Through the Looking Glass

Egypt’s Legal Evolution and FDI Surge

Al Tamimi & Company

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Any assessment of Egypt’s corporate investment landscape in 2026 necessarily entails reading the legal framework against a period of FX volatility, subsidy reform and regional conflict that has strained, but not extinguished, investor appetite. Despite tighter global liquidity and the indirect spillovers of conflicts across the wider region on trade, tourism and risk premia, Egypt has emerged as one of the world’s stand-out FDI stories.

How Al Tamimi & Company Can Help

Egypt’s evolving legal infrastructure, anchored by Investment Law , its recent amendments and an increasingly sophisticated Companies Law and governance framework, is doing the heavy lifting in a complex macroeconomic environment. Together with GAFI regulated free zones and the state’s “exporting real estate” push, this foundation is enabling repeat structuring across industrial, energy and real estate transactions. Record FDI inflows show that the platform can now deliver scale. The challenge for 2026 lies in identifying where this legal scaffolding is already strong enough to sustain major financing, and where it still needs contractual precision and risk transfer tools. Within that context, Al Tamimi & Company stands out with its local presence, licensed litigators and regional depth, offering the integrated capability investors depend on to make Egyptian exposure genuinely bankable.

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Egypt's corporate investment landscape in 2026 must be read against a period of FX volatility, subsidy reform, and regional conflict that has strained, but not extinguished, investor appetite. Yet the headline numbers tell a striking story. UNCTAD's World Investment Report 2025 records that FDI inflows jumped to approximately US$47 billion in 2024, catapulting Egypt from 32nd to 9th place globally among FDI recipients and making it the primary driver of Africa's roughly 75% rebound in FDI that year. Continent-wide inflows rose to around US$97 billion, with Egypt absorbing nearly half. While global FDI, excluding volatile condit economy flows, fell by about 11% in 2024, a second consecutive annual decline. Egypt defied the trend, seeing project finance commitments roughly double on the back of large-scale energy and transport infrastructure investments. In 2025, inflows normalized to an estimated 11 billion US dollars as the one-off megaproject effect faded. Yet Egypt still held its position as Africa's top FDI destination in a year when investment into much of the continent dropped by about one-third. Early 2026 data point annual inflows running at around 12 billion US dollars, underpinned by ongoing commitments in logistics, renewables, and industrial zones, and a stated policy ambition to at least double FDI over the medium term. For boardrooms and credit committees, the central question is whether Egypt's company, investment, zone, and real estate regimes now amount to a repeatable, rules-based platform capable of sustaining this trajectory, or whether each deal still requires bespoke protections and structuring to be bankable. The investment law framework. At the core of the regime is investment law number 72 of 2017. The investment law, as amended, which applies to local and foreign investments regardless of size and channels them through four regimes. The investment law hardwires non-discrimination, protection against expropriation and arbitrary measures, contract sanctity, profit repatriation and residency rights for foreign investors, guaranteeing foreign investors treatment equivalent to that of national investors, with the possibility of preferential treatment by cabinet decision on the basis of reciprocity. These guarantees are backed by a layered incentive structure. At the general level, all qualifying investment projects benefit from stamp duty and notarial fee exemptions for five years and a unified customs duty of 2% on imported machinery and equipment. At the special level, an investment incentive deducted from net taxable profits at a rate of up to 50% of investment costs for projects in underdeveloped areas, sector A, and 30% for qualifying projects elsewhere, sector B, is available, capped at 80% of paid-up capital over a maximum of seven years from the commencement of operations. Critically for foreign sponsors, the investor has the right to establish, own, manage, use and dispose of the investment project to repatriate profits and to transfer abroad the proceeds of liquidation, in whole or in part, without prejudice to the rights of third parties. All monetary transfers related to foreign investment are permitted freely and without delay in a freely convertible currency and at the prevailing exchange rate on the date of transfer. The 2023 Amendment Package, Law No. 160 of 2023, materially expanded both the scope and duration of these incentives. Companies must now be established within three years from the date the executive regulations come into force to benefit from special incentives. With the Council of Ministers able to extend this for additional periods not exceeding nine years in total, general incentives were broadened to all investment projects regardless of their date of establishment, with the exception of free zone projects. And a new cash incentive of between 35 and 55% of tax paid was introduced for eligible industrial projects, provided that