Entry & Establishment

The First Door: From Idea to Operating Entity.

Four pathways. Clear timelines. No shortcuts. This is how foreign companies enter the Iraqi market properly.

The first question a foreign company asks before entering Iraq is rarely "how long does registration take." The sharper question is: which legal vehicle, and why this one rather than the others.

The answer isn't a service menu. It's a structural decision that shapes your tax exposure, your liability, your operational flexibility, and even who can sue whom if a dispute arises later.

This page lays out the four pathways actually available to foreign companies in Iraq, when each one fits, and what happens behind each choice.

Four pathways. Each opens a different door.

There is no "best" structure. There is a structure that fits your situation. The differences between the four are not procedural; they are strategic.

Pathway One — Foreign Company Branch An extension of your parent, in Iraq.

What it is: A legal extension of your parent company abroad, operating in Iraq without forming a new entity.

Foreign ownership ceiling: 100%. The branch belongs entirely to the parent company. No Iraqi partner required.

When it fits

  • Your parent company has been registered and operating in its home country for at least one year.
  • You have a contract in Iraq — with the government, with a prime contractor working on a government contract, or with a private-sector counterparty above the regulatory threshold.
  • You want to preserve the parent company's identity and leverage its global reputation.

When it doesn't

  • You don't yet have a concrete contract in Iraq. Branches require an existing contract, not market intent.
  • Your planned activity in Iraq exceeds what the parent company does abroad.

Typical timeline

4–8 weeks from submission of complete documents.

What sets it apart

A branch is not an independent legal entity. It is a window onto Iraq for the parent company — meaning the branch's obligations are the parent's obligations, directly. An advantage in reputation. A weight in liability.

Pathway Two — Limited Liability Company (LLC) A new Iraqi entity, in partnership.

What it is: An independent Iraqi legal entity, established with mixed ownership between foreign and Iraqi parties.

Foreign ownership ceiling: 49%. Law No. 17 of 2019 mandates that the Iraqi shareholder hold no less than 51%.

When it fits

  • You are entering the market with a real Iraqi partner — not a name on paper, but someone who understands the market and earns half the entity.
  • You want operational flexibility (LLCs carry a lighter governance burden than joint-stock companies).
  • Your activity is commercially flexible, doesn't require multiple shareholders or share issuance.

When it doesn't

  • You're unwilling to share ownership with a local party.
  • Your project requires substantial capital distributed across multiple shareholders.

Typical timeline

4–8 weeks.

Minimum capital

1,000,000 Iraqi Dinars (~USD 850) for most activities. Specialized sectors (oil and gas, banking) carry significantly higher minimums.

What sets it apart

Choosing the Iraqi partner is the most consequential decision in an LLC's life. That partner holds half the entity and votes on substantive decisions. Due diligence on the prospective partner is not a detail — it's foundational.

Pathway Three — Joint-Stock Company (JSC) For scale and governance discipline.

What it is: An independent Iraqi legal entity established with capital distributed across shares among shareholders.

Foreign ownership ceiling: 49%. Same 51% Iraqi rule applies.

When it fits

  • A large project with substantial capital.
  • You anticipate bringing in additional shareholders later (private placement, public offering).
  • Your activity benefits from a formal corporate structure (board of directors, general assembly, independent auditor).

When it doesn't

  • Mid-sized projects (LLCs are lighter and carry the same ownership ceiling).
  • You prefer operational flexibility over governance discipline.

Typical timeline

6–10 weeks (longer than an LLC due to subscription procedures and additional formal steps).

What sets it apart

A JSC clearly separates ownership from management. That separation is a governance advantage, but it carries higher documentation and accounting demands than an LLC.

Pathway Four — Holding Company A control vehicle, not an entry vehicle.

What it is: A joint-stock or limited liability company that owns and controls other subsidiary companies.

Foreign ownership ceiling: 49% (since it takes the form of either a JSC or LLC).

When it fits

  • You have, or will have, more than one company in Iraq, and you want centralized control.
  • You're planning future acquisitions.
  • You're managing a multi-sector investment portfolio.

When it doesn't

  • A single, standalone project — a holding structure is unnecessary overhead.
  • No expansion plan that justifies a holding structure.

What sets it apart

A holding company is less a registration vehicle and more a control structure. It belongs in the conversation when the project outgrows a single entity.

Representative Offices — Why They're No Longer an Option

Before 2017, foreign companies could open representative offices in Iraq for market research and business development purposes, without engaging in commercial activity. This was governed by the 1989 regulation.

Foreign Branches Regulation No. 2 of 2017 repealed the 1989 regime. The current framework restricts the legal presence of foreign companies to the branch structure only.

In practice, this means: if your company is looking for a "quiet presence" in Iraq purely for follow-up purposes, your available options are:

  • A branch that satisfies the contract requirement.
  • A partnership with an Iraqi entity that represents you commercially (commercial agency, LLC partner, etc.).

The classic "representative office" is no longer a legal pathway open to companies entering the market after 2017.

A track that adds, not replaces.

Beyond establishing an entity, foreign investors can apply for an investment license from the National Investment Commission (NIC) under Law No. 13 of 2006. This is not an alternative to forming an entity — you must have an entity from one of the four pathways. It's an addition that unlocks substantial benefits.

What it grants

  • Full tax exemption for 10 years (15 years if the project is more than 50% Iraqi-owned).
  • Exemption from import duties on equipment and materials.
  • Right to repatriate capital and profits.
  • Right to employ foreign workers when needed.
  • Right to insure the project with foreign insurance companies.

