Income Tax Act 2058 · DTAA · VAT Act · Finance Act 2081 · FY 2082/83
Nepal Tax Guide for Foreign Investors: Withholding Tax, DTAA, and Corporate Tax (FY 2082/83)
25% corporate tax, 5% dividend withholding, 15% royalties and interest — and DTAA relief with 11 countries. What the rates are, which ones apply to your business, and what reduces them.
Foreign-owned Nepali companies pay 25% standard corporate tax (30% for banks, insurance, and telecom; 20% for qualifying exporters). Dividends are withheld at a flat 5% — the same for resident and non-resident shareholders. Interest and royalties are withheld at 15%, reducible under Nepal's 11 DTAAs. A foreign company providing services in Nepal for more than 90 days in a 12-month period creates a taxable permanent establishment with no incorporation required.
Key Figures at a Glance — FY 2082/83 Finance Act 2081
| Metric | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Standard corporate income tax rate | 25% | Income Tax Act 2058 |
| Banks, financial institutions, general insurance | 30% | Income Tax Act 2058 |
| Telecommunications and internet services | 30% | Income Tax Act 2058 |
| Petroleum, cigarette, and alcohol manufacturing | 30% | Income Tax Act 2058 |
| Export-oriented manufacturing (75%+ export) | 20% | Income Tax Act 2058 |
| Dividend withholding tax (final) | 5% — resident and non-resident alike | Income Tax Act 2058, §54 |
| Interest withholding tax | 15% (often ~10% under DTAA) | Income Tax Act 2058 |
| Royalty / technical service fee withholding | 15% | Income Tax Act 2058 |
| PE (branch) profit repatriation tax | 5% | Income Tax Act 2058, §68 |
| VAT standard rate | 13% | VAT Act 2052 |
| VAT registration threshold — goods | NPR 50 lakh (5,000,000) | Finance Act 2081 |
| VAT registration threshold — services/mixed | NPR 30 lakh (3,000,000) | Finance Act 2081 |
| Digital Service Tax — non-resident digital providers | 2% of transaction value | Digital Service Tax Act 2024 |
| Corporate income tax return deadline | End of Ashoj/Ashwin (mid-October) | Income Tax Act 2058, §95 |
| PE threshold — services/construction | 90 days within any 12-month period | Income Tax Act 2058, §2 |
| Countries with Nepal DTAA | 11 | IRD, as of 2025 |
Foreign-owned Nepali companies pay 25% standard corporate tax (30% for banks, insurance, and telecom; 20% for qualifying exporters), with dividends withheld at a flat 5% and interest/royalties at 15%, reducible under Nepal's 11 DTAAs.
I. Who This Guide Is For: Residence and Nepal-Source Income Income Tax Act 2058
Resident companies are taxed on worldwide income. Non-resident companies are taxed only on Nepal-source income — but "Nepal-source" is broader than most foreign investors expect.
Nepal taxes resident companies on worldwide income and non-resident companies only on Nepal-source income. A company is resident if it's incorporated in Nepal, or if its place of effective management is in Nepal during the fiscal year — incorporating offshore doesn't avoid Nepali tax if the real decisions are made from Kathmandu.
