
Finding the right IT company in Iraq is not as straightforward as a quick Google search. The market has grown fast, and so has the number of vendors claiming to offer enterprise-grade solutions. The reality is that the quality, reliability, and depth of service vary enormously from one provider to the next.
This guide gives you a clear, practical framework for evaluating IT companies in Iraq, whether you are building out infrastructure for the first time, upgrading aging systems, or looking for a long-term managed IT partner. By the end, you will know exactly what to ask, what to avoid, and what good actually looks like in the Iraqi market.
Quick summary: The best IT companies in Iraq combine certified vendor partnerships, local technical staff, proven industry experience, and responsive support. This guide walks you through how to verify each of these before you sign anything.
Iraq’s ICT market is projected to grow from around $840 million in 2025 to over $1.3 billion by 2031. Government digital transformation programs, new data center infrastructure, and the expansion of cloud services are all driving demand for qualified IT providers. That growth is good news, but it has also brought a flood of new entrants into the market, many of whom lack the technical depth or support infrastructure that enterprise clients need.
At the same time, the cost of getting it wrong is high. A poorly implemented firewall leaves your network exposed. A misconfigured cloud migration can cost weeks of downtime. An IT company that cannot respond quickly when something breaks can bring your operations to a halt. In a business environment that already deals with power instability and connectivity challenges unique to Iraq, you cannot afford to add IT reliability to your list of concerns.
That is why the selection process deserves real attention, not just a price comparison.
Before you evaluate individual companies, it helps to understand the landscape. IT providers in Iraq generally fall into four categories:
| Type | What They Do | Best For | Watch Out For |
| Authorized resellers/integrators | Sell and implement solutions from major vendors (Fortinet, Microsoft, Dell, HPE, Huawei) | Mid-to-large enterprises needing enterprise-grade hardware and software | Check that authorizations are current and direct, not via a distributor chain |
| Managed IT / AMC providers | Ongoing support, monitoring, and maintenance under a service contract | Businesses that want predictable IT costs and proactive support | Vague SLAs, understaffed support teams, slow response times |
| Generalist IT shops | Handle a wide range of tasks with no clear specialization | Small businesses with basic needs | Limited depth; may outsource complex work without telling you |
| Cybersecurity specialists | Focus specifically on security: firewalls, endpoint protection, SOC, compliance | Organizations in regulated sectors (banking, government, oil and gas) | May lack broader IT infrastructure capability |
Most businesses in Iraq need a combination of the first two: a certified integrator that can also provide ongoing managed support. That combination is rarer than vendors claim, so it is worth verifying carefully.
The single most important thing you can verify quickly is whether an IT company in Iraq holds direct, active certifications from the vendors whose products they sell and implement. This is not just a badge. Certified partners receive technical training, direct vendor support, and access to escalation paths that non-certified resellers do not have.
Ask for proof of current certification, not just a logo on their website. Key certifications to look for in the Iraqi market include:
Tip: Ask the vendor directly whether the IT company is a certified partner. Most vendors maintain public partner locators you can check independently.
Iraq has a genuine shortage of certified IT engineers. Some companies compensate by hiring sales staff and outsourcing technical work to third parties when projects arise. This creates problems: longer response times, inconsistent quality, and no one accountable when something goes wrong.
When evaluating an IT company, ask specifically:
A company with three sales people and one part-time technician is not the same as a company with a full engineering team. The difference becomes obvious the first time something breaks at 10 pm.
IT requirements differ significantly by sector. A bank needs to meet the Central Bank of Iraq’s cybersecurity guidelines and handle sensitive financial data with strict access controls. An oil and gas company needs reliable connectivity and backup for remote sites with no stable internet. A hospital needs uptime above almost everything else.
Ask every IT company you evaluate for references or case studies from businesses in your sector if they cannot provide a single example of work done in your industry; that tells you something important.
Good questions to ask:
If your business operates across multiple cities in Iraq, you need an IT partner that can support you in all of them. This sounds obvious, but many IT companies in Iraq are effectively single-city operations. A company headquartered in Baghdad with no Erbil presence will struggle to provide timely on-site support in the Kurdistan Region, and vice versa.
Verify coverage by asking where their engineers are physically located, not just where their offices are listed on their website.
A service-level agreement (SLA) defines how quickly the IT company will respond to and resolve problems. Without a clear SLA, “24/7 support” can mean anything from a dedicated engineer on call to an unanswered WhatsApp message.
A good SLA for an Iraqi enterprise IT partner should specify:
If a company resists putting specific times and commitments in writing, that is a red flag.
IT partnerships often last 3 to 5 years or longer. You need a company that will still be operating and capable of supporting you throughout that period. In Iraq, where the business environment can be unpredictable, this is worth checking.
