Corporate Tax Exemptions in UAE:
Complete List of Qualifying Activities 2026
Who is exempt from UAE Corporate Tax? What activities qualify? This is the definitive, FTA-aligned guide every UAE business owner and CFO needs before filing in 2026.
The UAE Corporate Tax (CT) system, introduced under Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022, imposes a 9% tax on business profits above AED 375,000 โ but it also contains a rich framework of exemptions, reliefs, and qualifying activity classifications that can significantly reduce or eliminate CT liability for eligible businesses.
Understanding who qualifies as an exempt person, what constitutes qualifying income in free zones, and which activities and entities fall outside the CT net entirely is essential for accurate 2026 CT compliance and strategic tax planning.
This guide provides the complete, categorised list of UAE CT exemptions โ covering exempt persons, qualifying free zone activities, extractive industries, public benefit organisations, Small Business Relief, investment fund exemptions, and more โ with practical guidance on how to determine eligibility.
OneDeskSolution's specialist UAE Corporate Tax advisors help businesses assess their exemption eligibility, structure qualifying activities correctly, and file fully compliant CT returns โ protecting maximum legitimate tax advantage while avoiding FTA penalties.
1. UAE CT Exemption Framework Overview
The UAE Corporate Tax law is not a blanket tax on all commercial activity. Instead, it establishes a tiered exemption architecture that reflects the UAE's commitment to maintaining a competitive, business-friendly environment while meeting international tax transparency standards (OECD BEPS compliance).
At the broadest level, the UAE CT framework divides business entities into three main categories: taxable persons (subject to 9% CT), exempt persons (fully outside the CT net), and qualifying free zone persons (subject to 0% CT on qualifying income). Overlaid on this are specific reliefs โ Small Business Relief, Participation Exemption, and deductions โ that further reduce CT liability for eligible taxpayers.
The key principle is that exemptions must be actively claimed and maintained โ they are not automatic in most cases. Businesses must assess their eligibility, maintain appropriate documentation, and in several cases notify or register with the FTA to benefit from exemptions. Failure to do so can result in full 9% CT being applied where a 0% or exempt position could have applied.
* Bar length for 0% rates shown symbolically. Qualifying Income (QI) = income from qualifying activities only.
Not Sure If Your Business Qualifies for CT Exemption?
OneDeskSolution's UAE Corporate Tax specialists assess your business structure, activities, and income to identify every legitimate CT exemption, relief, and deduction available to you โ before you file.
2. Category 1: Exempt Persons โ Full Corporate Tax Exemption
Article 4 of the UAE CT law identifies specific categories of "Exempt Persons" โ entities that are completely outside the scope of UAE Corporate Tax. These entities are not required to pay CT, but most must still register with the FTA and may have ongoing notification obligations.
| Exempt Person Category | Legal Basis | FTA Registration Required? | Auto-Exempt? |
|---|---|---|---|
| UAE Federal / Emirate Government | Article 4(1)(a) | Generally No | Yes |
| Government-Controlled Entities (Cabinet Listed) | Article 4(1)(b) | Notification Required | If Listed |
| Extractive Business Persons | Article 4(1)(c) + Article 7 | Yes โ with Conditions | Conditional |
| Non-Extractive Natural Resource Persons | Article 4(1)(d) + Article 8 | Yes โ with Conditions | Conditional |
| Qualifying Public Benefit Entities | Article 4(1)(e) + Cabinet Decision | Register + Apply | No โ Must Apply |
| Qualifying Investment Funds | Article 4(1)(f) | Register + Apply | No โ Must Apply |
| Public / Private Pension & Social Security Funds | Article 4(1)(g) | Register + Apply | No โ Must Apply |
3. Category 2: Qualifying Free Zone Persons โ 0% CT on Qualifying Income
One of the most commercially significant exemptions in the UAE CT regime is the Qualifying Free Zone Person (QFZP) status โ which allows eligible free zone companies to pay 0% Corporate Tax on their Qualifying Income, while non-qualifying income remains subject to the standard 9% CT rate.
Conditions to Be a Qualifying Free Zone Person
To maintain QFZP status, a free zone company must simultaneously meet all of the following conditions:
Maintain Adequate Substance in the UAE Free Zone
The entity must have genuine economic substance: qualified employees, operating premises, and decision-making activities actually located in the free zone โ not merely a registered address with no real operations.
