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Click Here to WhatsApp Us for Business Inquiries.
Saturday to Thursday 08:00 - 17:00
Office 1502, Building 361, Road 1705, Block 317, Diplomatic Area , Kingdom of Bahrain
Commercial Registration Bahrain is every company's legal identity — issued by the Ministry of Industry and Commerce through the Sijilat portal. This guide explains what a CR is, who needs one, how to register, and what the certificate contains.
Commercial Registration is the legal foundation of every business operating in the Kingdom of Bahrain. When the Ministry of Industry and Commerce issues a CR, it formally recognizes that a company has met the regulatory requirements to conduct business activities within the country. The process is governed by the Commercial Companies Law (Legislative Decree No. 21 of 2001, as amended) and administered entirely through the Sijilat digital platform.
The concept is straightforward — a CR is your company's birth certificate. Without it, your business does not legally exist. Banks cannot open corporate accounts for unregistered entities, the Labour Market Regulatory Authority (LMRA) cannot process work permits, and government procurement systems will not recognize your company as an eligible bidder. The CR ties together your company's identity, its permitted commercial activities, and its ownership structure into a single verifiable document.
Bahrain introduced the Sijilat system under e-Government Law 54/2018 to digitize the entire commercial registration process. Before Sijilat, business owners had to visit multiple government departments physically. Today, the entire journey — from name reservation through to CR activation — happens online. This digital-first approach is one reason Bahrain consistently ranks among the easiest GCC countries for starting a business.
Registration and licensing serve different regulatory purposes, and understanding the difference prevents confusion during setup. Registration establishes your company's legal existence — it creates the entity, records its shareholders, and assigns a CR number. Licensing authorizes the company to perform specific commercial activities under the categories defined by MOICT's ISIC 4.0 classification system.
A single CR can hold multiple business activities, and each activity may require its own license or approval from sector-specific authorities. For example, a company with a CR that lists both IT services (ISIC 6201) and management consultancy (ISIC 702) has one CR number but two distinct activity authorizations. Some activities — such as financial services regulated by the Central Bank of Bahrain — require additional approvals before the activity becomes operational on the CR.
Section 02Operating a business without a valid Commercial Registration in the Kingdom of Bahrain is not just impractical — it is illegal. The CR serves as the single source of truth that every government authority, financial institution, and commercial partner relies upon to verify that your business has the legal standing to operate.
Banks in Bahrain — regulated by the Central Bank of Bahrain — require a valid CR certificate as the first document in any corporate bank account application. Without a CR, no bank in the Kingdom will open an account, process transactions, or issue letters of credit for your company. The CR number becomes your company's financial identity across all banking relationships.
The Investor Visa in Bahrain — administered by the National Passport and Residency Affairs (NPRA) — requires an active CR as a prerequisite. Your CR number appears on the visa application, connects to your company's LMRA employment records, and determines how many work permits you can sponsor. If the CR expires, all visa processing stops and existing visas face suspension.
Your CR number appears on every commercial contract, invoice, purchase order, and official correspondence your business issues. Courts in Bahrain recognize the CR as the primary evidence of a company's legal existence when resolving commercial disputes. Suppliers, landlords, and clients routinely request a copy of your CR before entering into any business agreement.
Access to government e-services — from the National Bureau for Revenue (NBR) for VAT registration to the Bahrain Chamber of Commerce and Industry (BCCI) for export certificates — requires an active CR. Government tenders managed by the Bahrain Tender Board also require a valid, non-expired CR as part of the bidding eligibility criteria.
