Why Bahrain works for founders
- 100% foreign ownership in most sectors — no local partner required.
- Digital setup via the Sijilat portal — faster and less bureaucratic.
- No personal income tax, 10% VAT, and no corporate tax outside oil & gas.
- Lower operating costs than Dubai or Doha.
- Direct access to Saudi Arabia and a $2-trillion+ GCC economy.
Growth sectors
- FinTech Sandbox (run by the CBB) — for blockchain, payments and open-banking startups.
- ICT & cloud — liberalized telecoms and strong data infrastructure for SaaS and AI.
- Logistics & manufacturing and tourism & retail.
The founder's ongoing compliance checklist
- Maintain a corporate bank account with minimum balances.
- File VAT returns on time (mandatory above BD 37,500 annually).
- Renew the Commercial Registration (CR) annually.
- Track LMRA visas and Bahrainization quotas.
- Run compliant payroll and HR per Bahraini labor regulations.
- Stay updated on global reforms (OECD Pillar Two).
Taxes & VAT (2025)
10% VAT, mandatory above BD 37,500; no corporate tax (except oil & gas).
The clear setup path
Choose company structure → apply for CR via Sijilat → secure office lease → set up banking & compliance → final licenses.
Cost advantage
Up to a 48% total cost advantage versus regional peers for operating a financial-services firm with a tech hub (EY, 2025).
Bahrain vs. other hubs
- vs. UAE: a lower cost base — especially for financial-tech hubs — while keeping regional access.
- vs. Saudi Arabia: KSA offers larger market scale; Bahrain offers speed-to-license and ownership flexibility.
Frequently asked questions
How long does it take to start a business?
2–4 weeks for a WLL; longer for regulated sectors.
What are typical setup costs?
CR fees (BD 196), notarization, plus an office lease.
Can I run remotely with a Bahrain CR?
Yes, but a physical local address is required.
How does LMRA affect foreign hiring?
It sets visa quotas and requires Bahrainization compliance and medical clearance.