legal procedure to open a retail store in morocco

Start a Business in Morocco: Step-by-Step Legal, Tax & Registration Guide (2026)

Starting a business in Morocco is absolutely possible for locals and foreigners—and the process is structured: choose the legal form, reserve the name (OMPIC), prepare statutes, secure an address, register via CRI, then handle taxes and (if hiring) CNSS.

Introduction: Your Entrepreneurial Journey in Morocco Begins Here

Morocco is attractive because it connects Europe and Africa, has major logistics hubs, and offers multiple legal structures for different business sizes. Many entrepreneurs choose SARL because it’s flexible for SMEs.


Why Morocco? Unlocking Its Entrepreneurial Appeal

Strategic location: a gateway to Africa and Europe

Morocco is positioned for import/export and regional expansion, with strong port infrastructure often cited by investor guides.

A clearer “one-stop-shop” approach through CRI

In many regions, CRI platforms are designed to centralize procedures, project follow-up, and access to services—reducing back-and-forth.


Laying the Foundation: Pre-Registration Essentials

1) Validate your business activity (especially if regulated)

Some sectors need authorizations (examples: tourism, education, health, certain food activities). If your activity is regulated, plan this early so you don’t register a structure you can’t operate.

2) Build a simple business plan (even 2 pages)

Your plan should answer:

  • What you sell + to whom
  • Your pricing and costs
  • How you will invoice (local / export)
  • Whether you will hire staff (CNSS impact)

3) Prepare documents upfront

Common basics:

  • Passport/ID (and corporate docs if shareholder is a foreign company)
  • Intended address (lease or domiciliation proof)
  • Company name options (3–5)

Choosing Your Business Vehicle: Legal Structures in Morocco

The most common structures

  • SARL / SARLAU (LLC): popular for SMEs; limited liability; simpler governance.
  • SA (joint-stock company): usually for larger projects; heavier governance requirements.

Most guides targeting entrepreneurs emphasize SARL as the common starting point for SMEs.

Subsidiary vs branch vs liaison office (for foreign companies)

  • Subsidiary: Moroccan company (often SARL) owned by parent.
  • Branch/permanent establishment: extension of the foreign company; registration steps differ.
  • Liaison office: typically limited activities (no commercial trading).

If you’re opening a permanent establishment, CRI guidance often lists steps including negative certificate, tax domiciliation, and registration workflow.


Navigating the Registration Process: Step-by-Step

Step 1: Reserve your company name (Negative Certificate) with OMPIC

You usually start by reserving the name via OMPIC (the negative certificate confirms name availability). OMPIC also provides official search tools and business-life guidance.

Pro tip: prepare multiple name options to avoid delays.

Step 2: Secure your registered office address

Morocco requires a registered office (lease/ownership proof or a compliant domiciliation solution). This is a standard requirement repeated across formation guides.

Step 3: Draft the Articles of Association (statutes)

Your statutes typically include:

  • company name, purpose (activity), address
  • share capital and ownership
  • manager appointment and powers
  • duration, governance rules

(If you plan to change shareholders soon, draft clean clauses to avoid costly amendments.)

Step 4: Capital deposit & bank certificate (when required)

Depending on your structure/capital, the bank may issue a certificate of capital deposit. Many step-by-step guides place this before CRI filing.

Step 5: Register through the CRI workflow

CRI portals are designed to support creation and follow-up of procedures, acting as a centralized entry point in many regions.

Step 6: Obtain tax identifiers (and set your tax position)

You’ll obtain company tax identifiers as part of the registration/tax setup. Morocco’s Ministry of Economy & Finance explains core business taxes (including VAT/TVA and corporate income tax/IS) at a high level.

Step 7: CNSS registration (if you hire employees)

If you will hire, CNSS requires affiliation (employer registration) using specific forms and a defined procedure, including online options through CNSS services.

Step 8: Post-registration formalities (permits + ongoing compliance)

After creation, focus on:

  • sector permits (if regulated)
  • accounting system + invoicing process
  • tax calendar (VAT/IS/withholdings when applicable)

Essential Post-Registration Compliance (What People Forget)

Moroccan tax obligations (simple overview)

Most businesses deal with:

  • Corporate income tax (IS)
  • VAT/TVA when applicable
  • other duties depending on activity

For an official overview of the main taxes, the Ministry of Economy & Finance summary page is a good starting reference.

CNSS + employee compliance

Once you hire, you must manage:

  • employment contracts
  • payroll declarations
  • CNSS contributions

CNSS provides official pages describing affiliation and procedures.


Common Challenges (and how to avoid them)

  • Name reservation delays: submit multiple name options from day 1.
  • Address problems: make sure your domiciliation/lease proof is compliant before filing.
  • Wrong structure choice: SARL is often simplest for SMEs; SA is heavier—choose based on funding and governance needs.
  • Ignoring post-creation compliance: businesses can be legally created but operationally blocked if taxes/CNSS/permits aren’t handled.

Quick checklist

  • Legal form chosen (SARL / SA / branch)
  • Company name reserved (OMPIC negative certificate)
  • Registered office proof ready (lease/domiciliation)
  • Statutes drafted + signed
  • Capital deposit certificate (if required)
  • CRI filing completed
  • Tax position clarified (VAT/IS, etc.)
  • CNSS affiliation if hiring

FAQ

Can a foreigner start a business in Morocco?

Yes. Foreign investors can register a company in Morocco. In practice, you reserve the name (OMPIC), choose the legal form (often SARL), secure an address, register through CRI, then handle taxes and CNSS if you hire.

How much does it cost to start a business in Morocco?

Costs depend on the legal form, city, address solution, and whether you use a professional (accountant/lawyer). Plan for registration fees plus professional fees if you outsource the process.

How long does company registration take?

Timing varies by documents and city. If everything is ready (name, address, statutes), it can be completed relatively quickly. Delays usually come from missing documents or name/address issues.

What are the tax obligations after registration?

Most companies deal with corporate income tax (IS) and may have VAT (TVA) depending on activity. If you hire employees, you also have CNSS payroll obligations.

BHADVISER - Tax and legal consulting firm in Casablanca, Morocco

Writing by HANANE BELASKRI | Accountant , Legal and Tax Advisor , Judicial Expert

She is a Legal & Tax Advisor, Partner at BH Adviser, helping international companies enter, operate, and grow in Morocco and Africa through compliant business setup, due diligence, payroll, and tax advisory.