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Corporate Lawyers Oman 2026: Commercial Companies Regulation, Authorised Managers & Tax

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Last updated: 8 May 2026, Reviewed for Royal Decree 27/2026 and Ministerial Decision 245/2025

The 2025–2026 legislative cycle has delivered the most significant overhaul of Oman’s corporate framework in over a decade, and corporate lawyers in Oman are fielding an unprecedented volume of compliance queries from boards, in-house counsel and foreign investors alike. Amendments to the Commercial Companies Regulation, particularly the rewritten Article 92 governing authorised managers, took effect following Ministerial Decision 245/2025, while Royal Decree 27/2026, published on 11 February 2026, introduced additional governance and industrial-licensing obligations. At the same time, Oman’s corporate income tax regime has been recalibrated at a headline rate of 15 %, reshaping entity-choice and transfer-pricing calculations for every company operating in the Sultanate.

This guide distils each change into actionable steps, compliance calendars and entity-level impact analyses so that decision-makers can move from awareness to execution without delay.

Executive Summary & Quick Action Checklist

Three instruments demand immediate attention from every Omani-incorporated entity and every foreign investor with an Oman presence: the amended Commercial Companies Regulation (Article 92), Ministerial Decision 245/2025 and Royal Decree 27/2026. Their combined effect rewrites the rules on who may serve as an authorised manager, tightens corporate-governance filing obligations and confirms the 15 % corporate income tax (CIT) as the baseline for all taxable establishments. The practical burden falls on boards, company secretaries and CFOs to verify existing appointments, update Commercial Registry filings and reassess tax positions, all within compressed statutory deadlines.

Six-point urgent compliance checklist:

  • Verify authorised-manager eligibility. Confirm that every individual currently registered as an authorised manager meets the revised Article 92 criteria. Where gaps exist, initiate replacement procedures immediately.
  • Update MOCIIP filings. File amended particulars with the Ministry of Commerce, Industry and Investment Promotion (MOCIIP) Commercial Registry to reflect new manager appointments or confirmations.
  • Review board and management charters. Align internal governance documents, articles of association, board charters, delegation-of-authority matrices, with the new authorised-manager provisions.
  • Reassess corporate tax position. Evaluate entity-level exposure to the 15 % CIT, confirm tax registration status with the Oman Tax Authority and review transfer-pricing documentation.
  • Update commercial contracts and powers of attorney. Ensure that signatory authorities, agency agreements and powers of attorney reference the correctly registered authorised manager.
  • Engage experienced counsel. The interaction between company-law amendments and the new tax regime creates layered compliance risks, find an Oman corporate lawyer with demonstrated expertise across both areas.

Background: Legal Framework and Timeline of 2025–2026 Instruments

Key Instruments Reshaping Oman Corporate Law

Oman’s corporate-law architecture rests on the Commercial Companies Law (Royal Decree 18/2019) and its implementing regulations. The 2025–2026 reform wave did not replace the parent statute but instead amended the Commercial Companies Regulation, the subsidiary executive instrument that governs day-to-day company administration, manager appointments and filing procedures. Article 92 of the Regulation, which sets out the conditions for appointing an authorised manager, was substantially rewritten pursuant to Ministerial Decision 245/2025. Separately, Royal Decree 27/2026, promulgated on 11 February 2026, enacted provisions aligned with GCC Common Industrial Law obligations, introducing additional licensing and governance requirements for companies in certain sectors.

On the tax front, the corporate income tax framework, anchored at 15 %, was confirmed through implementing regulations issued by the Oman Tax Authority, affecting all entities earning income within the Sultanate.

Timeline of Key Dates

Date Instrument Required Action
2025 (published) Ministerial Decision 245/2025, amending Article 92 of the Commercial Companies Regulation Verify all authorised-manager appointments against revised eligibility criteria; begin filing updated documentation with MOCIIP
11 February 2026 Royal Decree 27/2026, GCC Common Industrial Law implementation and supplementary governance provisions Industrial and manufacturing companies: review licence conditions, update governance filings, confirm sector-specific compliance
2026 tax year (ongoing) Corporate Income Tax, 15 % headline rate, updated implementing regulations Register with Oman Tax Authority (if not already); file provisional returns; update transfer-pricing documentation
Within 30 days of any change Commercial Companies Regulation, general filing obligation Notify MOCIIP Commercial Registry of changes to authorised managers, directors, share capital or registered address

Key Changes to the Commercial Companies Regulation, Article 92 Explained

Article 92: Before and After

Prior to the amendments introduced by Ministerial Decision 245/2025, Article 92 of the Commercial Companies Regulation imposed a relatively permissive framework for appointing an authorised manager. In practice, companies could designate virtually any individual, including a non-resident or an employee of an affiliated entity, to act as the registered manager, with limited documentary scrutiny at the Commercial Registry stage. The amended Article 92 tightens this position materially. The new text imposes specific eligibility conditions on the person appointed, prescribes the documents that must accompany a registration application and introduces verification steps that MOCIIP’s Commercial Registry must complete before confirming the appointment.

