Last Updated: 2026-04-06
The United Arab Emirates introduced its first federal corporate tax in June 2023—a 9% rate on taxable profits exceeding AED 375,000 (~$102,000). However, companies in designated free zones can potentially pay 0% corporate tax if they meet specific criteria, creating a significant tax advantage for qualifying businesses. This raises the key question for entrepreneurs setting up in the UAE: should you establish a free zone company (e.g., DMCC in Dubai, ADGM in Abu Dhabi, RAK FTZ) or a mainland company (DED/DET license)? The decision involves trade-offs between tax benefits, operational flexibility, market access, and setup costs. This guide compares UAE free zone vs mainland taxation in 2026, explains the new 9% corporate tax rules, outlines free zone exemptions, and helps you determine which structure maximizes your tax savings while meeting your business needs.
On June 1, 2023, the UAE implemented Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022, introducing the country's first federal corporate tax. Prior to this, the UAE had zero corporate income tax (except for oil companies and foreign banks), making it one of the most tax-friendly jurisdictions globally. The new system maintains the UAE's competitive edge while generating government revenue.
Example 1: Mainland Company
Your Dubai mainland company earns AED 500,000 in profit.
Taxable amount: AED 500,000 - AED 375,000 = AED 125,000
Corporate tax: AED 125,000 × 9% = AED 11,250 ($3,063)
Example 2: Free Zone Company (Qualifying Income)
Your DMCC free zone company earns AED 500,000 in profit, all from transactions outside UAE mainland.
Corporate tax: AED 0 (exempt as Qualifying Free Zone Person)
Before June 2023, the UAE had:
After June 2023:
The reform aimed to align UAE with international tax standards (OECD BEPS) while keeping rates low enough to maintain competitiveness with Singapore (17%), Hong Kong (16.5%), and Ireland (12.5%).
The 9% corporate tax applies to:
Exempt from corporate tax:
Important: The UAE has no personal income tax. The 9% rate applies only to businesses. Individuals earning salary, dividends, or investment income pay 0% personal tax (though employers pay 0% payroll tax as well—UAE has no payroll/social security tax).
The UAE offers two primary business structures: free zone companies (established in designated economic zones) and mainland companies (registered with the Department of Economic Development or equivalent authority in each emirate). Each has distinct advantages, limitations, and tax implications.
| Feature | Free Zone Company | Mainland Company |
|---|---|---|
| Corporate Tax Rate | 0% (if qualify) or 9% | 9% on profits >AED 375k |
| Foreign Ownership | 100% (always) | 100% (since 2020 reform) |
| UAE Mainland Market Access | Restricted (need distributor/agent) | Direct access |
| Office Space Requirement | Must lease in free zone | Flexible (can be anywhere in emirate) |
| Visa Allocation | Based on office size/license type | Based on office size/activity |
| Setup Cost | AED 15,000-50,000 | AED 10,000-30,000 |
| Renewal Cost | AED 10,000-35,000/year | AED 5,000-20,000/year |
| Accounting/Audit Requirements | Financial statements required | Financial statements required |
| Import/Export | Simplified customs (duty exemptions) | Standard customs procedures |
| Business Activities Allowed | Limited to license scope | Broader range of activities |
Advantages:
Disadvantages:
Advantages:
Disadvantages:
Choose a free zone company if:
Choose a mainland company if:
Free zone companies can pay 0% corporate tax instead of 9%, but only if they qualify as a Qualifying Free Zone Person (QFZP) and earn only Qualifying Income. This is the most complex and important part of UAE free zone taxation—getting it wrong means you'll pay 9% tax despite being in a free zone.
A Qualifying Free Zone Person is a free zone company that meets ALL of the following conditions:
If you meet all 5 conditions, you are a QFZP and pay 0% corporate tax. If you fail any condition, you pay 9% corporate tax like a mainland company.
