Incorporating in Bahrain means creating a legally recognized entity that complies with the Kingdom's Commercial Companies Law. LevantBMS handles all the legal and regulatory steps on your behalf.

Requirements to incorporate

  • Passport copies for shareholders and directors.
  • Proposed trade name(s).
  • A business-activities list aligned with the Bahrain activity taxonomy.
  • Articles / Memorandum of Association drafted to local law.
  • A Bahrain address / lease.
  • Board resolution / power of attorney (for corporate shareholders).

Types of companies

EntityOwnershipCapitalLiabilityBest for
WLL (LLC)1–50 shareholders, 100% foreign allowedFlexible (≥ BD 50/share)LimitedSMEs, consultancy, trading
BSC (Closed/Public)Public/private shareholdersBD 250k–1m+LimitedLarge firms, IPOs, joint ventures
Branch100% foreign-ownedNo capitalParent liableMultinational expansions
Partnership2+ partnersNo minimumUnlimitedProfessional / legal services

Sijilat workflow

Reserve trade name → match activities to the MOIC taxonomy → draft & notarize MOA/AOA → upload to Sijilat & pay fees → receive CR → obtain regulator approvals.

Costs & timelines

Government fees depend on entity type and the number of activities. Typical timeline: 1–4 weeks for a WLL; longer for regulated activities.

Visas

  • Investor visa — for owners/directors.
  • Employment visas — for staff.
  • Dependent visas — for families.

Banking & KYC

You will need the CR, MOA/AOA, lease, shareholder passports, and a board resolution. Timeline: 1 day to 1 week — longer for foreign-heavy structures or regulated sectors. Key banks include BBK, NBB and Al Salam Bank.

Frequently asked questions

Can foreigners own 100%?

Yes.

How long does incorporation take?

1–4 weeks for WLLs; longer for regulated sectors.

Which banking documents are required?

CR, MOA/AOA, lease, passports, and board resolutions.

Do I need a local sponsor?

Not typically.

Is there a nationality requirement?

None.

Is physical presence required?

No — LevantBMS handles all steps with a power of attorney; investors must attend in person only for opening the bank account.