Effective January 1, 2026, sweeping amendments approved by Russian Government Resolution No. 1949 will fundamentally alter the landscape of state accreditation for the IT sector. The new rules tighten requirements for market participants and introduce new mandatory conditions, including significant investments in education. These changes directly impact companies' ability to obtain and maintain preferential status.
Key Changes in Accreditation Criteria
The main adjustments are aimed at strengthening control over shareholder composition, financial discipline, and operational transparency. To obtain accreditation, companies will now be required to comply with the following new conditions:
New Requirement
Essence of the Change
What This Means for the Company
Shareholder Composition
Limitation on the aggregate share of foreign entities and state-sector companies.
An audit of the ownership structure is required, along with potential restructuring for compliance.
Financial Condition
Absence of a negative balance on the Unified Tax Account (UTA) exceeding 3,000 rubles.
A critical requirement. Constant monitoring of settlements with the budget is necessary.
Information Disclosure
Obligation to disclose additional information, including details on ultimate beneficial owners.
Increased transparency. Companies must be prepared to provide a complete set of documents.
Corporate Website
Compliance with new requirements of the Ministry of Digital Development Order No. 511 (e.g., publication of software pricing).
Technical refinement of the company's website becomes a mandatory condition.
Document Flow
Obligation to provide documents even if they were not obtained through interagency requests.
Responsibility for collecting and providing a complete package of documents rests with the applicant.
Educational Agreements: A New Mandatory Condition
The most significant innovation for already accredited companies meeting a number of criteria (e.g., share of revenue from IT activities) is the obligation to conclude educational agreements.
Financial support for the agreement amounts to no less than 3% of the funds saved on IT tax benefits, but is calculated for the year before last (for an agreement in 2026, the base year will be 2024). The specific minimum amount for each company will be set by the Russian Ministry of Digital Development. This transforms benefits from a cost-saving tool into an instrument for investing in industry education.
New Grounds for Accreditation Revocation
The amendments significantly expand the list of risks. Accreditation can now be revoked, among other reasons, for:
Failure to conclude an educational agreement within the established timeframe.
Exceeding the 50% participation share of state-sector companies.
Failure to provide a certificate confirming the absence of a negative UTA balance or an unexpunged/unreversed criminal record of the executive.
Refusal by a large company to disclose required information.
Failure to provide necessary documents during the accreditation confirmation process.
Preparation Recommendations from Acsour
To minimize risks and ensure the continuity of the preferential regime, Acsour recommends:
Immediately initiate a comprehensive audit for compliance with all new criteria, especially the ownership structure and financial condition (UTA).
Calculate the potential scope of obligations under the educational agreement based on 2024 data and begin searching for a partner among educational institutions.
Review and refine the corporate website in accordance with the Ministry of Digital Development Order No. 511.
Establish internal processes for regular monitoring of the UTA balance and preparing a complete document package for the Ministry of Digital Development.
Adapting to the new rules requires deep knowledge of corporate, tax law, and the specifics of IT industry regulation, Acsour offers professional support at all stages:
Legal Audit and Consulting: analysis of the company's structure and documents for compliance with new requirements, assistance with restructuring if necessary.
Tax Consulting: monitoring of budget settlements to comply with the UTA limit, consultations within the preferential regime.
Project Support: assistance in preparing a complete document package for accreditation/confirmation, including interaction with the Ministry of Digital Development.
Submit a request, and our experts will help you build a step-by-step compliance plan for the new accreditation requirements.