| Income Type | Nepal-Source If |
|---|---|
| Business or investment income | Carried on in Nepal |
| Disposal of property | Property situated in Nepal |
| Interest, dividends, royalties, service fees | Paid by a Nepali resident |
| Services | Actually performed in Nepal |
II. Legal Framework: What Governs Nepal Tax for Foreign Investors Reference Level
| Law | What It Covers |
|---|---|
| Income Tax Act, 2058 (2002) — amended annually by Finance Act | Corporate tax rates, withholding tax (TDS), PE rules, residence, transfer pricing (§33), DTAA override (§73) |
| VAT Act, 2052 (1996) | VAT registration thresholds and the 13% standard rate |
| Digital Service Tax Act, 2079/80 (2024) | 2% levy on non-resident digital service providers with significant Nepal sales |
| Foreign Investment and Technology Transfer Act, 2019 (FITTA) | Repatriation rights and the investment approval that interacts with tax compliance |
| Annual Finance Act | Year-by-year rate adjustments, new incentives, threshold changes — rates don't move without it |
| Nepal's 11 Double Taxation Avoidance Agreements | Treaty-specific rates and PE definitions that override the Income Tax Act where they conflict, under §73 |
III. Corporate Income Tax: The Rates That Actually Apply FY 2082/83
| Business Type | Rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Standard rate — most businesses | 25% | Default rate for foreign-owned Nepali companies |
| Banks, development banks, finance companies, general insurance | 30% | No concessions regardless of other circumstances |
| Telecommunications and internet service providers | 30% | No concessions regardless of other circumstances |
| Petroleum, cigarette, and alcohol manufacturing | 30% | No concessions regardless of other circumstances |
| Export-oriented manufacturing (75%+ of production exported) | 20% | Requires formal certification of export share |
| IT companies — export-derived income (75%+ exported) | 75% rebate on export income | Rebate on specific income stream, confirmed through FY 2084/85 — not a flat low rate across whole business |
| Minimum tax floor (turnover > NPR 20 million) | 0.25% of turnover | Applies when standard calculation produces a lower figure — relevant for early-stage subsidiaries with losses |
Corporate tax returns are due within three months of the fiscal year end — by the end of Ashoj/Ashwin (mid-October in practice). The IRD has extended this deadline by circular in some recent years — for FY 2081/82 the extension ran to the end of Poush (mid-January). Confirm the current year's exact deadline with the IRD rather than assuming the standard cutoff applies. Advance tax is paid in three installments: end of Poush, Chaitra, and Ashadh.
IV. Permanent Establishment: Branch Profit Tax Explained High Risk for Service Providers
A Permanent Establishment is a fixed place of business, or qualifying activity exceeding 90 days, through which a non-resident's business is wholly or partly carried on in Nepal — triggering full Nepali tax liability on profits attributable to that activity.
| PE Trigger | Threshold |
|---|---|
| Fixed place of business in Nepal | Any duration |
| Substantial equipment or machinery installed | Any duration |
| Services (including consultancy) | More than 90 days in any 12-month period |
| Construction, assembly, or installation project | 90 days or more |
| Dependent agent habitually concluding contracts on behalf of foreign company | Any duration — no physical office required |
V. Withholding Tax (TDS): The Full Rate Table Income Tax Act 2058
Withholding tax (TDS) is deducted at the point of payment and, for most categories relevant to foreign investors, is a final tax — the recipient owes nothing further in Nepal on that specific amount and in most cases doesn't need to file a Nepali return for it.
| Payment Type | Standard Rate | Final Tax? | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dividends | 5% | ✓ Final | Same rate for resident and non-resident shareholders |
| Interest | 15% | ✓ Final | Often reduced to ~10% under DTAA |
| Royalties | 15% | ✓ Final | Subject to DTAA reduction where applicable |
| Technical service fees to non-residents | 15% | ✓ Final | Generally aligned with the royalty rate |
| Rent | 10% | ✓ Final | Relevant if a foreign investor leases out Nepali property |
| Contract/service payments over NPR 50,000 | 1.5% | ✗ Advance | Creditable against recipient's eventual liability — NOT final |
| PE (branch) profit repatriation | 5% | ✓ Final | Treated as dividend distribution — on top of corporate tax |
| Liquor royalty under technology transfer (non-export) | Capped at 5% of selling price (excl. tax) | ✓ Final | FITTA-specific cap — separate from general 15% royalty rate |
VI. Double Taxation Avoidance Agreements (DTAA) 11 Countries Only
VII. How to Claim a Reduced Withholding Rate Under a DTAA Before the Payment — Not After
Confirm Your Country Has a Nepal DTAA
Check the 11-country list above. If your country is not on it — no reduced rate, no treaty relief. Do not assume a treaty exists based on reported negotiations with the UK, Singapore, or Malaysia.
