TL;DR:
A contractor licence in Nepal is the government‑issued authority that permits a firm to legally execute construction works. Our lawyers conduct the full due‑diligence, prepare and file all required documents, and liaise with the Department of Industry and Labour to secure the licence efficiently.
Construction and contractor licensing in Nepal is a statutory permission issued by the Department of Industry that authorises a company or individual to undertake building projects, both public and private, after satisfying corporate, safety and labour requirements set out in the Company Act 2063, Labour Act 2074 and related regulations.
What does construction and contractor licensing cover in Nepal?
The licence allows the holder to bid for and execute construction contracts, import construction materials, and employ workers under Nepali labour law. It is contingent on an approved industry registration, compliance with occupational safety standards, and proper tax registration with the Inland Revenue Department (IRD).
When is a contractor licence required in Nepal?
- New construction firms that have not yet obtained an industry registration.
- Existing companies expanding into building works without a current licence.
- Foreign investors whose shareholding exceeds the 49 % cap and need formal approval from the Investment Board Nepal.
How to obtain a contractor licence in Nepal
- Pre‑registration due diligence – Verify land titles, shareholder structure and foreign equity limits.
- Company incorporation – Submit the Memorandum and Articles of Association to the Office of Company Registrar (OCR); obtain a tax identification number from the IRD.
- Industry registration – File the incorporation documents, project description and safety plan with the Department of Industry (DoI) to receive an Industry Registration Certificate.
- Labour compliance filing – Register with the Department of Labour (DoLOS) and provide occupational safety policies required by the Labour Act 2074.
- Licence application – Attach the industry certificate, labour registration proof and technical specifications to the DoI licence form.
- Tax and customs clearance – Secure VAT registration and settle import duties with the Department of Customs.
- Final issuance and post‑licence compliance – Receive the contractor licence and maintain periodic reporting to DoI and DoLOS.
[INTERNAL LINK: company registration in Nepal → /corporate/company-registration]
How our lawyers streamline the licensing process
We audit land titles, corporate structures and foreign investment ratios to pre‑empt regulator objections. Our team drafts incorporation and industry registration documents that meet OCR notarisation standards, and we arrange Nepali translations where required. During DoI review, we respond to clarification notices and coordinate any additional engineering reports within statutory deadlines. If the Labour Department raises safety‑policy issues, we prepare amendments and represent you before the Labour Court.
Cost and expected timeline for obtaining a contractor licence
Legal fees depend on corporate complexity, number of foreign shareholders and completeness of documentation. Typical expenses cover incorporation filing, industry registration preparation and licence‑application drafting.
- Timeline: 6–12 weeks from due‑diligence to licence issuance, assuming no extra site inspections.
- Common delays:
- Missing Nepali notarisation (10‑day delay).
- Additional engineering report requested by DoI (up to 4 weeks).
- IRD postponement of PAN/VAT due to incomplete tax forms.
We provide a transparent estimate after the initial review.
Typical pitfalls that delay contractor licence approval
- Incorrect company objective: Listing “general trading” instead of “construction” leads to DoI rejection.
- Incomplete labour filings: Omitted safety policies trigger DoLOS objections and fines.
- Exceeding foreign‑investment caps: Over 49 % foreign equity requires Investment Board Nepal approval.
- Late tax registration: Without a PAN/VAT number, the IRD may block the licence application.
- Failure to update OCR: Shareholding changes must be filed within thirty days; otherwise the licence can be deemed invalid.
Deliverables you receive after we secure your contractor licence
- Fully incorporated company with OCR registration certificate.
- Industry Registration Certificate from the Department of Industry.
- Labour registration confirmation and safety‑policy documentation.
- Completed contractor licence application and all annexures.
- Final contractor licence certificate and a compliance checklist for ongoing reporting obligations.

