A business visa / work‑permit advisory guides foreign investors through Nepal’s FITTA and Labour Act requirements to obtain a व्यापारिक भिसा and Shram Swikriti. Our firm prepares, files and liaises with the Department of Industry, Labour and Immigration so your staff can legally work in Nepal.
Business Visa & Work Permit Advisory in Nepal is the legal service that maps the entire FITTA‑based investment route—from company incorporation and capital‑investment‑fund (CIF) deposit to the issuance of a व्यापारिक भिसा and the Shram Swikriti work permit ensuring compliance with the Department of Industry, Department of Labour and Department of Immigration.
When is Legal Advice Essential for a Business Visa & Work Permit?
- FDI approval pending – If the Department of Industry’s Office of the Secretary (OSSC) has not issued the investment approval, counsel can accelerate the recommendation letter.
- Activity conflicts – When proposed activities appear on the FITTA negative list, a lawyer revises the memorandum to avoid rejection.
- Work‑permit objections – DoLOS often demands proof of local‑worker recruitment; we prepare the newspaper notice and “no‑local‑availability” justification.
- Tax registration missing – Without a PAN/VAT registration from the Inland Revenue Department (IRD), visa issuance stalls; we secure the tax clearance certificate.
- Shareholder disputes – Disagreements on foreign equity can block capital infusion into the CIF; we mediate and draft compliant shareholder agreements.
How to Secure a Business Visa and Work Permit in Nepal
- Confirm FITTA eligibility – Match the proposed activity against the negative list and ensure the investment amount meets the OSSC threshold (≤ NPR 6 billion).
- Incorporate the Nepali company – File incorporation documents with the Office of Company Registrar (Company Act 2063) and obtain the certificate of incorporation.
- Obtain FDI approval – Submit the application to the Department of Industry/OSSC, including the investment approval letter and capital‑infusion plan; receive the visa recommendation letter.
- Open a Capital Investment Fund (CIF) – Deposit foreign capital in an authorized Nepali bank and register the transaction with Nepal Rastra Bank (NRB) or the designated commercial bank.
- Apply for the business visa – Present the recommendation letter to the Nepalese embassy or immigration office to receive a three‑month business/investor visa.
- Publish a local advertisement and file the work permit – Publish a 15‑day newspaper notice showing attempts to hire Nepali staff, then submit the Shram Swikriti application to DoLOS with the DoI recommendation.
- Obtain the employment visa – After DoLOS issues the work permit, the foreign employee applies to the Department of Immigration for the employment visa, completing legal entry.
Key risk: Untranslated documents, delayed CIF registration, or missing newspaper copies each add weeks to the timeline.
What Our Lawyers Deliver
- Pre‑submission audit – We verify that the business activity is not on the FITTA negative list, preventing costly re‑filings.
- Full documentation handling – Preparation and filing of incorporation, FDI, CIF and tax registration paperwork with OCR, DoI and NRB.
- Work‑permit support – Drafting the newspaper notice, compiling the foreign‑hiring justification and addressing DoLOS objections.
foreign investment approval process
company registration in Nepal
Fees, Timelines & Commercial Considerations
- Large‑scale projects – Investments above NPR 6 billion require IBN approval, raising fees and extending timelines.
- Document readiness – Complete, notarized and translated paperwork can reduce processing to 3–6 weeks; missing items often add 2–4 weeks.
- Regulatory review cycles – DoI and DoLOS have internal review periods; peak seasons may lengthen processing.
- Foreign shareholder verification – Identity and tax clearance from abroad affect cost and schedule.
- Tax registration – PAN/VAT registration with IRD must be finalized before visa issuance; delays directly impact the timeline.
We provide a fee estimate after the initial assessment, with billing linked to milestones such as incorporation, FDI approval and work‑permit issuance.
Common Mistakes & Compliance Risks
- Mis‑stating company objectives – Listing activities on the FITTA negative list triggers immediate rejection.
- Skipping the CIF deposit – Undeclared foreign capital attracts penalties from NRB.
- Failure to publish the local advertisement – DoLOS will deny the work permit without proof of recruitment effort.
- Late tax registration – Absence of a Tax Clearance Certificate halts the employment visa.
- Ignoring post‑investment reporting – Annual FDI progress reports to DoI are mandatory; non‑compliance may lead to visa revocation.
- Improper shareholder agreements – Agreements not matching the approved foreign equity percentage can be voided by OCR.
What Clients Receive Upon Completion
- Certified Certificate of Incorporation and share‑register entries.
- Approved Investment Approval Letter and Visa Recommendation Letter from DoI.
- Fully funded Capital Investment Fund account statement.
- Shram Swikriti work‑permit certificate and employment visa.
- Compliance checklist covering tax, reporting and repatriation obligations.

