Oman's financial compliance landscape is evolving fast. From VAT enforcement to IFRS adoption, here is the definitive guide for businesses that want to stay ahead — not scramble to catch up.
Oman is at an economic inflection point. Vision 2040 — the sultanate's ambitious long-term roadmap for economic diversification — is reshaping the business landscape from the ground up. With oil revenues no longer the unchallenged anchor of the national budget, the government has turned to taxation, formalisation, and financial transparency to build a more resilient economy. The result: businesses of every size are now subject to levels of financial scrutiny that would have seemed extraordinary just a decade ago.
For entrepreneurs and CFOs alike, this means one thing. Accounting and bookkeeping — once treated as an afterthought handled once a year before tax season — must now be treated as a continuous, strategic function. The Oman Tax Authority (OTA) has dramatically increased audit activity since the rollout of VAT in 2021, and penalties for non-compliance can be severe: fines, back-payment demands, and in serious cases, criminal liability.
But this is not merely a story about risk. Businesses that invest in clean, structured financial records consistently outperform their peers. They attract better financing terms from banks, close deals faster with investors, and make sharper operational decisions. Bookkeeping done well is not a cost centre — it is a competitive advantage.
"Oman's regulatory environment is no longer one where businesses can afford to 'figure it out later.' The OTA has the tools, the mandate, and the enforcement appetite to hold non-compliant businesses accountable. Getting your books in order today is the most valuable investment you can make in your company's future." — Muscat Audit Advisory Team
Oman's financial reporting obligations are governed by a layered legislative framework. At its core sits the Commercial Companies Law (Royal Decree 18/2019), which requires all registered companies to maintain proper books of account, prepare annual financial statements, and submit these for audit where applicable. Overlaying this are sector-specific requirements from the Capital Market Authority (CMA) for listed entities, and the Oman Tax Authority (OTA) for tax compliance.
| Law / Decree | Key Requirement | Authority |
|---|---|---|
| Commercial Companies Law (RD 18/2019) | Maintain books of account; annual financial statements | Ministry of Commerce |
| Income Tax Law (RD 28/2009 & amendments) | 15% corporate tax; annual tax return within 4 months | Oman Tax Authority |
| VAT Law (RD 121/2020) | 5% VAT; quarterly returns; 10-year record retention | Oman Tax Authority |
| Capital Market Authority Regulations | IFRS-compliant financial statements for listed entities | CMA |
| Anti-Money Laundering Law (RD 30/2016) | KYC documentation; suspicious transaction reporting | Central Bank of Oman |
Oman broadly mandates International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) as the primary financial reporting framework. While IFRS for SMEs has been discussed as an option for smaller entities, the OTA and the CMA both expect full IFRS compliance for medium and large-sized enterprises. Practically speaking, this means Oman’s accounting requirements are internationally aligned — a significant advantage for businesses seeking foreign investment or cross-border trade finance.
Corporate tax stands at 15% of net profit for most entities (with a reduced rate for certain Omani-owned small businesses). Tax returns must be filed within four months of the financial year end, and provisional tax payments are due throughout the year. Failure to file on time attracts penalties of up to 1% per month on unpaid tax, capped at 25% of the total liability.
When Oman introduced Value Added Tax at 5% on April 16, 2021, it became the fourth GCC country — after the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Bahrain — to implement a broad-based consumption tax. Four years on, VAT has fundamentally changed the bookkeeping landscape for every business operating in the sultanate.
Any business whose taxable supplies exceed OMR 38,500 per year is required to register for VAT. Voluntary registration is available for businesses with supplies above OMR 19,250. Once registered, businesses must file quarterly VAT returns, issue compliant tax invoices for all taxable supplies, and maintain comprehensive VAT records for a minimum of ten years.
At the transaction level, every taxable sale must be supported by a tax invoice that includes: the supplier's VAT registration number, the customer's VAT number (for B2B transactions), a clear description of goods or services, the tax rate applied, the VAT amount expressed separately, and the total consideration. Simplified tax invoices are permitted for supplies under OMR 500 to unregistered customers.
The classification of supplies is where many businesses stumble. Oman's VAT law distinguishes between standard-rated (5%), zero-rated, and exempt supplies. Exported goods and certain financial services are zero-rated — meaning VAT is charged at 0% but input tax recovery is still available. Exempt supplies — such as bare land and certain domestic passenger transport — attract no VAT, but critically, no input tax can be recovered on costs associated with those supplies. Misclassifying an exempt supply as zero-rated is one of the most common and costly bookkeeping errors seen by audit firms.
The OTA has the authority to conduct desk audits and field audits with relatively little notice. During a VAT audit, inspectors will cross-reference your VAT returns with your general ledger, purchase invoices, sales invoices, and bank statements. Discrepancies trigger reassessments, and penalties range from 1% to 25% of unpaid tax, plus potential interest charges.