Top 10 IT Companies in Oman to Work With in 2026

May 3, 2026
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top it companies in oman

Top 10 IT Companies in Oman to Work With in 2026

A note on this list

This article is published by Masirat Technology, an Oman-based software development and digital marketing company. We are including ourselves on this list because we believe we belong on it, and we are being open about the publisher relationship so you can decide for yourself whether the inclusion is fair.

Every company on this list is reviewed against the same six criteria, which are listed in the next section. We have linked to each company’s official website so you can verify our descriptions and shortlist independently of this article.

If you are choosing an IT company in Oman for your business, treat this list as a starting point, not a final answer. Talk to two or three companies, ask for case studies in your industry, and pick the one that fits your project and budget.

Most “top IT companies in Oman” lists you find online are paid placements, generic copy-paste posts, or five years out of date. The companies that actually work for an Omani SME today are not always the same names that ranked in 2019. Many founders we speak with end up shortlisting the wrong vendor because they trust an outdated blog or a directory that just sells slots.

This guide is for the people doing the actual shortlisting. Business owners, operations heads, founders, and IT managers who need to pick a software, web, or app development partner in Oman in the next few weeks. We cover ten companies, the criteria we used to evaluate them, and a short framework for choosing the right fit. As mentioned in the disclosure above, this article is published by Masirat Technology and we are included at the top of the list. Where it matters, we say so plainly.

How we evaluated these companies

An IT company looks impressive on a homepage. The real question is whether it can ship work that suits your industry, support you for the next five years, and pick up the phone when something breaks. We used six criteria to assess each company, and each one matters for a different reason.

Local Oman presence

Does the company have a physical office in Muscat or another Omani city, with a local team you can meet in person? Remote-only vendors can do good work, but for most local businesses, having someone you can sit across a table with cuts down on miscommunication and speeds up project delivery.

Service depth and specialization

Most IT companies list every service possible on their homepage. The honest question is what they actually do well. A company with three deep specializations will usually deliver better work than one that claims to do thirty things equally.

Product or industry focus

Has the company built and shipped its own software product, or does it focus on a clear industry vertical? Companies with their own products tend to have stronger engineering culture and more resilient business models than pure service shops. They have to live with their own code.

Client base and case studies

How many clients have they served, and is there public proof of work? Case studies, named clients, app store listings, or live websites are all useful. Vague claims like “hundreds of satisfied customers” without names are less reassuring.

Team structure

Does the company have an in-house engineering team, or does it outsource most work to freelancers and offshore agencies? Both models can work, but in-house teams tend to deliver more consistent quality and stick around for support.

Support and after-sales

Software is a long-term commitment. The company that builds your platform should be the one fixing it two years later. Look for clear support terms, response time commitments, and language coverage that matches your team. In Oman, Arabic-friendly support is a real advantage for many businesses.

The top 10 IT companies in Oman in 2026

1. Masirat Technology

Masirat Technology is a Muttrah, Muscat-based software development and digital marketing company serving Omani SMEs across pharmacy, retail, real estate, healthcare, and hospitality. Its work spans custom software development, web development, mobile apps, e-commerce, and SEO, all delivered by an in-house local team.

Strengths

  • Builds and ships its own flagship product, Pharmasolo, our pharmacy management software, which is in active use at independent pharmacies across the country.
  • Has rapidly grown to serve more than 50 Omani business clients across multiple industries.
  • In-house Muscat team with Arabic-friendly support, which makes day-to-day communication and after-sales support easier for local businesses.

Best for: Omani SMEs and independent pharmacies looking for a local software partner with a real product portfolio, in-language support, and an in-house team that stays available after launch.

Website: masirat.com

2. Lumitech

Lumitech positions itself as a product and platform partner rather than a generic services agency. The company runs custom software, web platform, mobile app, and AI and data projects, and has built dedicated landing pages for verticals like LegalTech, fintech, and hospitality. Their messaging closely aligns with Oman Vision 2040 and they appear in the Knowledge Oasis Muscat ecosystem.

Strengths

  • Strong industry-specific positioning with separate offerings for legal tech, fintech, and hospitality clients, which is unusual for the local market.
  • Treats engagements as long-term product partnerships rather than one-off project handoffs.
  • Visible alignment with Oman’s national digital strategy, which can matter for projects involving public-sector tendering.

Best for: Businesses needing industry-specialized software with a long-term product roadmap, especially in legal, financial, and hospitality sectors. Note that Lumitech is not Oman-headquartered, but it has clearly invested in serving the local market.

Website: lumitech.co

3. Totally Tech

Founded in 2009, Totally Tech is one of the more established Omani IT firms still actively shipping work. Their service mix covers software, web, mobile, AI, and cloud, and they have an interesting healthcare angle: their Hospogage product is now integrated with the national Dhamani health platform.

Strengths

  • 17 years in the Oman market, which gives them institutional knowledge most newer agencies do not have.
  • Healthcare specialization through Hospogage and Dhamani platform integration, useful for clinics and hospitals navigating Oman’s health insurance ecosystem.
  • Broad service mix that lets them handle full-stack engagements without subcontracting.