The practical effect is twofold. First, companies with legacy authorised-manager appointments must proactively verify that each existing manager meets the revised eligibility criteria. Second, any new appointment filed after the effective date of Ministerial Decision 245/2025 must comply with the amended requirements from the outset.

Who Qualifies as an Authorised Manager Now?

Under the amended Article 92, an authorised manager must satisfy conditions that industry observers have grouped into three categories:

  • Residency and presence. The authorised manager must hold valid Omani residency status. This requirement addresses the historical practice of registering non-resident nominees who had no physical presence in the country.
  • Capacity and good standing. The individual must not be subject to any outstanding judicial prohibition from serving as a company officer, must be of legal age and must not have been declared bankrupt without rehabilitation.
  • Exclusivity of role. The amendments clarify that a single individual may not serve as the authorised manager for an unlimited number of entities. Industry observers expect MOCIIP to enforce practical caps, particularly in sectors where regulatory scrutiny is heightened.

It is worth noting that the amended Article 92, read together with Ministerial Decision 245/2025, appears to remove the previously informal requirement for employer consent where the authorised manager is employed by a different entity. The likely practical effect is that the appointment process becomes more streamlined for individuals, but the company bears a heavier documentary and verification burden at the registration stage.

Documentation Required for Registration

Ministerial Decision 245/2025 prescribes the supporting documentation that must accompany an authorised-manager filing with the MOCIIP Commercial Registry. At a minimum, companies should prepare the following:

  • Valid national ID or resident card confirming identity and Omani residency status.
  • No-objection certificate or clearance confirming the individual is not subject to judicial prohibitions on holding a corporate-officer role.
  • Board or shareholder resolution (depending on entity type) approving the appointment, the resolution must be notarised where required by the articles of association.
  • Updated Commercial Registry application form (prescribed format, available via the MOCIIP online portal).
  • Power of attorney (if the filing is made by a representative rather than the authorised manager in person).

Steps to verify and register authorised managers:

  1. Conduct an internal audit of all current authorised-manager appointments across every Oman-registered entity in the group.
  2. Assess each incumbent against the revised eligibility criteria set out in the amended Article 92.
  3. Where an incumbent does not meet the new criteria, initiate a board or shareholder resolution to appoint a qualifying replacement.
  4. Compile the prescribed documentary package per Ministerial Decision 245/2025.
  5. Submit the updated filing through the MOCIIP Commercial Registry portal and retain confirmation of acceptance.
  6. Update internal governance records, articles of association, signatory cards, bank mandates and powers of attorney, to reflect the confirmed authorised manager.

Royal Decree 27/2026 & Ministerial Decision 245/2025, Compliance Impact and Timelines

Royal Decree 27/2026: Scope and Practical Impact

Royal Decree 27/2026, published on 11 February 2026, implements aspects of the GCC Common Industrial Law within the Omani legal order. While the decree’s primary focus is on industrial licensing and the regulatory treatment of manufacturing establishments, its provisions carry broader corporate-governance implications. Companies operating in sectors covered by the decree, notably manufacturing, processing and certain energy-adjacent activities, face additional licensing conditions and periodic reporting obligations. The decree also reinforces MOCIIP’s supervisory powers over company-registration data, creating a tighter feedback loop between the industrial regulator and the Commercial Registry.

For corporate lawyers in Oman advising multi-sector groups, the key takeaway is that Royal Decree 27/2026 does not operate in isolation. It overlays the existing Commercial Companies Regulation and must be read alongside Ministerial Decision 245/2025. Where a company holds both an industrial licence and a commercial registration, both sets of filing and governance obligations apply concurrently.

Ministerial Decision 245/2025: Procedural Changes in Detail

Beyond the authorised-manager provisions discussed above, Ministerial Decision 245/2025 introduced procedural refinements to the way companies interact with MOCIIP. The decision standardises filing formats for several routine corporate actions, changes of address, updates to share-capital records and amendments to articles of association. It also introduces stricter timelines: companies must notify the Commercial Registry of material changes within 30 days of the relevant board or shareholder resolution. Failure to comply within this window exposes companies to administrative penalties and, in the case of repeated non-compliance, potential suspension of the commercial registration.

