Compare taxes and see how much you save moving from Bangladesh to UAE
Bangladeshi nationals form one of the largest expatriate communities in the UAE — second only to Pakistanis among South Asian nationalities, with approximately 700,000–1,000,000 Bangladeshi workers and professionals across Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Sharjah, and other emirates. The remittance corridor from UAE to Bangladesh is one of the most important for the Bangladesh economy, totalling several billion USD annually. From a tax perspective, UAE's zero personal income tax provides Bangladeshi workers with their full gross salary as take-home pay. Bangladesh's income tax system — while relatively moderate (top rate 25% at BDT 4.6M+) — would apply to equivalent income if earned domestically. Bangladeshi nationals working in UAE are generally non-residents of Bangladesh for tax purposes if they spend fewer than 183 days in Bangladesh per year, meaning only Bangladesh-source income (Bangladesh property, Bangladesh business income) is taxable by NBR. A key compliance point: Bangladesh requires overseas citizens to file returns if they have Bangladesh-source income or assets above threshold — and maintaining an NTN (National Tax Number) and filing returns, even with nil income, is advisable to avoid non-filer withholding penalties on Bangladesh transactions. Remittances sent from UAE to Bangladesh via official banking channels are not taxed by NBR and may qualify for the 2.5% government remittance incentive (Pravashiprobashi Kalyan Bank schemes).
NBR Income Tax; Minimum Tax BDT 2,000
Bangladesh National Board of Revenue (NBR) taxes residents at progressive rates 0–25%. Tax-free threshold: BDT 350,000 (men), BDT 400,000 (women/elderly). Minimum tax BDT 2,000 applies to all filers regardless of income level. Provident Fund contributions 5–10% employee (where available). Non-residents taxed at flat 30% on Bangladesh-source income.
No Personal Income Tax; Corporate Tax 9% (from 2023)
UAE has no personal income tax for individuals. Salaries, bonuses, and investment returns are all tax-free. Corporate income tax 9% on profits above AED 375,000 introduced June 2023. No capital gains tax, no inheritance tax, no withholding tax on dividends or interest paid to individuals.
At AED 120,000 ($32,700) / BDT 3,600,000 income:
A Bangladeshi worker earning AED 120,000/year in UAE pays zero UAE income tax. Equivalent Bangladesh income (BDT 3.6M): tax ~BDT 770,000 (~$7,000). Senior professionals earning AED 240,000 would save approximately $15,000–$18,000/year vs Bangladesh equivalent taxation. This does not include the salary uplift from UAE employment (UAE salaries typically 4–8× Bangladesh equivalents for skilled roles).
| Income | BD Tax | AE Tax | Savings | 10-Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AED 72,000 / BDT 2.2M | ~BDT 382,500 Bangladesh (17.4%) | AED 0 UAE (0%) | ~$3,500/year saving | 10-year: ~$35,000 cumulative saving |
| AED 120,000 / BDT 3.6M | ~BDT 770,000 Bangladesh (21.4%) | AED 0 UAE (0%) | ~$7,000/year saving | 10-year: ~$70,000 cumulative |
| AED 240,000 / BDT 7.2M | ~BDT 1,750,000 Bangladesh (24.3%) | AED 0 UAE (0%) | ~$16,000/year saving | 10-year: $160,000 cumulative — substantial |
| AED 480,000 / BDT 14.4M | ~BDT 3,580,000 Bangladesh (24.9%) | AED 0 UAE (0%) | ~$32,500/year saving | 10-year: $325,000 — transformative for high earners |
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Get Paid Across Borders →Bangladeshis working in UAE are generally non-residents of Bangladesh for tax purposes (spending most of the year outside Bangladesh). As non-residents, they owe Bangladesh tax only on Bangladesh-source income: rental income from Bangladesh property, dividends from Bangladesh companies (taxed at 15–20% withholding), and business income from Bangladesh operations. If you have no Bangladesh-source income above the threshold, you may have no filing obligation — but maintaining an NTN (e-TIN) and filing a return (even nil) is advisable. Non-filers face higher withholding tax rates (Tax Deducted at Source) on Bangladesh banking transactions, property registration, vehicle registration, and other activities — which can be significant if you own Bangladesh property or remit through formal channels.
Bangladesh government provides a 2.5% cash incentive on remittances received through official banking channels (banks and authorised money exchange houses). This means: if you send BDT 100,000 from UAE to Bangladesh via bank transfer, the recipient receives BDT 102,500 (the extra 2.5% paid by the government). This incentive applies to all incoming remittances sent through official channels, with no cap. The incentive was designed to encourage formal remittance flows vs informal 'hundi' channels. To qualify: the remittance must come through a registered banking or authorised channel; informal or cash transfers do not qualify. For Bangladeshi workers in UAE, using Wise, bank transfer, or UAE Exchange with a Bangladesh-registered recipient account captures this incentive.