Derive Income from Qualifying Activities
All or substantially all of the entity's income must come from Qualifying Activities or Qualifying Ancillary Activities (see Section 4 for the complete list). Income from non-qualifying sources disrupts QFZP status for that category.
Not Have Elected to Apply the Standard CT Regime
Free zone companies can irrevocably elect to be treated as standard taxable persons (subject to 9% CT). Once made, this election applies for at least 5 years. If no election is made, QFZP conditions must be continuously maintained.
Comply with Transfer Pricing Rules
All transactions with related parties โ including parent companies, subsidiaries, and group entities โ must comply with the arm's-length standard and be supported by appropriate transfer pricing documentation.
Non-Qualifying Income Must Not Exceed the De Minimis Threshold
A QFZP may have some non-qualifying income without losing QFZP status, provided it remains below the de minimis threshold โ the lower of AED 5,000,000 or 5% of total revenue in the tax period.
If a free zone entity fails to meet any of the QFZP conditions in a tax period, it loses QFZP status for that entire tax period and the following 4 tax periods โ meaning all income becomes subject to 9% CT for 5 years. This makes ongoing QFZP compliance monitoring essential, not optional.
4. Complete List of Qualifying Activities for Free Zone CT 0% Rate (2026)
The UAE Ministry of Finance has published the definitive list of Qualifying Activities (under Ministerial Decision No. 139 of 2023) that entitle a Qualifying Free Zone Person to the 0% CT rate on income derived from those activities. Here is the complete categorised list:
| # | Qualifying Activity | Category | Key Condition |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Manufacturing of goods or materials | Manufacturing | Physical goods produced in UAE free zone |
| 2 | Processing of goods or materials | Manufacturing | Transformation/processing of raw inputs in free zone |
| 3 | Holding of shares and other securities | Investment / Finance | Long-term investment holding โ not trading |
| 4 | Ownership, management, and operation of ships | Maritime | Registered/operated through UAE free zone |
| 5 | Reinsurance services | Financial Services | Regulated reinsurance โ DIFC/ADGM regulated firms |
| 6 | Fund management services | Financial Services | Licensed fund managers operating in free zones |
| 7 | Wealth and investment management services | Financial Services | Services to qualifying clients only (not UAE residents generally) |
| 8 | Headquarter services to related parties | Corporate Services | Group HQ functions โ strategy, management, coordination |
| 9 | Treasury and financing services to related parties | Treasury | Intercompany treasury / cash pooling for group entities |
| 10 | Financing and leasing of aircraft | Aviation | Aircraft financing and operating/finance leases |
| 11 | Distribution of goods or materials from a qualifying free zone | Trading / Logistics | Goods must pass through a designated free zone |
| 12 | Logistics services | Trading / Logistics | Freight, warehousing, logistics coordination in free zone |
| 13 | Qualifying intellectual property (IP) income | IP / Tech | Patents, software, qualifying IP developed in free zone |
| 14 | Any activity ancillary to above qualifying activities | Ancillary | Must be subordinate/incidental to a primary qualifying activity |
The following activities do not qualify for the 0% QFZP rate โ income from these sources is taxed at 9%:
- Transactions with UAE mainland natural persons (individual consumers on the mainland)
- Banking activities subject to UAE Central Bank regulation
- Insurance activities (other than qualifying reinsurance)
- Activities with non-free zone UAE resident persons (unless excluded ancillary)
- Real estate activities (other than commercial real estate held by QFZP for investment)
- Construction or real estate development sold/rented to mainland clients
5. Qualifying Income vs. Non-Qualifying Income โ The Key Distinction
For a Qualifying Free Zone Person, not all income is treated equally. Understanding the boundary between Qualifying Income (0% CT) and Non-Qualifying Income (9% CT) is the most practically important aspect of free zone CT planning in 2026.
