Our Expert in Namibia
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Last updated: 10 May 2026
TL;DR, Immediate action for boards and in‑house counsel
Corporate law Namibia is undergoing its most significant overhaul since the Companies Act 28 of 2004 came into force. The Corporate Laws Bill 2025, introduced by the Business and Intellectual Property Authority (BIPA) and published in the Government Gazette on 11 November 2025, consolidates company, close‑corporation and not‑for‑profit legislation into a single statute. The reform aligns Namibia with international corporate governance standards prevalent in the United Kingdom, the European Union and South Africa. For mining and oil & gas companies, the backbone of Namibia’s extractive economy, the Bill creates new obligations around beneficial ownership, changes of control and director accountability that demand immediate attention.
The Corporate Laws Bill 2025 is expected to progress through Parliament and receive assent in the near term. Industry observers expect the transitional window, once the Act commences, to be tight, early indications suggest periods as short as twelve to twenty‑four months for re‑registrations and conversions. General counsel and chief financial officers should treat compliance preparation as a current‑quarter priority, not a future‑year exercise.
If you do only one thing, assign a named compliance owner, typically the company secretary or head of legal, with authority to convene working groups, instruct external counsel, and present a gap analysis to the board before the next scheduled board meeting. The five decisions that cannot wait are: (1) appoint a compliance lead, (2) map every group entity against the Bill’s new entity classifications, (3) begin populating beneficial‑ownership registers, (4) schedule a D&O policy review with your broker, and (5) set calendar alerts for every published transitional deadline.
The Bill is introduced to reform company law in Namibia, restate the greater part of the enactments relating to companies, and address other forms of business entities under a single legislative framework. According to the BIPA summary, the reform consolidates the Companies Act 28 of 2004, the Close Corporations Act 26 of 1988, and provisions governing section 21 (not‑for‑profit) companies into one coherent statute. The Bill also aligns Namibia with international corporate governance standards in leading markets such as the UK, the EU and South Africa.
The Companies Act 28 of 2004 was itself a substantial modernisation of pre‑independence legislation, but it lacked provisions for beneficial‑ownership transparency, digital filing, single‑shareholder formation and codified directors’ duties aligned with international norms. The Corporate Laws Bill 2025 fills each of those gaps. It also introduces penalties for non‑compliance with reporting timelines, a regime that had limited teeth under the 2004 Act, and brings changes‑of‑control notifications into the corporate‑law sphere for the first time, with particular consequences for licence‑holding entities in the extractive sector.
The directors’ duties provisions in the Corporate Laws Bill 2025 represent a landmark shift for corporate governance Namibia. Under the existing Companies Act 28 of 2004, directors’ obligations were largely framed by common‑law principles inherited from South African and English case law. The Bill now codifies these duties and expands them considerably.
The Bill sets out express duties of care, skill and diligence, requiring directors to exercise the degree of care that a reasonably diligent person with the same general knowledge and experience would exercise. A parallel duty of loyalty mandates that directors act in the best interests of the company, avoid conflicts of interest, and refrain from exploiting corporate opportunities for personal gain. These standards are not merely aspirational: the Bill creates statutory causes of action enabling the company, shareholders and, in certain circumstances, regulators to hold directors personally liable for breach.
Industry observers expect the new framework to require that a prescribed proportion of directors be ordinarily resident in Namibia, mirroring similar provisions in South African corporate law. The likely practical effect will be to compel foreign‑invested mining and oil & gas companies to appoint and empower local directors rather than treating them as nominal appointees. Boards should also anticipate requirements around minimum meeting frequency and quorum thresholds that ensure effective oversight rather than rubber‑stamping of decisions made offshore.
Several categories of personal liability under the Bill deserve close attention from directors of Namibian companies:
Boards should treat the reform as a trigger event for a full D&O policy review. The expanded range of statutory liabilities means existing policy wordings, many of which were drafted under the 2004 Act framework, may contain exclusions or sub‑limits that leave directors materially under‑insured. Practical steps include:
Consider a hypothetical: a mining company’s board authorises a dividend payment without verifying that the company passes both the solvency and liquidity tests required under the new Act. If the company subsequently cannot pay creditors, every director who voted in favour of the resolution, and who failed to record a dissenting vote, faces personal liability. Under the Bill, the standard of review is objective: the question is not what the director subjectively believed, but what a reasonably diligent director would have done.
The Corporate Laws Bill 2025 modernises the rules governing share capital in ways that directly affect corporate law Namibia practitioners and the companies they advise. The Bill permits more flexible share classes, including shares with varied voting, dividend and redemption rights, while tightening disclosure requirements around beneficial ownership and indirect control.
Companies will be able to create multiple classes of shares in their memorandum of incorporation, provided the rights attached to each class are clearly stated and filed with BIPA. Pre‑emptive rights, the right of existing shareholders to participate pro rata in new share issuances, are preserved but may now be disapplied by special resolution in specified circumstances, giving boards greater flexibility for capital raises.
For mining and oil & gas companies, share transfers and changes of control carry additional regulatory consequences. The Bill introduces requirements for regulatory notification, and in some cases pre‑clearance, when a change of control occurs in a company holding a mineral or petroleum licence. This includes indirect changes of control: where, for example, an offshore parent company is acquired, and the Namibian subsidiary’s ultimate beneficial ownership shifts as a result. Industry observers expect BIPA and the relevant sector regulators to coordinate on a unified notification framework, though the practical mechanics remain subject to finalisation in the implementing regulations.
