UAE Corporate Tax Guide 2026

Understanding UAE Corporate Tax: What Every Business Must Know

The United Arab Emirates has long been known for its business-friendly environment. With the introduction of Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022, the UAE implemented a federal Corporate Tax (CT) system, aligning the country with global tax standards while maintaining a competitive economy.

Corporate Tax applies to business profits and requires companies to strengthen financial reporting, compliance, and tax planning.

This guide outlines what businesses need to know to remain compliant and financially prepared.

What is UAE Corporate Tax?

Corporate Tax is a direct tax on the net profit of businesses.

It applies to:

  • UAE companies and legal entities
  • Branches of foreign companies
  • Free zone entities
  • Individuals conducting licensed business activities (above thresholds)

The tax applies to financial years starting on or after 1 June 2023.

UAE Corporate Tax Rates

The UAE maintains one of the lowest corporate tax rates globally:

  • 0% on taxable income up to AED 375,000
  • 9% on taxable income above AED 375,000

Qualifying Free Zone Persons (QFZP):

  • 0% on qualifying income
  • 9% on non-qualifying income

This structure supports SMEs while ensuring transparency and fairness.

Who Must Pay Corporate Tax?

Corporate Tax applies to:

UAE-incorporated businesses
Branches of foreign companies
Free zone entities (even if taxed at 0%)
Individuals conducting business with turnover above AED 1 million

Exempt Persons

Certain entities may be exempt, including:

  • Government entities
  • Natural resource extraction businesses
  • Qualifying public benefit organizations
  • Pension & social security funds
  • Qualifying investment funds

Some exemptions require approval from the Federal Tax Authority.

Free Zone Businesses: Key Requirements

Free zone companies are not automatically exempt.

To retain 0% tax benefits, they must:

  • Earn qualifying income
  • Maintain economic substance in the UAE
  • Prepare audited financial statements
  • Limit non-qualifying income

Failure to comply may result in taxation at 9%.

How Corporate Tax is Calculated

Taxable income is derived from:

Accounting profit (IFRS)
→ adjusted as per tax law
→ resulting in taxable income

Adjustments may include:

  • Excluding exempt income
  • Disallowing non-deductible expenses
  • Interest deduction limits
  • Transfer pricing adjustments

Compliance Requirements

To remain compliant, businesses must:

  1. Register for Corporate Tax
    Obtain a Tax Registration Number.
  2. Maintain Records
    Financial records must be kept for at least seven years.
  3. File Annual Returns
    Due within 9 months after the financial year end.
  4. Pay Tax on Time
    Late compliance may result in penalties.

Transfer Pricing & International Compliance

The UAE follows the arm’s-length principle for related-party transactions.

Businesses must:

  • Price transactions at market value
  • Maintain transfer pricing documentation
  • Disclose related-party transactions

This ensures transparency and prevents profit shifting.

Reliefs & Incentives

Businesses may benefit from:

Small Business Relief (revenue below AED 3M, subject to conditions)
Tax loss carry forward (up to 10 years)
Group tax relief options
Participation exemption on dividends & capital gains
Free zone incentives

Strategic Considerations

Businesses should:

review corporate structure
assess free zone eligibility
maintain accurate financial records
ensure transfer pricing compliance
evaluate tax relief opportunities
seek professional advisory support

Final Thoughts

The UAE Corporate Tax regime marks a new era of compliance and transparency. Despite new obligations, the UAE continues to offer one of the most competitive tax environments globally.

Businesses that maintain proper records and plan strategically will remain compliant while continuing to grow with confidence.