Section 03The CR certificate is a detailed document that serves as the complete identity profile of your business. Every field on the certificate serves a specific regulatory and commercial purpose. Here is exactly what appears on a standard CR issued through Sijilat:
| Field | What It Contains | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Commercial Name (EN) | Company name in English as registered | Used on contracts, invoices, bank accounts |
| Commercial Name (AR) | Company name in Arabic | Required for Arabic legal documents and government correspondence |
| CR Number | Unique identifier (e.g., 185843-1) | Your company's permanent legal ID across all authorities |
| CR Type | WLL, SPC, Branch, Partnership, etc. | Determines legal structure, liability, and governance rules |
| Registration Date | Date of initial CR issuance | Establishes the company's legal start date |
| Expiry Date | Date the CR must be renewed by | Operations become illegal after this date without renewal |
| Status | ACTIVE, EXPIRED, DELETED, etc. | Only ACTIVE status permits lawful business operations |
| Business Activities | ISIC 4.0 codes with descriptions | Defines exactly what commercial activities you can perform |
| Commercial Address | Flat, building, road, block, town | Must match your actual or virtual office address |
| Company Capital | Authorized, issued, and paid-up capital | Determines share structure, foreign investment percentages |
| Partners & Shareholders | Names, nationalities, share counts, ownership % | Defines ownership structure and compliance with foreign ownership rules |
| Authorized Signatories | Names, nationalities, authority level | Determines who can legally bind the company |
| Amendment History | All changes made since registration | Complete audit trail of company modifications |
Banks pay particular attention to the CR when processing account applications. The commercial name, ownership percentages, authorized signatories, and business activities must all align with the supporting documents submitted during the bank account opening process. Discrepancies between the CR and your Memorandum of Association (MOA) or Articles of Association (AOA) are among the most common reasons banks reject applications.
Section 04The type of CR you register determines your company's legal structure, governance requirements, liability exposure, and ownership flexibility. Each type serves a different business need, and choosing the right one at the outset avoids costly restructuring later.
| CR Type | Minimum Partners | Capital Requirement | Foreign Ownership | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| WLL (With Limited Liability) | 1–50 shareholders | BHD 1,000 minimum | Up to 100% (activity-dependent) | Most foreign investors, SMEs, startups |
| SPC (Single Person Company) | 1 shareholder | BHD 1,000 minimum | 100% (activity-dependent) | Solo entrepreneurs, single-owner entities |
| BSC (Bahraini Shareholding) | Minimum varies | Higher threshold | Varies | Large corporations, IPO-track companies |
| Foreign Branch | Parent company | No separate requirement | Extension of parent | International companies establishing presence |
| Partnership | 2+ partners | No minimum | Varies | Professional services, joint ventures |
| Individual Establishment | 1 owner (Bahraini/GCC) | No minimum | Bahraini/GCC only | Sole traders, freelancers |
| BIIP | Varies | Varies | 100% | Industrial and manufacturing operations |
The WLL structure dominates foreign investor registrations because it allows 100% foreign ownership for most service-based, manufacturing, export, and holding company activities — while limiting each shareholder's liability to their capital contribution. Approximately 67% of foreign investor applications target activities that permit full foreign participation. For detailed ownership rules by sector and nationality, see the full setup guide.
Two activity categories require Bahraini participation in the ownership structure. Trading inside Bahrain (domestic trading) permits foreign ownership of up to 99.99% but requires at least one Bahraini shareholder holding a minimum of one share — this is commonly referred to as the "9999+1 structure." Construction activities require a Bahraini majority shareholder with at least 51% ownership. GCC nationals and US citizens (under the US-Bahrain Free Trade Agreement) receive national treatment and face no ownership restrictions across all sectors.
Section 05Bahrain's regulatory framework does not impose blanket restrictions based on nationality. Instead, eligibility depends on the intersection of the investor's profile and the intended business activities. The MOICT Activity Classification Database lists 630 commercial activities, and foreign nationals can access 602 of them (95.6%) without any ownership restrictions. US nationals access 591 activities (93.8%) under the US-Bahrain FTA.
Foreign individuals may register companies either as sole shareholders (SPC) or alongside other investors (WLL). Overseas companies can establish a foreign branch office that operates as an extension of the parent entity. In both cases, the NPRA security clearance is the first step — this background check typically takes 3–5 business days and must be completed before any other registration activity begins.
GCC citizens receive full national treatment under the GCC Economic Agreement Article 3 — no ownership restrictions apply to any business activity. US nationals benefit from the US-Bahrain Free Trade Agreement (Article 10.2), which provides near-complete market access across all sectors. Both groups can register any company type without requiring a Bahraini partner.
Bahraini citizens face no restrictions on any business activity or company type. They can register Individual Establishments (sole trader), WLLs, partnerships, and any other structure available under the Commercial Companies Law. Bahraini nationals are also the only nationality eligible to hold the mandatory minimum share in domestic trading and construction activities that require local participation.
