High Tech Park in Belarus
Our clients
High Tech Park in Belarus: Entry for International IT Enterprises
Belarus has established itself as one of Eastern Europe’s most robust technology hubs, combining a deep talent pool of over 100,000 skilled developers with operational costs approximately 50% lower than comparable markets in the United States and Western Europe. For international companies, this cost efficiency does not come at the expense of quality: Belarusian engineers consistently rank among the top globally for technical proficiency in software architecture, artificial intelligence, and enterprise systems development. When combined with the preferential legal regime of the High Tech Park (HTP), this creates a compelling value proposition for foreign investors seeking scalable, cost-effective, and compliant development capacity.
For foreign investors, obtaining HTP resident status is not merely a tax planning exercise; it is a strategic decision that defines operational efficiency, cost structure, and long-term scalability within the region. Companies operating under this regime benefit from exemptions on VAT, reduced income tax rates, and favourable social security contributions, creating a competitive environment for global tech expansion.
However, securing and maintaining HTP residency requires precise adherence to complex legislative requirements. The admission process involves rigorous validation of business activities, intellectual property structures, and compliance protocols with the HTP Administration in Minsk. Errors in documentation or misclassification of revenue streams can jeopardise resident status and trigger significant financial liabilities. Our firm specialises in guiding international companies through this landscape. We provide end-to-end support for obtaining HTP resident status, ensuring that your development centre or product company leverages all available benefits while maintaining full compliance with Belarusian law and international standards.
Regulatory Compliance and Reporting
Maintaining HTP status demands continuous monitoring of legislative changes and strict reporting discipline. We handle all statutory filings required by the HTP Administration and state authorities. Our compliance specialists ensure that your activities remain within the permitted scope of IT services, preventing status loss due to procedural errors or outdated reporting practices.
Admission and Legal Structuring
We manage the complete lifecycle of HTP residency applications under Decree No. 8. Our legal team analyses your business model to ensure eligibility, prepares the requisite documentation for the HTP Administration, and negotiates the resident contract. We advise on optimal corporate structuring to align intellectual property ownership and revenue flows with HTP requirements, minimising regulatory risk from the outset.
Tax Optimisation and Fiscal Advisory
The HTP regime offers specific fiscal advantages that require expert navigation. We structure your tax affairs to maximise benefits under the Belarusian Tax Code, including VAT exemptions on software exports and reduced corporate profit tax. Our accountants prepare tax returns that withstand scrutiny from the Ministry of Taxes and Duties, ensuring lawful optimisation without exposure to penalties.
Labour Law and Talent Administration
HTP residents operate under a special labour regime that differs from standard Belarusian employment law. We draft employment contracts compliant with HTP regulations, manage visa support for foreign specialists, and administer payroll with correct application of social security exemptions. This ensures your human capital strategy remains flexible, compliant, and cost-effective within the High Tech Park framework.
Industry Directions Supported Within the HTP Ecosystem
FinTech and Blockchain Solutions
Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning
SaaS and Cloud Infrastructure
Gaming and Interactive Entertainment
Enterprise Solutions and Cybersecurity
Cryptocurrency Mining and Digital Assets
Hardware Development and Robotics
Advertising Technology and MarTech Solutions
Advantages for HTP Residents: Key Benefits
Unified 1% Tax Regime for Eligible Activities
0% VAT on Export of IT Services
0% Corporate Profit Tax on Qualified Activities
Reduced Dividend Tax Rates for HTP Residents
Reduced Payroll Taxes
Simplified Employment of Foreign Specialists
Why Clients Rely on Our Expertise?
Team Expertise
Precision Accounting
Compliance Shield
Global Expertise
Regulatory Integrity
Infrastructure Problem Solving
FAQ
The High Tech Park is a government-established special economic zone for IT and technology companies, created by Presidential Decree No. 12 in 2005 and significantly expanded by the Digital Economy Development Decree in 2017. It is not a physical location — the HTP operates as a virtual regime: any registered Belarusian legal entity conducting eligible IT activities can become a resident and access all tax and regulatory benefits regardless of where in Belarus it is physically based. Today the HTP hosts over 1,000 resident companies and employs approximately 65,000 professionals.
HTP residents receive a package of preferential tax treatment that is among the most favorable for IT businesses in the CIS region. Core benefits include: income tax exemption (0% on profits from eligible IT activities), VAT exemption on software sales and IT services, exemption from the innovation fund contribution, and reduced payroll taxes — social security contributions (FSZN) are calculated based on the national average wage rather than the employee’s actual salary, resulting in approximately 50% lower payroll tax costs compared to non-HTP entities. These benefits apply for the duration of HTP residency, subject to annual confirmation of eligible activity.