at least 50% of financing is sourced in foreign currency from outside Egypt, and the project commences operations within six years of the law's entry into force, with a possible cabinet extension for up to a further six years. The amendment also reshaped the Golden License framework, extending it to strategic national projects and PPP projects in infrastructure, renewable energy, transportation, roads and ports, issued by decision of the Council of Ministers. Garfi, in coordination with the relevant authorities, monitors compliance with Golden License conditions. Where a company is found to be in violation, it must be notified by registered letter, given the opportunity to present its defense and granted a reasonable period to remedy the breach, failing which the project's activities or incentives may be suspended and, in the case of continued violation, the golden license may be revoked by cabinet decision. Law No. 2 of 2024 added a further layer, introducing incentives for green hydrogen projects and their derivatives, a cash investment incentive of 33 to 55% of income tax paid on qualifying project income, VAT exemptions on specified imports, and a golden license for approved projects, subject to conditions including that at least 70% of the investment cost is financed in foreign currency from outside Egypt and that locally manufactured components account for at least 20% of project inputs where available. Free zones, supervised by the General Authority for Investment and Free Zones, GAFI, operate as fenced regimes for export-oriented activities under Chapter 4 of Law 72, offering custom suspension, exemption from Egyptian tax and duties, and streamline licensing. Projects in public free zones pay fees of 1% of commodity value on ingress for storage projects and 2% of commodity value on egress for manufacturing and assembly, while private free zones pay around 1-2% of total revenues depending on the nature of the activity. Investment and technological zones cluster specific activities, including industrial, logistics, and ICT, under simplified procedures that still tie into the domestic tax base. Recent regulatory amendments have expanded the scope for private free zones, with Prime Ministerial Decree No. 2140 of 2023 permitting the Cabinet to approve establishment of projects in private free zones, including for certain service industries, subject to conditions such as incorporation as a joint stock company or LLC and meeting specified criteria on activity profile and economic impact. Garfi is required to monitor private free zone activities to ensure proper conduct and compliance, with periodic reports submitted to the relevant Free Zone Board on whether each project should continue operating under the private free zone regime. Approval lapses if the investor does not take serious implementation steps, including commencing incorporation, submitting engineering drawings, obtaining necessary approvals, and establishing a timetable within six months of notification of the approval decision. The corporate backbone. Underpinning every investment structure is Companies Law No. 159 of 1981 and its executive regulations, the company's law, as amended. It sets out the main forms of commercial entity, joint stock companies, limited liability companies, partnerships limited by shares, and, since later amendments, single-person companies, and regulates incorporation, capital changes, shareholder meetings, liquidation and basic governance. The relationship between the two laws is complementary. Every company must comply with the company's law, while the investment law is optional and strategic, overlaying incentives and guarantees onto existing corporate structures. Garfi serves as both the registrar under the company's law and the investment authority under the investment law responsible for incorporation, filings, project approval, incentive administration, and supervision of compliance. Regulators have progressively tightened governance rules across both listed and unlisted companies over the past several years. The company's law was materially amended by Law No. 4 of 2018, introducing provisions on electronic voting at General Assemblies, horizontal spin-offs and vertical split-offs, and share repurchase mechanisms, among other reforms. Garfi has also modernized corporate procedures, permitting online general meetings and developing a digital platform for company establishment. For foreign sponsors, the practical effect is that shareholding structures, voting arrangements and board processes increasingly operate within a recognizable governance framework, one that can be mapped against lender covenants, ESG policies, and group-wide governance standards, rather than resting solely on bespoke articles of association. For listed companies and non-banking financial institutions, the Financial Regulatory Authority and the Egyptian Exchange enforce a stringent governance regime, including requirements on board composition with independent and non-executive directors, mandatory audit and risk committees, female board representation of at least 25%, related party transaction disclosure, and cumulative voting for board elections to strengthen minority representation. Mandatory ESG reporting now applies to large listed companies and non-banking financial institutions with capital or assets above specified thresholds, including climate-related financial disclosures following TCFD guidelines for entities with very large