Running a company in Qatar requires more than registering it. Every year, Qatar-registered businesses face a calendar of compliance obligations: tax filings with the General Tax Authority (GTA), commercial registration renewal with MOCI, social insurance contributions, wage protection system (WPS) compliance, and sector-specific licences. Missing any of these can result in fines, suspension of operations, or visa/licence blocks.
This guide maps every annual compliance requirement for a Qatar LLC or QFC entity in 2026, with deadlines, costs, and the consequences of non-compliance.
Qatar Compliance Annual Calendar (Calendar Year Company)
| Deadline | Obligation | Authority |
|---|---|---|
| January 15 (monthly) | Social insurance contribution (GRSIA) for prior month | GRSIA |
| February 28 | WHT return for October–December (if applicable) | GTA |
| March 31 | MOCI Commercial Registration renewal (if expiry is March 31) | MOCI |
| April 30 | Annual CIT return for prior calendar year | GTA |
| April 30 | Tax payment — any balance due with return | GTA |
| Monthly (15th) | WHT returns (if WHT payments made in prior month) | GTA |
| Monthly (last day) | WPS salary upload (via QNB/bank WPS portal) | Ministry of Labour |
| Annually (expiry date) | Municipal licence renewal | Municipality |
| Annually (expiry date) | Sector licence renewal (health, education, finance, etc.) | Relevant Ministry |
| Within 4 months of fiscal year end | Audited financial statements (if required) | GTA / MOCI |
GTA Annual CIT Return Filing Within 4 Months
The most critical annual obligation for any Qatar company subject to corporate income tax is the annual tax return to the General Tax Authority (GTA).
Filing Deadline
The annual CIT return must be filed within 4 months of the end of the company’s fiscal year. For companies using the calendar year (January 1 – December 31), this means the tax return is due by April 30 of the following year.
What the CIT Return Covers
The annual return filed through the GTA’s Dhareeba portal must include:
- Income statement showing gross revenues and all expenses
- Reconciliation between accounting profit and taxable profit (adjusting for non-deductible items)
- Disclosure of related-party transactions
- Capital assets schedule and depreciation claim
- Tax loss carry-forward claims (if applicable)
- Withholding tax paid/deducted during the year
- Audited financial statements (for companies meeting audit thresholds)
Tax Payment
Any CIT due must be paid simultaneously with the return filing (by April 30). The GTA does not issue a separate tax assessment before payment is required — the company self-assesses its tax and pays it with the return. The GTA may subsequently audit the return and issue revised assessments if discrepancies are found.
Extension Requests
A 30-day extension may be requested from the GTA before the filing deadline if a valid reason is provided (e.g., awaiting finalisation of audited accounts). Extensions are not automatic and must be applied for in writing.
Audit Requirements in Qatar
Who Must Prepare Audited Financial Statements?
Qatar law requires audited financial statements in the following circumstances:
- The company has annual turnover exceeding QAR 2,000,000
- The company has more than a specified number of employees (generally 10+)
- The company’s paid-up capital exceeds QAR 1,000,000
- The company is required by its sector regulator to maintain audited accounts (e.g., all financial services companies, healthcare entities)
- The Commercial Registration or licence conditions specifically require annual audits
Practically, virtually all operating companies in Qatar should prepare audited financial statements annually, both to meet GTA requirements and to comply with the expectations of Qatari banks (which require audited accounts for credit facilities).
Auditors in Qatar
Auditors in Qatar must be registered with the Ministry of Commerce and Industry. The Big Four accounting firms (PwC, Deloitte, KPMG, EY) all have offices in Doha. Indian companies may find it convenient to work with the Qatar offices of the same firms they use in India, enabling coordinated reporting across both jurisdictions.
Audit Standards
Qatar companies prepare financial statements in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), and audits are conducted under International Standards on Auditing (ISA). Companies previously reporting under GAAP should note that Qatar’s regulatory framework mandates IFRS for commercial companies.
QFC Accounting Requirements
QFC-licensed entities must prepare financial statements in accordance with IFRS and have them audited by a QFC-registered auditor. QFC financial statements are submitted to the QFC Authority, not to the GTA.
MOCI Annual Renewal
Every company registered under MOCI must renew its Commercial Registration (CR) annually before the expiry date printed on the CR certificate. Failure to renew results in the CR being cancelled, which can suspend all business activities, block new visa applications, and create complications with banks and counterparties.
CR Renewal Process
- Access the MOCI Sijilat portal (business.gov.qa)
- Submit the renewal application before the expiry date
- Pay the annual renewal fee
- Ensure the lease agreement for the registered office address is current (MOCI requires proof of valid premises)
- Confirm that all licences linked to the CR (municipal, sector) are also renewed
Renewal Fees
Annual CR renewal fees vary by company size and activity but typically range from QAR 500 to QAR 5,000. Commercial services companies pay more than small trading entities. The exact fee is calculated on the Sijilat portal at the time of renewal.
Change of Details
Any changes to the company’s registered details address, shareholders, capital, managers, activities must be notified to MOCI and reflected in the CR. MOCI amendments require updated MoA notarisation and resubmission. Indian-owned companies must ensure that changes in Indian shareholder structure (e.g., a merger in India, change of promoters) are reflected in the Qatar CR within the legally required timeframe.