No treaty = standard domestic rates apply (15% interest/royalty, 5% dividend)Obtain a Tax Residency Certificate from Your Home Country
Get a tax residency certificate from your home country's tax authority confirming your entity's residency status for the relevant fiscal year. This is the core documentary requirement — without it, the reduced rate cannot be applied.
Must be current for the relevant fiscal year — not a general certificateConfirm the Limitation-on-Benefits Test
Verify your entity passes the §73(5) test — broadly, that it is genuinely resident in the treaty country and not majority-owned from a non-treaty jurisdiction purely to access the treaty. A holding structure based in a treaty country but owned from a non-treaty jurisdiction can be denied treaty benefits entirely.
Anti-treaty-shopping rule — 50%+ beneficial ownership must be in Nepal or treaty countrySubmit Residency Certificate to the IRD — Before Payment
Submit the residency certificate to the Inland Revenue Department alongside or ahead of the payment giving rise to the withholding obligation. Submitting after the deposit has been made at the standard rate creates a refund dispute rather than a simple adjustment.
Must be submitted BEFORE the payment — submitting after creates a refund disputePayer Withholds at Reduced Treaty Rate
Once documentation is on file with the IRD, the Nepali payer withholds at the reduced treaty rate rather than the standard 15%. The transaction is reported to the IRD at the treaty rate from the outset — not adjusted after the fact.
Treaty rate applies from the payment date — not retrospectivelyVIII. Transfer Pricing and Related-Party Transactions IRD Scrutiny — No Formal Code
For a foreign investor, the practical takeaway is to keep contemporaneous documentation justifying intercompany pricing — for management fees, royalties, intercompany loans, or goods transferred between a foreign parent and its Nepali subsidiary — even though Nepal doesn't mandate a specific transfer pricing study format. The burden sits on the taxpayer to show that intercompany pricing reflects what unrelated parties would have agreed.
IX. Capital Gains Tax When a Foreign Shareholder Exits Tax Clearance Required
| Share Type | Tax Treatment | Process |
|---|---|---|
| Listed securities | Specific withholding-based capital gains regime | Withholding deducted at transaction point |
| Unlisted shares (most foreign-owned private subsidiaries) | Folded into ordinary income, taxed at standard corporate rate | Withholding collected at point of transfer, credited against final liability |
2. The share transfer must be recorded with the Office of the Company Registrar.
3. Where shares were originally registered as foreign investment, the transfer must be endorsed by the Department of Industry or relevant sector regulator.
X. Indirect Transfer and Offshore Share Sales: The Ncell Precedent Ncell Case — Verify Citation
Nepal's most significant capital gains dispute involving a foreign investor centered on Ncell, the telecom operator. Following an offshore transaction in which a foreign parent sold its indirect stake at the holding-company level outside Nepal, Nepali tax authorities asserted the right to tax the resulting capital gain — arguing that the underlying value derived from a Nepali asset.
XI. Digital Service Tax on Non-Resident Providers Since FY 2079/80
Nepal's Digital Service Tax applies a 2% levy on the transaction value of digital services supplied by non-resident providers to customers in Nepal, once annual transactions exceed the NPR 30 lakh registration threshold. Applies to: cloud computing, streaming, online advertising, online marketplaces — supplied from abroad with no physical presence in Nepal.
XII. Tax Dispute Resolution and Appeals Miss the First Deadline — Lose the Case
Administrative Review — File at IRD First
Contest the specific IRD assessment within the statutory deadline by filing an Administrative Review application directly with the IRD. Missing this deadline can foreclose all later stages of appeal — file on time regardless of whether the merits look strong.
Missing the Administrative Review deadline forecloses later appeal stagesRevenue Tribunal — Specialized Tax Appeal Body
If the Administrative Review doesn't resolve the dispute, the matter proceeds to the Revenue Tribunal — a specialized tribunal handling tax appeals outside the ordinary court hierarchy. Each stage has its own filing deadline and procedural requirements.
