Tax Services for
Dental Practices in Dubai
The complete 2026 tax guide for Dubai dental practices — VAT on therapeutic vs cosmetic dental treatments, Corporate Tax optimisation, DHA licence compliance, dental equipment duties, dentist salary structuring, and specialist UAE dental clinic tax advisory.
Dubai's dental sector is one of the UAE's most dynamic healthcare segments — with the city home to hundreds of dental clinics ranging from single-chair general dental practices to multi-branch specialist orthodontic groups, dental implant centres, and cosmetic dental studios. For dental practice owners, the UAE's tax framework in 2026 creates a genuinely complex operating environment: UAE VAT applies differently to therapeutic dental treatments (zero-rated) versus cosmetic dental procedures (standard-rated at 5%), and the boundary between these two categories is precisely where most Dubai dental clinics have their most significant tax compliance gaps. Corporate Tax at 9% has applied since 2023. DHA-regulated practice structures, dentist salary and drawings tax treatment, dental equipment import duties, reverse charge on overseas dental software, and insurance billing VAT all add layers of complexity that require specialist dental-sector tax knowledge. This comprehensive 2026 guide covers every material tax obligation and planning opportunity for Dubai dental practices — from the complete VAT treatment of every dental service category through Corporate Tax, dentist remuneration structuring, dental equipment import management, DHCC free zone dental clinic tax, insurance company billing VAT, reverse charge on dental SaaS, and the annual compliance calendar — with how OneDeskSolution provides specialist Dubai dental practice tax advisory services.
🦷1. Dubai Dental Sector Tax Landscape 2026
Dubai's dental sector has grown significantly in line with the emirate's expanding population, increasing health consciousness, and the growth of medical tourism — with dental care being one of the most commonly sought healthcare services by both UAE residents and visiting patients from the region. The sector spans a wide range from basic single-chair general dental practices in community centres to sophisticated multi-speciality dental groups offering orthodontics, implantology, oral surgery, and full cosmetic dentistry services to premium clientele.
From a tax perspective, dental practices in Dubai face a uniquely layered compliance environment. The UAE VAT framework makes a specific distinction between zero-rated therapeutic dental services and standard-rated cosmetic dental procedures — a distinction that most dental clinic owners and practice managers understand at a conceptual level, but frequently misapply in their billing systems, treatment categorisation, and quarterly VAT returns. The consequence: either under-declared output VAT (on cosmetic procedures incorrectly zero-rated) creating FTA audit risk, or over-charged VAT to patients (on therapeutic treatments incorrectly standard-rated) creating patient dissatisfaction and incorrect VAT accounting.
Beyond VAT, Dubai dental practices must navigate Corporate Tax registration and compliance (since June 2023), the specific tax treatment of dentist remuneration in different practice ownership structures, dental equipment import duties, DHA licensing requirements that intersect with tax registration, and the increasingly important area of insurance company billing — where the VAT treatment of services billed through insurance networks requires specific analysis.
Specialist Tax Advisory for Dubai Dental Practices
OneDeskSolution's healthcare tax team works with Dubai dental clinics — from single-chair practices to multi-branch dental groups — providing VAT classification reviews, quarterly returns, Corporate Tax filing, dentist salary structuring, and DHA compliance accounting. Contact us today.
🧾2. VAT on Dental Services — The Core Distinction
The UAE VAT treatment of dental services flows from Article 45 of the UAE VAT Executive Regulations, which defines qualifying healthcare services as preventive healthcare services and curative healthcare services provided by licensed healthcare professionals. The test for whether a dental service is zero-rated or standard-rated is whether the primary purpose of the dental treatment is therapeutic (curative/preventive) or aesthetic (cosmetic/elective).
Therapeutic Dental Treatment
Curative or preventive dental care — treating disease, pain, infection, or functional impairment. Provider charges 0% VAT but recovers all input VAT on clinic costs.
Cosmetic Dental Procedures
Purely aesthetic procedures with no therapeutic dental necessity — improving appearance without treating a condition. Provider must charge 5% VAT on patient invoice.
Mixed / Borderline Treatments
Procedures that may have both therapeutic and cosmetic elements — require clinical documentation of the therapeutic indication. Each case assessed individually.
