Qatar’s tax landscape is one of the most favourable in the world for foreign businesses and for Indian companies operating in or through Qatar, it is made even more attractive by the India–Qatar Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA). This comprehensive 2026 tax guide covers every tax a Qatar-registered business (or its Indian owners) might encounter: corporate income tax (CIT), withholding tax, the QFC zero-tax regime, QFZ incentives, the India–Qatar treaty, and the critical question of VAT.
Understanding Qatar’s tax structure is essential not just for compliance, but for structuring your Qatar entity in a way that legally minimises the overall India–Qatar tax burden on your business and personal income.
Qatar Tax Overview A Gulf Standout
Qatar’s tax regime is structurally different from most countries. To understand it correctly, start with what Qatar does NOT have:
- No personal income tax (on salaries, wages, or any personal income)
- No capital gains tax (at the entity level, except in specific sectors)
- No wealth tax
- No inheritance or estate tax
- No VAT (as of 2026 though this may change; the GCC VAT framework is in place)
- No municipal tax or local business tax
What Qatar DOES have
- Corporate Income Tax (CIT) at a flat 10% rate on taxable profits of foreign-owned entities
- Withholding Tax (WHT) of 5% on payments to non-residents for certain services and royalties
- Customs duties on imports (generally 5% GCC common external tariff, with many exemptions)
- Excise duties on tobacco, soft drinks, and energy drinks (applicable since 2019)
Qatar vs. GCC Tax Comparison
| Country | Corporate Tax Rate | VAT | Personal Income Tax | Withholding Tax |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Qatar | 10% | None (2026) | None | 5% |
| UAE | 9% | 5% | None | None |
| Saudi Arabia | 20% | 15% | None | 5–20% |
| Bahrain | 0% (general) | 10% | None | None |
| Kuwait | 15% (foreign) | None | None | None |
| Oman | 15% | 5% | None | 10% |
Qatar’s 10% CIT is the second lowest in the GCC (after Bahrain’s general 0%), but Qatar’s no-VAT environment and the QFC’s 0% CIT for licensed entities make it arguably the most tax-efficient jurisdiction for service-based businesses in the Gulf.
Qatar Corporate Income Tax 10% Flat Rate
Who Is Subject to Qatar CIT?
Qatar’s corporate income tax is governed by Income Tax Law No. 24 of 2018 and administered by the General Tax Authority (GTA). The key principle: only the foreign-owned portion of a Qatari company’s profits is subject to CIT.
Under current law:
- A company 100% owned by a foreign investor (e.g., an Indian entrepreneur) → 100% of profits subject to 10% CIT
- A company 60% foreign-owned / 40% Qatari-owned → 60% of profits subject to CIT
- A company 100% owned by Qatari nationals → generally exempt from CIT (Qatari-owned businesses are typically not subject to income tax)
Taxable Income Calculation
Taxable income = Gross revenues − Allowable deductions
Allowable deductions under Qatar’s tax law include:
- Cost of goods sold
- Salaries, wages, and employee benefits
- Rent for business premises
- Depreciation of fixed assets (per GTA-prescribed rates)
- Interest on loans used for business purposes
- Bad debt provisions (subject to conditions)
- Professional fees (audit, legal, consulting)
- Marketing and advertising expenses
Non-deductible items include:
- Fines and penalties paid to government authorities
- Personal expenses of owners or managers
- Donations (unless to approved Qatari charitable organisations)
- Excessive management fees paid to related parties (subject to transfer pricing scrutiny)
Tax Rate 10% Flat
Qatar applies a flat 10% rate on taxable income with no brackets, no progressive rates, no surcharges. This simplicity is one of Qatar’s key advantages. For a company with QAR 1,000,000 in taxable profit, the tax is simply QAR 100,000.
Tax Losses
Losses can be carried forward for up to three years to offset future taxable profits. Losses cannot be carried back.
Tax Return Filing
The annual tax return must be filed with the GTA within 4 months from the end of the fiscal year. Most companies use a calendar year (January–December), so the deadline is April 30 of the following year. See Blog 3 for full compliance details.
QFC Tax Regime 0% CIT Explained
The Qatar Financial Centre has its own tax framework, governed by the QFC Tax Regulations (separate from Qatar’s Income Tax Law). The flagship feature is a 0% corporate income tax rate on income from QFC-licensed activities.