Qualifying Income includes income from transactions that meet ALL of the following tests:
Test 1: Transaction is with non-UAE parties OR other free zone persons
Test 2: Transaction is conducted in a foreign currency (if selling goods)
Test 3: Goods do not enter UAE mainland for consumption
Test 4: Services are not provided to UAE mainland residents/businesses
Common Qualifying Income examples:
Common NON-Qualifying Income examples (triggers 9% tax):
If your free zone company earns BOTH Qualifying Income and non-Qualifying Income, you have two options:
Option 1: Pay 9% tax on ALL income
Option 2: De-minimis exemption (if non-qualifying income is <5%)
Example: Mixed Income Company
Your DMCC free zone company earns:
- AED 1,000,000 from exporting goods (Qualifying Income)
- AED 30,000 from consulting to a Dubai mainland client (non-qualifying income)
Non-qualifying income = AED 30,000 / AED 1,030,000 = 2.9% → Below 5% threshold
Result:
- Qualifying Income (AED 1,000,000): 0% tax
- Non-Qualifying Income (AED 30,000 - AED 375,000 exemption): 0% tax (falls under AED 375k exemption)
- Total tax: AED 0
If non-qualifying income was AED 60,000 (5.8%), you'd pay 9% on ALL AED 1,060,000.
To qualify as QFZP, you must demonstrate "adequate" substance in the UAE. The Federal Tax Authority evaluates this based on:
If you fail substance requirements, you lose QFZP status and pay 9% tax—even if all your income is technically Qualifying Income.
Even if you don't qualify as a QFZP (e.g., you do business with UAE mainland customers), you can still pay 0% corporate tax using Small Business Relief—if your revenue is below AED 3 million (~$817,000).
Small Business Relief is an optional tax relief that allows small businesses (both mainland and free zone) to pay 0% corporate tax, regardless of their income sources. To qualify:
If you elect for Small Business Relief, you pay 0% corporate tax on all profits, even if you exceed the AED 375,000 threshold.
Example: Free Zone Company with Mixed Income (Using Small Business Relief)
Your DMCC company earns:
- AED 2,000,000 from international consulting (Qualifying Income)
- AED 400,000 from UAE mainland consulting (non-qualifying income)
Total revenue: AED 2,400,000
Without Small Business Relief:
- You have non-qualifying income >5%, so you lose QFZP status
- Pay 9% tax on all profits: (AED 2,400,000 - AED 375,000) × 9% = AED 182,250
With Small Business Relief (revenue
- Pay 0% tax on all profits
Savings: AED 182,250 annually
If you're a small business in a free zone, you have two paths to 0% tax:
Choose QFZP exemption if:
- Your revenue exceeds AED 3M
- You can structure your business to earn only Qualifying Income
- You want long-term 0% tax even as you scale beyond AED 3M
Choose Small Business Relief if:
- Your revenue is below AED 3M
- You serve UAE mainland customers (non-qualifying income)
- You want simpler compliance (no need to segregate qualifying vs non-qualifying income)
Many small free zone businesses use Small Business Relief for the first few years, then transition to QFZP exemption once revenue exceeds AED 3M and they can restructure operations to earn only Qualifying Income.
Free zone costs vary significantly depending on which free zone you choose, your business activity, and visa requirements. Here's a breakdown of typical costs in 2026.
| Cost Item | DMCC (Dubai) | JAFZA (Jebel Ali) | RAKEZ (Ras Al Khaimah) | ADGM (Abu Dhabi) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| License Fee | AED 10,000-15,000 | AED 12,000-18,000 | AED 8,500-12,000 | AED 20,000-35,000 |
| Office Space (Flexi/Virtual) | AED 10,000-25,000 | AED 8,000-20,000 | AED 6,000-12,000 | AED 15,000-30,000 |
| Visa Allocation (per visa) | AED 5,000-8,000 | AED 5,500-8,500 | AED 4,500-7,000 | AED 6,000-10,000 |
| Registration Fees | AED 2,000-3,000 | AED 2,500-4,000 | AED 1,500-2,500 | AED 3,000-5,000 |
| Service Fees (via agent) | AED 3,000-8,000 | AED 3,500-7,000 | AED 2,500-5,000 | AED 5,000-10,000 |
| TOTAL (1 visa) | AED 30,000-59,000 | AED 31,500-57,500 | AED 23,000-38,500 | AED 49,000-90,000 |
Annual Renewal Costs (Year 2+)
Mainland is typically cheaper upfront, but free zone may save more via 0% corporate tax if you qualify.
Scenario: E-commerce Consulting Business
Assumptions:
- Annual revenue: AED 600,000
- Profit margin: 50% (AED 300,000 profit)
- Serves international clients (Qualifying Income)
Free Zone (DMCC, QFZP status):
- Setup cost: AED 35,000
- Annual renewal: AED 30,000
- Corporate tax: 0% (QFZP)
- Total Year 1 cost: AED 65,000
- Net profit after costs: AED 235,000
Mainland (Dubai DED):
- Setup cost: AED 20,000
- Annual renewal: AED 15,000
- Corporate tax: (AED 300,000 - AED 375,000) = AED 0 (below threshold!)