Zero-Rated vs. Exempt — Why It Matters for Dental Clinics: Zero-rated dental services (0% VAT) allow the clinic to recover all input VAT on its operating costs — dental materials, equipment, rent, utilities, staff, and professional fees. If therapeutic dental services were VAT-exempt rather than zero-rated, the clinic would lose input VAT recovery rights on all shared costs, creating an irrecoverable 5% cost on a large portion of operating expenditure. Zero-rating is the better position — actively claim all input VAT every quarter on the costs of your therapeutic dental services.
✅3. Zero-Rated Dental Treatments (0% VAT)
| Dental Treatment | VAT | Rationale | Documentation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dental examination and diagnosis | 0% Zero-Rated | Preventive / diagnostic — core qualifying healthcare service | Standard patient record; DHA-licensed dentist providing service |
| Dental X-rays and imaging | 0% Zero-Rated | Diagnostic investigation — part of curative/preventive dental care | X-ray records; clinical indication documented in patient notes |
| Tooth extraction (therapeutic) | 0% Zero-Rated | Curative treatment — extraction for dental disease, infection, or pain | Clinical notes documenting therapeutic indication (decay, periapical abscess, impaction causing symptoms) |
| Root canal treatment (endodontics) | 0% Zero-Rated | Curative treatment of pulpal infection / dental pain | Standard endodontic records; clinical indication clear |
| Dental fillings and restorations | 0% Zero-Rated | Curative treatment of dental caries / decay | Cavity diagnosis in clinical notes; restoration type recorded |
| Periodontal treatment (scaling, root planing) | 0% Zero-Rated | Curative treatment of gum disease / periodontitis | Periodontal chart; BPE scores; clinical diagnosis of periodontal disease |
| Dental implants (replacing lost teeth) | 0% Zero-Rated | Therapeutic restoration of dental function after tooth loss — curative purpose | Clinical notes documenting tooth loss; functional restoration rationale |
| Orthodontic treatment — medically indicated | 0% Zero-Rated | Correction of malocclusion causing documented functional impairment (chewing difficulty, speech impairment, TMJ issues) | Orthodontic records; functional assessment; clinical documentation of impairment — NOT just aesthetics |
| Oral surgery for disease treatment | 0% Zero-Rated | Surgical treatment of cysts, tumours, or pathological conditions | Biopsy reports; surgical indication in clinical notes |
| Preventive treatments (fissure sealants, fluoride) | 0% Zero-Rated | Preventive healthcare service — reducing risk of dental disease | Standard preventive dentistry records; patient age and risk factors noted |
| Treatment under general anaesthetic | 0% Zero-Rated | Where the underlying dental treatment is therapeutic — GA is ancillary to the zero-rated treatment | GA consent; anaesthetist records; primary procedure is therapeutic |
| Paediatric dentistry (therapeutic) | 0% Zero-Rated | Treatment of dental disease in children — same curative/preventive principle applies | Standard paediatric dental records |
❌4. Standard-Rated Cosmetic Dental Procedures (5% VAT)
| Procedure | VAT | Why Not Zero-Rated | Common Clinic Error |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cosmetic teeth whitening (in-chair / take-home) | 5% Standard | Purely aesthetic — improving tooth colour without treating dental disease | Zero-rating because whitening is performed by a DHA-licensed dentist in a licensed clinic |
| Dental veneers (porcelain / composite) — cosmetic | 5% Standard | Cosmetic improvement of tooth appearance without therapeutic need | Zero-rating all veneer treatments regardless of clinical indication |
| Cosmetic composite bonding | 5% Standard | Elective aesthetic procedure improving tooth appearance | Treating as dental restoration (which is 0%) rather than cosmetic improvement (5%) |
| Teeth contouring / reshaping (cosmetic) | 5% Standard | Elective cosmetic reshaping without functional therapeutic purpose | Zero-rating as "dental procedure" based on dentist performing it |
| Orthodontics — purely cosmetic alignment | Assess Per Case | Where the primary purpose is aesthetic tooth alignment with no documented functional impairment — potentially standard-rated | Blanket zero-rating of all orthodontic treatment without clinical documentation of functional need |
| Gum contouring / gum lift (cosmetic) | 5% Standard | Cosmetic gum reshaping for aesthetic smile improvement without therapeutic gum disease treatment | Confusing with therapeutic gingivectomy (treating gum disease — 0%) |
| Smile makeover packages | 5% Standard | Packaged cosmetic dentistry — multiple aesthetic procedures bundled. Must separately identify any therapeutic elements at 0% | Zero-rating the entire package because it includes some therapeutic elements alongside cosmetic procedures |
| Dental photography / smile design (cosmetic planning) | 5% Standard | Digital smile design and cosmetic treatment planning — ancillary to cosmetic supply | Zero-rating as "diagnostic service" — it is diagnostic but exclusively in service of a cosmetic outcome |
The Whitening Zero-Rating Error: Cosmetic teeth whitening is one of the most common VAT misclassification errors in Dubai dental practices — a high volume, high revenue service that is frequently zero-rated on the mistaken assumption that "dental treatment = healthcare = zero-rated." Whitening improves the aesthetic appearance of teeth without treating any dental disease. It is unambiguously standard-rated at 5% UAE VAT. A dental practice performing 50 whitening treatments per month at AED 1,500 each has AED 3,750/month of output VAT (AED 45,000/year) that must be declared and remitted. If zero-rated incorrectly for 2 years: AED 90,000 of underdeclared VAT → potential FTA penalty of AED 45,000.
