with a long payback period (e.g., heavy industry, refining, logistics)? | Yes, long-term land leases and corporate-tax exemption periods in zones like SEZAD are designed for exactly this profile. | Lease structures are available but without equivalent tax holidays. |
| Do you need proximity to a deep-water port and want a single-window licensing authority? | Yes, Sohar Free Zone and the Special Economic Zone at Duqm both offer integrated port-plus-zone logistics and one-stop regulatory services. | Multiple ministries and municipal authorities are involved; no single-window model. |
The regulatory landscape for Oman free zones moved through three distinct phases between 2020 and 2026. Understanding the sequence is essential because some earlier incentive agreements remain in force, while new projects fall under the consolidated law.
| Date | Instrument | Practical effect |
|---|---|---|
| August 2020 | Royal Decree No. 105/2020, Establishment of OPAZ | Created the Public Authority for Special Economic Zones and Free Zones as a single regulator responsible for oversight, licensing and promotion of all SEZs and free zones across Oman (OPAZ). |
| 2025 | Royal Decree 38/2025, Law of Special Economic Zones and Free Zones | Consolidated the legal framework for all zones. The law sets out investor rights (ownership, repatriation of profits, dispute-resolution options), defines the categories of zone licences, codifies tax and customs incentives, and empowers OPAZ to issue binding implementing regulations (OPAZ). |
| 2026 | Ministerial and implementing regulations (various) | Detailed operational rules for permit applications, mainland trade approvals, investor licensing procedures and environmental compliance. Investors should consult the OPAZ and SEZAD portals for operative texts as they are gazetted. |
The practical effect of this three-stage rollout is that Oman now has a single, codified legislative base for free-zone investment, replacing the patchwork of zone-specific decrees that previously governed each area independently. Industry observers expect the implementing regulations issued during 2026 to further streamline investor on-boarding, particularly for SEZAD and Sohar Free Zone projects. For a broader look at the corporate-law environment, see Oman corporate law changes 2026.
OPAZ currently oversees several distinct zones, each designed for a different investment profile. Choosing the right zone at the outset avoids costly re-structuring later.
Located adjacent to Sohar Port on the Batinah coast, Sohar Free Zone targets manufacturing, metals processing, petrochemicals, logistics and food industries. Its proximity to a major deep-water port and industrial feedstock (adjacent to Sohar Refinery and aluminium smelter) makes it the default choice for medium-to-heavy industry. The zone offers ready-built warehouse and factory units alongside serviced land for build-to-suit projects.
Established in 2011, the Special Economic Zone at Duqm spans approximately 2,000 square kilometres with an 80-kilometre coastline on the Arabian Sea (SEZAD). SEZAD is structured for large-scale, capital-intensive projects, refining, dry dock, fisheries port, heavy industry and tourism. Its sheer size and government-backed infrastructure programme (roads, utilities, airport, port) make it Oman’s flagship zone for operating in Duqm. SEZAD manages, regulates and develops all economic activities within the zone through a dedicated authority.
Positioned in the Dhofar Governorate near Salalah Port, this zone focuses on logistics, light manufacturing, warehousing and export-oriented assembly. Its location on established East-West shipping lanes makes it attractive for re-export and distribution operations serving the Indian Ocean rim.
Situated on the Oman–Yemen border in the Dhofar region, Al Mazunah is a trade-focused zone designed for small-to-medium enterprises engaged in cross-border commerce, general trading and light manufacturing. It serves as a gateway for goods moving between the GCC and the Horn of Africa.
Investors comparing these zones should weigh four factors: sector fit, infrastructure readiness, proximity to target markets and the specific incentive package each zone authority offers.
Foreign investors can generally hold 100 per cent of the equity in a free-zone entity without the need for a local partner. This is one of the most significant differentiators between an Oman free zone structure and a mainland company, where foreign ownership remains subject to conditions under the Oman commercial companies law and the Foreign Capital Investment Law administered by MOCIIP.
The Law of Special Economic Zones and Free Zones (Royal Decree 38/2025) confirms investor rights including full foreign ownership, repatriation of capital and profits, and access to dispute-resolution mechanisms (OPAZ). Within each zone, investors typically choose from the following corporate forms:
| Entity type | Ownership permitted | Key reporting and compliance |
|---|---|---|
| Free Zone Company (FZC), single shareholder | 100% foreign ownership | Annual financial statements; zone licence renewal; compliance with zone-specific activity conditions. |
| Free Zone Company (FZE), multiple shareholders | 100% foreign ownership (all shareholders may be foreign) | Annual audited accounts; shareholder register maintenance; zone licence renewal. |
| Branch of a foreign company | Parent retains full control, no separate equity | Audited accounts of the branch; annual licence renewal with zone authority; parent-company guarantee may be required. |
| Free Zone LLC | 100% foreign ownership permitted in most zones | Minimum capital requirements vary by zone and activity; annual audit; zone licence renewal and activity reporting. |
Each zone authority prescribes its own minimum share-capital thresholds and activity classifications, so investors should confirm the applicable requirements with OPAZ or the relevant zone operator before incorporation.