How the 0% Rate Works
A company licensed by the QFC pays 0% tax on its income from activities permitted under its QFC licence. The 0% rate is not a temporary incentive or a tax holiday it is the standard rate under the QFC’s tax framework for licensed businesses.
However, there are important nuances:
- The 0% rate applies to QFC-source income income arising from QFC-licensed activities conducted from the QFC
- If a QFC entity has income from activities outside its licence scope, that income may be taxable
- Certain regulated financial activities (banking, insurance) may have specific tax treatment
- The QFC tax system is separate from Qatar’s national CIT a QFC entity does not file a tax return with the GTA; it files with the QFC Tax Department
QFC Transfer Pricing
The QFC tax framework includes transfer pricing rules based on the OECD arm’s length principle. Transactions between QFC entities and related parties (including parent companies in India) must be at market rates, and documentation is required for significant related-party transactions.
Dividend Treatment Under QFC
Dividends paid by a QFC entity to a foreign shareholder (e.g., an Indian individual or Indian company) are generally exempt from withholding tax at the QFC level. Tax implications in India on receipt of those dividends are then governed by the India–Qatar DTAA (see Section 8).
QFC vs. Onshore LLC Tax Comparison
| Factor | MOCI LLC | QFC Entity |
|---|---|---|
| CIT on profits | 10% | 0% |
| WHT on dividends to India | 5% (DTAA rate, or 0% under certain interpretations) | Typically 0% at QFC level |
| Tax filing authority | General Tax Authority (GTA) | QFC Tax Department |
| Transfer pricing rules | Yes (GTA) | Yes (OECD-aligned, QFC) |
| Tax treaty access | Yes (India–Qatar DTAA) | Yes (QFC entities can access Qatar’s tax treaties) |
Qatar Free Zone (QFZ) Tax Benefits
Companies licensed under the Qatar Free Zones Authority (QFZA) enjoy a range of tax and customs incentives:
- Corporate Income Tax: 20-year tax holiday from the date of licence issuance (extendable to 35 years for strategic investments)
- Import Duties: 0% customs duty on goods imported into the free zone for business operations
- Export: Goods exported from the QFZ to international markets are not subject to Qatari export duties
- Withholding Tax: No withholding tax on dividends, profits, or repatriation of capital from QFZ to foreign shareholders
- VAT: Free zone transactions are generally outside the scope of any future VAT (though this depends on the eventual VAT law structure)
QFZ and the India–Qatar DTAA
QFZ entities are incorporated in Qatar and should technically be eligible to claim benefits under the India–Qatar DTAA, including reduced withholding tax rates on dividends paid to Indian shareholders. However, treaty access for free zone entities can be a grey area Indian tax authorities may scrutinise whether the QFZ entity has genuine substance in Qatar. Seek specific advice before structuring a QFZ entity for DTAA benefits.
Withholding Tax in Qatar 5%
Qatar imposes withholding tax (WHT) at 5% on certain payments made to non-residents. This is a relatively low rate compared to other jurisdictions. Understanding exactly when WHT applies is critical for Indian businesses receiving fees or royalties from Qatar.
Payments Subject to Withholding Tax
- Royalties and fees for the use of intellectual property
- Technical service fees paid to non-residents
- Management fees paid to non-resident related parties
- Interest payments to non-residents (in certain cases)
- Commissions paid to non-resident agents
Payments NOT Subject to Withholding Tax
- Dividends paid to shareholders (Qatar does not impose WHT on dividends under the national CIT law though DTAA provisions should be reviewed)
- Payments for goods (pure sale of commodities)
- Salaries paid to employees (covered under employment, not WHT)
India–Qatar DTAA Override
Where the India–Qatar DTAA provides a lower rate than 5%, the Indian recipient can claim the treaty rate. For example, the DTAA caps royalties at 10%, which is actually higher than Qatar’s domestic WHT of 5% meaning Qatar’s domestic rate of 5% is already lower. For interest payments, the DTAA rate is 10%, again higher than Qatar’s 5% WHT.
Effectively, for most categories, Qatar’s domestic 5% WHT is already the best rate an Indian recipient will get, with or without the DTAA treaty claim.
WHT Compliance
The Qatari paying entity is responsible for deducting WHT and remitting it to the GTA within 15 days of the end of the month in which the payment was made. The non-resident receives payment net of WHT, and the payer files a WHT return with the GTA.
