If your Bahrain-registered company earns income from what regulators call “relevant activities,” you have an annual ESR filing obligation. Missing it means penalties. Filing incorrectly means more penalties. And unlike VAT registration – which only applies above a revenue threshold – ESR applies based on what your company does, not how much it earns.
This guide covers what the Economic Substance Return is, which Bahrain companies must file, the relevant activity categories, the annual deadline, the penalty structure, and what the filing actually involves.
Table of Contents
What is the Economic Substance Return?
The Economic Substance Return (ESR) is an annual compliance filing that Bahrain introduced in 2018 in response to the OECD’s Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) framework. Its purpose is to prevent companies from booking profits in low-tax jurisdictions – like Bahrain – without conducting genuine economic activity there.
Bahrain’s ESR regulations are administered by the Ministry of Industry and Commerce (MOIC) and are encoded in Resolution No. 21 of 2019, as amended by Resolution No. 22 of 2021.
Part 1 – Annual Notification: Every Bahrain-registered company must submit a notification declaring whether it conducts a “relevant activity.” This is filed regardless of whether an economic substance test applies.
Part 2 – Economic Substance Report: Companies that both conduct a relevant activity AND earn income from it must file a detailed report demonstrating that the activity is genuinely performed in Bahrain – with local staff, local expenditure, and local management decisions.
Which Activities Trigger ESR in Bahrain?
There are nine relevant activity categories under Bahrain’s ESR regulations. If your company conducts any of these, you must file both the notification and the substance report:
1. Banking Business: Financial intermediation, deposits, lending. Requires demonstration of local staff, local premises, and board decision-making in Bahrain.
2. Insurance Business: Underwriting and risk management. Must show adequate employees and management of risk locally.
3. Investment Fund Management: Managing investment portfolios and fund vehicles. Local decision-making authority and fund administration must be demonstrable.
4. Lease-Finance Business: Equipment leasing and financing. Requires local contract negotiation and asset management.
5. Headquarters Business: Providing central management services to group companies. Strategic decisions and coordination must happen in Bahrain.
6. Shipping Business: Operating vessels for international transport. Crew management and strategic direction must be demonstrable locally.
7. Holding Company Business: Pure equity holding with dividend income. Reduced substance requirements compared to other categories – adequate premises and compliance with company law.
8. Intellectual Property Business Patents, trademarks, and IP asset exploitation. The regulations distinguish between low-risk IP (holding and licensing within a group) and high-risk IP (IP acquired from third parties or developed by the entity). High-risk IP requires detailed evidence of economic rationale.
9. Distribution and Service Centre Business: Purchasing, storing, or providing services for group entities. Must demonstrate local logistics and service delivery.
Does Every Bahrain Company Need to File?
Every Bahrain-registered company must submit the annual notification. The notification is a declaration – it either says “we do not conduct a relevant activity” or “we do, and here is the detail.”
Only companies that conduct a relevant activity AND earn income from it must file the full economic substance report.
For most small-to-medium WLL companies registered in Bahrain for trading, professional services, consulting, or general business – the notification will show “no relevant activity” and no further filing is needed. However, if your company provides services to related group companies (headquarters function), holds intellectual property, or provides financing to related parties, the relevant activity categories may apply.
ESR Filing Deadline
The Economic Substance Return for a given financial year must be filed within six months of the company’s financial year-end.
For companies with a financial year ending 31 December 2025, the ESR deadline is 30 June 2026.
The filing is submitted through the Sijilat portal at sijilat.bh, under the ESR module.
Penalties for Non-Compliance
Failing to file or filing incorrectly carries escalating penalties under Bahrain’s ESR regulations:
| Violation | Penalty |
|---|---|
| Failure to file the annual notification | BHD 500 per month |
| Failure to file the economic substance report | BHD 10,000–50,000 |
| Inaccurate or incomplete report | BHD 10,000–50,000 |
| Second-year failure after initial penalty | Up to BHD 100,000 |
| Persistent non-compliance | Licence suspension or company dissolution |
Beyond financial penalties, MOIC can trigger automatic exchange of information with the tax authorities of the ultimate parent entity’s home jurisdiction. For companies with shareholders in jurisdictions that Bahrain has information exchange agreements with, this creates direct exposure for the parent company’s tax position.
What the ESR Filing Actually Involves
For companies that must file a full economic substance report, the documentation required includes:
- Board resolutions confirming decisions were made in Bahrain
- Evidence of physical presence – office lease, EWA bill
- Employee records showing staff performing core income-generating activities in Bahrain
- Financial records showing expenditure incurred locally
- Description of core income-generating activities performed in Bahrain
- Details of the relevant income earned and how it relates to those activities
The quality of documentation matters. MOIC has the authority to reject reports that lack sufficient substance evidence and to impose penalties even where a report has been submitted.
ESR and Your Company Formation
If you are in the process of registering a company in Bahrain that will conduct any of the nine relevant activities, ESR compliance should be part of your operational structure from day one — not a problem to solve after the fact.
PI Startup Advisory advises clients on ESR classification at the company formation stage and manages annual ESR filing as part of our ongoing compliance service. For the complete guide to setting up a company in Bahrain, read our company formation guide. For our ESR filing service, see Economic Substance Return service.
Contact us for a free consultation or call +973 1311 8811.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does a dormant Bahrain company need to file an ESR notification?
Yes. All Bahrain-registered companies must file the annual notification. A dormant company would declare “no relevant activity” but the filing obligation still exists.
What if I missed last year’s ESR deadline?
Late filing penalties apply from the day after the deadline. File as soon as possible – the longer the delay, the higher the accumulated penalty. Contact MOIC or an authorised adviser to manage the late submission process.
Does ESR apply to branch offices in Bahrain?
Yes. Branch offices of foreign companies registered in Bahrain are subject to the same ESR notification requirement as locally incorporated companies.
Is ESR the same as VAT filing?
No. VAT and ESR are separate compliance obligations with different deadlines, different administering authorities, and different documentation requirements. VAT is administered by the National Bureau for Revenue (NBR); ESR is administered by MOIC through Sijilat.