โ Qualifying Income (0% CT Rate)
- Income from qualifying activities with any person
- Income from qualifying activities with other free zone persons
- Income from ancillary activities (within de minimis limits)
- Dividends from UAE or foreign subsidiaries (participation exemption)
- Capital gains on qualifying shareholdings
- Income from qualifying IP assets
- Income from transactions with non-UAE residents
- Income that meets the substance requirements in the free zone
โ Non-Qualifying Income (9% CT Rate)
- Income from transactions with UAE mainland natural persons
- Revenue from non-qualifying activities (retail, consumer services)
- Income that exceeds de minimis (>AED 5M or >5% of revenue)
- Income from UAE mainland business customers (some exceptions apply)
- Revenue from real estate sold/leased to mainland parties
- Passive income not meeting IP box or participation conditions
- Any income if QFZP conditions are violated in that period
A QFZP can earn limited non-qualifying income without losing its 0% rate, as long as that income does not exceed the lower of AED 5,000,000 or 5% of total revenue in the tax period. This provides a safety buffer for incidental non-qualifying transactions. However, non-qualifying income exceeding this threshold triggers 9% CT on the entire income โ not just the excess โ making careful monitoring essential.
6. Extractive & Non-Extractive Natural Resource Businesses
The UAE CT law provides a special exemption for businesses engaged in the extraction of UAE natural resources โ primarily oil, gas, and minerals โ recognising that these industries already contribute to UAE government revenues through emirate-level royalties, profit-sharing agreements, and concession fees.
| Business Type | CT Treatment | Emirate-Level Tax | Key Condition |
|---|---|---|---|
| Extractive Business (Oil/Gas/Mineral Extraction) | Exempt from Federal CT | Subject to emirate royalties/PSA | Must be subject to emirate-level tax or royalty |
| Non-Extractive Natural Resource Business | Exempt from Federal CT | Subject to emirate tax/fees | Deriving income from UAE natural resources under emirate arrangement |
| Support Services to Extractive Industry | 9% Standard CT | Not typically subject to emirate tax | Third-party service providers are fully taxable |
| Downstream Processing (Refining/Petrochemicals) | Complex โ Case by Case | Varies by emirate arrangement | Depends on whether subject to qualifying emirate-level tax |
The exemption for extractive businesses applies only where the business is subject to a specific UAE emirate-level tax, royalty, or profit-sharing arrangement with the relevant emirate authority. For Abu Dhabi, this means arrangements with ADNOC and the Abu Dhabi Department of Finance. For Dubai, similar arrangements through the emirate's energy department. The federal CT exemption recognises these existing fiscal arrangements rather than imposing an additional tax layer.
7. Public Benefit Organisations & Charities
Non-profit organisations, charities, and entities established for public benefit can apply for Qualifying Public Benefit Entity (QPBE) status โ which grants full exemption from UAE CT on income earned in furtherance of their public benefit purposes.
Criteria for Qualifying Public Benefit Entity Status
- โ Listed in Cabinet Decision: The entity must be listed in a Cabinet Decision approved by the UAE Minister of Finance โ listing is by application and not automatic. The entity must apply and be approved before claiming exemption.
- โ Non-Profit Purpose: Established and operated exclusively or primarily for religious, charitable, scientific, artistic, cultural, athletic, educational, or other public benefit purposes โ not for the private benefit of members or shareholders.
- โ No Profit Distribution: Profits must not be distributed to founders, members, or associates โ any surplus must be retained and reinvested in the public benefit purpose or donated to another QPBE.
- โ Dissolution Clause: On dissolution, assets must be transferred to another QPBE or to the UAE government โ not to members or founders.
- โ Ongoing Compliance: Must maintain proper financial records, comply with all applicable laws, and submit required reports to the FTA. Loss of QPBE status triggers retrospective CT liability.
While the formal list is established by Cabinet Decision, the following types of organisations typically qualify:
- Licensed UAE charities and humanitarian organisations
- Educational foundations and university endowments
- Scientific research institutions
- Professional syndicates and licensed trade associations (non-commercial)
- Sports clubs and federations (not commercial sports franchises)
- Cultural and arts organisations
- Religious institutions and mosque management bodies
8. Qualifying Investment Funds
Investment funds โ including Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs), private equity funds, and other collective investment vehicles โ can apply for Qualifying Investment Fund (QIF) status, which grants them exempt person status to prevent double taxation of investment returns.
