What is the difference between a contractor and an employee in Mauritania?
In Mauritania, the key distinction is control, integration, and economic dependence. An employee works under the direction of the employer, is integrated into the business, and receives statutory benefits. A contractor operates independently, provides services to multiple clients, bears financial risk, and supplies own equipment. Mauritania courts apply a multi-factor test including: Worker operates as independent business, not integrated into company structure; Worker provides own tools, equipment, and workspace; Worker determines own working methods and schedule; Worker serves multiple clients simultaneously. MaxisHR assesses each engagement against Mauritania's classification criteria before onboarding.
What withholding tax applies to contractor payments in Mauritania?
Contractor payments in Mauritania attract withholding tax of 10% (resident) / 15% (non-resident). The engaging company is responsible for deducting this tax at source and remitting it to National Revenue Authority. Failure to withhold exposes the engaging company to the tax liability plus penalties. MaxisHR handles all withholding tax calculations, deductions, and remittances for every contractor payment processed through our platform.
What happens if a contractor is misclassified as an employee in Mauritania?
Misclassification in Mauritania carries significant liability: Backdated PAYE + statutory contributions + penalties and interest. The engaging company becomes liable for all unpaid employer statutory contributions, backdated PAYE, and may face labour law claims from the worker. MaxisHR's contractor management service includes classification risk assessment for every engagement — protecting your business from misclassification exposure before it arises.
Can I pay contractors in Mauritania in USD instead of MRU?
Foreign currency payments to Mauritania contractors are possible but must comply with local foreign exchange regulations. USD wire transfers are used for international contractors. MaxisHR's payment platform supports both MRU and USD disbursements to Mauritania contractors — with full FX reconciliation and payment records for audit purposes.
Does VAT apply to contractor invoices in Mauritania?
Yes. VAT-registered contractors in Mauritania charge 15–18% (standard rate — verify locally) on their services. The engaging company may be able to reclaim input VAT if also VAT-registered. MaxisHR validates VAT registration status for all contractors and processes VAT-compliant invoices through our platform.
What contracts does MaxisHR use for contractors in Mauritania?
MaxisHR uses locally compliant contractor agreements for Mauritania — including Independent Contractor Agreements, Statements of Work, and Consultancy Agreements. All contracts are drafted under Local Employment Act, Income Tax Act, VAT Act, include withholding tax provisions, IP ownership clauses, confidentiality terms, and clear termination procedures. MaxisHR's Mauritania legal team reviews every contract to ensure compliance with current local law.
How does MaxisHR manage contractor payments in Mauritania?
MaxisHR's contractor payment platform processes MRU payments to Mauritania contractors — handling invoice validation, withholding tax deduction (10% (resident) / 15% (non-resident)), payment disbursement via MRU bank transfer or USD wire transfer, payment records, and monthly remittance to National Revenue Authority. You approve contractor invoices on the MaxisHR dashboard and we handle everything else.