The Oman commercial companies law framework has entered its most significant reform cycle since Royal Decree 18/2019 replaced the original 1974 statute. Through a series of amendments culminating in Ministerial Decision 245/2025 and a broader package of commercial companies regulation updates now being phased in during 2026, Oman’s Ministry of Commerce, Industry and Investment Promotion (MOCIIP) has reshaped the governance, conversion and foreign‑ownership landscape for every company registered in the Sultanate. For general counsel, CFOs, corporate secretaries and foreign investors, the practical question is no longer what changed but what to do next, and within what timeframe.
This playbook maps each reform to a concrete compliance step, assigns it to the right internal stakeholder, and sequences everything into a 30‑, 60‑ and 90‑day action plan.
The reforms touch every entity type, limited liability companies (LLCs), closed joint‑stock companies (SAOCs), branches and representative offices, and introduce a grading system that determines everything from annual‑filing obligations to the scope of authorised manager powers. Coupled with Oman’s 2026 corporate tax adjustments, the amendments create both compliance obligations and genuine restructuring opportunities for businesses willing to act decisively.
Understanding the full scope of the 2025–2026 amendment cycle is essential before moving to action steps. The reforms arrived through multiple instruments, a combination of ministerial decisions, executive regulations and policy circulars issued by MOCIIP. Industry observers note that taken together, these changes represent the most comprehensive overhaul of the commercial companies regulation since the base law was enacted by Royal Decree 18/2019.
The full English text of the base law is published by the Financial Services Authority (Oman). Ministerial decisions and subsequent amendments are available on the Tejarah government portal and the MOCIIP website.
The grading system is central to the reforms. Every company registered with the Commercial Register is now assigned a grade that dictates its governance obligations. A Grade 4 company, typically a micro or small enterprise with limited capital and fewer than 10 employees, faces the lightest compliance burden: simplified annual returns, no mandatory audit committee, and streamlined authorised manager documentation. A Grade 1 company, by contrast, generally a large enterprise or a listed entity, must maintain a full board committee structure, appoint an independent external auditor, and comply with enhanced related‑party transaction disclosure requirements.
The table below maps the key entity types to the governance changes and the immediate practical actions each requires.
| Entity type | Key governance change (2025–26) | Practical action required |
|---|---|---|
| Limited Liability Company (LLC) | Authorised manager eligibility tightened; conflict‑of‑interest disclosure now mandatory; grading determines audit obligations | Review manager appointments against MD 245/2025 criteria; file updated documents with Commercial Register within 90 days |
| Closed Joint‑Stock Company (SAOC) | Board committee requirements scaled to grade; enhanced shareholder‑meeting notice rules; conversion pathway from LLC simplified | Confirm grade classification with MOCIIP; update constitutional documents and committee terms of reference |
| Branch / Representative Office | Branch manager role now subject to same fit‑and‑proper checks as authorised managers; annual compliance certificate required | Verify branch manager’s eligibility; file annual compliance certificate through Invest Easy portal |
| Free Zone Entity | Foreign ownership Oman rules applied flexibly; free zone authority retains primary regulatory oversight, but MOCIIP reporting applies for activities outside the zone | Confirm whether activities outside the zone trigger additional MOCIIP registration; update dual‑reporting obligations |
Understanding which grade applies, and confirming it directly with MOCIIP, is the essential first step before any other compliance action.
The reforms do not come with a single compliance deadline; instead, obligations cascade across a 30‑ to 90‑day window depending on the specific instrument and the company’s grade. The checklist below is designed for in‑house legal and compliance teams managing the transition.
For teams managing multiple entities in Oman, industry observers recommend creating a single compliance tracker, a spreadsheet or project‑management board, that maps each entity, its grade, its specific obligations, and the responsible internal owner for each task.
Company restructuring in Oman has become significantly more accessible under the 2025–26 reforms. The amendments streamlined conversion procedures, reduced duplicative regulatory approvals, and introduced electronic filing for most of the steps previously handled through paper submissions to the Commercial Register.