capital. Separately, insolvency and restructuring legislation has evolved to provide clearer routes for court supervised restructurings, reducing the historic stigma and criminal law exposure associated with corporate failure, a development that materially improves the comfort level for lenders and equity sponsors alike. The tax landscape. Egypt's tax proposition combines scale-driven incentives with an increasingly structured compliance framework. The headline corporate income tax rate of 22.5% applies across most sectors, but the effective burden for investors is often materially reduced through the incentive architecture embedded in the investment law. Crucially, these incentives are explicitly non-discretionary once conditions are met, providing a degree of certainty that is particularly valuable for capital-intensive and long-dated projects. At the general level, all qualifying projects benefit from exemptions on stamp duty and notarization fees for five years and a reduced customs duty on imported machinery and equipment. Special incentives allow investors to deduct between 30 and 50% of qualifying investment costs from taxable profits, subject to caps tied to paid-up capital, directly lowering effective tax rates during the early operating years of a project. Recent amendments have broadened the scope of these incentives, extending eligibility periods and expanding the categories of qualifying projects, notably in infrastructure, energy, logistics, and manufacturing. Egypt has also moved beyond traditional tax deductions to targeted cash-based incentives designed to improve investor returns and foreign currency inflows. Amendments introduced between 2023 and 2024 allow qualifying industrial and green energy projects to receive cash incentives of up to 55% of income tax paid, subject to conditions including foreign currency funding thresholds and operational timelines. For investors navigating AirFX volatility, these regimes effectively convert part of the tax cost into a recoverable cash flow, improving project bankability and internal rates of return. Free zones remain a cornerstone of the tax proposition for export-oriented and regionally integrated businesses, with projects effectively removed from the domestic tax net, exempt from corporate income tax, customs duties, and VAT in return for modest revenue-based fees. Importantly, Egypt's corporate tax environment is not only about incentives, but also about ongoing administrative reform. The tax authority has accelerated digital filing, standardized audits, and introduced clearer guidance on transfer pricing, permanent establishment risk, and profit repatriation. While enforcement has tightened, this has been coupled with greater procedural clarity, faster dispute resolution mechanisms, and a stated policy of broadening the tax base through compliance rather than raising headline rates. Investors can expect to move towards a more predictable, rules-based system that preserves headline tax competitiveness while steadily reducing execution risk over a project's life cycle. Real estate and construction at the center of the FDA narrative. Real estate and construction now sit squarely at the center of Egypt's FDI story. Gulfi data confirm that the sector was the top recipient of FDI in FY 2023-2024, attracting approximately 35.8 billion US dollars, roughly 76% of total net inflows, largely driven by the landmark Ras Elhecma Coastal Development Agreement with Abu Dhabi's ADQ's Sovereign Wealth Fund. That single US$35 billion deal, comprising 24 billion US dollars in direct FDI for the development of 170 million square meters of Mediterranean coastline and US$11 billion through conversion of UAE deposits into infrastructure and real estate projects was the principal catalyst behind Egypt's record FDI year, with projections suggesting cumulative investment in Ras el Hekma alone could draw up to US$150 billion in total. In 2025, flows have normalized after the Ras el Hekma spike, but real estate and construction continue to attract the largest share of new foreign capital. Supported by ongoing project phases and a broader pipeline of coastal, new city and tourism led schemes as deal sizes become more granular and diversified beyond a single megaproject. The depth of the development cycle is evident in the numbers. Newly established construction companies rose 20% year on year to 2,856 in 2024, with momentum carrying into early 2025. Real estate developers have multiplied to around 15,000, roughly 1.4 billion US dollars in private golf capital is targeting Egyptian housing. And the commercial real estate market is valued at approximately 4.03 billion US dollars in 2025, projected to continue growing at close to 7% annually. The government has actively sought to monetize this demand through planning, marketing, and legal reform. The Exporting Real Estate Initiative, anchored in megaprojects such as the New Administrative Capital, New Alemain and Ras El Hecma, is designed to attract foreign currency through property sales to non-residents, while the legal framework permits foreign individuals to own residential property subject to certain conditions and geographic restrictions. Persistent challenges remain, including delays in issuing the long-awaited real estate development law and ongoing calls for an independent regulatory authority and professional standards framework for the sector, capital flows, and the macroenvironment. Egypt's FDI profile is increasingly two-track. At