Inside Aqaba ASEZ: The Tax Structure That Makes AI Ops Work in Jordan
By Yousof Almalkawi, Founder
Inside Aqaba ASEZ: The Tax Structure That Makes AI Ops Work in Jordan
When people hear that STEADYWRK is headquartered in Aqaba, Jordan, the first question is always about talent. The second is about infrastructure. Nobody asks about taxes until I tell them the numbers.
Then taxes become the only question.
The Aqaba Special Economic Zone in 200 Words
The Aqaba Special Economic Zone Authority (ASEZA) was established in 2001 to transform Aqaba from a port city into a diversified economic hub. The zone covers the entire Aqaba Governorate — 375 square kilometers — making it one of the largest special economic zones in the Middle East.
For technology companies exporting services outside the zone, the fiscal structure is remarkable:
- 5% corporate tax on profits (compared to 20% standard Jordanian corporate tax and 21% US federal corporate tax)
- 0% sales tax on exported services — and 100% of STEADYWRK's revenue is exported (US enterprise clients)
- 0% customs duty on imported equipment — every server, every monitor, every workstation enters duty-free
- 100% foreign ownership allowed — no local partner requirement
- Free repatriation of capital and profits — no restrictions on moving money out
For an AI company generating revenue from US clients and spending primarily on Jordanian salaries and infrastructure, this means the effective tax burden is a fraction of what it would be in Amman, Dubai, or any US state.
The Math on a 10-Person AI Team
Let us compare three scenarios for a 10-person AI engineering team generating $1.2M in annual revenue:
Scenario A — San Francisco:
- Revenue: $1.2M
- Total comp (10 engineers × $180K avg): $1.8M
- Office (1,500 sqft × $72/sqft): $108K
- Federal + CA state tax (28%+8.84%): ~$260K on profit
- Net: operating at a loss without VC
Scenario B — Amman, Jordan:
- Revenue: $1.2M
- Total comp (10 engineers × $45K avg): $450K
- Office (200 sqm × $15/sqm/mo): $36K
- Jordan corporate tax (20%): ~$143K
- Net: ~$571K retained
Scenario C — Aqaba ASEZ:
- Revenue: $1.2M
- Total comp (10 engineers × $40K avg — Aqaba cost base is ~15% less than Amman): $400K
- Office (200 sqm × $10/sqm/mo): $24K
- Equipment import: $0 customs
- ASEZ corporate tax (5%): ~$38.8K
- Net: ~$737K retained
The difference between Amman and Aqaba is $166K per year on the same revenue. Over 5 years, that is $830K — enough to fund two additional engineering hires or a full office buildout.
How the Exemptions Actually Work
The ASEZ tax regime is not a temporary incentive program. It is structural — built into the Aqaba Special Economic Zone Law (Law No. 32 of 2000, amended). Key points that founders should verify with their legal counsel:
Corporate income tax (5%): Applies to profits generated within the zone. For service-export companies, this covers essentially all revenue since the work is performed in Aqaba. The rate is fixed — not a promotional rate that expires.
Sales tax exemption: Services exported outside the zone are zero-rated. For STEADYWRK, every dispatch to a US client is an exported service. The exemption requires proper invoicing and documentation, but the compliance burden is standard.
Customs exemption: Equipment imported for use within the zone enters duty-free. This covers IT hardware, office furniture, and any equipment used in business operations. The exemption requires ASEZA registration and a declaration that goods will remain within the zone.
Work permits: ASEZA has a streamlined work permit process for foreign employees. Processing times are significantly shorter than mainland Jordan. For a company hiring Jordanian nationals (which is the majority of our target talent pool), no work permits are needed.
Banking: ASEZ-registered companies can open accounts with major Jordanian banks (Arab Bank, Housing Bank, Jordan Islamic Bank) in Aqaba. Foreign currency accounts are permitted. International wire transfers operate under standard Jordanian banking regulations with no additional ASEZ restrictions.
What the Zone Does NOT Offer
Honest reporting requires noting what ASEZ does not provide:
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No income tax exemption for individuals. Employees pay standard Jordanian income tax on their salaries. The 5% rate applies to the company, not to personal income.
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No exemption from social security contributions. Employer and employee social security contributions apply at standard Jordanian rates.
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No exemption from annual audit requirements. ASEZ-registered companies must file annual audited financial statements. The audit requirement increases compliance costs, though mid-tier firms (BDO Jordan, Grant Thornton Jordan) offer competitive rates.
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No exemption from VAT filing. Even though exported services are zero-rated, quarterly VAT filings are required. Filing is procedural, not substantive, for export-only companies — but missing a filing deadline incurs penalties.
Why This Compounds for AI Companies Specifically
AI companies have a unique cost structure that Aqaba's ASEZ amplifies:
High compute cost, low marginal labor cost. The primary variable cost is API calls (Anthropic, OpenAI, cloud compute), not headcount. These costs are the same whether the team is in Aqaba or San Francisco. But the fixed cost (salaries, office, tax) is dramatically lower in Aqaba — which means more of each dollar of revenue converts to margin.
Export-only revenue. AI SaaS revenue from US clients is 100% exported service revenue under ASEZ rules. There is no domestic sales tax component. The tax structure was designed for manufacturing exports, but it works even better for software service exports.
Equipment-light operations. A modern AI company needs laptops, monitors, and internet. The customs exemption on imported equipment — while meaningful — is less impactful than for manufacturing. The real value is the 5% corporate tax and 0% VAT on exports.
Talent arbitrage with quality. Jordanian engineers trained at PSUT, University of Jordan, and JUST are world-class — Princess Sumaya University's CS program consistently produces engineers hired by Google, Amazon, and Meta. The talent quality is not discounted; only the cost of living is.
The Registration Process
For founders considering ASEZ registration:
- Entity: Register a Jordanian LLC under ASEZA (not mainland Ministry of Industry and Trade). This can be a subsidiary of an existing foreign entity.
- Timeline: 4-6 weeks from filing to license issuance.
- Capital: IT/Professional Services license requires a minimum capital deposit (verify current bracket with counsel — historically JOD 10-20K).
- Virtual office: ASEZA Business Center offers virtual addresses (~JOD 1,500/year) for pre-physical-office phase.
- Legal counsel: Engage a Jordan-registered firm with ASEZA experience. Ali Sharif Zu'bi and Khalifeh & Partners are the top-tier options.
The Strategic Positioning
The fiscal argument for Aqaba is compelling on its own. But it compounds with the strategic argument:
There is no other AI-first company headquartered in Aqaba. STEADYWRK is building the narrative — and the infrastructure — for Aqaba as an AI operations hub. First-mover status in a special economic zone with a 5% tax rate and world-class port infrastructure is not a lifestyle choice. It is a competitive moat.
Every AI company in the region defaults to Dubai or Riyadh. The ones that think clearly about unit economics end up in Aqaba.
STEADYWRK is an Anthropic Partner building AI-powered dispatch operations from Aqaba, Jordan. We are hiring across engineering, operations, and design. See all open roles at steadywrk.app/careers. Learn more about our Aqaba office at steadywrk.app/aqaba.