What Is a Branch for Saudi CIT Purposes?
A registered branch of a foreign company in Saudi Arabia is the most direct form of foreign business presence in the Kingdom. For CIT purposes, the branch is treated as a permanent establishment — it is taxed on the profits arising from its Saudi activities.
The branch is not a separate legal entity. It is an extension of the foreign parent company operating under a Saudi licence, typically issued by the Ministry of Investment (MISA). The branch carries the foreign company’s name and legal identity. For CIT purposes, however, the branch is treated as a distinct taxable unit — it must maintain its own Saudi books and records, file its own return, and pay CIT on the profits attributable to its Saudi operations.
Unlike a subsidiary, the branch has no share capital in Saudi Arabia. Its financing, resources, and direction come from the head office. This makes determining what constitutes “branch income” and “branch expenses” both commercially logical and legally constrained — Saudi CIT has specific rules that limit how much of the head office relationship can be reflected in the branch’s taxable income calculation.
Source of Income Rules: What Income Is Taxed?
A branch is taxed on income from sources in Saudi Arabia — specifically, income arising from the branch’s activities in the Kingdom. Under Article 5 of the Implementing Regulations, Saudi-source income for a branch includes all revenues generated through the branch’s Saudi activities: service fees, project revenues, rental income from Saudi assets, and interest where the debtor is Saudi-resident.
Income that a branch generates from activities entirely outside Saudi Arabia does not become taxable in Saudi Arabia simply because the entity has a Saudi branch. The branch is taxed on the Saudi portion of the business — the internationally standard principle of attributing profits to the permanent establishment based on the activities conducted through it.
The Attribution Challenge
In practice, determining what portion of a foreign group’s profits should be attributed to its Saudi branch is not always straightforward. For businesses where the Saudi branch is operationally self-contained — delivering services locally, billing Saudi clients directly, maintaining its own staff and infrastructure — the attribution is reasonably clean. For businesses where the Saudi branch is part of a globally integrated service or production model, the profit attribution requires more careful analysis.
ZATCA can apply estimated tax bases where it is not possible to accurately separate local and global activity. For certain industries, specific estimation methodologies are prescribed — most notably for airlines and international transport companies.
The Head Office Expense Restrictions: What Branches Cannot Deduct
This is the defining CIT issue for branches, and it separates the branch model from the subsidiary model in terms of effective tax cost. Article 10(10) of the Implementing Regulations explicitly prohibits deductions for payments made by wholly-owned Saudi branches to their foreign head offices in four categories:
- Royalties or commissions paid to the head office — non-deductible in full. This includes technology fees, brand royalties, IP licence fees, and commission-based arrangements where the head office charges the branch for use of intellectual property or business referrals.
- Loan charges (interest) or any other financial fees paid to the head office — non-deductible. The only exception is for branches of foreign banks, which may deduct loan fees paid to their head offices. For all other branch types, interest charged by the head office on intragroup funding is permanently disallowed.
- Indirect administrative and general expenses allocated from the head office on an estimated basis — non-deductible. Group overhead allocations, central service charges, shared function recoveries — all of these are disallowed at the branch level when they are estimated or formula-based rather than directly attributable.
- Any other payments characterised as royalties, commissions, or management-type charges structured between the branch and head office — these fall within the intent of the restriction even if described differently.
The practical effect is that a branch’s taxable income in Saudi Arabia is higher than it would be under standard commercial accounting — because the charges that reduce accounting profit (head office allocations, IP fees, intragroup financing costs) are added back for tax purposes. The branch pays CIT on a tax base that reflects only genuinely local costs against local revenues.
A French engineering firm operates in Saudi Arabia. Scenario A: registered branch. Scenario B: wholly-owned Saudi subsidiary (100% foreign-owned). Both generate SAR 20 million in Saudi revenues. The French parent charges: SAR 2M in management fees, SAR 1M in IP royalties, SAR 500K in head office interest charges.
Branch (Scenario A): All three charges — totalling SAR 3.5M — are non-deductible. Assume other allowable costs of SAR 14M. Tax base: SAR 20M − SAR 14M = SAR 6M. CIT: SAR 1.2M.
Subsidiary (Scenario B): All three charges are potentially deductible subject to arm’s length transfer pricing. Assume the same SAR 14M other costs plus SAR 3.5M in deductible intragroup charges. Tax base: SAR 20M − SAR 17.5M = SAR 2.5M. CIT: SAR 500,000.
The subsidiary structure generates SAR 700,000 less in CIT — a direct result of the branch’s inability to deduct head office charges. The economics of branch vs subsidiary must factor in this deduction gap alongside the setup costs, governance requirements, and capital repatriation rules of each structure.
Estimated Tax Base: Airlines and Transport Branches
For branches of foreign airlines and international land and sea transport companies, Saudi CIT applies an estimated tax base methodology. The tax base is fixed at 5% of total Saudi-source revenues — meaning the total revenues from passenger tickets, excess baggage, cargo, mail, and any other revenues from journeys originating in Saudi Arabia and ending at the final agreed destination.
CIT of 20% is then applied to that 5% estimated base — giving an effective rate of 1% of gross Saudi transport revenues. This simplified approach reflects the practical difficulty of attributing costs and profits to the Saudi leg of international transport operations, where costs are inherently global and inseparable.