Reporting and Filing Obligations by Regulator

Regulator Filing Deadline
MOCIIP, Commercial Registry Authorised-manager appointment / update; annual return; changes to articles of association Within 30 days of resolution; annual return per prescribed schedule
MOCIIP, Industrial Licensing (per Royal Decree 27/2026) Industrial-licence renewal; governance compliance certificate As specified in individual licence conditions; periodic reporting at least annually
Oman Tax Authority Corporate tax registration; provisional and final returns; transfer-pricing documentation Registration within 30 days of incorporation; annual returns per tax calendar
Capital Market Authority (CMA), listed companies only Board-composition disclosures; related-party transaction reports; continuous-disclosure obligations Continuous; specific deadlines per CMA rules

Corporate Tax 2026, 15 % CIT: Who It Applies to, Practical Steps & Planning Considerations

Overview of Rates and Scope

Oman’s corporate income tax regime applies a headline rate of 15 % to the taxable income of all establishments operating within the Sultanate. This rate applies to Omani-incorporated companies (LLCs, SAOCs), branches of foreign companies and permanent establishments. Certain categories of income, notably income earned by government entities in specified circumstances and small-enterprise exemptions where criteria are met, may qualify for reduced rates or exclusions. The Oman Tax Authority administers the regime and has been progressively issuing implementing guidance on calculation methodologies, allowable deductions and filing procedures.

It is important to distinguish the corporate income tax from other levies in the pipeline. Early indications suggest that Oman is considering the introduction of a personal income tax, although this is not expected before 2028. The 15 % CIT is, for 2026 compliance purposes, the primary direct-tax obligation for corporate entities.

How Tax Interacts with Entity Type

The choice of entity type has direct consequences for a company’s tax-reporting obligations, available deductions and effective tax burden. The table below summarises the position for the three most common structures used by foreign investors.

Entity Type Typical Reporting Obligations Tax Consequences
LLC (Limited Liability Company) Commercial Registry annual return (MOCIIP); corporate tax registration and annual return (Tax Authority); authorised-manager confirmation Taxed at 15 % on worldwide income attributable to the Oman entity; eligible for treaty relief where applicable; losses may be carried forward subject to conditions
SAOC (Closed Joint Stock Company) Same as LLC plus additional CMA governance filings if listed; stricter audit requirements; board-composition disclosures Same 15 % rate; stricter transfer-pricing scrutiny for large enterprises; withholding-tax obligations on certain distributions
Branch of Foreign Company Branch registration (MOCIIP); corporate tax registration; annual audited financial statements filed with Tax Authority Taxed at 15 % on Oman-source profits only; head-office cost allocations subject to arm’s-length scrutiny; no separate legal personality, parent liable for all obligations

Transfer Pricing, DTAs and Withholding Taxes

Multinationals with intercompany transactions flowing through Oman must maintain contemporaneous transfer-pricing documentation. Oman’s transfer-pricing framework follows OECD-aligned principles, requiring arm’s-length pricing for all related-party transactions. The Oman Tax Authority has signalled increasing scrutiny of management-fee arrangements, intellectual-property licensing charges and intercompany financing, areas where the risk of base-erosion is highest.

Oman has concluded double-taxation agreements (DTAs) with a number of jurisdictions. These treaties can reduce withholding-tax rates on dividends, interest and royalties flowing out of Oman, but treaty benefits must be claimed actively through the prescribed procedural channels. Companies should review their DTA position annually, particularly where group structures have changed or new intercompany agreements are in place.

Industry observers expect the Tax Authority to issue further guidance on country-by-country reporting (CbCR) obligations during 2026, aligning Oman more closely with the OECD/G20 Inclusive Framework on Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS). Companies with consolidated group revenue exceeding the threshold, typically OMR 300 million (approximately EUR 720 million), should begin preparing CbCR infrastructure now.

Practical Steps for Foreign Investors, Setting Up a Subsidiary in Oman & Compliance Checklist

Choosing Entity Type: LLC vs SAOC

For most foreign investors, the LLC remains the default vehicle for setting up a subsidiary in Oman. It offers limited liability, relatively straightforward governance requirements and a well-understood tax treatment under the 15 % CIT regime. The minimum capital requirements are modest, and the management structure, centred on one or more authorised managers, is flexible enough to accommodate a wide range of operational models.