Best for: Healthcare-related software needs and businesses wanting an established local vendor with a long track record and platform integrations already in place.

Website: totallytech.co

4. Ozone United

Ozone United is a Muscat-based software and mobile app company with one of the strongest vertical product portfolios in the country. Instead of pitching custom development for every client, they have built ready-to-deploy products for several niche verticals, which can dramatically cut delivery time for the right buyer.

Strengths

  • Pre-built ERP and HRMS products, plus dedicated systems for school management, mall management, insurance brokers, and document management.
  • Productized approach means faster deployment and lower total cost than starting from scratch.
  • Local presence in Muscat with a focus on operational businesses rather than glossy marketing-led work.

Best for: Schools, malls, insurance brokers, and other vertical businesses that need a working system in weeks, not months, and prefer configuring an existing product over building one from zero.

Website: ozoneunited.com

5. CSL Oman

CSL Oman is a multi-service local provider with visibility across both software development and web development categories in the Omani market. They sit in the comfortable middle of the market: not the cheapest option, not the most specialized, but a credible choice for businesses that want one vendor for several different needs.

Strengths

  • Local Oman presence with steady visibility in directory listings and category-level rankings.
  • Works across both web development and software development, which suits businesses bundling multiple projects.
  • Established operations rather than a brand-new entrant, which reduces vendor risk for cautious buyers.

Best for: Businesses wanting a single multi-service local provider for combined web and software needs, especially when the project scope is broad rather than deeply specialized.

Website: csloman.com

6. Rawat Al Makan

Rawat Al Makan is a local Omani IT company offering ERP systems, business process automation, custom software, mobile apps, and web design. Their site shows a clear push around React Native mobile development, with dedicated landing pages for the framework rather than generic “we build apps” copy.

Strengths

  • Clear specialization in React Native mobile app development, which matters if you want a single codebase across iOS and Android.
  • Broad service mix covering ERP, automation, and web work alongside apps.
  • Active local Oman presence with a visible content marketing footprint.

Best for: Businesses needing React Native mobile apps, ERP systems, or process automation, especially when the same vendor will handle multiple workstreams.

Website: rawatmakan.com

7. Velocity Infotech (Velocity Oman)

Velocity Infotech SPC is a Ruwi-based software company focused on business automation for Omani SMEs. Rather than pitching from-scratch development, they specialize in deploying and supporting trusted retail and hospitality platforms, including TallyPrime, Busy, AlignBooks, animoRetail POS, menew Restaurant POS, and the TOSSKEY hotel PMS.

Strengths

  • Authorized partner for established hospitality and retail products, so clients get proven software backed by local support.
  • Vertical strength in restaurants, hotels, retail, salons, laundry, and auto garages, with a dedicated solution for each.
  • Clear focus on accounting, inventory, and POS rather than spreading thin across many service areas.

Best for: Restaurants, hotels, retailers, and small businesses that want a packaged, well-supported POS or accounting solution rather than custom development.

Website: velocityoman.com

8. Mazoon Soft

Mazoon Soft is a Muscat-based design and software firm with more than ten years of work across Oman, the UAE, and the wider Gulf. Their site is bilingual but Arabic-first, and they ship a remarkably broad in-house product line covering car rental, lawyer office management, real estate, garage management, school management, e-invoicing, HR, and several other verticals.

Strengths

  • Strong Arabic-language product and support, which is unusual in the Omani software market and a real advantage for Arabic-speaking business owners.
  • One of the widest vertical product portfolios on this list, covering more than 20 industry-specific systems.
  • Active client base across Oman, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, and Egypt, suggesting the products travel well across the GCC.

Best for: Arabic-first businesses across Oman and the GCC that want pre-built vertical software, especially in real estate, legal, automotive, and education.

Website: mazoonsoft.com

9. Codevative

Codevative is a software and product engineering firm with a presence in Oman and a track record of building complex digital products for large enterprises. Their public case studies include the National Bank of Oman mobile app, Oman Oil, Daleel Petroleum’s HR app, the Pinch tourism app, and the Kalhat cleaning app, alongside international work for The Body Shop.

Strengths

  • Strong enterprise-grade case studies, especially in banking, oil and gas, and consumer apps.
  • Full coverage of design, web, mobile, cloud engineering, and AI services rather than just one slice of the stack.
  • Long product engineering history and a mature partner network with cloud and platform vendors.

Best for: Larger Omani enterprises and well-funded startups that need a polished mobile or web product and have the budget for a full product engineering engagement.

Website: codevative.com

10. Informatics for Technology

Informatics for Technology, based at Centre Point in Ruwi, Muscat, is a long-running IT and software company serving Omani businesses since the early 2000s, with an additional office in Cairo. Their work spans ERP, e-commerce, custom software, and managed IT services, with a focus on configurable products that can be tailored to changing business scenarios.

Strengths

  • More than two decades of operations in the Omani market, which is rare among local IT firms.
  • Combined offering of managed IT services, ERP, and digital marketing, useful for businesses that want a single vendor across operations and software.
  • Public client testimonials covering ERP rollouts, e-commerce builds, and ongoing technical support.