one end sit large sovereign-backed and strategic deals in real estate, infrastructure, and energy, led predominantly by UAE capital and anchored by the Ras El Hecma megaproject. At the other is a steady pipeline of industrial, services and technology investments using investment law incentives and zone regimes, supported by ongoing regulatory reform. Conflict-related tensions in neighboring states and along key transit corridors have raised risk perceptions and logistics costs. But they have also reinforced Egypt's position as a pivotal energy, transport and services hub-linking Africa, the Gulf, and Europe, keeping strategic capital engaged despite higher premia. The current IMF program and associated financing have eased near-term balance of payments pressures, while tightening conditionality around state ownership policy, privatization, and more transparent criteria-based incentive frameworks. Against this backdrop, Egypt is targeting $12 to $15 billion in FDI by end 2025, with early data already pointing to double-digit year-on-year growth and a 2025-2030 FDI strategy focused on 13 priority sectors. Egypt is simultaneously developing alternative land to sea corridors against a backdrop of subdued Suez canal traffic and persistent Red Sea security risks. Ongoing maritime security disruptions and elevated war risk premiums have diverted a significant share of container and tanker traffic around the Cape of Good Hope, pushing transits for some vessel classes to multi-year lows and compressing canal revenues. In response, the Suez Canal Authority has been negotiating temporary rebates and routing incentives with major lines. While the government accelerates a program of seven logistics corridors, expanded dry port capacity and Red Sea Roro routes to Saudi Arabia, practical work rounds and resilience tools rather than full substitutes for the canal, data protection, and privacy. Egypt has personal data protection law number 151 of 2020, PDPL, which establishes a comprehensive legal framework governing the processing, storage, and transfer of personal data. The PDPL imposes obligations relating to interolia, data controller and processors obligations, lawful basis for processing, including consent requirements, and restrictions on cross-border data transfers. The executive regulations to the PDPL number 816 of 2025 have now been promulgated, thereby clarifying and operationalizing the PDPL's substantive and procedural requirements, including compliance obligations and implementation mechanisms. A transitional grace period is currently in force, affording regulated entities an opportunity to align their internal policies, procedures, and systems with the PDPL and its executive regulations. Full compliance is required by 31 October 2026, following which enforcement measures and penalties may be applied. In this context, foreign investors are advised to treat the transitional period as a critical compliance window to implement robust data governance frameworks, update contractual and operational arrangements, obtain necessary licenses and permits, appoint data protection officers, and ensure readiness for regulatory oversight and enforcement. Boardroom and Credit Committee Questions. Against this landscape, the boardroom and credit committee questions sharpening in 2026 cluster around several themes. How should investors structure operating assets, whether in free zones, investment zones, or onshore, to optimize tax treatment? And market access. Can investment law 72 and zone incentives be reliably underwritten over a project's life? And how should these be captured in core contracts and financing documents? Do the current company's law and governance standards provide the right balance of control, minority protection, and disclosure for joint ventures and complex shareholding? How can demand, pricing, and regulatory risks be mitigated across megaprojects and exported property schemes amid concentrated FDI patterns? How predictable are arbitration and enforcement outcomes in Egypt? And where is additional contractual or political risk protection needed? How might regional instability and FX pressures impact convertibility, supply chains, and repatriation? And what covenants or reserves can hedge these exposures? Whether alternative routing through land-to-sea corridors and diverted shipping lanes is hardening into a structural feature of East-West trade or remains a cyclical hedge tied to the current Red Sea security and insurance environment, and what that distinction means for logistics, supply chain and infrastructure investment assumptions. How Al Tamimi and company can help, Egypt's legal infrastructure, anchored by the investment law, its recent amendments, and an increasingly sophisticated company's law and governance framework, is doing the heavy lifting in a complex macroeconomic environment, together with Garfi-regulated free zones and the state's exporting real estate push. This foundation is enabling repeat structuring across industrial, energy, and real estate transactions. Record FDI inflows demonstrate that the platform can deliver scale. The challenge for 2026 is identifying where this legal scaffolding is already strong enough to sustain major financing and where it still needs contractual precision and risk transfer tools. Altamimi and Company, with its local presence, licensed litigators, and regional depth, offers the integrated capability investors depend on to make Egyptian exposure genuinely bankable.