The SAOC (closed joint stock company) is typically reserved for larger enterprises, joint ventures involving multiple investors or businesses planning an eventual public listing. SAOCs are subject to stricter governance rules, including mandatory board committees, auditor-rotation requirements and, if listed, continuous-disclosure obligations to the CMA. The higher administrative burden is offset by greater credibility with institutional counterparties and the ability to issue different classes of shares.

Sector also matters. Certain regulated activities, banking, insurance, securities dealing, require specific entity types prescribed by the sectoral regulator. Corporate lawyers advising on entity choice should conduct a regulatory mapping exercise before committing to a structure.

Pre-Incorporation Checklist

  • Obtain MOCIIP approval for the proposed company name and commercial activity.
  • Secure any sector-specific licences required before incorporation (e.g., industrial licence under Royal Decree 27/2026 for manufacturing activities).
  • Appoint an Omani commercial agent if the intended activity falls within sectors that require local-agent arrangements.
  • Draft and notarise the memorandum and articles of association in compliance with the Commercial Companies Regulation.
  • Open a capital-deposit account with an Omani bank and deposit the requisite share capital.
  • Register with MOCIIP Commercial Registry and obtain the commercial registration certificate.

Post-Incorporation Compliance

Once the subsidiary is registered, the following tasks must be completed promptly:

  • Register the authorised manager per the amended Article 92 and Ministerial Decision 245/2025, submit the full documentary package described above.
  • Register with the Oman Tax Authority for corporate income tax within 30 days of incorporation.
  • Enrol with the Royal Oman Police for labour-card processing if hiring expatriate staff.
  • Open operational bank accounts and register signatory authorities consistent with the registered authorised manager.
  • File the first annual return with the MOCIIP Commercial Registry by the prescribed deadline.

Corporate Compliance in Oman: Calendar & Risk Mitigation

30 / 90 / 180-Day Action Plan

Timeframe Action Owner
Within 30 days Audit all existing authorised-manager appointments; identify non-compliant appointments; file urgent updates with MOCIIP Company Secretary / Legal Counsel
Within 30 days Confirm corporate tax registration status; file any outstanding provisional returns CFO / Tax Adviser
Within 90 days Complete replacement of non-qualifying authorised managers; update all bank mandates and powers of attorney Board / Company Secretary
Within 90 days Review and update transfer-pricing documentation for all intercompany transactions CFO / External Tax Counsel
Within 180 days Conduct a full governance review against Royal Decree 27/2026 for industrial-licensed entities; submit governance compliance certificates Board / Compliance Officer
Within 180 days Update articles of association and internal governance policies to reflect all 2025–2026 legislative changes; file amended articles with MOCIIP Board / Legal Counsel

Penalties and Enforcement Risk

MOCIIP has demonstrated a willingness to enforce compliance proactively. Companies that fail to file authorised-manager updates within the prescribed 30-day window face administrative fines, and persistent non-compliance can result in the suspension or cancellation of the commercial registration, effectively halting the company’s ability to conduct business in Oman. On the tax side, the Oman Tax Authority imposes penalties for late registration, late filing and underpayment of tax, with interest accruing on outstanding liabilities. Given the convergence of company-law and tax-law reform in 2026, the enforcement risk is materially higher than in prior years: regulators are staffed and mandated to verify compliance with the new instruments, and companies that delay remediation expose themselves to compounding penalties.

Reporting Obligations by Entity Type, Comparative Overview

Entity Type Reporting & Filings Key Deadlines & Notes
LLC (local) MOCIIP Commercial Registry: annual return, authorised-manager confirmation, changes to articles of association. Oman Tax Authority: corporate tax registration, annual tax return, transfer-pricing documentation. Annual return per MOCIIP schedule; tax registration within 30 days of incorporation; authorised-manager updates within 30 days of any change
SAOC (closed joint stock) All LLC filings plus: CMA governance disclosures (if listed); auditor appointment notification; board-composition report; related-party transaction disclosures Stricter audit deadlines; board composition must comply with CMA diversity/independence requirements; continuous disclosure for listed SAOCs
Branch of foreign company MOCIIP: branch registration renewal, authorised-manager filing. Tax Authority: corporate tax registration, annual return on Oman-source income, audited branch financial statements Taxed on Oman-source profits at 15 %; branch must maintain separate accounting records; head-office allocations documented at arm’s length
Foreign subsidiary (LLC or SAOC with foreign shareholders) Same as domestic LLC / SAOC plus: potential withholding-tax filings on distributions; DTA relief claims; transfer-pricing master file and local file DTA relief must be claimed proactively; CbCR filing for groups above threshold; additional MOCIIP filings for any change in foreign-shareholder particulars