The Saudi-source revenue is defined broadly: it includes all revenues from journeys commencing in Saudi Arabia, regardless of where the ticket was sold or where the payment was processed. An airline passenger who purchases a Riyadh-to-London ticket from a travel agent in London generates Saudi-source revenue for the airline’s Saudi branch.
Where ZATCA applies an estimated tax base — whether for airlines or for any taxpayer that has failed to maintain proper books — no deductions from gross income are permitted. The estimated profit margin is applied to gross revenues with no allowance for actual costs. This is both a compliance incentive and a significant commercial risk for businesses that let their records lapse.
Compliance Obligations for Foreign Branches
A registered Saudi branch carries the same CIT compliance obligations as any other CIT taxpayer:
Registration: The branch must register with ZATCA before the end of its first fiscal year. Registration typically follows MISA licensing. The penalty for late registration is SAR 10,000 for joint stock entities and SAR 5,000 for others.
Books and records: Arabic-language books and records must be maintained in Saudi Arabia. The branch cannot rely on its head office’s overseas records as its Saudi record-keeping. This requirement is practical — ZATCA inspectors expect to find the records in the Kingdom.
Annual return and payment: Within 120 days of fiscal year-end, with CPA certification where revenues reach SAR 1 million or more. The branch files as a distinct taxpayer — not consolidated with the head office’s home country return.
Advance payments: Three equal instalments on the last day of months 6, 9, and 12, each equal to 25% of the prior year’s net tax liability minus prior-year WHT credits.
WHT obligations: If the branch makes payments to non-residents — to sub-contractors, service providers, or other third parties — it bears the same WHT withholding and remittance obligations as any other Saudi payer.
Branch vs Subsidiary — The CIT Decision Framework
The choice between a branch and a subsidiary is one of the most consequential structural decisions for a foreign company entering Saudi Arabia. From a pure CIT perspective, the key considerations are:
| Factor | Branch | Subsidiary |
|---|---|---|
| Head office charges deductible? | No — royalties, commissions, interest, indirect admin all disallowed | Yes — subject to arm’s length TP rules and documentation |
| Legal entity | Extension of foreign company — no separate legal personality | Separate Saudi legal entity |
| Capital requirements | No share capital requirement in Saudi Arabia | Minimum capital requirements apply under Saudi company law |
| Profit repatriation | No WHT on repatriation — profits return to head office directly | Dividends paid to foreign parent subject to 5% WHT |
| Liability | Head office is liable for Saudi branch obligations | Liability generally limited to Saudi entity’s assets |
| Setup complexity | Simpler — MISA licence + ZATCA registration | More complex — articles of association, share capital, governance |
The CIT deduction gap is the decisive factor in most cases where the foreign group provides significant services to its Saudi operations. For project-based businesses with limited intragroup service flows, the branch may be tax-efficient. For businesses with substantial IP, management services, or financing from the foreign parent, a subsidiary structure is usually preferable on a net CIT cost basis — despite the 5% WHT on dividend repatriation.
FAQs — CIT for Foreign Branches
Does a foreign bank branch have any different CIT treatment?
Yes — one specific difference. Branches of foreign banks are permitted to deduct loan fees paid to their head offices abroad, whereas all other types of branches are prohibited from doing so. This recognises the commercial reality of interbank lending, where the branch’s funding from the head office is a genuine cost of the Saudi banking activity. All other head office charge restrictions apply equally to foreign bank branches.
Can a branch claim the same depreciation deductions as a subsidiary?
Yes. Depreciation on assets used in the Saudi branch’s taxable activity is deductible on the same basis as for any CIT taxpayer — using the prescribed tax depreciation rates and pooled asset categories. The branch’s allowable depreciation is calculated on its own Saudi assets, not on the head office’s global asset base.
If my branch makes a loss, can I use that loss against my head office’s income in my home country?
This is a home country tax question, not a Saudi CIT question. Under Saudi law, the branch’s losses are tracked and carried forward for Saudi CIT purposes. Whether those losses can also be recognised in the foreign parent’s home country tax return depends entirely on the tax rules of the home country. Many countries do allow consolidation of foreign branch losses — but this requires specific home country analysis.
Do I need a separate ZATCA registration for a Saudi branch if my parent already has a ZATCA registration?
Yes. The Saudi branch is a separate taxable person for CIT purposes and requires its own ZATCA registration. The parent company’s home country tax registration has no relevance to Saudi CIT compliance. Similarly, if the parent has a VAT registration or Zakat registration in Saudi Arabia for a different entity or activity, those do not cover the branch’s CIT obligations.
- A registered Saudi branch is treated as a PE of the foreign company and is subject to CIT on profits from its Saudi activities — not on the global profits of the foreign company.
- Branches cannot deduct payments to their head offices for royalties, commissions, loan charges (except foreign bank branches), or indirectly allocated administrative expenses. This is a permanent, structural disallowance.
- The deduction gap between a branch and a subsidiary is commercially significant for businesses with substantial intragroup service flows — model it explicitly before choosing a structure.
- Airlines and international transport branches are taxed on an estimated base of 5% of Saudi revenues — an effective rate of 1% on gross Saudi transport income.
- All standard CIT compliance obligations apply to branches: ZATCA registration, Arabic books and records maintained in Saudi Arabia, annual return with CPA certification, advance payments, and WHT obligations on third-party payments.