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Panama Passes Law Imposing Stricter Requirements on Multinational Firms

PANAMA CITY, May 27 (Reuters) – Panama’s ⁠National ⁠Assembly approved a law ⁠that requires multinational entities domiciled in the ​country to demonstrate real local operations or face a 15% tax ‌on passive foreign income, ‌the Ministry of Economy and Finance said on ⁠Wednesday.

• The ⁠law is intended to help satisfy European Union tax ​transparency requirements and support the country’s removal from EU monitoring lists.

• “At the fiscal level, it requires multinationals to demonstrate that ​they have physical operations and real activity in a country, ⁠beyond ⁠just seeking tax advantage,” ⁠the ​ministry said.

• Entities that fail to prove economic substance — qualified ​personnel, adequate facilities, ⁠strategic decision-making and real operating expenses in Panama — face a flat 15% rate on net taxable passive foreign income.

• Passive income covered by the law includes dividends, interest, ⁠royalties, capital gains and real estate income earned abroad by ⁠members of multinational groups.

• The legislation, which President Jose Raul Mulino must sign into law, takes effect from fiscal year 2027 and gives the executive branch 90 days to issue implementing regulations.

• The law grants special treatment for income from intangible assets developed in Panama, such as patents, trademarks and copyrights, ⁠to encourage innovation.

• The merchant marine sector and financial entities supervised by the banking, securities and insurance regulators are expressly excluded from the regime.

(Reporting by Elida ​Moreno; Writing by Brendan O’Boyle; Editing by Daina ​Beth Solomon and Edwina Gibbs)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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