📋5. Treatment-by-Treatment VAT Quick Reference
✅ 0% VAT — Therapeutic Dental
- Dental examination and diagnosis
- Dental X-rays and OPG radiographs
- Tooth extractions (disease/pain/impaction)
- Root canal treatment (all teeth)
- Amalgam and composite fillings (caries)
- Periodontal scaling and root planing
- Dental implants (restoring lost teeth)
- Crowns and bridges (functional restoration)
- Fissure sealants and fluoride applications
- Emergency dental treatment
- Dentures (functional replacement)
- Oral cancer screening
- Medically-indicated orthodontics
❌ 5% VAT — Cosmetic Dental
- Cosmetic teeth whitening (all types)
- Porcelain veneers (aesthetic)
- Composite bonding (cosmetic)
- Teeth contouring / reshaping
- Cosmetic gum contouring (gum lift)
- Digital smile design
- Smile makeover packages
- Botox / fillers for smile aesthetics
- Purely cosmetic orthodontics
- Tooth jewellery
- Whitening trays (take-home cosmetic)
- Cosmetic dental photography
📊 Common Revenue Mix for Dubai Dental Practice — VAT Impact
📋6. Insurance Company Billing & VAT
- VAT treatment unchanged by insurance billing route: The VAT rate applicable to a dental service is determined by the nature of the service — not by whether payment is made by the patient directly or by an insurance company. A root canal treatment billed to the insurance company is still 0% VAT. A cosmetic veneer billed to insurance (where covered) is still 5% VAT. The insurance payment route does not change the VAT classification
- Issuing VAT-compliant invoices to insurers: When billing an insurance company for dental services, the dental clinic must issue a UAE-compliant tax invoice (showing TRN, treatment description, taxable amount, and VAT rate) even though the insurer is paying rather than the patient. Zero-rated treatments: invoice shows 0% VAT. Standard-rated cosmetic treatments: invoice shows 5% VAT
- Insurance management fees / administration fees: Fees charged by the insurer to the dental clinic for network participation, administration, or claims processing — these are services received by the clinic from the insurer. If the insurer is a UAE-registered entity: the clinic may receive an invoice with 5% VAT (input recoverable). If the insurer is overseas: reverse charge may apply
- Co-payment from patient: The patient's co-payment portion of a dental bill is subject to the same VAT treatment as the full treatment. If the treatment is 0% VAT: the co-payment is also 0% VAT. If the treatment is 5% VAT: the co-payment also attracts 5% VAT. Do not zero-rate the co-payment and standard-rate the insurance portion separately — the treatment determines the rate for the entire supply
- Claims reconciliation and VAT accounting: Dental practices billing through multiple insurance networks must reconcile each period's insurance receipts to the VAT return. The split between zero-rated (therapeutic) and standard-rated (cosmetic) services must be maintained at the claim level — not estimated or assumed based on practice profile
Dental Practice Tax Done Right — Every Quarter.
OneDeskSolution manages dental practice VAT — therapeutic vs. cosmetic classification reviews, POS system configuration, quarterly VAT 201 returns, insurance billing reconciliation, and Corporate Tax filing. Focus on your patients, we'll handle the tax. Contact us today.
