Acknowledgment
Salt & Associates extends its sincere appreciation to all partners, contributors, and reviewers whose engagement and expertise supported the development of this special publication on Double Taxation in Iraq. This analysis draws on comparative insights from the European Union, Germany, and the United States, offering a clearer understanding of how Iraq can modernize its tax framework to align with global standards.
The research presented in this paper reflects our ongoing commitment to advancing transparent, predictable, and investor-friendly legal frameworks in Iraq. While the views expressed remain those of the authors, this publication is grounded in a shared purpose: strengthening Iraq’s fiscal architecture, protecting its sovereignty, and supporting sustainable foreign investment.
This white paper forms part of Salt & Associates’ broader policy initiative to enhance Iraq’s legal and regulatory ecosystem, particularly in areas that shape cross-border business activity.
Contents
Abstract
Foundations of Double Taxation
Iraq’s Legislative Framework
Western Approaches (EU, Germany, USA)
Comparative Insights
Policy Implications & Recommendations
Strategic Guidance for Investors
Conclusion
Summary
Abstract
This publication evaluates Iraq’s Income Tax Law No. 113 of 1982 against Western tax systems and international model conventions. It highlights how Iraq’s reliance on nationality, residence, and source as concurrent taxing nexuses—combined with limited treaty coverage—creates exposure to unrelieved double taxation for both inbound and outbound investors. The paper proposes reforms aligned with OECD/UN models, EU directives, and U.S.–style foreign tax credit systems to enhance fairness, neutrality, and legal certainty.
Foundations of Double Taxation
Double taxation, in its strictest form, occurs when the same income of the same taxpayer is taxed by two jurisdictions for the same period. Western systems mitigate this through strong treaty networks, domestic relief mechanisms, and constitutional or supranational principles that safeguard fairness, non-discrimination, and economic neutrality.
Iraq’s Framework
Iraq’s tax structure retains an uncommon blend of nationality, residence, and source, placing it closer to U.S. allegiance-based taxation than European standards. Limited treaty coverage and an outdated residency definition increase exposure to duplicate taxation, especially for multinational investors and Iraqi companies expanding abroad. The system offers only narrow domestic relief and limited pathways for dispute resolution.
Western Approaches
The paper contrasts Iraq’s framework with that of the EU, Germany, and the United States:
EU: Treaty freedoms and harmonizing directives restrict discriminatory tax burdens and prevent duplicate taxation within the Single Market.
Germany: A comprehensive treaty network backed by constitutional equality principles eliminates most instances of juridical double taxation.
USA: Although uniquely broad in its worldwide reach, the U.S. offsets this with robust foreign tax credits and extensive treaties.
These systems collectively demonstrate how coordinated relief mechanisms protect taxpayers and encourage international investment.
Policy Implications & Recommendations
The paper proposes several reforms to align Iraq with global standards:
Introduce a statutory Foreign Tax Credit to protect Iraqi multinationals operating abroad.
Replace the outdated nationality nexus with the internationally recognized Place of Effective Management (POEM).
Expand Iraq’s Double Taxation Agreement (DTA) network, prioritizing Germany, France, Italy, the Netherlands, and the United States.
Embed Mutual Agreement Procedure (MAP) and arbitration mechanisms in future treaties to resolve cross-border tax disputes.
Create a binding advance ruling system within the General Commission for Taxes to enhance legal certainty for investors.
Formally harmonize Baghdad–Kurdistan tax recognition to eliminate domestic double taxation.
These reforms would not only reduce administrative friction but also strengthen Iraq’s position as a competitive and predictable investment destination.
For Investors: Practical Guidance
Until systemic reforms are adopted, investors operating in Iraq should consider practical mitigation strategies:
Structure investments through jurisdictions with existing Iraqi DTAs.
Negotiate tax gross-up clauses in contracts to preserve net-of-tax payments.
Secure Iraqi tax residency certificates to facilitate foreign tax credit claims in home jurisdictions.
Use transparent partnership structures where appropriate to avoid unnecessary duplication of tax liabilities.
Conclusion
Iraq’s current framework creates genuine exposure to double taxation, particularly when compared with Western systems whose mechanisms prioritize fairness, neutrality, and certainty. While investors must presently navigate these challenges through structuring and compliance, long-term solutions lie in legal and policy reform.
By modernizing its tax laws, strengthening treaty coverage, and adopting international standards, Iraq has an opportunity to:
Protect Iraqi companies operating abroad
Attract direct investment from Western jurisdictions
Reduce cross-border disputes and compliance costs
Demonstrate its commitment to transparency, predictability, and economic diversification
Download the White Paper
Double Taxation: A Comparative Legal Analysis between Iraq and Western Tax Systems (EU, Germany, USA)
Composed by Mohammed Koperly, Managing Partner at Salt & Associates, Baghdad.
For further information or legal inquiries, please contact Mohammed directly.

