Foreign Investment & Market Entry
Foreign Investment & Market Entry Lawyer in Kuwait
Bin-Saleem Law Firm is a Kuwaiti-licensed law firm that helps foreign investors and companies structure, establish, and protect a position in Kuwait — from choosing the right entity to securing the approvals and agreements that keep it standing. Founder-led, in English or Arabic.
Setting up a foreign company in Kuwait
Establishing a presence in Kuwait usually means choosing the right legal structure for your activity and ownership goals, drafting the founding documents, and coordinating registration and licensing with the relevant authorities. The correct structure depends on your sector, how much control you want, and whether your activity qualifies for higher foreign ownership under Kuwait's foreign investment framework.
We assess your specific case rather than applying a template, and act as your single Kuwaiti point of contact from first assessment through to commercial registration and post-formation compliance.
- Choosing the appropriate legal structure for your activity and ownership objectives
- Drafting founding contracts (memorandum and articles of association)
- Coordinating commercial registration and the applicable licensing steps
- Post-formation compliance as operations begin
Foreign ownership and structuring
Kuwaiti company law has historically applied a majority-Kuwaiti ownership norm, but Kuwait's foreign investment framework allows higher — and in some licensed activities full — foreign ownership, subject to approval and sector-specific rules. Which route is available to you depends on your activity and how the structure is built.
We advise on the ownership and control arrangement that fits your objectives, the sector-specific considerations and exceptions that apply, and the capital and governance terms that protect your position.
Agreements, approvals, and dispute protection
A foreign-backed structure typically runs on a set of agreements and approvals — joint-venture and shareholder terms, licensing, and the provisions that protect you if a disagreement arises. We draft and negotiate these before signing, coordinate the regulatory steps, and represent you if a dispute develops with a partner, counterparty, or regulator.
- Joint venture and shareholder agreement drafting and negotiation
- Regulatory approvals and licensing coordination
- Dispute-resolution and protection provisions reviewed before you sign
- Representation in disputes with partners, counterparties, or authorities
Foreign investment in Kuwait — common questions
Can a foreigner own 100% of a company in Kuwait?
In some licensed activities and structures, higher or full foreign ownership may be available under Kuwait's foreign investment framework, subject to approval and sector-specific rules. The default under ordinary company law has been majority-Kuwaiti ownership, with exceptions. We assess whether your specific activity qualifies rather than giving a blanket answer.
Do I need a Kuwaiti partner to invest in Kuwait?
It depends on your activity and the structure you use. Some routes require a Kuwaiti partner or shareholder; others, under the foreign investment framework, may not. We advise on the structure that fits your ownership and control objectives.
How long does it take to set up a foreign company in Kuwait?
Timelines vary with the activity, the structure, the completeness of your documentation, and processing at the relevant authorities — factors partly outside our control. We give you a realistic estimate for your specific case and coordinate the steps to avoid avoidable delays.
Do you act for investors based outside Kuwait?
Yes. Much of our foreign-investment work is for clients who are not physically in Kuwait. Consultations are held over Zoom, and we act as your Kuwaiti point of contact throughout.
What do you need from me to start?
A short description of your activity, your ownership and control objectives, and any timeline you're working to. We start with a consultation, assess the available structures, and set out the route we recommend.
Planning an investment or entry into Kuwait?
Book a free 15-minute intro call. We'll tell you clearly whether and how we can help — no obligation.