🏛7. Corporate Tax for Dental Clinics
| Clinic Structure | CT Rate | Conditions | Key CT Actions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small dental practice (revenue < AED 3M) | 0% (SBR election) | Annual revenue below AED 3M; SBR election in CT return — cannot be QFZP simultaneously | Actively elect SBR in each CT 201 return; CT registration mandatory regardless; VAT registration may still apply |
| Established dental clinic / group (mainland) | 9% above AED 375K profit | Standard CT rules; IFRS-based taxable income; non-deductible add-backs | Quarterly CT provision; annual CT 201 return; entertainment add-back; statutory audit coordination |
| DHCC / free zone dental clinic (QFZP) | 0% on qualifying income | Qualifying income >95%; UAE substance; TP on intercompany arrangements | Annual QFZP election; income split monitoring; substance documentation |
| Individual dentist (natural person) | 0% personal income tax | Individual providing dental services — no personal income tax in UAE | VAT registration if revenue > AED 375K; no CT for natural persons below corporate entity |
💡 Key CT Deductible Expenses — Dental Clinics
- Dentist and staff salaries + EOSB accrual: All dentist, dental hygienist, nurse, reception staff, and management salaries — fully deductible including housing allowance, health insurance, End of Service Benefit accrual (21 days per year for first 5 years, 30 days thereafter), and visa and Emirates ID costs
- Dental materials and consumables: Composites, amalgam, impression materials, local anaesthetic, gloves, masks, sterilisation supplies — all deductible as cost of sales in the period incurred
- Dental equipment depreciation (IAS 16): Dental chairs, x-ray units, autoclaves, CBCT scanners, CAD/CAM systems — depreciated under IAS 16 over useful life (typically 5–10 years). Annual depreciation charge is CT-deductible
- Clinic rent and facility costs: Clinic lease, utilities, maintenance, clinic fit-out amortisation — all deductible
- Professional indemnity insurance: Mandatory PI insurance for DHA-licensed dentists — fully deductible
- Client entertainment (50% non-deductible): Patient/referrer gifts, hospitality events — only 50% deductible under UAE CT rules. Tag entertainment separately in your Chart of Accounts
- DHA fines and regulatory penalties (0% deductible): Any regulatory fines from DHA, MOHAP, or DHCC — fully non-deductible. Add back 100% in CT return
- Continuing education and CPD costs: Dental conferences, specialist training, CPD courses — deductible where directly related to maintaining dental skills and DHA CPD requirements
💼8. Dentist Salary & Drawings Structure — Tax Treatment
| Ownership Structure | Remuneration Type | UAE Personal Tax | CT Deductibility for Clinic | Optimal Approach |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sole owner — UAE LLC clinic | Owner-director salary (employment contract) | 0% personal income tax | Deductible if arm's-length and employment contract exists | Set a market-rate dentist salary to reduce clinic CT taxable income; document with employment contract |
| Sole owner — UAE LLC clinic | Profit distribution / dividend | 0% personal income tax | Not deductible — post-tax profit distribution | Blend salary (deductible) + dividend (not deductible) based on CT planning; seek advice for optimal split |
| Multi-partner dental group (LLC) | Partner salary + profit share | 0% personal income tax on both | Salary deductible; profit share not deductible from LLC | Document each partner's clinical role and salary basis; ensure arm's-length remuneration |
| Individual dentist (sole practitioner) | Personal income from practice | 0% personal income tax | N/A — individual, not corporate entity | VAT registration required if revenue > AED 375K; no CT at individual level |
| Associate dentist (employed) | Salary + commission | 0% personal income tax | Fully deductible employment cost | Ensure associate dentist commission arrangements are clearly documented in employment contract for CT and labour law compliance |
UAE's Genuine Advantage for Dental Practice Owners: The combination of 0% personal income tax on salary, drawings, dividends, and profit distributions — and 0% Capital Gains Tax on future practice sale proceeds — makes the UAE one of the world's most tax-efficient jurisdictions for dental practice ownership. A dental practice owner drawing AED 1.5 million per year from their clinic pays 0% UAE personal tax on that entire amount. The CT obligation is at the entity (clinic) level — potentially 0% via Small Business Relief for smaller practices or 9% for established clinics, but always only on the entity's taxable profits, not on the owner's personal receipts.