Signs of a stable, established IT company:
The Iraqi IT market has a well-known problem with lowball quotations that expand dramatically once work begins. A reputable IT company will invest time in understanding your environment before quoting, ask detailed questions, and explain clearly what is and is not included in a proposal.
Be cautious of:
Beyond the positive criteria above, these are specific warning signs that an IT company in Iraq may not be the right fit:
| Red Flag | What It Usually Means |
| Vendor logos on website with no proof of certification | They resell products without direct authorization or training |
| No engineers mentioned by name on their website | Small team or heavy reliance on subcontractors |
| Cannot provide a single client reference in your sector | Limited relevant experience |
| Reluctant to put SLA commitments in writing | They know they cannot meet reasonable targets consistently |
| Support contact is a personal mobile number only | No structured support operation; depends on one person |
| No physical office or warehouse | Low operational stability; may disappear after a project |
| Quotes that do not specify brands or models | Flexibility to substitute inferior products after signing |
When you meet with an IT company in Iraq, bring this list. The quality and specificity of their answers will tell you more than any brochure:
A logistics company in Baghdad was operating on a 7-year-old network with no redundancy and a backup solution that had never been tested. After a power surge damaged two core switches, they lost access to their warehouse management system for three days. Their existing IT vendor took 48 hours to respond.
When they reached out to Osous Al Taqnia, the team conducted a full infrastructure assessment within two days. The assessment identified four single points of failure, an expired firewall license, and a backup configuration that had been silently failing for months. Within three weeks, the team deployed a redundant Huawei core switching layer, replaced the aging Fortinet firewall with a current-generation unit, and reconfigured the Veeam backup environment with daily automated tests and off-site replication to an Azure-based recovery vault.
Twelve months later, the company experienced another power event. Their systems failed over automatically, and operations continued without interruption. That is the difference the right IT partner makes.
If you are evaluating IT companies in Iraq and want to understand what a proper infrastructure assessment involves, our team is happy to walk you through the process. Contact us for a no-obligation consultation.
If you are managing a formal evaluation, here is a straightforward process that works well in the Iraqi market:
| Step | Action | Timeframe |
| 1. Define your requirements | List your current pain points, must-have capabilities, and preferred vendors or technologies | Day 1-2 |
| 2. Build a shortlist of 3-5 companies | Use referrals, vendor partner locators, and online research | Day 3-5 |
| 3. Request a site visit and technical assessment | A serious IT company will do this at no charge | Week 2 |
| 4. Evaluate proposals in detail | Compare scope, brands, SLAs, and total cost of ownership, not just price | Week 3 |
| 5. Check references | Speak directly with at least one existing client per company | Week 3 |
| 6. Verify certifications independently | Check vendor partner portals or contact vendor representatives directly | Week 3 |
| 7. Negotiate the SLA before signing | Do not accept a standard contract without reviewing the support commitments | Week 4 |
Choosing an IT company is not a one-time transaction. The best partnerships develop over time as your provider learns your environment, anticipates your needs, and grows with your business. Here is what a healthy IT partnership looks like in practice:
If you are currently in a relationship where your IT company only shows up when something is broken, you are not getting the value you should be.
To summarize everything in this guide:
The right IT partner in Iraq will not just solve today’s problems. They will help you build infrastructure that supports your business for the next five years and beyond.
Osous Al Taqnia is an authorized partner for Fortinet, Microsoft, Huawei, Dell, HPE, Veeam, and other leading vendors, with certified engineers based across Baghdad, Erbil, and Basra. If you would like to discuss your IT requirements or request an infrastructure assessment, get in touch with our team today.
IT support costs in Iraq vary widely depending on the scope of services, number of users, and complexity of your infrastructure. An annual maintenance contract (AMC) for a 50-user business typically ranges from $3,000 to $15,000 per year. A full managed IT services engagement, including monitoring, help desk, and on-site support, will generally cost more. A reputable IT company will assess your environment before quoting rather than offering a generic price.
Most major vendors maintain a public partner locator. For Microsoft, you can search the Microsoft AI Cloud Partner Program directory. For Fortinet, check the Fortinet Partner Locator. For Huawei, use the Huawei Partner Finder. You can also contact the vendor’s regional office and ask them to confirm a company’s current partner status.
For most businesses in Iraq, a hybrid approach works best: an internal IT coordinator who understands the business, supported by an external IT company for specialist services, infrastructure management, and cybersecurity. Fully in-house IT teams struggle to maintain the breadth of skills needed across networking, cybersecurity, cloud, and hardware. Our guide on managed IT services in Iraq covers this question in more detail.
At minimum, an IT services contract should include a defined scope of work, SLA commitments with specific response and resolution times, escalation procedures, pricing and payment terms, hardware and software ownership terms, data handling and confidentiality clauses, and termination conditions. Avoid contracts that are vague on any of these points.
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