Specialized tax tribunal — not the ordinary civil court systemSupreme Court of Nepal — Points of Law Only
A further appeal on points of law can reach the Supreme Court of Nepal from the Revenue Tribunal. For a foreign investor facing an assessment, the practical priority at every stage is filing on time and getting the IRD's reasoning on record before assessing further appeal merits with counsel.
Appeal on points of law — not a full rehearing of factsXIII. Worked Example: An IT Subsidiary's First-Year Tax Illustrative Only
⚠ Illustrative only — not a real company. Consult a registered chartered accountant for specific tax advice.
Scenario: Foreign-owned Nepali Pvt. Ltd. providing IT services. Revenue: NPR 50 million in first fiscal year, none export income. Net taxable profit after deductions: NPR 10 million.
- Corporate income tax: 25% standard rate × NPR 10 million = NPR 2.5 million. (If this company exported 75%+ of services, that export-derived income would qualify for the 75% IT export rebate — substantially reducing tax on the export portion. This example assumes fully domestic revenue.)
- Minimum tax floor check: Turnover of NPR 50 million exceeds the NPR 20 million threshold, so the 0.25% minimum (NPR 125,000) applies as a floor — irrelevant here since the standard calculation already produces a higher figure.
- VAT: Services turnover of NPR 50 million is well above the NPR 30 lakh (3 million) services threshold — VAT registration mandatory. VAT is collected from customers and remitted, not an additional cost to the company unless input credits don't fully offset output VAT.
- Dividend repatriation: If the company distributes its full after-tax profit of NPR 7.5 million to the foreign parent as a dividend, a further 5% withholding applies: NPR 375,000 — leaving NPR 7.125 million repatriable.
XIV. Tax Incentives Foreign Investors Actually Use Application Required — Not Automatic
| Incentive | Benefit | Conditions |
|---|---|---|
| Underdeveloped region industries | Full income tax exemption for first 10 years | Industry in designated underdeveloped region — formal certification required |
| Hydropower projects | 100% tax holiday for 10 years from COD; 50% exemption for next 5 years | Commercial generation by specified deadline — see hydropower guide |
| Special Economic Zones (SEZ) | Full exemption first 5 years; 50% exemption next 5 years | Under SEZ Act 2016 — older sources describing a 10-year full exemption predate the current framework |
| Qualifying startups (turnover < NPR 10 crore) | 100% income tax exemption for 5 years from start of operations | Extended for FY 2082/83 under Economic Act 2080/81 — waives income tax only, not PAN, filing, or other compliance |
| IT export rebate | 75% rebate on export-derived income | IT company exporting 75%+ of income — confirmed through FY 2084/85; verify current Finance Act sunset date |
XV. Compliance Calendar FY 2082/83
| Obligation | Frequency | Typical Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Corporate income tax return | Annual | End of Ashoj/Ashwin (mid-October) — confirm IRD circular for any extension |
| Audited financial statements | Annual | Within 6 months of fiscal year end (by mid-January) |
| Advance tax installments | Three times per year | End of Poush, Chaitra, and Ashadh (mid-January, mid-April, mid-July) |
| Withholding tax (TDS) remittance | Monthly | 25th of the following month |
| VAT returns (if registered) | Monthly (some sectors: trimester) | 25th of the following month |
| PAN registration | Once, before commencing taxable activity | Before any taxable transaction |
XVI. Document Checklist Prepare in Advance
XVII. Common Misconceptions Myth vs. Reality
Foreign shareholders pay a higher dividend tax than Nepali shareholders.
The 5% final withholding rate is identical for resident and non-resident shareholders under Income Tax Act §54. There is no surcharge for being a foreign shareholder.
A DTAA automatically reduces my dividend withholding tax.
Dividend withholding is already a flat 5% under domestic law regardless of treaty status in most cases. DTAAs mainly help on interest and royalties — where the domestic rate is 15% — not on dividends.
I only owe Nepali tax if I've incorporated a company here.
Providing services or running a project in Nepal for more than 90 days in a 12-month period can create a taxable permanent establishment with no incorporation at all — and no PAN filing triggers the problem retroactively.
Repatriating PE profits is tax-free since the PE already paid corporate tax.