Section 06The CR registration process in Bahrain is sequential — each step must be completed before the next one begins. The entire process is administered through the Sijilat portal, with specific stages involving the NPRA, MOICT, the relevant municipality, and your chosen bank. Here is exactly how the process works from start to finish:
Every foreign investor must pass a security clearance conducted by the National Passport and Residency Affairs. You submit passport copies and personal details through Sijilat, and NPRA conducts background verification. This step takes 3–5 business days. GCC nationals may receive expedited processing. The clearance must be obtained before any other registration activity can proceed.
Once security clearance is approved, you reserve your company's commercial name through the Sijilat portal. Submit three proposed names — MOICT checks availability against existing registrations and naming rules (no offensive terms, no identical names to existing companies, proper legal suffix like W.L.L or S.P.C). The reservation is valid for 60 days and costs a nominal fee. Both English and Arabic versions of the name are registered simultaneously.
Every CR requires a commercial address approved by the relevant municipality. You can use a physical office, a virtual office, or a serviced office — as long as it holds a valid commercial license. The address you register appears on your CR certificate and must remain active throughout your registration period. This step takes 1–3 business days once your lease agreement is submitted.
The Memorandum of Association (MOA) and Articles of Association (AOA) are the legal documents that define your company's purpose, capital structure, shareholder rights, and governance rules. These must be drafted, signed by all shareholders, and notarized. For WLL companies, the MOA specifies the share distribution, management appointments, and financial year-end. A Board Resolution appointing the manager is also prepared at this stage.
The final step involves depositing the minimum share capital (BHD 1,000 for WLL/SPC) into a temporary corporate bank account. The bank issues a capital deposit certificate, which you upload to Sijilat. MOICT then activates the CR, and your company is legally operational. Once activated, you can convert the temporary account to a fully operational corporate account and receive your IBAN.
| Step | Authority | Processing Time | Key Document |
|---|---|---|---|
| Security Clearance | NPRA | 3–5 business days | Passport copies |
| Name Reservation | MOICT / Sijilat | 3–5 business days | 3 proposed names |
| Address Registration | Municipality | 1–3 business days | Office lease agreement |
| MOA/AOA Signing | Notary / Legal | 1–2 business days | MOA, AOA, Board Resolution |
| Capital Deposit + Activation | Bank + MOICT | 1–3 business days | Capital deposit certificate |
For a detailed cost breakdown covering government fees, office address costs, and all-inclusive packages, see the full cost breakdown.
Section 07Document requirements differ slightly depending on whether the applicant is an individual, an overseas company, or a GCC national. Here is the complete checklist organized by category:
Valid passport (minimum 6 months validity) — colour scan of all pages. Six-month personal bank statement showing sufficient funds. Proof of home address (utility bill or government-issued document). Passport-size photograph with white background. CV or professional profile (some banks request this).
Three proposed commercial names (English and Arabic). Office lease agreement from an MOICT-approved address provider. Memorandum of Association (MOA) — drafted to match the proposed business activities and ownership percentages. Articles of Association (AOA). Board Resolution appointing the Company Manager. Company Profile outlining the business plan, target market, and projected activities. Power of Attorney (if using a service provider to handle registration).
Certificate of Incorporation of the parent company. Parent company's MOA and AOA (attested and apostilled). Board Resolution authorizing the establishment of a Bahrain branch and appointing a branch manager. Audited financial statements of the parent company for the most recent financial year. Power of Attorney from the parent company to the branch manager. All documents must be attested by the Bahraini Embassy in the country of origin.
This distinction confuses many first-time business owners because the two processes overlap during the Sijilat registration flow. When you submit your CR application, you select your desired business activities from the MOICT activity classification database. Sijilat then determines which activities proceed under general commercial licensing and which require additional approvals from sector-specific regulators.
General commercial activities — such as management consultancy, IT services, or general trading — receive their activity authorization as part of the standard CR issuance. Regulated activities — such as insurance brokerage (Central Bank of Bahrain), healthcare services (NHRA), or educational institutions (Ministry of Education) — require separate approvals that must be obtained before the activity becomes operational on the CR.
