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Last reviewed: June 21, 2026
Understanding how to close a foreign branch in Iraq is essential for any head office that has decided to wind down its Iraqi operations. The process is governed by the Ministry of Trade’s Companies Registrar (Tasjeel) under Order No. 2 of 2017 and its amending regulation, Order No. 4 of 2023, and it involves a mandatory public-notice period, multiple regulator clearances and a defined set of legalised documents. Missteps, a missed publication window, an incomplete tax filing, an un-legalised power of attorney, can leave the parent company exposed to penalties and lingering liabilities long after it intended to exit.
This guide provides in-house legal teams, country managers and corporate secretaries with the exact sequence of actions, documents and timelines needed to achieve a clean company deregistration in Iraq.
Before diving into the detail, the following five-step checklist summarises the critical path for any foreign company branch closure in Iraq. Each step is expanded in the sections below.
The closure application may be submitted by the branch manager named on the original registration, or by a locally licensed Iraqi lawyer holding a notarised and legalised power of attorney from the parent company. The Ministry of Trade Iraq Companies Registrar requires that the power of attorney explicitly authorise the agent to apply for deregistration, sign undertakings and collect the final certificate. Where the branch manager has already departed Iraq, appointing an Iraqi-qualified legal representative is the standard practical route.
Not every exit from Iraq follows the same procedure. The appropriate route depends on the entity type and whether there are outstanding creditor claims. The comparison table below clarifies the key distinctions between closing a foreign branch, liquidating an Iraqi subsidiary and deregistering a representative office.
| Entity Type | Key Regulatory Obligations on Closure | Typical Timeline / Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Foreign branch | Submit closure application to Companies Registrar (Tasjeel), publish notice, obtain tax and social-security clearance, cancel commercial registration | Administrative closure: 60–120 days if no creditors; longer if creditor claims or insolvency arise |
| Iraqi subsidiary (local company) | Court-supervised liquidation or shareholder resolution, auditor reports, creditor claims period, Registrar filings | Formal company liquidation in Iraq often takes 6–18 months depending on creditor claims |
| Representative office | Deregistration via Registrar; fewer tax filings if the office conducted no commercial activity | Typically shorter if no trade liabilities exist |
A foreign branch that has no outstanding debts, no unresolved employee claims and no assets remaining in Iraq can generally follow the administrative closure route through Tasjeel. However, where the branch holds significant assets, has unsettled creditor obligations or is insolvent, a more formal branch liquidation in Iraq may be required. In such cases, a court-appointed or voluntarily appointed liquidator manages asset realisation and creditor distribution before the Registrar will issue a deregistration certificate. Industry observers note that many foreign companies underestimate the threshold at which formal liquidation becomes necessary, even a single disputed supplier invoice can delay the administrative route.
Under Iraqi law, a foreign branch is not a separate legal entity. The parent company bears full liability for the branch’s obligations. This means that deregistration does not automatically extinguish debts incurred during the branch’s operation. Creditors, tax authorities and former employees retain the right to pursue the head office even after the branch ceases to exist on the Iraqi register. For this reason, obtaining comprehensive clearances before deregistration, and retaining copies of all clearance letters for a minimum of five years, is a critical risk-control measure.
The following five steps reflect the procedure set out in the Tasjeel Companies Registrar framework and Order No. 2 of 2017 (as amended by Order No. 4 of 2023). Each step should be completed in sequence, although tax and social-security clearances (Step 5 in the FAQ, covered separately below) can run in parallel with the publication window.
The process begins with a formal resolution from the parent company’s board of directors (or equivalent governing body) authorising the closure of the Iraqi branch. The resolution must state the decision to cease all commercial activities in Iraq, identify the branch by its Tasjeel registration number, and appoint a named individual, either the existing branch manager or a locally licensed lawyer, as the authorised agent for deregistration. This resolution must be notarised in the home jurisdiction, legalised by the Iraqi embassy or consulate there, and translated into Arabic by a certified translator. Industry observers expect Tasjeel to reject any application where the resolution does not expressly reference deregistration authority.
The branch must prepare a final set of financial statements covering the period from the last filed annual return up to the intended closure date. These accounts must be audited by an Iraqi-licensed auditor. The auditor’s report should confirm that all known liabilities have been settled or adequately disclosed and that no assets remain unaccounted for. The audited final accounts form a mandatory attachment to the closure application filed with Tasjeel Iraq. Branches that have been dormant should still produce a nil-activity auditor’s report, the Registrar does not waive the audit requirement simply because no revenue was earned.
The closure application is filed with the Companies Registrar at the Ministry of Trade Iraq Companies Registrar office (Tasjeel). The application pack must include all of the following:
Tasjeel reviews the application for completeness. If any document is missing or improperly authenticated, the Registrar issues a deficiency notice and the 60‑day clock does not start until all documents are accepted. This is one of the most common causes of delay in the foreign company branch closure Iraq process.
Once Tasjeel accepts the application, the branch must publish a closure notice in a widely circulated Iraqi newspaper. The notice must identify the branch, its registration number, the parent company, and invite any creditors or parties with claims against the branch to submit those claims within 60 days of publication. This 60‑day statutory period is the central timeline control in the entire company deregistration Iraq process. During this window, the Registrar will not issue a deregistration certificate. Any claims received must be resolved, by payment, settlement or formal dispute, before the Registrar will proceed. Proof of publication (a copy of the newspaper page or a publisher’s certificate) must be submitted to Tasjeel.
