Starting a Business · Mozambique
Starting a business in Mozambique: foreigner's guide (2026)
Mozambique shaded by its starting a business status
Mozambique permits 100% foreign ownership in most sectors under the 2023 Investment Law, with business formation completed via a 5–7-step process at Commercial Registry Offices or the electronic one-stop shop (E-BAU) in 10–30 days. No statutory minimum paid-up capital is required for basic company formation, but foreign investors seeking profit-repatriation protections must meet a minimum FDI threshold of MZN 6.5 million (~USD 100,000). All filings must be in Portuguese, with foreign documents requiring apostille and certified translation, adding procedural complexity for foreign founders.
Key points
100% foreign ownership is permitted in most sectors. Restrictions apply to defence, national security, and certain natural resource activities requiring special governmental approval. Private land ownership is constitutionally prohibited; investors instead obtain land-use rights (DUATs).
The Commercial Code (Decreto-Lei No. 1/2022) governs company formation and structure. Investment Law No. 8/2023 (effective September 2023) and its Implementing Regulations (Decree No. 8/2024 of 7 March 2024) govern FDI incentives and guarantees. APIEX is the primary investment promotion authority for projects up to approximately USD 100 million.
Typically 5–7 procedures: (1) name reservation at Commercial Registry, (2) notarised Articles of Association, (3) capital deposit in a Mozambican bank, (4) Commercial Registry filing for provisional entry, (5) publication in the Boletim da República, plus sectoral licensing if applicable. The process takes 10–30 days and can be completed at BAU one-stop-shop offices or via the E-BAU online portal.
No statutory minimum paid-up capital is required to form a Sociedade por Quotas (LDA). However, to qualify for profit-repatriation and capital-export protections under the Investment Law, foreign investors must commit a minimum of MZN 6.5 million (~USD 100,000); a minimum of MZN 7.5 million in own capital is required to access the full suite of tax incentives.
All company documents must be in Portuguese. Foreign documents require an apostille under the Hague Convention and a certified Portuguese translation. Foreign shareholders must present a valid passport or DIRE (residence permit). AML and beneficial-ownership disclosure requirements were tightened in 2024–2025, increasing identity and source-of-funds scrutiny during registration and bank onboarding.
Qualifying FDI projects registered through APIEX receive an investment certificate, which must be presented to access tax incentives, profit-transfer guarantees, and protection against expropriation without compensation. Sectors such as natural resources, energy, and large infrastructure require additional environmental licensing and may be subject to enhanced FDI screening.
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Last verified 5/24/2026 · Orientation, not legal advice - verify against the primary sources linked above. Explore the full world map →