No Personal Income Tax in Qatar
Qatar has no personal income tax on salaries, dividends, investment income, rental income, or any other form of personal income. This applies equally to Qatari nationals, Indian expatriates, and all other nationalities.
An Indian professional working in Qatar pays no income tax in Qatar on their salary, regardless of the amount. An Indian entrepreneur drawing a salary from their Qatar company pays no tax in Qatar on that salary.
Indian Tax Residency Implications
The key point for Indian individuals: your global tax obligation depends on your Indian tax residency status. If you remain a tax resident of India (spending more than 182 days in India in a financial year, or meeting other residency tests under Section 6 of the Income Tax Act), your global income including Qatar salary and dividends is taxable in India. The India–Qatar DTAA and the Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) mechanism under Section 90/91 of the Income Tax Act become important in this context. See Blog 5 for a full discussion.
VAT in Qatar Not Yet Implemented (2026)
The GCC member states agreed to implement VAT under a unified framework, with Saudi Arabia and UAE implementing a 5% VAT in 2018, Bahrain in 2019, and Oman in 2021. Qatar, however, has not yet implemented VAT as of 2026.
Current Status
Qatar has been preparing VAT legislation but implementation has been repeatedly delayed. As of 2026, there is no VAT in Qatar. Businesses operating in Qatar do not need to:
- Register for VAT
- Charge VAT on supplies
- File VAT returns
- Maintain VAT-compliant invoices (for VAT purposes)
Future Outlook
Qatar is expected to implement VAT at some point, likely at the standard GCC rate of 5%. When this happens, businesses will need to register, charge, collect, and remit VAT. The transition period, registration thresholds, and exemptions will be specified in the VAT law when enacted.
Indian businesses planning long-term Qatar operations should build VAT readiness into their ERP and accounting systems now to minimise the compliance transition burden.
India–Qatar DTAA Full Treaty Analysis
The Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement between India and Qatar (entered into force in 2000, with protocol) is the cornerstone legal instrument for Indian businesses managing their Qatar tax exposure. It prevents the same income from being taxed in both countries and sets maximum withholding tax rates for cross-border payments.
Structure of the Treaty
The India–Qatar DTAA follows the OECD Model Convention closely and covers:
- Dividends (Articles 10)
- Interest (Article 11)
- Royalties (Article 12)
- Capital gains (Article 13)
- Business profits / Permanent Establishment (Articles 5–7)
- Independent personal services (Article 14)
- Employment income (Article 15)
- Elimination of double taxation methods (Article 23)
- Exchange of information (Article 26)
Key DTAA Rates
| Type of Income | DTAA Rate | Qatar Domestic WHT | Effective Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dividends (less than 10% holding) | 10% | Generally 0% (Qatar) | 0% in Qatar; taxable in India |
| Dividends (10%+ holding) | 5% | Generally 0% (Qatar) | 0% in Qatar; 5% DTAA cap if WHT applies |
| Interest | 10% | 5% domestic WHT | 5% (Qatar WHT < DTAA rate) |
| Royalties | 10% | 5% domestic WHT | 5% (Qatar WHT < DTAA rate) |
| Technical service fees | 10% (FTS clause) | 5% domestic WHT | 5% (Qatar WHT < DTAA rate) |
| Capital gains (shares) | May be taxable in source country | Assessed by GTA | Depends on asset type |
Dividend Article 5% and 10% Rates
The dividends article is the most important for Indian business owners receiving profits from their Qatar company. The treaty provides:
- 5% WHT rate: When the Indian shareholder (individual or company) holds at least 10% of the capital of the Qatar company paying the dividend
- 10% WHT rate: For all other dividend payments (holdings below 10%)
Practically speaking, an Indian promoter who owns 100% of their Qatar LLC will qualify for the 5% DTAA rate on dividends. However, since Qatar does not currently impose withholding tax on dividends under its domestic CIT law, the DTAA dividend article primarily becomes relevant for tax credit purposes in India.
Permanent Establishment (PE) Risk
An important concern for Indian companies providing services to or through Qatar: if an Indian company’s employees or agents operate in Qatar beyond certain thresholds, they may create a Permanent Establishment in Qatar, subjecting Indian company profits attributable to Qatar operations to Qatari CIT at 10%.
