Morocco just cracked open its foreign exchange regulations, and the changes actually matter this time. IGOC 2026 isn't eliminating exchange controls—let's be clear about that—but it's recalibrating thresholds and simplifying procedures in ways that should make life easier for foreign investors and tech companies trying to operate like it's actually 2026.
IGOC 2026 recalibrates thresholds and ditches bureaucratic friction without pretending Morocco just abolished exchange controls entirely.
Tech startups certified by Morocco's Agence de Développement du Digital can now make outbound investments up to MAD 10 million (roughly $1.1 million USD) per transaction. That's significant. Previous regulations severely restricted or straight-up prohibited outbound investments by Moroccan tech companies. Certified companies can now acquire foreign assets, establish foreign subsidiaries, or jump into international joint ventures without begging the Office des Changes for case-by-case authorization.
Foreign investors who've stuck around for ten years or longer get something valuable: they can transfer investment income abroad up to MAD 2 million annually without proving their original capital contribution came from foreign currency. The old framework demanded proof that initial investments went through authorized banking channels properly. Try finding those documents from a decade ago. Good luck. That documentation burden is gone.
Professional travel allowances doubled from MAD 500,000 to MAD 1,000,000 annually for companies without foreign currency accounts. Moroccan subsidiaries of foreign groups regularly sending employees abroad for conferences, training, or business development just got more breathing room. Documentation requirements haven't changed—companies still need travel justifications and supporting invoices—but the higher threshold helps.
Cross-border M&A structuring got clearer too. Moroccan residents can now grant guarantees covering assets and liabilities to non-resident buyers in acquisition agreements. Previous ambiguity complicated deal structuring unnecessarily. Representations and warranties insurance policies from non-resident insurers can be paid directly in foreign currency by Moroccan acquiring entities, though prior authorization from the Office des Changes is still required.
Everything still runs through authorized intermediaries, typically Moroccan banks licensed for foreign exchange operations. The oversight mechanisms remain. Bank Al-Maghrib continues its intervention strategies in foreign exchange markets to manage the dirham exchange rate and maintain stability within Morocco's evolving regulatory framework. Similar to how Egypt's Central Bank manages its market through regulatory responsibilities and intervention mechanisms, Morocco maintains active oversight of currency flows. For context, regulatory bodies like the Financial Services Authority of Seychelles oversee forex brokers and trading activities in other jurisdictions, demonstrating the global importance of forex market supervision. But IGOC 2026 represents measured liberalization that acknowledges reality: businesses need flexibility to compete internationally.