What it requires

  • Minimum project capital: USD 250,000.
  • Economic and technical feasibility study.
  • Funding plan with guarantee from a recognized financial institution.
  • Project execution timetable.

What it excludes

  • Oil and gas extraction and production.
  • Banks.
  • Insurance companies.

These sectors fall outside the investment law's scope.

Relationship to the four pathways: You first establish your entity (say, an LLC) and then apply for an investment license for a specific project. The license attaches to the project, not the entity.

6–10 Weeks. Seven Stages. Daily Oversight.

This timeline reflects a typical LLC establishment. Other entity types follow a similar logic with adjustments based on structure.

  1. Week 1

    Initial Diligence

    Sector review, entity-type selection, partner identification (if needed).

  2. Weeks 2–3

    Founding Contract

    Share allocation, management appointment, economic objectives drafted.

  3. Week 4

    Trade Name

    Non-conflict confirmed at the Chamber of Commerce registry.

  4. Week 5

    Capital Deposit

    Frozen bank account opened pending incorporation.

  5. Week 6

    Registration

    Complete documents submitted to the Companies Registrar.

  6. Week 7

    Verification

    Daily follow-up at the Registrar until clearance.

  7. Week 8

    Certificate

    Entity legally formed. Operations may begin under sectoral permits.

This timeframe assumes:

  • Documents from the home country arrive properly authenticated (legalized by the Iraqi embassy).
  • No unexpected regulatory objections arise.
  • Daily follow-up at the Registrar is maintained.

The most common delays originate not at the Iraqi Registrar, but in the authentication chain at the parent company's home country.

Registration is not the finish line. It's the starting line.

Many believe that receiving the Certificate of Establishment from the Companies Registrar means the company is ready to operate. This is inaccurate. The Certificate grants you legal personality — meaning the entity exists in law. But operating the actual activity requires, in many sectors, additional permits from multiple regulatory authorities.

If the project is residential or real estate

  • Non-conflict with electricity transmission lines (Ministry of Electricity).
  • Non-conflict with oil pipelines (Ministry of Oil).
  • Non-conflict with telecommunications networks (Communications and Media Commission).
  • Environmental approvals (Ministry of Environment).
  • Approval from the Antiquities Directorate covering the project's geographic area.
  • Local municipal approval of the design.
  • Building permit from the Urban Planning Department.

If the project involves industrial work or deep excavation

  • Antiquities Directorate pre-approval before any execution begins.
  • If antiquities surface during excavation, work halts and a specialist archaeological team takes over assessment.
  • Sites near historic cities (Babylon, Nineveh, Hatra, Ur, Najaf, Karbala, Samarra, etc.) face stricter review.

If the project is in oil and gas

  • Pre-approval from the Ministry of Oil (a condition for entity formation itself).
  • Minimum capital: 2 billion Iraqi Dinars.
  • Operational permits specific to the activity (refining, exploration, field services, etc.).
  • Antiquities Directorate approval for new fields before drilling.

If the project is in telecommunications

  • License from the Communications and Media Commission.
  • Frequency allocation (if the activity requires it).
  • Security approvals.
  • Antiquities Directorate approval for tower locations and underground infrastructure.

If the project is in finance and banking

  • License from the Central Bank of Iraq.
  • Special note: the investment law does not apply to this sector.

General rule: Before starting any project, fully map every sectoral permit required. Postponing this assessment until after entity formation typically results in months of inactivity while the entity sits frozen.

On This Land

Iraq is not an ordinary country when it comes to antiquities. Its land is layered with civilizations spanning six millennia. Any excavation — even for a residential project in a modern suburb — carries the possibility of uncovering a find. The General Directorate of Antiquities (under the Ministry of Culture) doesn't simply grant pre-approval. It retains the right to halt work upon any archaeological discovery, even mid-execution.

This is not an obstacle. It is the context of the ground you're working on. Companies that engage with this reality early — preliminary archaeological assessment, coordination with the Directorate, contingency planning if a find emerges — spare themselves sudden multi-month delays.

At Tigris Gate, we treat these approvals as part of the establishment system, not as an emergency to be managed after digging begins.

Four points usually discovered too late.

These aren't trade secrets. They are details that recur in every file we open — but they tend to surface after establishment, when correction becomes expensive.

01

The Certificate of Establishment is not a work visa.

The entity exists legally, but foreign founders and managers cannot reside and work in Iraq simply by virtue of registering the company. Residency permits, work authorizations, and ration cards (where applicable) are parallel processes that should begin early — not after the office opens.

02

Social security is not optional.

Every Iraqi entity — even with a single employee — must register with the Pension and Social Security Authority. Contributions begin from the first month of employment. Delays generate cumulative penalties. The rates: 17% of total salary — 12% paid by the employee, 5% paid by the employer.

03

A certified accountant is a requirement, not an option.

Foreign branches and joint-stock companies must engage a licensed Iraqi auditor. This is not a regulatory option — it's a condition for registration and continued operation. Selecting your auditor in advance saves you surprises in month one.

04

Translation and authentication take longer than expected.

Every document from the parent company requires legal translation into Arabic, authentication by authorities in the country of origin, and authentication by the Iraqi embassy in that country. This chain typically takes 2–4 weeks before any procedure begins in Iraq. Companies that coordinate this step in advance gain a full month.

Exploration Stage? Let's Talk.

Every file is different. The right entity for your company depends on your sector, your partners, your five-year plan, and factors that don't appear on a written page. A first conversation, no commitment, is enough to give you a clear framework for your decision.

Let's Talk →