- Total Year 1 cost: AED 35,000
- Net profit after costs: AED 265,000
At AED 600,000 revenue, mainland is better (saves AED 30,000).
At AED 1,500,000 revenue (AED 750,000 profit):
Free Zone:
- Costs: AED 30,000
- Corporate tax: 0%
- Net profit: AED 720,000
Mainland:
- Costs: AED 15,000
- Corporate tax: (AED 750,000 - AED 375,000) × 9% = AED 33,750
- Net profit: AED 701,250
At AED 1.5M revenue, free zone is better (saves AED 18,750).
Break-even point: Around AED 700,000-800,000 profit—above this, free zone (with QFZP status) saves more than mainland despite higher setup costs.
The UAE has 45+ designated free zones, each targeting specific industries and offering different benefits. Here are the most popular options for entrepreneurs in 2026:
Best for: Trading, consulting, professional services, tech startups
Location: Jumeirah Lakes Towers (JLT), Dubai
Setup cost: AED 30,000-50,000
Pros: Prestigious address, excellent facilities, strong ecosystem, flexible activities
Cons: Higher costs than other free zones
Best for: Import/export, logistics, warehousing, manufacturing
Location: Jebel Ali (near Dubai's main port)
Setup cost: AED 30,000-55,000
Pros: Direct port access, massive warehousing facilities, customs benefits
Cons: Far from Dubai center, less suited for service businesses
Best for: Financial services, asset management, FinTech, legal services
Location: Al Maryah Island, Abu Dhabi
Setup cost: AED 50,000-90,000
Pros: English common law jurisdiction, ideal for finance/legal, high prestige
Cons: Very expensive, strict compliance, mainly for large enterprises
Best for: Cost-conscious startups, small businesses, e-commerce
Location: Ras Al Khaimah (northern emirate)
Setup cost: AED 20,000-35,000
Pros: Cheapest free zone option, fast setup, good for small businesses
Cons: Remote location (1.5 hours from Dubai), less prestige
Best for: Banks, insurance, asset management, large financial firms
Location: Downtown Dubai
Setup cost: AED 75,000-150,000+
Pros: Top-tier financial hub, English law, best for large finance firms
Cons: Very expensive, not suited for small businesses or non-financial companies
Best for: Online businesses, e-commerce, digital services, freelancers
Location: Fujairah
Setup cost: AED 12,000-25,000
Pros: Extremely low cost, fully online setup, good for remote businesses
Cons: Remote location, less banking/payment gateway access
Best for: Media, marketing, creative agencies, content creators
Location: Sharjah
Setup cost: AED 15,000-30,000
Pros: Low cost, media-focused, freelancer-friendly
Cons: Sharjah is more conservative, less international ecosystem
Recommendation:
Setting up a UAE mainland company gives you unrestricted access to the UAE market but requires more paperwork than free zones. Here's the step-by-step process in 2026.
Select from:
Choose business activities (up to 10-15 activities per license). Common categories:
Total timeline: 3-6 weeks from start to finish (assuming no complications)
Total cost (1 owner visa): AED 20,000-40,000
Choosing between free zone and mainland depends on your business model, market, and revenue. Use this decision framework:
Many businesses start with a mainland company to serve the UAE market, then later establish a free zone company for international operations. This dual-structure approach allows you to:
Example: A marketing agency starts as Dubai mainland LLC (serves UAE clients, pays 9% tax). After 2 years, it establishes a DMCC free zone company to serve international clients (0% tax). The two companies operate separately but share back-office resources.
This is common for agencies, consultancies, and SaaS companies that have both local and international customers.
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Hire Globally with UAE Company →No. While free zone companies CAN pay 0% corporate tax, you only qualify if you meet Qualifying Free Zone Person (QFZP) criteria: (1) earn only Qualifying Income (transactions with non-UAE parties or other free zone companies), (2) maintain adequate substance in UAE (office, employees, expenditure), and (3) don't conduct business with UAE mainland market. If you fail any criteria, you pay 9% corporate tax like a mainland company. Alternatively, if your revenue is below AED 3 million (~$817,000), you can use Small Business Relief to pay 0% tax regardless of income sources.
Yes, but with restrictions. Free zone companies cannot sell DIRECTLY to UAE mainland customers—you must appoint a local distributor or agent to handle mainland sales. This distributor purchases from your free zone company and resells to UAE customers. Additionally, selling to UAE mainland customers generates non-Qualifying Income, which disqualifies you from QFZP 0% tax status (you'll pay 9% tax on all profits). If mainland market access is critical to your business, choose a mainland company instead.
