How to Verify a Company in Morocco in 2026: Complete Guide
Everything you need to know to verify the existence, legal status, and financial health of a Moroccan company. Official sources, available documents, and common pitfalls.
Planning to do business with a Moroccan company, invest in Morocco, or simply verify the legitimacy of a commercial partner? Verifying a Moroccan company follows specific rules and relies on official registries that every professional should know.
This guide walks you through how to verify a company in Morocco in 2026: reference sources, available documents, and red flags you cannot afford to miss.
Why Verify a Moroccan Company?
Morocco is Africa's 5th largest economy and a strategic hub connecting Europe, sub-Saharan Africa, and the Middle East. With over 400,000 registered companies and annual trade flows exceeding 1,200 billion dirhams, counterparty verification has become essential for any serious business actor.
The risks of inadequate verification are real: shell companies, sanctioned directors, financial statements not filed for years. The good news: Morocco has a structured commercial registry and accessible official data.
Key Identifiers of a Moroccan Company
Every Moroccan company is identified by several official numbers you should know before starting any verification.
The RC number (Registre de Commerce) is assigned to each company upon incorporation. It is local: a company registered in Casablanca will have a different RC than one in Rabat. It is the first identifier to request.
The ICE (Identifiant Commun de l'Entreprise) is a national 15-digit number, unique to each company. Mandatory on all commercial invoices since 2016, its absence is an immediate red flag.
The Tax Identifier (IF) is the registration number with the General Directorate of Taxes. It must appear on tax documents and invoices.
Documents Available on Moroccan Companies
Official documentation on Moroccan companies is extensive and well-structured. SYNTA-IQ works directly with official registries and relies on a network of local partners who collect, verify and curate this data to ensure you always receive accurate, up-to-date intelligence.
Legal documents: Full legal profile (identity, directors, capital), articles of association, commercial registry certificate, legal event history (amendments, transfers, director changes).
Financial documents: Complete multi-year financial statements (Balance sheet, P&L, operating ratios, cash flow, notes), financial aggregates (revenue, value added, net income), statutory auditor reports.
All documents carry full legal value and are certified by the competent authorities.