After the 60‑day publication period expires with no unresolved claims, and once all tax, social-security and customs clearances have been submitted, the Companies Registrar reviews the complete file. If satisfied, the Registrar strikes the branch from the register and issues a formal deregistration certificate. This certificate is the definitive proof that the branch has been lawfully closed. Retaining certified copies is essential, the head office may need to present this document to its home-jurisdiction regulators, auditors or banks to confirm that the Iraqi entity no longer exists.
No discussion of how to close a foreign branch in Iraq is complete without addressing the clearance requirements that run in parallel with the Tasjeel filing. The Registrar will not issue a deregistration certificate until it receives evidence that the branch has no outstanding obligations to the tax authority, the social-security administration and (where applicable) customs.
The branch must file all outstanding income-tax returns with the General Commission for Taxes up to and including the final period of operation. Any taxes due, including corporate income tax, withholding taxes on payments to non-residents and any applicable sales or service taxes, must be paid in full. Once the tax authority confirms that no amounts remain outstanding, it issues a tax clearance certificate (sometimes referred to as a “no-objection letter”). This certificate is a mandatory attachment for the Registrar’s final review. The typical processing time for tax clearance ranges from 30 to 90 days, depending on the complexity of the branch’s tax history. Branches with a history of late filings or disputed assessments should budget additional time.
All Iraqi employees must be formally terminated in accordance with the Iraqi Labour Law. This includes payment of end-of-service benefits, any accrued but untaken leave entitlements and the applicable notice-period compensation. The branch must also settle all employer and employee social-security contributions with the Pension and Social Security Authority and obtain a clearance letter confirming a nil balance. Failure to settle employee claims is a frequent source of post-closure liability for parent companies, former employees may bring claims against the head office in Iraqi courts even after branch deregistration.
Branches that imported goods, equipment or materials into Iraq must obtain a customs clearance confirming that no duties or penalties remain outstanding and that any temporarily imported items have been re-exported or properly accounted for. Additionally, any sector-specific licences, for example, a construction licence, a security-services permit or a telecommunications authorisation, must be formally cancelled with the issuing ministry before the Registrar will finalise deregistration. Practical experience suggests starting the customs and licensing cancellation process as early as possible, ideally in parallel with Step 1, to avoid bottlenecks at the end of the timeline.
Pro tip: Retain certified copies of every clearance letter, tax, social security, customs and sectoral licences, for a minimum of five years after deregistration. These documents are the head office’s primary defence if a historic claim surfaces after the branch no longer exists.
The document-authentication requirements for Tasjeel Iraq are exacting. Every foreign-origin document submitted as part of the closure application must pass through a three-stage authentication chain: notarisation in the home jurisdiction, legalisation (attestation) by the Iraqi embassy or consulate in that jurisdiction, and certified translation into Arabic by a translator approved by the Iraqi authorities.
Documents originating outside Iraq must be attested by the Iraqi embassy or consulate in the country of origin. Iraq is not a party to the Hague Apostille Convention, so the simplified apostille process does not apply. Instead, the full consular-legalisation chain must be followed: notarisation by a local notary public, authentication by the relevant government department (typically the foreign-affairs ministry of the home country), and then attestation by the Iraqi embassy. For contact details and appointment procedures, the Iraqi Ministry of Foreign Affairs maintains a directory of diplomatic missions on its official website.
The 60‑day rule is the single most important timeline constraint when planning how to close a foreign branch in Iraq. Under the procedural framework established by Order No. 2 of 2017 and refined by Order No. 4 of 2023, a minimum of 60 days must elapse between the date of the published closure notice and the earliest date on which the Companies Registrar may issue a deregistration certificate. This window exists to protect creditors and other parties who may have claims against the branch.
| Milestone | Typical Days from Start | Who Acts / Documents Due |
|---|---|---|
| Board resolution and appointment of agent | 0–7 days | Head office; notarised resolution and power of attorney |
| Preparation of final accounts and audit | 14–45 days | Iraqi-licensed auditor and branch finance team |
| Submission to Companies Registrar (Tasjeel) | Day 1 of submission | Application form plus all attachments |
| Publication of closure notice / creditor window | 60 days (statutory minimum) | Proof of publication required |
| Tax and social-security clearance | 30–90 days (run in parallel) | Tax authority and social-security administration |
| Registrar issues deregistration certificate | After all clearances and expiry of 60‑day window | Registrar decision and certificate |
In a straightforward case with no creditor claims and prompt clearances, the entire process can be completed in approximately 90 to 120 days from the date of the board resolution. More complex cases, particularly those involving disputed tax assessments or employee litigation, may extend well beyond six months.
The following checklist is designed to be printed or saved as a reference document. Each item corresponds to a step in the process described above.
For tailored guidance on your branch’s specific circumstances, consult an Iraq-qualified legal professional or search the corporate law directory for practitioners experienced in Iraqi regulatory filings.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Furat Kuba at Al-Nesoor Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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