IT Company Sale in Belarus
Our clients
Selling an IT Company in Belarus
Selling a Belarusian IT company – particularly one that is a resident of the Hi-Tech Park – is a transaction with specific features that distinguish it from a standard share sale. The HTP residency is a commercially valuable asset that transfers with the company. The buyer acquires not just the legal entity but the tax benefits, the employment regime and the operational infrastructure of an established HTP resident. For foreign founders selling to exit the Belarusian market – or to local buyers who want to acquire an operating IT business – this creates a specific transaction dynamic.
Since 2022, share sales by founders from countries designated as unfriendly by Belarus – EU member states, the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada and others – are subject to restrictions that affect the process and the economics. These restrictions do not make a sale impossible but they require specific structuring and government approval.
AMBY Legal advises sellers of Belarusian IT companies on transaction structuring, regulatory compliance, documentation and closing – in English and Russian, for both local and cross-border transactions.
Why HTP Residency Makes the Sale Different
HTP residency is attached to the legal entity – not to the founder. When the founder sells their participatory interest, the company continues as an HTP resident under new ownership. The buyer inherits all the HTP benefits without going through the application process. This makes an established HTP resident company significantly more attractive to a buyer than a non-HTP company in the same sector.
Key points for the seller to understand: the HTP residency is a negotiating asset – it should be reflected in the valuation. The HTP administration must be notified of the change of ownership after closing. Failure to notify is a compliance violation. And the buyer will conduct due diligence on the company’s HTP compliance – any outstanding compliance issues need to be addressed before signing.
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Restrictions for Sellers from Unfriendly States
For founders from EU member states, the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia and other designated unfriendly states, the sale of a participatory interest in a Belarusian company is subject to restrictions introduced since 2022.
Government commission approval: The transaction requires prior approval from the government commission on foreign investment. The application must be submitted before signing the sale agreement. The commission reviews the transaction and can impose conditions.
State contribution: A contribution of up to 25% of the transaction value must be paid to the Belarusian state budget as a condition of the transaction. This contribution is calculated on the actual transaction price and is paid before or at closing.
Practical implication: These requirements significantly affect the economics of the transaction for sellers from restricted countries. A seller receiving 100 units of consideration effectively receives 75 after the state contribution. The contribution is not negotiable – it is a legal requirement. We advise sellers on the full economics of the transaction before any commitments are made.
For founders from Russia, China, CIS states and other non-restricted countries – no government commission approval and no state contribution are required. The standard share sale procedure applies.
Our services
Government commission application
Seller due diligence preparation
Transaction documentation
HTP notification
Valuation Considerations
Valuing a Belarusian IT company for sale involves several specific considerations. HTP status adds value – an established HTP resident with a clean compliance record commands a premium over a non-HTP company. The client base and contract stability are key value drivers – recurring revenue under multi-year contracts is worth significantly more than project-based revenue. The IP position matters – a company that demonstrably owns its software products is worth more than one where IP ownership is unclear. And the team – key developers and technical staff whose departure would affect the business – needs to be factored into valuation and post-closing arrangements.
For sellers from unfriendly states, the 25% state contribution effectively reduces the net proceeds. This should be factored into the asking price from the outset – not discovered after negotiation has concluded.
Why Clients choose us
HTP expertise
Restriction navigation
Seller protection
Remote handling
English-speaking
FAQ
Yes – but the sale requires prior approval from the government commission and payment of a state contribution of up to 25% of the transaction value. These requirements apply to founders from countries designated as unfriendly by Belarus. We advise on the full process and economics before any commitments are made.
Yes – HTP residency is attached to the legal entity, not the founder. When the participatory interest is sold, the company continues as an HTP resident under new ownership. The HTP administration must be notified of the change of ownership after closing.
The standard warranty package for an IT company sale covers: title to the participatory interest being sold; no undisclosed liabilities; accuracy of financial information provided; validity of key contracts; IP ownership; HTP compliance; employment law compliance; and tax compliance. We negotiate the warranty package to reflect what the seller actually knows – limiting exposure to matters within the seller’s knowledge.
For a straightforward transaction between parties from non-restricted countries – four to eight weeks from term sheet to closing. For transactions involving government commission approval – add six to twelve weeks for the approval process. We advise on the realistic timeline for each specific transaction.
The employment relationships transfer with the company – employees do not need to sign new contracts on a change of ownership. However, key employee retention is often a condition of the transaction. We advise on structuring retention arrangements for key developers and technical staff.
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