Existing section 21 (not‑for‑profit) companies will need to re‑register under the new Act’s dedicated not‑for‑profit provisions. The Bill prescribes a conversion window, and entities that fail to convert within the transitional period risk losing their legal personality. Boards of section 21 entities should begin reviewing their founding documents now to identify clauses that are incompatible with the new regime, particularly provisions relating to the distribution of assets upon winding up, membership voting rights and financial reporting thresholds.
Mining company compliance Namibia sits at the intersection of three concurrent reform streams: the Corporate Laws Bill 2025, the proposed amendments to the Minerals (Prospecting and Mining) Act, and the draft Local Content Policy published by the Ministry of Mines and Energy. Each creates obligations that interact with and reinforce the others. As noted in Afriwise’s analysis of mining‑law developments, the process for obtaining and maintaining mining rights is being streamlined with digital licensing systems and time‑bound application reviews, but the compliance burden on licence holders is simultaneously increasing.
The Corporate Laws Bill subjects indirect changes of control to regulatory scrutiny for the first time within the corporate‑law framework. As reported by The Extractor Magazine, this includes pledges, beneficial‑ownership shifts and offshore restructurings that alter who ultimately controls a Namibian licence‑holding entity. Mining and oil & gas companies with complex group structures should map every intermediate holding company and identify which transactions could trigger a notification obligation.
| Regulatory impact | Corporate action required | Suggested timeframe |
|---|---|---|
| Beneficial‑ownership register mandatory for all licence holders | Compile register; verify natural‑person ownership chains; file with BIPA | Within 60 days of Act commencement |
| Indirect change‑of‑control notifications | Map group structure; establish internal approval workflows; notify regulator pre‑transaction | Ongoing, before any qualifying transaction |
| Local content compliance intersects with corporate reporting | Integrate local content reporting into annual returns; assign compliance owner | Align with annual return cycle |
| Director residency requirements | Review board composition; appoint qualifying resident directors; update BIPA records | Within transitional period (anticipated 12–24 months) |
| Close corporation conversion (mining CCs) | Pass special resolution; file conversion documents with BIPA; update licence records | Within prescribed conversion window |
| Enhanced annual financial reporting | Engage auditors; update accounting policies for new disclosure requirements | Next financial year‑end after commencement |
The transitional provisions in the Corporate Laws Bill 2025 establish the framework for migrating existing companies, close corporations and section 21 entities to the new regime. The Government Gazette (No. 8781, 11 November 2025) contains the published Bill text, and BIPA’s summary outlines the key conversion and re‑registration requirements. Companies that fail to comply within the prescribed windows face penalties ranging from administrative fines to involuntary deregistration.
| Event / milestone | Description | Required action |
|---|---|---|
| Act commencement date | Date on which the new Act enters into force (to be proclaimed by the President) | Monitor Government Gazette for commencement notice; activate compliance plan |
| Close corporation conversion window | Prescribed period within which all existing CCs must convert to private companies | Pass members’ resolution; prepare and file conversion application with BIPA |
| Section 21 re‑registration deadline | Section 21 entities must re‑register under the new not‑for‑profit provisions | Review founding documents; amend where necessary; file re‑registration |
| Beneficial‑ownership register deadline | All companies must have compiled and filed a beneficial‑ownership register | Identify all natural‑person beneficial owners; populate register; submit to BIPA |
| First annual return under new Act | First annual return filing cycle under the reformed requirements | Align internal reporting calendar; engage auditors; file within prescribed period |
Boards should prepare model resolutions now, before the commencement date is proclaimed, so that the administrative process of passing resolutions and filing documents can begin immediately. Recommended board‑minute language should record that the board has considered the implications of the Corporate Laws Bill 2025, received legal advice on the company’s compliance obligations, and authorised the company secretary to take all steps necessary to effect compliance within the transitional periods.
The 2026/27 national budget proposals add a fiscal dimension to the corporate law Namibia reform picture. Early indications suggest adjustments to corporate income tax rates, withholding tax thresholds on dividends and royalties, and potential new levies on extractive‑sector revenues. While the tax proposals are separate from the Corporate Laws Bill 2025, they create parallel compliance urgency: companies restructuring to comply with the new corporate regime must simultaneously assess the tax consequences of any group reorganisation, share transfer or entity conversion.
Industry observers expect the combined effect of corporate‑law reform and tax‑policy changes to accelerate the trend toward simplified group structures in Namibia. Intermediate holding entities that served no commercial purpose beyond historical convenience are likely to be unwound, both to reduce compliance costs under the new corporate regime and to minimise exposure to increased withholding taxes on intra‑group flows. Companies should engage tax advisers alongside corporate counsel when planning their transition.
The Corporate Laws Bill 2025 is not a distant regulatory prospect, it is a present‑day compliance imperative for every company operating in Namibia. Boards that act now to map their obligations, empower compliance owners and engage specialist corporate law and Namibia‑based legal advisers will be positioned to convert the reform from a risk into a governance advantage. Those that wait will face compressed timelines, increased costs and heightened personal liability exposure for directors.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Elias Shikongo at Shikongo Law Chambers, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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