🔧9. Dental Equipment Import Duties
| Equipment | HS Code | UAE Customs Duty | VAT on Import | CT Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dental chairs and units | HS 94.02 | 0% Duty | 5% VAT (recoverable) | Capitalise; depreciate over useful life (typically 8–10 years); IAS 16 |
| Dental handpieces and instruments | HS 90.18 | 0% Duty | 5% VAT (recoverable) | Low-value instruments: expense in period. High-value: capitalise and depreciate |
| Dental x-ray units (periapical, OPG) | HS 90.22 | 0% Duty | 5% VAT (recoverable) | Capitalise; depreciate over 5–8 years; IAS 16 |
| CBCT (cone beam CT) scanner | HS 90.22 | 0% Duty | 5% VAT (recoverable) | Capitalise; depreciate over 8–10 years; significant capex — document carefully |
| CAD/CAM system (milling unit + scanner) | HS 84.62 / 90.18 | 5% on milling unit | 5% VAT (recoverable) | Capitalise; depreciate over 5–7 years |
| Autoclave / sterilisation equipment | HS 84.19 | 5% Duty | 5% VAT (recoverable) | Capitalise; depreciate over 7–10 years |
| Dental consumables (composites, cements, local anaesthetic) | Various HS 30.xx | 0% (pharma HS 30) | 5% VAT (recoverable) | Expense as cost of sales in period consumed |
| Dental implant components | HS 90.21 | 0% Duty | 5% VAT (recoverable) | Expense as cost of sales when implant placed (or stock holding as inventory) |
Import VAT Recovery on Dental Equipment: When a Dubai dental clinic imports equipment with 5% VAT paid at customs (import VAT), this VAT is fully recoverable as input VAT in the clinic's quarterly VAT 201 return (Box 6 — Import VAT). Ensure your customs broker provides you with the customs entry documents showing the import VAT paid — this is the evidence required to claim the recovery. For a clinic purchasing a CBCT scanner at AED 250,000 + AED 12,500 import VAT, that AED 12,500 is fully recoverable in your next quarterly VAT return. Many dental clinics miss this recovery by not maintaining adequate import documentation.
🏛10. DHCC & Free Zone Dental Clinics
| Aspect | Dubai Healthcare City (DHCC) | Dubai Mainland (DHA) | Abu Dhabi / DoH |
|---|---|---|---|
| Regulatory Authority | Dubai Health Authority (DHA) + DHCC Authority | Dubai Health Authority (DHA) | Department of Health (DoH) Abu Dhabi |
| Business Entity | DHCC-incorporated entity (free zone) | Dubai mainland LLC or civil company | Mainland LLC or ADGM entity |
| Corporate Tax | QFZP eligible if qualifying income conditions met. Many DHCC dental clinics serve international medical tourism clients — may qualify | 9% on profits above AED 375K (or SBR if < AED 3M revenue) | 9% on profits above AED 375K |
| VAT Treatment | Same UAE federal VAT rules apply — zero-rated therapeutic, 5% cosmetic | Same UAE federal VAT rules | Same UAE federal VAT rules |
| Audit Requirement | Annual IFRS audit — mandatory for DHCC entities; submit to DHCC Authority | If free zone entity: annual audit. Mainland LLC: audit recommended | Per licensing requirements |
| Medical Tourism Advantage | International patient revenue (zero-rated services export conditions): potentially QFZP qualifying income | Limited — primarily UAE patient base | Limited — primarily UAE patient base |
DHCC Dental Clinic QFZP — Medical Tourism Consideration: DHCC dental clinics with a significant international patient base (patients who are established outside the UAE receiving dental treatment in Dubai) may be able to structure their revenue for QFZP qualification — where revenue from overseas patients could be analysed as export of healthcare services if the patients are not UAE residents. This is a complex area requiring specific legal and tax analysis per patient demographic. Most DHCC dental clinics primarily serve UAE residents, making QFZP qualification challenging — but clinics actively targeting GCC and international medical tourism should seek specific QFZP eligibility advice from our advisory team.
