Investing in Morocco

Public Procurement in Morocco

Public procurement in Morocco can be a significant opportunity for foreign companies in infrastructure, technology, engineering, healthcare, energy and services. Success depends on careful review of tender documents, eligibility, guarantees, local partner roles and contract execution risks.

Who this is for: For foreign bidders, consortium leaders, subcontractors and suppliers responding to Moroccan public tenders.

Legal support for public procurement in Morocco: tender review, consortium agreements, bid compliance, public contracts and dispute prevention.

Reviewing tender risk before submission

We review tender documents, bid requirements, consortium or subcontracting structures, signatures, powers, guarantees, tax and social documentation, price conditions, penalties, dispute clauses and execution obligations before a company submits its bid.

Practical legal work

Our work is designed to move the project from intention to execution: choosing the right vehicle, preparing corporate documents, aligning tax and regulatory points, coordinating with local stakeholders, and keeping the investor informed before each filing or commitment.

Risk points for foreign investors

Foreign investors often underestimate timing, local formalities, banking requirements, proof of powers, tax identification, foreign exchange rules, public authority interfaces and the way a contract will be enforced in practice. We treat these questions early so they do not become expensive delays.

How Nerra Law Firm supports you

Nerra Law Firm combines business law, tax coordination and Morocco market-entry experience. The objective is not only to answer a legal question, but to give investors a reliable operating path in Morocco, with documents, negotiations and compliance points handled in a coherent way.

Frequently asked questions

Can a foreign investor appoint Nerra Law Firm for public procurement in Morocco before travelling?

Yes. Many steps can be prepared remotely, including document review, powers, incorporation planning, contract negotiation and regulatory checks. Certain filings or bank procedures may still require original documents or local coordination.

Is Morocco suitable for an international investment structure?

Morocco can be an attractive platform for Africa, Europe and the Middle East, but the structure must be aligned with Moroccan company law, tax rules, foreign exchange considerations and the commercial purpose of the project.

When should legal counsel be involved?

Ideally before signing a letter of intent, lease, shareholder agreement, purchase order, tender file or local partnership document. Early review usually costs less than correcting an unsuitable structure.

Discuss your Morocco project

We can review your structure, contracts, tax exposure and market-entry priorities before the first commitments are made.