| Status | Enacted Law |
| Law | Law No. 22 of 2024 amending certain provisions of Income Tax Law No. (24) of 2018 was published in Qatar’s Official Gazette on March 27, 2025 |
| Effective Date | Financial years beginning on or after January 1, 2025 |
| IIR | Yes (2025) |
| UTPR | No |
| QDMTT | Yes (2025) |
| Filing Deadlines | Not provided |
| Safe Harbours | Not specifically included but the OECD Safe Harbours and Administrative Guidance applies for the application of the GloBE rules in Qatar |
| On March 27, 2025, Law No. 22 of 2024 amending certain provisions of Income Tax Law No. (24) of 2018 was published in Qatar’s Official Gazette. This implements the Pillar Two Income Inclusion Rule (IIR) and a Domestic Minimum Top- Up Tax (DMTT which is intended to be a Qualified Domestic Minimum Top-Up Tax) from January 1, 2025. |
GLOBE APPLICATION
General
Law No. 22 of 2024 includes a number of definitions which are based on the OECD Model Rules, including:
– Income Inclusion Rule – as defined in Article 2.1 of the OECD Model Rules
– Multinational Groups – as defined in Article 1.2 of the OECD Model Rules
– Constituent Entities – as defined in Article 1.3 of the OECD Model Rules
– Safe Harbours – measures implemented by the Inclusive Framework to simplify and reduce the administrative burdens on MNE groups for the application of the Pillar Two GloBE rules.
Article 23 Bis (3) provides that the IIR and DMTT are to be applied and interpreted in a manner consistent with the OECD Model GloBE Rules, Commentary and Administrative Guidance, including the Safe Harbour Rules.
Any amendments to the Commentary, including those contained in the OECD Administrative Guidance will apply in Qatar unless a decision to exclude those amendments is issued by the Council of Ministers.
This therefore directly applies the OECD Model Rules, Commentary, Administrative Guidance and Safe Harbour Rules for domestic law, unless any amendments are specifically excluded.
The application of the IIR will therefore follow the OECDs approach – including the clarifications made in the OECD Administrative Guidance.
OECD Administrative Guidance
Whilst Law No. 22 of 2024 does not include specific provisions of the OECD Administrative Guidance, Article 23 Bis (3) provides that the IIR and DMTT are to be applied and interpreted in a manner consistent with the OECD Model GloBE Rules, Commentary and Administrative Guidance. This should therefore apply all aspects of the OECD Administrative Guidance for the application of the GloBE rules in Qatar.
OECD Safe Harbour and Penalty Relief Guidance
Whilst Law No. 22 of 2024 does not include specific Safe Harbours, Article 23 Bis (3) provides that the IIR and DMTT are to be applied and interpreted in a manner consistent with the OECD Model GloBE Rules, Commentary, Administrative Guidance and Safe Harbour Rules. The Safe Harbours are defined as measures implemented by the Inclusive Framework to simplify and reduce the administrative burdens on MNE groups for the application of the Pillar Two GloBE rules. This should therefore apply all relevant OECD Safe Harbours in Qatar.
ELECTIONS
Elections in the OECD Model Rules
Whilst Law No. 22 of 2024 does not include specific elections from the OECD Model Rules, Article 23 Bis (3) provides that the IIR and DMTT are to be applied and interpreted in a manner consistent with the OECD Model GloBE Rules. This should therefore apply the elections from the OECD Model Rules for the application of the GloBE rules in Qatar.
Elections in the OECD Administrative Guidance
Whilst Law No. 22 of 2024 does not include specific elections from the OECD Administrative Guidance, Article 23 Bis (3) provides that the IIR and DMTT are to be applied and interpreted in a manner consistent with the OECD Administrative Guidance. This should therefore apply the elections from the OECD Administrative Guidance for the application of the GloBE rules in Qatar.
NEW ELECTIONS
There are no new elections in Law No. 22 of 2024.