PE triggers under the DTAA include:
- A fixed place of business in Qatar (office, workshop, etc.) for more than 6 months
- A construction site or project in Qatar lasting more than 6 months
- A dependent agent in Qatar habitually concluding contracts on behalf of the Indian company
- Services provided in Qatar for more than 9 months in any 12-month period
Once a PE is established, profits attributable to the PE are taxed in Qatar at 10%. The Indian company can claim a Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) in India for taxes paid in Qatar, subject to Section 90 of the Indian Income Tax Act.
Dividends from Qatar Company to Indian Shareholder
This is the question most Indian business owners ask: if my Qatar LLC earns a profit, what taxes will I pay when that profit is distributed to me in India?
At the Qatar Level
The Qatar company first pays CIT at 10% on its taxable profit. After-tax profit can be distributed as dividends. Qatar does not impose a separate withholding tax on dividends paid to foreign shareholders under its domestic Income Tax Law No. 24 of 2018. So the dividend leaves Qatar without any additional Qatar tax (beyond the CIT already paid by the company).
At the India Level
Dividends received by an Indian individual or Indian company from a foreign company are taxable in India. Since 2020 (abolition of the DDT regime), dividends from foreign companies are taxed in the hands of the Indian recipient at their applicable income tax slab rate.
However, to avoid double taxation, the Indian recipient can claim:
- Section 90 relief Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) for taxes paid in Qatar (i.e., the 10% CIT paid by the Qatar company on profits from which the dividend was paid)
- Section 57 deduction Deduction of interest on borrowings to finance the investment in Qatar company
Illustrative Example
| Step | Amount (QAR) | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Qatar LLC profit before tax | 1,000,000 | |
| Less: Qatar CIT at 10% | (100,000) | Paid to GTA |
| After-tax profit | 900,000 | Available for distribution |
| Dividend to Indian shareholder | 900,000 | No Qatar WHT on dividends |
| India income tax (slab, ~30%) | (270,000) | On QAR 900,000 equivalent in INR |
| Less: Section 90 FTC (10% Qatar CIT) | (100,000) | Credit for Qatar taxes paid |
| Net India tax | 170,000 | After FTC credit |
| Total effective tax | 270,000 | 27% effective rate (vs 10% standalone) |
This example is simplified and for illustration only. Actual tax depends on Indian residency status, applicable slab, DTAA interpretation, and other factors. Consult a chartered accountant.
Transfer Pricing in Qatar
Qatar’s Income Tax Law No. 24 of 2018 includes transfer pricing (TP) provisions requiring that transactions between related parties be conducted at arm’s length i.e., at the prices that independent parties would agree to in comparable circumstances.
Scope of Qatar Transfer Pricing Rules
Qatar’s TP rules apply to:
- Transactions between a Qatar entity and its foreign parent or affiliate (e.g., services rendered by an Indian parent company to its Qatar LLC)
- Cross-border loans between related parties
- Royalty or IP licensing between related parties
- Management fee arrangements
- Purchases and sales of goods between related parties
Documentation Requirements
While Qatar’s TP documentation requirements are less prescriptive than India’s or OECD-standard countries, the GTA expects taxpayers to be able to demonstrate arm’s length pricing on request. Best practice (and OECD-aligned requirement under QFC) is to maintain:
- A Transfer Pricing Policy document
- Benchmarking analysis (comparables) for significant related-party transactions
- Intercompany agreements for management services, loans, IP licensing, etc.
India–Qatar TP Interaction
Indian companies transacting with their Qatar affiliates must comply with India’s transfer pricing regulations under Sections 92–92F of the Income Tax Act, as well as the reporting obligations under Form 3CEB (Chartered Accountant’s report on international transactions). Indian TP rules are among the most comprehensive in the world. Ensure consistency between TP positions taken in India and in Qatar.
The General Tax Authority (GTA) Registration & Filing
The General Tax Authority (GTA) is Qatar’s central tax administration body, established under Emiri Decree No. 11 of 2018. All companies subject to Qatar CIT must register with and file returns with the GTA.
Tax Registration
New companies must register with the GTA within 30 days of obtaining their Commercial Registration. Registration is done through the GTA’s online portal (dhareeba.gov.qa). Upon registration, the company receives a Tax Identification Number (TIN).