Any legal entity registered in Belarus — including subsidiaries and representative offices of foreign companies — can apply for HTP residency, provided that its primary business activities fall within the list of eligible IT activities defined by the HTP Regulations. This includes software development, SaaS products, cybersecurity services, data processing, AI and machine learning solutions, gaming, blockchain and digital asset platforms, and a range of other technology disciplines. Sole traders (individual entrepreneurs) do not qualify; residency requires a registered legal entity.
No — to hold HTP residency, a company must be a registered Belarusian legal entity (LLC, JLLC, or other recognized form). A foreign company wishing to access HTP benefits must first establish a subsidiary, joint venture, or other legal structure in Belarus. Spex assists international businesses with the full setup process: company registration, charter and governance documentation, notarization, and submission of the HTP membership application — so that the local entity is operational and compliant from day one.
The list of eligible activities is broad and regularly updated. It currently includes: custom software development and outsourcing, SaaS and cloud product development, mobile application development, cybersecurity tools and services, data analytics and AI/ML systems, digital marketing technology, gaming and interactive entertainment, blockchain infrastructure and digital asset operations (including cryptocurrency mining under a separate regulated framework), e-commerce platforms, and IoT and embedded systems. If your business operates at the intersection of several technology domains, Spex can assess which activities qualify and how to structure your business plan accordingly.
The standard process from document preparation to formal HTP admission typically takes 4 to 8 weeks, depending on the complexity of the business model and the completeness of the submitted application package. Key steps include: legal entity registration (if not yet established), preparation of the business plan in the format required by the HTP administration, submission and review by the HTP Supervisory Board, and issuance of the resident certificate. Spex manages this process end-to-end, including preparation of the business plan — which is the most time-sensitive and technically demanding part of the application.
- The HTP Supervisory Board is the governing body that reviews and approves membership applications. It evaluates each applicant’s business plan, confirms that the proposed activities meet the eligibility criteria, and assesses the anticipated economic contribution of the new resident. The Board meets periodically; applications must be submitted in advance of each session. Spex coordinates submission timing, prepares supporting materials, and where appropriate, provides advisory support ahead of the review to ensure the application is presented as compellingly as possible.
Yes. Maintaining HTP residency requires ongoing compliance with several reporting and operational obligations. Residents must annually confirm that their activities remain within the scope of eligible IT operations, submit financial and activity reports to the HTP administration, maintain minimum staffing thresholds where applicable, and comply with HTP-specific labor and IP regulations. Failure to meet these requirements can result in suspension or revocation of residency — and the retroactive loss of tax benefits. Spex provides resident monitoring, reporting support, and compliance advisory on a retainer basis.
Yes, and the HTP regime includes provisions that simplify the employment of foreign specialists. HTP residents benefit from a streamlined work permit process and, in many cases, can hire non-Belarusian employees without the standard labor market test required of regular Belarusian employers. Salary conditions for foreign staff must meet defined thresholds. Spex’s HR and legal team handles work permit applications, employment contract structuring, and relocation support for international hires placed at HTP-resident companies.
Loss of HTP residency — whether voluntary or as a result of non-compliance — terminates access to all preferential tax treatment from the date of exclusion. Depending on the circumstances, tax authorities may reassess previously filed periods and issue back-tax assessments for income and payroll taxes that would have applied under the standard regime. This makes maintaining residency compliance a commercially critical matter. Spex recommends all resident companies retain ongoing legal and compliance support rather than managing this in-house, particularly during periods of rapid growth or business model change.
The HTP legal framework includes enhanced provisions for intellectual property protection, including favorable treatment of royalty income and software licensing revenue. HTP residents can structure IP ownership within the Belarusian entity to benefit from tax exemptions on royalties received. Spex assists resident companies in drafting IP assignment agreements, licensing structures, and NDA frameworks that align with both HTP regulations and international commercial standards — ensuring that proprietary technology is protected and commercially optimized.
The HTP application process is procedurally straightforward on paper but technically demanding in practice. The business plan must demonstrate eligible activity in precise legal terms, the company structure must be optimized for the resident’s actual operating model, and ongoing compliance must be managed proactively to avoid inadvertent breaches. Spex has guided numerous international IT companies through HTP entry — from initial feasibility assessment and company registration through to application submission and post-admission compliance. Our team combines legal, HR, accounting, and business advisory expertise in a single engagement, which significantly reduces both the time-to-residency and the risk of costly procedural errors.