Best for: Mid-market businesses preferring vendors with long track records and bundled IT services, especially those needing both ERP and ongoing managed support.

Website: informaticstec.com

How to choose the right IT company for your business

Reading a list is easy. Picking the right partner is harder. Here are five practical points that come up again and again when we help clients shortlist vendors.

Define the project scope before you talk to vendors

Walk in with a one-page brief covering the problem, the users, the must-have features, and the rough timeline. Vendors who get a clear scope respond with clear proposals. Vendors who get a vague request respond with vague pricing, and you end up comparing apples and oranges. If the scope is unclear in your head, that is a problem to solve before you start vendor calls. Our guide on how to choose a software development company in Oman covers this in more depth.

Ask for case studies in your industry

A vendor that has built three pharmacy systems will deliver a better pharmacy system than one that has built thirty random projects. Ask for two or three case studies in your sector, then call one of the listed clients if you can. Five minutes on the phone with a past client tells you more than a polished pitch deck.

Check support and after-sales terms in writing

The first version of the software is rarely the last. Ask exactly what happens after launch. Who fixes bugs? What is the response time? How much does an extra feature cost six months later? If the answers are vague, you are signing up for friction. Insist on a written support agreement before the project starts, not after.

Verify local presence

If a company claims to have a Muscat office, visit it. If they say they have a local team, ask to meet two or three engineers. Some vendors front a sales presence in Oman while delivery happens entirely overseas. That can still work, but you should know it going in. The same applies to SEO and digital marketing work, where local context matters as much as technical skill.

Get a written proposal with milestones

A serious vendor produces a written proposal with phases, deliverables, milestones, and pricing tied to each milestone. A handshake quote on WhatsApp is not a proposal. The act of writing things down forces both sides to be specific, and it gives you a reference if expectations drift later.

Frequently asked questions

What is the best IT company in Oman in 2026?

It depends on what you are building. A pharmacy looking for a ready-to-use management system has a different best vendor than a bank rebuilding its mobile app. Use the six criteria above (local presence, service depth, product or industry focus, client base, team structure, and support) to filter the shortlist for your specific project. The “best” vendor is the one that scores well on the criteria that matter most for your situation.

How much do IT services cost in Oman?

Costs vary widely. A simple WordPress website can run from OMR 300 to OMR 1,500. A custom mobile app typically starts around OMR 5,000 and goes up significantly based on features, integrations, and design quality. ERP and large custom platforms can run from OMR 10,000 into six figures. The main cost drivers are scope, integration complexity, design polish, and ongoing support. For a more accurate figure, share a one-page brief with two or three vendors and compare their custom software development proposals.

Are there Omani-owned IT companies, or are they mostly foreign?

The market is mixed. Several strong Omani-headquartered companies are listed above, including Masirat Technology, Totally Tech, Ozone United, Velocity Infotech, Mazoon Soft, and Informatics for Technology. Other firms operate in Oman with foreign or regional headquarters but invest seriously in the local market. Both models can deliver good work. The right question is not where the company is registered, but who actually shows up to your meetings and supports your software two years from now.

Which IT companies in Oman build their own software products?

This is one of the most useful filters when shortlisting. Companies that ship their own products tend to have deeper engineering culture than pure service shops. From this list, Masirat Technology runs Pharmasolo for independent pharmacies, Ozone United has a strong vertical ERP and HRMS portfolio, Totally Tech runs Hospogage in healthcare, Mazoon Soft maintains a wide Arabic-language product line, and Velocity Infotech ships and supports several hospitality and retail platforms.

How do I choose between an Omani IT company and a foreign vendor with an Oman office?

Three factors usually decide it: response time, cultural fit, and long-term support. A local company can typically meet you in person within a day, understands the local business culture, and is more likely to be available in Arabic if your team needs it. A foreign vendor with an Oman office may bring more specialized engineering talent or sector experience, but you may be talking to a sales lead in Muscat and a delivery team in another country. For most local SMEs, the local-first option wins. For complex enterprise projects with niche tech requirements, the foreign vendor can sometimes be the right call.

What questions should I ask an IT company before hiring them?

Six questions are usually enough to separate the serious vendors from the rest:

  • Can you show me two case studies in my industry, with named clients?
  • Who exactly will be on my project team, and where are they based?
  • What is your written support and bug-fix policy after launch?
  • How do you handle scope changes during the project?
  • Can I speak to a past client directly?
  • What is the total cost of ownership for the next three years, not just the build?

If a vendor cannot answer any of these clearly, that is itself a useful signal.

Final thoughts

Choosing an IT company in Oman is less about finding the “best” name and more about finding the right fit for your project, your industry, and your timeline. Use this list as a shortlist generator, not a verdict. Talk to two or three companies, run them through the six criteria above, and check at least one reference before you sign anything.

If you are looking for a Muscat-based partner with an in-house team, an Arabic-friendly support process, and a real product portfolio, we would be glad to talk. Visit our custom software development page or get in touch directly to discuss your project.

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