Profit sent abroad by a PE is treated as a dividend and taxed at an additional 5% branch profit tax — on top of the PE's own corporate income tax. Both apply.
An offshore share sale is automatically outside Nepal's tax reach.
The Ncell case shows Nepali authorities are willing to assert tax jurisdiction over indirect transfers where the underlying value sits in a Nepali asset — even when the legal transaction happens entirely outside Nepal.
The 1.5% contract withholding is a final tax.
It is an advance tax credited against the recipient's actual liability — unlike the 5% dividend or 15% royalty/interest withholding, which are final. Modeling it as a final tax understates effective tax rates.
XVIII. Process Traps That Create Unexpected Tax Exposure Avoid These
Crossing the 90-Day PE Threshold Without Realizing It
A consulting engagement or installation project that runs long — even informally — can create a PE and a Nepali tax filing obligation retroactively. Monitor project duration from day one.
Claiming a DTAA Rate Without a Current Tax Residency Certificate on File
The reduced rate isn't applied automatically. Documentation must be submitted to the IRD in advance of the payment — not after the deposit has already been made at the standard 15% rate.
Assuming SEZ or Sector Incentives Apply Without the Formal Certificate
Several incentives described in government marketing material require a specific eligibility certificate from a ministry or the IRD. Relying on the headline rate without the formal certificate is a common source of later assessment disputes.
Modeling PE Projects Without the Additional 5% Branch Profit Tax
Modeling a project's after-tax economics without the additional 5% on repatriated PE profit understates the real tax burden. Both the corporate tax layer and the branch profit tax layer must appear in the financial model.
Missing the Limitation-on-Benefits Ownership Test
A holding structure based in a treaty country but substantially owned from a non-treaty jurisdiction can be denied treaty benefits under §73(5). Confirm beneficial ownership structure before claiming any reduced treaty rate.
Assuming an Offshore Restructuring Avoids Nepali Capital Gains Tax
The Ncell precedent means an indirect transfer of a Nepali asset's value can still attract Nepali tax scrutiny — even when the legal transaction happens entirely outside Nepal. Take specific legal advice before any offshore exit structure is finalized.
Failing to Withhold and Assuming the Recipient's Liability Covers It
If a Nepali payer fails to withhold, the recipient is still treated as having paid — but the payer becomes personally liable for the unpaid tax, plus interest and penalties under the Income Tax Act.
XIX. Definitions
Frequently Asked Questions Click to Expand
Sources and Primary Legislation
- Government of Nepal. Income Tax Act, 2058 (2002), §§2, 33, 54, 67, 68, 69, 73, 87–92, 95–96. Law Commission, Nepal. lawcommission.gov.np
- Government of Nepal. VAT Act, 2052 (1996) and VAT Rules, 2053 (1996). Law Commission, Nepal. lawcommission.gov.np
- Government of Nepal. Digital Service Tax Act, 2079/80 (2024). Ministry of Finance, Nepal.
- Government of Nepal. Foreign Investment and Technology Transfer Act, 2019 (FITTA 2075 BS). doind.gov.np
- Government of Nepal. Special Economic Zone Act, 2016. Ministry of Industry, Commerce and Supplies.
- Government of Nepal. Annual Finance Act (Finance Act 2081), governing FY 2082/83 rates. Ministry of Finance. mof.gov.np
- Inland Revenue Department. Tax administration, forms, and guidance. ird.gov.np
- Nepal Rastra Bank. Foreign exchange interaction with tax compliance. nrb.org.np
- Nepal's bilateral Double Taxation Avoidance Agreements with India (1987, revised 2011), Norway (1996), Thailand, Sri Lanka, Mauritius, Austria, China, Qatar, South Korea, Pakistan, and Bangladesh (2019). Available at: lawcommission.gov.np
- Supreme Court of Nepal Ncell capital gains dispute — cite specific case number and date once confirmed against primary Supreme Court records. Secondary sources report inconsistently on procedural history and final outcome. Available at: supremecourt.gov.np