🔄11. Reverse Charge on Dental Software & Overseas Tools
- Dental practice management software (overseas subscription): Dental4Windows, Dentrix, Carestream Dental Cloud, Curve Dental — subscriptions from overseas providers trigger 5% reverse charge VAT on the AED equivalent amount. Declare in Box 3 of VAT 201 return; recover in Box 10. Net cash impact zero for fully taxable clinics — but 50% FTA penalty if not declared
- Dental imaging software and CBCT viewing platforms: 3Shape, Planmeca, DENTSPLY Sirona CEREC software subscriptions — overseas software licences trigger reverse charge VAT on every annual or monthly invoice
- Online appointment booking platforms: Zocdoc, HealthHub, and similar overseas healthcare appointment platforms — subscription fees trigger reverse charge VAT
- Communication and practice tools: WhatsApp Business API (Meta), Zoom for patient consultations, Microsoft 365, Google Workspace — all overseas SaaS subscriptions with monthly reverse charge obligations
- Dental supply orders from overseas companies: Where a dental clinic purchases consumables, instruments, or equipment directly from overseas suppliers online — the import VAT is handled at customs (Box 6 of VAT return), not as reverse charge. Distinguish between services (reverse charge) and goods (import VAT at customs)
- Telehealth/teleconsultation platform: If your dental clinic uses an overseas teleconsultation platform for remote patient consultations — the platform subscription is reverse charge VAT. The dental service delivered via teleconsultation follows the same therapeutic/cosmetic VAT analysis as in-person treatment
📅12. Annual Tax Compliance Calendar — Dental Clinics
Process all treatment invoices with correct VAT coding (0% therapeutic vs 5% cosmetic) in PMS/accounting system. Calculate reverse charge on overseas dental software invoices. Process dental supply invoices. Accrue EOSB for all staff. WPS payroll processing. Track revenue for VAT and CT threshold monitoring.
File VAT 201. Box 1: cosmetic dental revenue × 5% VAT. Box 4: zero-rated therapeutic dental. Box 3: reverse charge on overseas dental software/SaaS. Box 6: import VAT on equipment and materials. Box 10: input VAT recovery on all deductible costs. Pay net VAT due. Reconcile to practice management system reports.
File Q1 VAT. Review treatment classification register — add any new services introduced. CT provision update. Insurance billing VAT reconciliation: confirm correct VAT coding on insurance claims submitted in Q1.
File Q2 VAT. Mid-year CT position review. Review DHA licence renewal fees — ensure correctly expensed and input VAT claimed. Staff turnover and EOSB payment review: ensure EOSB payments correctly deducted in CT.
File Q3 VAT. Full-year CT estimate for current financial year. Year-end planning: timing of equipment purchases (IAS 16 capex), CPD expenditure, dental material stock levels. Review whether SBR election is available for CT return.
IFRS financial statements audit — mandatory for DHCC and other free zone dental entities. IAS 16 asset register review. EOSB provision check. Input VAT position confirmation. Engage MoE-registered auditor with healthcare sector experience.
File CT 201. SBR election if revenue < AED 3M; QFZP election (DHCC firms); entertainment 50% add-back; fines 100% add-back; dentist salary deductibility confirmation; CT payment due. Review whether prior year CT losses are available for carry-forward offset.
🏆13. Our Dental Practice Tax Services
VAT Classification Review
Full service portfolio assessment: therapeutic (0%) vs cosmetic (5%); PMS system VAT coding; billing team training
Quarterly VAT Returns
Full VAT 201 — therapeutic/cosmetic split, reverse charge dental SaaS, import VAT recovery, insurance billing reconciliation
Corporate Tax Filing
Annual CT 201, SBR election, entertainment add-back, equipment depreciation, EOSB deductibility, dentist salary review
Practice Accounting
IFRS bookkeeping, dental equipment asset register, treatment revenue by category, monthly management accounts
Equipment Import Advisory
HS code classification, import VAT recovery management, CBCT and CAD/CAM capitalisation, depreciation schedules
FTA Audit Defence
Registered Tax Agent representation, cosmetic/therapeutic dispute documentation, voluntary disclosures, penalty mitigation
❓14. Frequently Asked Questions
🔗15. Related Resources
Expert Tax Advisory for Dubai Dental Practices
From complete VAT classification reviews and quarterly returns through Corporate Tax filing, equipment import advisory, dentist salary structuring, insurance billing compliance, and FTA audit defence — OneDeskSolution provides specialist tax services built specifically for Dubai dental practices of every size. Contact us for a free consultation today.

