Compare taxes and see how much you save moving from UAE to Bahrain
Both the UAE and Bahrain impose zero personal income tax — making them among the world's most attractive jurisdictions for high-earning professionals. The comparison is therefore primarily about cost of living, business environment, banking access, and lifestyle. The UAE (Dubai, Abu Dhabi) offers the larger economy, higher salaries, more international connections, and a mature free zone system — but comes with significantly higher costs: Dubai housing alone can absorb USD 30,000–60,000/year for a family. Bahrain is substantially cheaper (housing 40–50% lower than Dubai), has no VAT (vs UAE's 5%), and offers strong Islamic finance and banking sectors. The UAE's 9% corporate tax (from June 2023) on business profits above AED 375,000 only affects companies, not personal income. For high-earning employees, both jurisdictions offer total tax savings of USD 30,000–80,000/year vs Western Europe or the US — the choice between them depends primarily on career opportunity, cost of living, and lifestyle preference.
Personal Income Tax
5% VAT; corporate tax 9% on profits above AED 375K (businesses only)
Personal Income Tax
No VAT; no capital gains tax; GOSI 1% employee (expats)
At $150,000 income:
That is $1,250/month back in your pocket!
| Income | AE Tax | BH Tax | Savings | 10-Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $80,000 | AED 0 income tax; 5% VAT on consumption (est. AED 7,000–12,000/yr on AED 80K lifestyle spend) | BHD 0 income tax; 0% VAT; GOSI 1% employee = ~$800/yr | Bahrain saves ~$3,000–5,000 on VAT + lower cost of living | $30,000–$50,000 |
| $120,000 | AED 0 income tax; 5% VAT on consumption (est. AED 12,000–18,000/yr on lifestyle spend) | BHD 0 income tax; 0% VAT; GOSI 1% = ~$1,200/yr | Bahrain saves ~$5,000–8,000 on VAT + lower housing costs | $50,000–$80,000 |
| $150,000 | AED 0 income tax; 5% VAT on consumption; Dubai housing: $30,000–50,000/yr | BHD 0 income tax; 0% VAT; Bahrain housing: $18,000–28,000/yr | Bahrain saves ~$15,000 on combined VAT + housing cost differential | $150,000 |
| $200,000 | AED 0 income tax; 5% VAT on consumption; Dubai family housing: $40,000–70,000/yr | BHD 0 income tax; 0% VAT; Bahrain family housing: $22,000–35,000/yr | Bahrain saves ~$20,000+ on housing + VAT vs comparable Dubai lifestyle | $200,000+ |
| $300,000 | AED 0 income tax; 5% VAT; Dubai premium lifestyle: $50,000–90,000/yr in housing + lifestyle | BHD 0 income tax; 0% VAT; comparable Bahrain lifestyle: $25,000–45,000/yr | Both save massively vs Western Europe — Bahrain saves additional $30,000+ on lifestyle costs vs Dubai | $300,000+ |
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Transfer AED ↔ BHD / USD at the Real Rate →Yes. Neither the UAE nor Bahrain imposes personal income tax on employment income, self-employment income, capital gains, dividends, or inheritance for residents. UAE: no personal income tax since its founding; 5% VAT since January 2018; 9% corporate tax on business profits above AED 375,000 since June 2023 (does not affect personal salaries). Bahrain: no personal income tax; no VAT; GOSI contribution of 1% employee + 3% employer for expat workers. Both are among the most tax-efficient personal income jurisdictions in the world. The real tax comparison is therefore about indirect costs — VAT, cost of living, and employer-side contributions.
UAE's corporate tax (9% on business profits above AED 375,000, introduced June 2023) affects companies and business owners — not employees. Salaried workers receive their gross salary with zero income tax deduction and are unaffected. However, freelancers, consultants, and business owners who structure income through UAE companies now need to account for corporate tax on profits above the threshold. Free zone companies (DIFC, ADGM, etc.) may qualify for 0% corporate tax if they maintain 'qualifying income' from international activities under specific conditions. For employees at UAE companies, nothing changed — take-home remains gross salary minus zero tax.
Depends on specialisation. UAE (DIFC/ADGM): largest financial hub in the Middle East, home to Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, HSBC, and virtually every major international bank's MENA headquarters. Scale, deal flow, and compensation are higher. Bahrain: the GCC's Islamic finance capital with deep expertise in sukuk, Islamic banking, and Sharia-compliant structures; also home to major regional banks (Al Baraka, Ithmaar, BBK). For conventional investment banking and asset management: UAE wins on scale and compensation. For Islamic finance specialists, compliance roles, and treasury: Bahrain offers more depth and a lower cost base. Bahrain also hosts the Central Bank of Bahrain and significant fintech regulatory development work.
No — US citizens are taxed on worldwide income regardless of where they live. Living in UAE or Bahrain eliminates local income tax (both zero), but US citizens must still file annual US federal tax returns (Form 1040), FBAR (if foreign accounts > $10,000), and potentially Form 8938 (FATCA). In UAE and Bahrain, the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) can exclude up to $126,500 (2024 amount) from US tax if the foreign earned income test is met. The Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) is less useful in zero-tax jurisdictions since there's no foreign tax to credit. US citizens in the Gulf typically use the FEIE for the exclusion and pay US tax on amounts above the exclusion threshold. Specialist US expat tax preparation is important.
Both are generally stable and safe countries for expats by global and regional standards. UAE: highly stable authoritarian governance, world-class security services, near-zero violent crime, comprehensive infrastructure. The UAE has maintained stability through regional turbulence. Bahrain: broadly stable but experienced political unrest in 2011 (Arab Spring) that was suppressed with Saudi assistance; remains politically tense between the Sunni ruling family and Shia majority. Crime is low. Saudi proximity means Bahrain's security environment is influenced by regional Saudi-Iran dynamics. For most expats' day-to-day lives, both are very safe. For those concerned about longer-term political risk, UAE's governance structure and economic diversification make it more resilient.