DEVIATIONS FROM THE OECD MODEL RULES/EU GLOBAL MINIMUM TAX DIRECTIVE
There are no specific deviations from the OECD Model Rules, aside from the non-implementation of the Under-Taxed Profits Rule.
As the IIR and DMTT are to be applied and interpreted in a manner consistent with the OECD Model GloBE Rules, Commentary, Administrative Guidance and Safe Harbour Rules, the OECD approach should be applied in Qatar.
DOMESTIC MINIMUM TAX
General
Law No. 22 of 2024 provides for a QDMTT (or at least a domestic minimum tax (DMTT) that is intended to be classed as a QDMTT) as of January 1, 2025.
QDMTT Design Features
There are no specific rules for the detailed design application of the DMTT in Law No. 22 of 2024.
The DMTT is defined as a tax on the excess profits of domestic entities, in a manner consistent with the application of the Pillar Two GloBE rules and which raises the domestic tax liability on excess domestic profits to 15%. Article 23 Bis (2) further confirms that the DMTT applies to incorporated entities located in Qatar.
Article 23 Bis (3) directly applies the OECD Model Rules, Commentary, Administrative Guidance and Safe Harbour Rules for domestic law, unless any amendments are specifically excluded.
For the DMTT, the OECD approach should apply, however, further details are likely to be required to establish Qatar’s approach to the application of the DMTT. Not least because whilst the mandatory deviations in the OECD Administrative Guidance for DMTTs (eg the pushdown restriction for CFCs etc) may apply due to the application of the OECD Administrative Guidance, the OECD Administrative Guidance also permits a number of optional deviations (eg the accounting standard to use for DMTT purposes).
This is not addressed in Law No. 22 of 2024. As such, the default position (eg using the accounting standard of the UPE in the consolidated accounts) would need to be used unless further detail was provided in Ministerial Decisions. Article 23 Bis (6) provides that the Tax Authority will issue the necessary circulars and guidelines to implement the provisions of Law No. 22 of 2024.
Registration
Article 23 Bis (6) provides that administrative obligations includes registration for the IIR and DMTT.
Article 23 Bis (6) provides that further Circulars will be issued which are likely to address the specific deadlines and method of registration.
Filing
Article 23 Bis (6) provides that administrative obligations includes:
– Filing a GloBE Information Return (GIR) in accordance with Article 8.1.1 of the OECD Model Rules;
– Where a UPE, designated filing entity or designated local entity files the GIR on behalf of the constituent entity, a notification under Article 8.1.3 of the OECD Model Rules should be made to identify the identity of the filing entity and the jurisdiction in which it is located;
– Filing an IIR Tax Return;
– Filing a DMTT Tax Return.
However no further detail on the administrative rules is provided in Law No. 22 of 2024. Article 23 Bis (6) provides that further Circulars will be issued which are likely to address the specific deadlines and method of registration/filing.
Payment
No details are provided in Law No. 22 of 2024.
Penalties
Article 23 Bis (7) provides for a number of penalties related to the application of the IIR and DMTT. This includes:
– Failure to file by the filing deadline – a financial penalty of 500 riyals for each day of delay, up to a maximum of 180,000 riyals;
– Failure to pay the top-up tax under the IIR or DMTT by the deadine;
a penalty of 2% of the amount of tax due for each one month of delay (not exceeding the amount of tax due);
– Failure to register – a penalty of 20,000 riyals.
Article 4 of Law No. 22 of 2024 provides for the OECDs transitional penalty relief regime.
It applies for fiscal years beginning on or before December 31, 2026 but not after June 30, 2028, and provides that during this period, no penalties should apply relating to the above breaches where an MNE has taken “reasonable measures” to ensure the correct application of the GloBE Rules.
Note that Article 3 of Law No. 22 of 2024 provides for additional penalties that are outside the transitional penalty relief regime. This includes penalties for failure to keep accurate records, failure provide documents when requested and the provision of incomplete or in accurate information.
None issued.
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