⚡ Key Takeaways

Algeria’s e-commerce market is estimated at $7 billion growing 25% annually, and the legal framework has shifted from grey-zone to regulated. The auto-entrepreneur regime via anae.dz cuts tax to 0.5% of turnover (from 5-12%), while Law 18-05 enforcement now gates payment-gateway access and marketplace seller status.

Bottom Line: Algerian e-commerce founders and freelancers should file auto-entrepreneur status on anae.dz in 2026 to lock in the 0.5% IFU rate and clear commercial register compliance before further legislative tightening raises the cost of staying informal.

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🧭 Decision Radar

Relevance for Algeria
High

The shift from grey-zone to regulated e-commerce directly affects tens of thousands of Algerian merchants, freelancers, and fintechs, and reshapes competitive dynamics across marketplaces.
Action Timeline
Immediate

Auto-entrepreneur registration, commercial register filing, and payment gateway onboarding decisions made in 2026 determine whether a seller captures 2027-2028 market growth.
Key Stakeholders
E-commerce founders, freelancers, marketplace operators,
Decision Type
Tactical

This is an execution decision about registration, compliance posture, and gateway onboarding — the strategic question (sell online or not) has already been answered by the market.
Priority Level
High

Operating informally now carries rising costs (blocked gateways, blocked tax benefits, blocked marketplace access) that did not exist in 2023.

Quick Take: Algerian e-commerce founders and freelancers should file auto-entrepreneur status on anae.dz immediately to lock in the 0.5% IFU rate, complete commercial register registration, and onboard with CIB/Edahabia online acquiring before upcoming legislation tightens verification further. Marketplace operators should strengthen seller KYC now rather than scramble when the updated law ships.

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