Social Insurance 5% Employer Contribution
Qatar operates a social insurance system administered by the General Retirement and Social Insurance Authority (GRSIA). Employers are required to register all eligible employees with GRSIA and make monthly contributions.
Who Is Covered?
Social insurance under the GRSIA system primarily covers Qatari national employees. Expatriate employees (including Indian employees) are not covered by the Qatari state pension/social insurance system but may be covered by the End-of-Service Gratuity under Qatar Labour Law (separate from GRSIA).
Employer Contribution Rate
- Employer contribution: 5% of the Qatari employee’s basic salary (paid by the company)
- Employee contribution: 5% of the Qatari employee’s basic salary (deducted from salary)
- Government contribution: 10% (paid by the state)
Total contribution: 20% of the Qatari employee’s basic salary (with only 5% being the employer’s cost).
Expatriate End-of-Service Gratuity
Under the Qatar Labour Law (Law No. 14 of 2004, as amended), expatriate employees (including Indians) are entitled to an end-of-service gratuity upon completion of 1 year of continuous service. The gratuity equals:
- 3 weeks’ basic wage for each year of the first 5 years of service
- 4 weeks’ basic wage for each year beyond 5 years
This is a statutory obligation, not optional. Companies must provision for this liability in their financial statements (typically disclosed in audited accounts as an employee benefit obligation).
Qatar Labour Law Key Employer Obligations
Qatar’s Labour Law (Law No. 14 of 2004 and subsequent amendments, including significant 2020–2021 labour reforms) governs all employment relationships in Qatar other than domestic workers and certain exempted categories.
Employment Contracts
All employees must have a written employment contract in Arabic (with a translation in the employee’s language if requested). The contract must specify:
- Job title and description
- Basic salary and allowances
- Working hours
- Leave entitlement
- Probation period (maximum 6 months)
- Contract duration (fixed-term or indefinite)
- Notice period
Working Hours
- Standard: 8 hours per day, 48 hours per week
- Ramadan: 6 hours per day for Muslims
- Outdoor workers in summer: restricted to working between 10:00 AM and 3:30 PM from June 15 to September 15
Annual Leave
- Minimum 3 weeks per year for employees with less than 5 years of service
- Minimum 4 weeks per year for employees with 5 or more years of service
Minimum Wage
Qatar implemented a non-discriminatory minimum wage of QAR 1,000 per month in March 2021 the first minimum wage in Qatar’s history and the first non-nationality-based minimum wage in the GCC. In addition:
- Employers must provide food allowance of at least QAR 300/month (or provide free meals)
- Employers must provide housing allowance of at least QAR 500/month (or provide free accommodation)
- Total minimum compensation therefore: QAR 1,800/month (cash + allowances)
Kafala Reforms
Qatar undertook major labour reforms starting 2020:
- The exit permit system for most workers was abolished workers can leave Qatar without employer approval (subject to certain exceptions)
- Workers can change jobs without employer’s No Objection Certificate (NOC) after completing 1 year of service (or immediately for workers subjected to exploitation)
- A new Dispute Resolution Committee provides faster resolution for low-value wage disputes
These reforms significantly changed the employer–employee dynamic in Qatar. Indian employers running Qatar companies should ensure their HR policies are aligned with the post-reform framework.
Wage Protection System (WPS)
Qatar’s Wage Protection System (WPS), administered by the Ministry of Labour, requires all private-sector employers to pay salaries through the approved electronic payment system on a monthly basis. WPS was made mandatory for all private sector companies.
How WPS Works
- The employer opens a WPS-enabled payroll account with an approved Qatari bank (QNB, Commercial Bank, etc.)
- Monthly salaries are uploaded through the bank’s WPS portal by the salary payment date
- The system verifies that all registered employees have been paid at least the contracted salary
- The Ministry of Labour has real-time access to WPS data and can identify non-compliant employers
Consequences of WPS Non-Compliance
WPS non-compliance is treated very seriously by Qatari authorities:
- Suspension of new work visa applications (the company is “blacklisted” by the Ministry of Labour)
- Fines and penalties
- Potential suspension of the Commercial Registration
- Reputational damage and worker complaints
Delayed salary payment (even by a few days) can trigger a WPS flag. Companies must ensure salaries are in the employee’s bank account by the last working day of the month at the latest.
WPS and Indian Employees
For Indian employees in Qatar, WPS provides an important protection it creates a verifiable electronic record of salary payments. This is relevant for Indian employees claiming UAE or Qatar banking statements for Indian loan applications or remittances.
GTA Penalties for Late Filing & Non-Compliance
The General Tax Authority imposes meaningful financial penalties for non-compliance. Indian business owners accustomed to India’s penalty regime should note that Qatar’s penalties, while not India-level aggressive, can accumulate quickly.