The LLC‑to‑SAOC conversion remains the most common pathway and is now governed by a clearer procedural framework. The key stages are:
For foreign‑owned groups, the reforms also clarified re‑domiciliation mechanics, the process of moving a company’s registered seat into or out of Oman. While full re‑domiciliation into Oman remains subject to MOCIIP approval and compliance with the Foreign Capital Investment Law, the practical pathway has been simplified by allowing electronic submission of the application and supporting documents.
Branch conversion, upgrading a branch office into a full LLC or SAOC, follows a similar procedural track, though it also requires clearance from the original jurisdiction’s corporate registry (or confirmation that the branch is being replaced, not duplicated). Early indications suggest that MOCIIP is processing these applications more quickly than in prior years, reflecting the government’s broader Oman Vision 2040 objective of attracting foreign direct investment.
Foreign ownership in Oman is governed by the interplay between the commercial companies law and the Foreign Capital Investment Law, promulgated by Royal Decree No. 50/2019. The 2025–26 amendments expanded the range of activities in which foreign investors may hold 100 per cent of a company’s capital without the requirement for an Omani partner, a significant shift from the earlier framework, which presumed a minimum Omani shareholding in most sectors.
The practical choices for a foreign investor entering Oman in 2026 typically fall into three categories:
Regardless of structure, all foreign investors must register with MOCIIP and obtain a foreign‑investor licence, which can now be applied for electronically through the Invest Easy portal. The likely practical effect of the 2025–26 reforms will be a significant increase in 100‑per‑cent‑foreign‑owned registrations, particularly in the technology, logistics, and renewable‑energy sectors that Oman is actively promoting under its Vision 2040 economic diversification strategy.
Ministerial Decision 245/2025 transformed the role of the authorised manager from a largely administrative appointment into a regulated governance position. The authorised manager requirements in Oman now include the following obligations:
Boards and company secretaries should treat this as a documentation exercise first: assemble the required materials, pass the necessary resolutions, and file promptly. The practical risk of non‑compliance is administrative penalties, potential delays in processing other filings, and, for listed or high‑profile entities, reputational exposure.
The 2026 corporate tax changes sit alongside the commercial companies regulation reforms and affect restructuring decisions in several important ways. While the corporate tax Oman regime has historically applied a flat rate to most corporate entities, the 2026 adjustments introduced graduated considerations around transfer pricing, related‑party transactions, and the tax treatment of intra‑group restructurings.
For in‑house CFOs and tax advisors, the key action items are:
Given the interaction between the international commercial practice elements and local tax rules, cross‑functional coordination between legal, tax and finance teams is essential for any restructuring decision in 2026.
| Date / Period | Instrument | Required action (responsible team) |
|---|---|---|
| 2019, Royal Decree 18/2019 | Commercial Companies Law (base text) | Reference text for all corporate forms and baseline obligations (Legal) |
| 2019, Royal Decree 50/2019 | Foreign Capital Investment Law | Governs foreign ownership Oman thresholds and MOCIIP approval requirements (Legal / Business Development) |
| 2025, Ministerial Decision 245/2025 | Amended executive regulations: authorised managers, conversion mechanics, grading | Update authorised manager appointments and file with Commercial Register within 90 days (Board / Company Secretary) |
| 2026, Corporate tax changes (effective date per Ministry of Finance circular) | Tax Code update: adjusted rates, transfer‑pricing documentation | Model tax impact on restructurings; update TP documentation; align filing timelines (CFO / Tax) |
| Ongoing, Annual return cycle | Commercial companies regulation: expanded annual return template | Complete expanded fields (beneficial ownership, related‑party transactions, grading data) ahead of filing window (Company Secretary / Finance) |
The 2025–26 reforms to the Oman commercial companies law are not aspirational, they carry concrete, time‑bound obligations. Every entity registered in Oman should now be working through the compliance checklist above, tailored to its grade and entity type. The three highest‑priority actions are:
For foreign investors evaluating entry into Oman, the expanded foreign‑ownership rules and streamlined registration processes create a genuinely more accessible market than existed even two years ago. The combination of the commercial companies regulation reforms and the broader Vision 2040 incentive framework makes 2026 a pivotal year for inbound investment structuring. Teams seeking specialist guidance can find a qualified Oman corporate lawyer through the Global Law Experts 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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