Looking Ahead: The Role of Corporate Lawyers in Oman’s 2026 Compliance Landscape

The convergence of company-law reform, new industrial-governance requirements and a recalibrated tax regime makes 2026 a year in which proactive compliance is not optional, it is a condition of continued operation. The interaction between Ministerial Decision 245/2025, Royal Decree 27/2026 and the 15 % CIT creates layered obligations that vary by entity type, sector and ownership structure. Companies that treat these changes as isolated administrative tasks risk compounding penalties and, in the worst case, suspension of their commercial registration.

Experienced corporate lawyers in Oman play a critical role in navigating this landscape. From verifying authorised-manager eligibility and structuring board resolutions to optimising entity choice for tax efficiency and managing DTA claims, the 2026 reforms demand integrated legal and tax advice grounded in practical knowledge of MOCIIP procedures and Oman Tax Authority expectations. For companies and investors seeking to act decisively, the Global Law Experts lawyer directory connects you with qualified Oman corporate counsel who can deliver a tailored compliance review and implementation plan.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. Royal Decree 27/2026, Official Text
  2. Al Tamimi & Company, New Requirements for Authorised Managers of Omani Companies
  3. PwC, Taxes on Corporate Income (Oman)
  4. Emerhub, Guide to Corporate Tax in Oman
  5. Bait Al Qanoon, Amendments to Oman’s Commercial Companies Regulation
  6. Crowe, Doing Business in Oman (2025)

FAQs

What are the amendments to Article 92 and what do companies need to do?
Ministerial Decision 245/2025 rewrote Article 92 of the Commercial Companies Regulation to impose stricter eligibility, residency and documentation requirements on authorised managers of Omani companies. Every company must verify that its currently registered authorised manager meets the new criteria and, where necessary, appoint a qualifying replacement and file updated particulars with the MOCIIP Commercial Registry within 30 days.
The authorised manager must hold valid Omani residency, be of legal age, have no outstanding judicial prohibition on serving as a company officer and not have been declared bankrupt without rehabilitation. The amendments also introduce practical limits on the number of entities a single individual may represent. Full registration requires submitting a valid ID or resident card, a no-objection clearance, a board or shareholder resolution and the prescribed MOCIIP application form.
Yes. Royal Decree 27/2026, published on 11 February 2026, implements GCC Common Industrial Law provisions within Oman’s legal order. Industrial and manufacturing companies face additional licensing conditions, periodic governance-compliance certifications and enhanced MOCIIP supervisory oversight. Companies holding both an industrial licence and a commercial registration must satisfy both sets of obligations concurrently.
The 15 % corporate income tax applies to all establishments earning income in Oman, including locally incorporated LLCs and SAOCs, branches of foreign companies and permanent establishments. Foreign-owned subsidiaries are taxed on worldwide income attributable to the Oman entity but may benefit from double-taxation agreements where applicable. Treaty relief must be claimed proactively. Transfer-pricing documentation is required for all related-party transactions.
The process involves obtaining MOCIIP approval for the company name and activity, drafting and notarising articles of association, depositing share capital, registering with the Commercial Registry and then completing post-incorporation steps: registering the authorised manager under the amended Article 92, registering with the Oman Tax Authority within 30 days and enrolling for labour-card processing if expatriate staff will be hired. The full pre- and post-incorporation checklists are set out in the practical-steps section above.
The amended regulations do not provide for an indefinite grace period. Companies are expected to bring existing authorised-manager appointments into compliance within the standard 30-day notification window from the point at which a non-compliance is identified or a change is made. Early indications suggest that MOCIIP is taking a pragmatic approach during the initial implementation phase, but companies should not interpret this as a formal extension. The prudent course is to complete verification and, where necessary, replacement of non-qualifying managers promptly.
The primary point of contact for company-registration matters is the MOCIIP Commercial Registry, accessible through the Ministry’s online portal. For corporate tax registration, the Oman Tax Authority operates a dedicated registration and filing platform. Listed companies must also file governance disclosures with the Capital Market Authority (CMA). Where a company holds an industrial licence, the MOCIIP Industrial Licensing division is the relevant regulator for Royal Decree 27/2026 compliance.

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Corporate Lawyers Oman 2026: Commercial Companies Regulation, Authorised Managers & Tax

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