Yes, as of June 2020, 100% foreign ownership is permitted for UAE mainland companies in most business activities. Prior to this reform, foreign investors were required to have a 51% UAE national partner (local sponsor). However, some activities still have ownership restrictions: banks and financial institutions (51% UAE ownership required), oil and gas exploration (60% UAE ownership), and certain strategic industries. For most businesses (trading, consulting, services, e-commerce), you can now own 100% of a mainland company without a UAE partner.
DMCC (Dubai Multi Commodities Centre) is a general-purpose free zone suitable for trading, consulting, services, and tech companies. Setup cost: AED 30,000-50,000. DIFC (Dubai International Financial Centre) is a specialized financial free zone for banks, insurance, asset management, and large financial institutions. Setup cost: AED 75,000-150,000+. DIFC operates under English common law (not UAE civil law) and has its own courts and regulatory framework. DMCC is better for SMEs and non-financial businesses; DIFC is for large financial firms needing regulatory licenses (banking, insurance, securities). Both offer 0% corporate tax if you qualify as QFZP.
Yes, all UAE free zones require you to lease office space within the free zone. Options include: (1) Flexi-desk (AED 8,000-20,000/year)—shared workspace with hot-desking, (2) Virtual office (not allowed for QFZP status)—just a mailing address, or (3) Dedicated office (AED 30,000-150,000+/year)—private office space. To qualify as a Qualifying Free Zone Person (QFZP) and pay 0% tax, you must have a dedicated office or flexi-desk—virtual offices don't meet substance requirements. Mainland companies have more flexibility and can operate from home or external co-working spaces.
Yes. Small Business Relief is available to both mainland and free zone companies. If your revenue is below AED 3 million (~$817,000), you can elect for Small Business Relief and pay 0% corporate tax—even if you don't qualify as a QFZP (e.g., you serve UAE mainland customers). This is particularly useful for free zone companies that have mixed income (both UAE and international customers). Once your revenue exceeds AED 3 million, you must transition to either QFZP exemption (if you meet criteria) or pay 9% corporate tax.
If you earn BOTH Qualifying Income (international) and non-Qualifying Income (UAE mainland sales), you lose QFZP status and pay 9% corporate tax on ALL profits—unless non-qualifying income is less than 5% of total revenue (de minimis exemption). If non-qualifying income is <5%, you maintain QFZP status and pay 0% on qualifying income, but pay 9% on the non-qualifying portion. To avoid this, many businesses use a dual structure: (1) free zone company for international clients (0% tax), (2) mainland company for UAE customers (9% tax). This segregates income streams and maximizes tax savings.
No. The UAE has zero personal income tax—no tax on salary, wages, dividends, capital gains, interest, or investment income for individuals. The 9% corporate tax introduced in June 2023 applies only to businesses (companies, sole proprietorships, partnerships). Individuals pay no tax on employment income, freelance earnings (received as an individual, not through a company), or passive income. There's also no inheritance tax, wealth tax, or payroll tax in the UAE. The only personal taxes are: 5% VAT on goods/services and municipality fees (5-10% on rental income for property owners).
Yes, but you need a visa sponsor. Options include: (1) Employment visa (sponsored by your employer), (2) Investor visa (requires owning AED 2M+ property or AED 500k+ investment), (3) Golden visa (10-year visa for investors, entrepreneurs, skilled professionals—requires AED 10M+ investment or exceptional skills), (4) Freelance visa (available in some free zones like Dubai Media City—allows self-employment without setting up a company), or (5) Family sponsorship (spouse/parent can sponsor you). Most entrepreneurs obtain residency by setting up a free zone or mainland company, which entitles them to investor visas for themselves and their family.
When filing your corporate tax return, you must provide evidence that you meet QFZP criteria: (1) Financial statements segregating Qualifying Income from non-Qualifying Income, (2) Transaction documentation showing customers are outside UAE mainland (invoices, contracts, payment records), (3) Proof of substance: office lease agreement, employee payroll records, UAE operating expenditure receipts, evidence that Core Income Generating Activities occur in UAE, and (4) Declaration that all income meets Qualifying Income tests. The Federal Tax Authority may audit your QFZP status—if you fail to prove qualification, you'll owe 9% tax retroactively plus penalties. Work with a UAE tax advisor to ensure compliance.