Annual Filing Obligations
- Annual tax return: Filed within 4 months of fiscal year end (April 30 for calendar year companies)
- Tax payment: Any tax due is payable upon filing
- Advance tax (estimated): Not generally required for small companies; larger taxpayers may be required to make advance payments
- Withholding tax returns: Filed monthly (15 days after month end) when WHT payments have been made
- Financial statements: Audited accounts must accompany the tax return for companies meeting certain size thresholds
GTA Dhareeba Portal
All GTA filings are made through the Dhareeba online tax portal. Companies must maintain an active Dhareeba account and ensure their registered address and contact details are current.
Tax Planning Strategies for Indian Business Owners
With proper legal structuring, Indian entrepreneurs can significantly optimise their combined India–Qatar tax position. Here are the key strategies used in practice:
Strategy 1: Use QFC for Service Businesses
If your activity qualifies for a QFC licence (consulting, IT, professional services, finance), consider the QFC over MOCI. The 0% CIT saves 10% of all profits at the company level immediately. Over a business generating QAR 2,000,000 in annual profit, this is QAR 200,000 in annual tax savings.
Strategy 2: Reinvest in Qatar Rather Than Repatriate
Dividends remitted to India trigger Indian income tax on receipt. If you reinvest profits within the Qatar business (capex, working capital, expansion), you defer the Indian tax event. This is especially effective if the Qatar business has ongoing investment needs.
Strategy 3: Structure Remuneration as Salary + Dividend Mix
Since there is no personal income tax in Qatar, there is no tax cost on your Qatar salary. Taking a market-rate salary from the Qatar company (deductible for Qatar CIT purposes) reduces the company’s taxable profit and therefore CIT. Dividends from after-tax profit then carry a lower base.
Strategy 4: Use the India–Qatar DTAA for Indian Resident Beneficiaries
If an Indian resident receives dividends from a Qatar company, claim the Section 90 FTC for Qatar CIT paid. This reduces the Indian tax on those dividends by the amount of CIT already paid in Qatar. Ensure your Indian tax return properly reports foreign income and foreign tax credits on Schedule FA (foreign assets) and the relevant foreign income schedule.
Strategy 5: Establish Genuine Qatar Substance
For Indian tax treaty positions and to avoid FEMA/SEBI scrutiny of ODI structures, ensure your Qatar entity has genuine economic substance: a real office, local employees, local decision-making, and meaningful activity in Qatar. This protects against General Anti-Avoidance Rule (GAAR) challenges in India and Principal Purpose Test (PPT) challenges under treaty provisions.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does a Qatar company need to pay tax on income earned outside Qatar?
Qatar’s CIT applies to income with a Qatari source. Income earned by a Qatar company from activities genuinely conducted outside Qatar (e.g., from a project in another GCC country) may not be subject to Qatari CIT, but the sourcing rules are complex and should be reviewed with a Qatar tax advisor.
Is Qatar in the OECD Pillar Two (Global Minimum Tax) framework?
Qatar is not an OECD member and has not adopted the Pillar Two 15% global minimum tax as of 2026. However, if a large Indian MNC group (with over EUR 750 million in revenue) operates in Qatar through a subsidiary, the Indian parent’s Ultimate Parent Entity may be subject to a Qualified Domestic Minimum Top-up Tax in India on the Qatar subsidiary’s income if the effective tax rate falls below 15%. This is a rapidly evolving area for large groups.
What happens if I don’t file a tax return in Qatar?
Penalties for late or non-filing are significant. See Blog 3 for a full breakdown of GTA penalties, including late filing surcharges and interest on unpaid taxes.
Can I claim a deduction in India for Qatar corporate taxes paid?
Yes. Under Section 90 of the Indian Income Tax Act, Indian residents can claim a Foreign Tax Credit for taxes paid in Qatar on income that is also taxable in India, subject to the rules in the India–Qatar DTAA and the Indian Foreign Tax Credit Rules (Rule 128 of the Income Tax Rules).
Conclusion
Qatar’s tax system 10% CIT on onshore profits, 0% under QFC, generous free zone holidays, no personal income tax, no VAT, and a favourable India–Qatar DTAA makes it one of the most tax-efficient jurisdictions for Indian businesses expanding into the Gulf. The key to optimising your position is choosing the right structure upfront (MOCI LLC vs. QFC vs. QFZ), ensuring genuine substance, maintaining arm’s length pricing in related-party transactions, and properly claiming treaty and foreign tax credit benefits in your Indian tax returns.
This guide is for informational purposes. Consult a qualified Qatar tax advisor and an Indian chartered accountant for advice specific to your situation.