
In Qatar’s highly competitive commercial landscape, winning large-scale contracts is no longer determined solely by the lowest financial bid or technical merit. Whether you are bidding within the energy sector under QatarEnergy’s Tawteen initiative or pursuing major public infrastructure projects, a third critical factor dictates success: your In-Country Value (ICV) score.
The ICV program measures the economic value a company retains inside the State of Qatar. Historically centered around the oil and gas sector, ICV certification has expanded across public procurement frameworks, making it an essential requirement for foreign contractors.
For foreign companies without an established presence in Doha, a low ICV score can reduce their competitiveness during tender evaluations. However, by understanding the ICV framework and implementing targeted strategies, international firms can significantly improve their scores and compete more effectively.
Understanding the Core Components of the ICV Scorecard
The ICV score is determined by a rigorous financial audit of your operations in Qatar over the preceding financial year.
How the Base ICV Score Is Calculated
Your Base ICV Score is determined by comparing your eligible local investments with your total operational costs.
The score takes into account:
- Spending on locally sourced goods and services
- Investment in employee training and workforce development
- Efforts to develop and support local suppliers
- Investment in fixed assets, such as equipment and facilities
These eligible investments are measured against your total operational costs to calculate your overall ICV score.
In simple terms: The more your business spends on local suppliers, workforce development, and local investments relative to its total operating costs, the higher its potential ICV score.
To optimize this ratio, foreign bidders must actively shift expenditures from non-eligible foreign categories into eligible local costs.
4 Strategic Pillars to Optimize Your ICV Score
- Structure Local Procurement Around Certified Vendors
Procurement of goods and services typically forms the largest component of an operational budget. If a foreign bidder imports materials directly from overseas, that specific spend registers as a zero on the ICV scorecard.
- The Strategy: Replace direct imports with local distributors or, where possible, switch to Qatar-based manufacturers. When evaluating subcontractors in Qatar, request their official ICV certificates during your internal vetting phase.
- The Impact: Sourcing from a supplier with an ICV score of 65% injects far more value into your own scorecard than using a non-certified vendor, even if the non-certified vendor is marginally cheaper.
- Localize Human Capital and On-Shore Payroll
Workforce compensation is heavily weighted in the ICV formula. However, the system strictly verifies this data against the Ministry of Labor’s Wage Protection System (WPS) records.
- The Strategy: Personnel mapping must favor in-country execution. For specialized foreign experts brought in for specific project phases, process their payroll through an inside-Qatar corporate vehicle or an approved local Employer of Record (EoR) partner. This anchors the compensation within the local financial system.
- The Impact: Moving personnel from offshore consulting contracts to onshore payroll converts a dead expenditure into a high-scoring local workforce cost.
- Capitalize on the 15% Bonus Scheme
Qatar’s enhanced ICV framework includes a Bonus Scheme that allows suppliers to earn up to 15% additional ICV points by meeting specific strategic business criteria.
Foreign bidders frequently miss these points because they fail to document actions they are already taking. The bonus scheme evaluates seven distinct levers:
- Productivity & Automation (Up to 5%): Rewarded based on digital maturity and automation. Undergoing a verified Smart Industry Readiness Index (SIRI) assessment is the primary requirement to claim this top-tier bonus.
- Capability Building & Training (Up to 5%): Measured by the percentage of your total cost spent on upskilling local talent and expanding the capacity of local suppliers.
- Qatarization (Up to 3%): Points are awarded incrementally as Qatari nationals fill a higher percentage of your white-collar, professional workforce.
- Sustainability, R&D, and Exports (Remaining points): Suppliers can earn these bonus points by obtaining recognized environmental certifications, investing in domestic research and development (R&D), or using Qatar as a regional export hub.
- Leverage Exemptions for Newly Established Firms
Foreign investors often hesitate to bid early in their lifecycle because their local infrastructure is still under construction.
- The Rules: The ICV framework provides a specific safety net here. Companies established in Qatar for less than two years are exempt from mandatory historical audits.
- The Strategy: Newly registered foreign companies can use approved internal management accounts (for operations spanning 9 to 15 months) or initial audited statements to obtain a provisional certificate. This allows startups and new market entrants to bid on equal footing with legacy suppliers.
Blueprint for an Audit-Ready ICV Submission
Achieving a high score on paper is meaningless if it fails to pass scrutiny during the official verification process. Because the calculation is a historical financial review, data fragmentation is the leading cause of point depreciation.
To ensure a seamless, successful audit, execute the following steps:
- Segregate Ledgers Early: Maintain distinct, localized accounting ledgers for Qatari operations. Do not bundle corporate overheads from headquarters into the local entity’s cost tracking sheet.
- Maintain Ledger-to-Invoice Chains: Every local cost claimed must have an unbroken paper trail consisting of a localized purchase order, a compliant invoice showing the vendor’s Commercial Registration (CR), and a bank transfer receipt.
- Cross-Reference with Portal Requirements: Ensure your asset register clearly distinguishes fixed assets located in Qatar from leased assets and equipment located overseas.
Navigating the Commercial Balance
Optimizing an ICV score is a balancing act. In commercial evaluations, your final positioning is usually a combined metric reflecting both your financial bid price and your certified ICV percentage.
$$\text{Total Evaluation Score} = \text{Financial Competitiveness} + \text{ICV Weighted Advantage}$$
A higher ICV score can strengthen your position during tender evaluations, even when competing against bids with slightly lower prices. By embedding ICV optimization directly into your early procurement, recruitment, and asset strategies, you establish a resilient commercial position within the Qatari economy.
Accelerate Your Growth in Qatar with QShield
Navigating the complexities of Qatar’s localization initiatives requires deep structural expertise. As Qatar’s leading corporate compliance partner, QShield provides the strategic workforce solutions, corporate structuring, and government liaison expertise required to maximize your local footprint. From onboarding local talent compliantly through tailored Employer of Record (EoR) models to ensuring your corporate documentation satisfies stringent ministerial standards, we pave a clear path for international bidders.
Strengthening your ICV performance starts with the right strategy. QShield helps businesses optimize local procurement and improve compliance for future tenders. Speak with our experts to develop an ICV-focused roadmap tailored to your business.