The fiscal incentive package is typically the primary driver for choosing an Oman free zone over a mainland structure. The Law of Special Economic Zones and Free Zones (Royal Decree 38/2025) codifies the categories of incentives available, while zone-specific regulations and individual investor agreements set out the detail (OPAZ).
Industry observers expect the implementing regulations under the 2025 law to tighten transfer-pricing scrutiny for transactions between free-zone entities and related-party mainland companies. Investors structuring intercompany supply chains should ensure that pricing is at arm’s length and that documentary evidence supports the commercial rationale. Tax residency certificates, required to access Oman’s double-taxation treaty network, must be obtained from the Ministry of Finance (MOF), and free-zone entities should confirm their eligibility in advance.
A free-zone company can trade on the Oman mainland, but it cannot do so on the same basis as a mainland-registered entity. This is the single most misunderstood aspect of the free zone vs mainland Oman decision.
There are two principal routes for mainland market access:
Investors whose revenue model depends heavily on domestic Omani sales should carefully model the cost of customs duties and the administrative burden of maintaining parallel registrations before committing to a free-zone structure.
Every free-zone project requires an immigration plan. Visa sponsorship, work-permit quotas and medical-clearance procedures are governed by the Royal Oman Police (ROP) and the Ministry of Labour, with zone authorities acting as the first point of contact for applications (ROP).
A visa sponsored by a free-zone entity generally restricts the holder’s employment to activities within that zone. Staff required to work on the Oman mainland on a regular basis, for example, sales personnel or after-sales service teams, should be employed by a mainland entity or branch. Early indications suggest the 2026 implementing regulations may introduce a formal secondment or temporary-deployment mechanism, but until those rules are published, the safest approach is to maintain separate sponsorship for mainland-facing roles.
Securing the right site and connecting it to utilities are often the longest lead-time items in a free-zone project. The practical mechanics differ materially between SEZAD and Sohar Free Zone.
| Lease type | Typical term | Key considerations |
|---|---|---|
| Usufruct agreement (SEZAD) | Up to 50 years, renewable | Granted by SEZAD directly; land remains government-owned; investor holds the right to develop, operate and benefit from the plot. Terms are negotiable for large-scale projects (SEZAD). |
| Standard land lease (Sohar Free Zone) | Typically 25 years, renewable | Issued by the zone operator; includes serviced plots with utilities to the plot boundary. Shorter initial terms with renewal options are common for warehouse and logistics operations. |
| Ready-built facility lease | 1–10 years | Available in Sohar and Salalah for investors wanting immediate operations without a construction phase. Monthly or annual rent; shorter commitment but limited customisation. |
Within SEZAD, the authority coordinates water, electricity, sewage and telecoms connections, and investors submit connection applications through the SEZAD online services portal. Environmental impact assessments are mandatory for industrial projects and are reviewed by the zone authority in coordination with the Environment Authority. In Sohar Free Zone, the zone operator manages utility allocation and investors are typically required to submit a detailed project brief, including projected utility demand, at the licensing stage.
Oman’s ICV programme applies across the economy, including free zones. Investors bidding for government contracts or participating in large-scale infrastructure projects must demonstrate compliance with ICV certification requirements. The likely practical effect of the 2026 regulations will be to formalise how ICV scoring interacts with free-zone incentive agreements, so investors should build local-content planning into their project feasibility studies from the outset.
The formation process for free zone company formation in Oman follows a broadly similar pattern regardless of zone, but each zone authority has its own portal, document requirements and timelines.
Typical timelines vary. For straightforward Sohar Free Zone registrations (warehouse or trading activities), the process from initial enquiry to zone-licence issuance can take four to eight weeks. SEZAD projects, given their scale, typically require three to six months from application to usufruct execution, with additional time for construction permitting. Pre-engagement with the zone authority and submission of a complete documentation package are the most effective ways to compress these timelines.
Oman free zones offer a compelling proposition for foreign investors seeking full ownership, fiscal incentives and integrated logistics, provided the structure is right for the commercial objective. The 2025–2026 legislative overhaul under Royal Decree 38/2025 has strengthened the legal framework, but the detail sits in implementing regulations that are still being gazetted. Investors should confirm the current status of zone-specific rules before finalising any structure. For additional resources on investing in Oman, consult our international commercial practice guide or find an Oman corporate lawyer through our directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ahmed Al Barwani at Al Tamimi, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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