The practical impact is this: your CR may show "NEW CR W/O LICENSE" status for a regulated activity until the sector-specific authority grants its approval. Once approved, the status updates to "GET LICENSE" and the activity becomes fully operational. Understanding this distinction helps you plan your timeline accurately — a company with standard commercial activities can be fully operational in 15–20 business days, while one requiring sector-specific approvals may take longer.
Section 09The activities listed on your CR define the legal boundaries of your business operations. You cannot perform commercial activities outside the scope of what your CR authorizes. If a bank or business partner reviews your CR and the activity does not match the transaction, they may refuse to process it.
MOICT's activity classification database contains 630 activities organized by sector. The most commonly registered activities for foreign investors include computer programming (6201), management consultancy (702), general trading (4690), information technology consultancy (6202), advertising and marketing (7310), and business support services (8211). Each activity has its own set of rules regarding foreign ownership percentages and licensing requirements.
Adding or removing activities from an existing CR is called a CR amendment — it is processed through Sijilat and typically takes 1–3 business days. You do not need to create a new CR to expand your business scope; you simply amend the existing one. However, if the new activity falls under a restricted category (such as domestic trading or construction), you may need to adjust your ownership structure before the amendment can proceed.
Section 10Your CR number is the single most important reference point for your business across every government authority and financial institution in Bahrain. The format follows a sequential numbering system with a branch suffix (the "-1" indicates the main branch). If you open additional branches, each receives the same base number with a different suffix (e.g., 185843-2).
Here is where your CR number appears and why it matters in each context: bank account applications and all banking correspondence; LMRA work permit applications and employee records; NPRA visa processing for Investor Visas and family sponsorship; NBR VAT registration and tax filings; BCCI export certificates and certificates of origin; government tenders and procurement bids; commercial contracts, invoices, and purchase orders; customs import and export declarations; and signboard licenses from the municipality.
Anyone can verify a CR number by searching the Sijilat public database at www.sijilat.bh. The search returns the company's name, registration date, status, business activities, and capital structure — making it a critical due diligence tool for banks, suppliers, and potential partners.
Section 11The Sijilat portal replaced the previous paper-based system and serves as the single point of entry for every commercial registration service in the Kingdom. Access requires an advanced eKey — a digital authentication credential issued by the Information and eGovernment Authority (iGA). Foreign investors who are not physically in Bahrain can authorize a representative through a Power of Attorney to handle Sijilat transactions on their behalf.
The portal organizes services into three main categories: Plan (research and prepare), Start (new registrations and name reservations), and Manage (renewals, amendments, and ongoing administration). Each service follows a guided workflow that collects the required information, validates it against MOICT rules, processes payments, and generates the relevant certificates.
For business searches, Sijilat provides a public-facing search tool that allows anyone to look up a company by name or CR number. This transparency supports Bahrain's commitment to commercial integrity and makes due diligence straightforward for banks and business partners. The search results display the company summary, business activities, capital structure, shareholder information, and amendment history — all drawn directly from the official MOICT database.
Section 12Receiving your activated CR certificate is the starting point of your business operations — not the finish line. Several post-registration actions must happen in a specific sequence to get your company fully operational.
The corporate bank account is the immediate priority. With bank-ready documentation — MOA, AOA, Board Resolution, Company Profile, and a clear business plan — account approval can happen within an hour at banks that accept newly registered entities. The bank issues your IBAN certificate, which you need for capital deposit confirmation and ongoing commercial transactions.
If you plan to reside in Bahrain, the Investor Visa application follows. The visa process runs through LMRA and NPRA, requires your active CR and bank account confirmation, and includes medical examination, biometrics, and residency card issuance. The complete process and fees are covered in our Investor Visa cost breakdown.
VAT registration with the National Bureau for Revenue is mandatory for businesses exceeding the registration threshold. Even businesses below the threshold may benefit from voluntary registration for input tax recovery on business expenses.
Annual CR renewal through the Sijilat portal keeps your registration active. You can renew up to 90 days before the expiry date. Late renewals or expired CRs trigger bank account freezes, visa suspensions, and potential deletion from the commercial register. For details on the renewal process, see our dedicated CR renewal guide.
Section 13Setup in Bahrain has completed 2,500+ business registrations since 2018. We prepare bank-ready documents from day one so your CR clears compliance on the first attempt.
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