Late Filing Penalties
| Violation | Penalty |
|---|---|
| Failure to register with GTA within 30 days of CR | QAR 10,000–100,000 |
| Late filing of annual tax return (per month of delay) | 1% of tax due per month, minimum QAR 500 |
| Late payment of tax due | 1.5% per month on unpaid tax |
| Failure to maintain adequate accounting records | QAR 5,000–50,000 |
| Failure to submit WHT return on time | QAR 2,000–20,000 per return |
| Tax evasion (deliberately understating income) | Up to 3× the evaded tax, plus criminal referral |
| Failure to cooperate with GTA audit | QAR 10,000–100,000 |
MOCI and Municipal Penalties
| Violation | Consequence |
|---|---|
| Operating with an expired Commercial Registration | Company cannot legally operate; fines up to QAR 50,000 |
| Operating with an expired municipal licence | Closure order; fines up to QAR 50,000 |
| Failure to renew within 30 days of expiry | Late renewal surcharge + potential suspension |
Labour Law Penalties
| Violation | Penalty |
|---|---|
| WPS non-compliance (salary delay) | Visa ban + QAR 2,000–6,000 per worker |
| Underpaying minimum wage | QAR 2,000 per affected worker + back pay order |
| Operating outdoor workers during summer heat ban (10am–3:30pm) | QAR 100,000 fine + possible suspension |
| Failing to provide end-of-service gratuity | Court order + interest on unpaid amount |
QFC-Specific Compliance
Companies licensed under the Qatar Financial Centre face a separate but parallel compliance framework administered by the QFC Authority and (for regulated financial activities) the Qatar Financial Centre Regulatory Authority (QFCRA).
QFC Annual Licence Renewal
QFC licences must be renewed annually. The renewal requires:
- Annual licence renewal fee payment (see Blog 6 for fee schedules)
- Confirmation that the entity continues to meet QFC substance requirements
- Submission of updated company information and directors/shareholders
QFC Financial Reporting
- Audited financial statements must be submitted to the QFC Authority within 6 months of the fiscal year end (i.e., by June 30 for calendar year companies)
- Financial statements must be prepared under IFRS and audited by a QFC-registered auditor
QFC Tax Return
QFC entities file an annual tax return with the QFC Tax Department (not the GTA). The QFC return is due within 4 months of fiscal year end, aligning with the national CIT deadline.
QFCRA Compliance (Regulated Activities)
QFC entities conducting regulated activities (fund management, investment advice, insurance, banking) must comply with QFCRA prudential and conduct requirements, including:
- Minimum capital and solvency requirements
- Compliance officer appointment
- AML/CFT (anti-money laundering / counter-financing of terrorism) policies
- Regular QFCRA reporting and supervision
Annual Compliance Checklist for Indian-Owned Qatar Companies
Use this checklist to ensure your Qatar company stays fully compliant throughout the year:
Tax Compliance (GTA)
- ☐ File annual CIT return by April 30 (calendar year companies)
- ☐ Pay any balance CIT due with the return
- ☐ File WHT returns monthly (15th of following month) if applicable
- ☐ Maintain Dhareeba portal account with current contact details
- ☐ Retain all invoices, contracts, and accounting records for 5 years
- ☐ Commission annual audit (if turnover >QAR 2M or required by licence)
Corporate Compliance (MOCI)
- ☐ Renew Commercial Registration before expiry date
- ☐ Renew municipal licence before expiry
- ☐ Renew sector licences (health, education, finance, etc.) before expiry
- ☐ Update CR for any changes in shareholders, capital, managers, address, or activities
- ☐ Maintain valid registered office lease agreement
- ☐ Renew Chamber of Commerce membership
Employment Compliance
- ☐ Pay salaries via WPS by month-end (last working day)
- ☐ Register new Qatari employees with GRSIA within 30 days of hiring
- ☐ Pay GRSIA contributions by 15th of following month
- ☐ Maintain valid employment contracts for all employees
- ☐ Provision for end-of-service gratuity in annual accounts
- ☐ Comply with summer outdoor work restrictions (June 15–September 15)
- ☐ Ensure minimum wage compliance (QAR 1,000 + QAR 300 food + QAR 500 housing)
India-Side Compliance (for Indian Owners)
- ☐ File ODI Annual Performance Report (APR) with RBI via AD bank by December 31
- ☐ Report foreign assets in Indian income tax return (Schedule FA)
- ☐ Report foreign income in Indian ITR (Schedule FSI)
- ☐ Claim FTC in Form 67 before filing India ITR
- ☐ FEMA compliance report remittances, dividends received from Qatar company
Conclusion
Qatar’s compliance environment is structured and predictable there are no surprise tax laws, no retroactive changes, and the GTA and MOCI digital platforms make filings reasonably straightforward. The key risk for Indian-owned companies is not complexity but calendar management: missing the April 30 CIT deadline, letting a CR lapse, or falling foul of WPS due to a salary payment delay can cascade into visa bans and operational disruptions that are expensive to resolve.
Engage a local Qatari accounting firm or PRO (Public Relations Officer) to manage your annual compliance calendar. The cost is a fraction of the penalties you’d face from non-compliance — and it frees you to focus on running the business rather than chasing government deadlines.
This guide is for informational purposes. Consult a licensed Qatar compliance professional for advice specific to your company.