| Condition | Requirement for QIF Status |
|---|---|
| Regulated Fund | Must be regulated and licensed by a UAE regulatory authority (FSRA/ADGM, DFSA/DIFC, SCA) or equivalent foreign regulator |
| Multiple Investors | Interests in the fund must be held by multiple, genuinely independent investors โ not a single investor using fund structure for CT avoidance |
| Main Purpose โ Investment | Primary purpose must be investment/portfolio management โ not trading, manufacturing, or active business operations |
| No Control of Portfolio Companies | The fund must not directly control portfolio companies in a way that constitutes conducting business โ passive investment holding required |
| CT Transparency | Income/gains of the fund flow through to investors who are responsible for their own CT obligations on distributions received |
| Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) | UAE-listed REITs meeting the REIT regime requirements are eligible for QIF status on qualifying income from property investment |
9. Small Business Relief 2026
Small Business Relief (SBR) is a simplification measure that allows small UAE businesses to treat their taxable income as zero for qualifying tax periods โ effectively a full CT exemption for eligible small businesses during the relief period.
| SBR Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| Revenue Threshold | Total revenue in the tax period must not exceed AED 3,000,000 |
| Qualifying Tax Periods | Tax periods ending on or before 31 December 2026 (covering FY 2023, 2024, 2025 for most businesses) |
| Election Required | Must be actively elected in the CT return โ it is not automatically applied. Election is irrevocable for that period. |
| Effect on Losses | Tax losses and disallowed interest carry-forwards cannot be created during an SBR period โ these must be considered before electing SBR |
| Who Cannot Elect SBR | Members of a multinational enterprise group (MNE) with global revenue above AED 3.15 billion are NOT eligible for SBR, regardless of their individual revenue |
| Record-Keeping Still Required | Electing SBR does not exempt a business from CT registration, record-keeping, and return-filing obligations โ these continue as normal |
| Future Tax Periods (Post-2025) | SBR beyond the 2023โ2025 period has not yet been legislated for 2026 onwards โ monitor FTA announcements for extension |
SBR is highly beneficial for most small UAE businesses with revenue under AED 3M. However, it is not always the optimal choice โ if your business has significant tax losses (which could be carried forward at 9% value) or is expecting rapid revenue growth that would benefit from establishing a loss pool, electing SBR may reduce future CT savings. OneDeskSolution advisors model both scenarios for clients before recommending whether to elect.
10. Participation Exemption โ Dividends & Capital Gains
The Participation Exemption is one of the most valuable CT reliefs for holding companies, family offices, and businesses with subsidiary investments โ exempting dividends and capital gains received from qualifying shareholdings from UAE Corporate Tax.
Conditions for the Participation Exemption
| Condition | UAE Subsidiary | Foreign Subsidiary |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum Ownership | 5% shareholding or more | 5% shareholding or more |
| Minimum Holding Period | 12 consecutive months (or intention to hold) | 12 consecutive months (or intention to hold) |
| Subject to Tax Test | N/A (UAE CT entity) | Foreign subsidiary must be subject to โฅ9% tax in its home jurisdiction |
| Not a Pure Passive Vehicle | Subsidiary has qualifying activities | Not set up mainly to benefit from exemption artificially |
| Income Covered | Dividends + capital gains on disposal | Dividends + capital gains on disposal |
The Participation Exemption is particularly powerful for: UAE holding companies receiving dividends from operating subsidiaries; family offices holding diversified equity portfolios through UAE vehicles; private equity sponsors using UAE entities as exit vehicles for portfolio company sales; and regional headquarters receiving dividend flows from Middle East and African subsidiaries into a UAE parent entity.
11. How to Claim CT Exemptions in UAE โ Step by Step
Exemptions under UAE CT are not always self-executing โ most require positive action. Here is how businesses claim and maintain their exemption status:
Assess Your Exemption Category
Determine which exemption or relief category applies to your business โ Exempt Person, QFZP, SBR, Participation Exemption, or a combination. Many businesses qualify for multiple reliefs simultaneously.
Register with the FTA
All UAE businesses โ including exempt persons (in most cases) โ must register for CT with the FTA using the EmaraTax portal. QFZP entities must also register and identify as free zone taxpayers in their registration.
Apply for Exempt Person Status (if applicable)
Public Benefit Entities, Qualifying Investment Funds, and Pension Funds must formally apply to the FTA for exempt person status โ this is not granted automatically by registration. Provide supporting documentation of organisational structure, purpose, and operations.
Maintain QFZP Substance & Activity Records
If claiming 0% as a QFZP, maintain detailed records of: employee headcount and qualifications in the free zone, office premises, operational decisions made in the free zone, and a revenue analysis showing income by qualifying/non-qualifying activity.
File Annual CT Return โ Claim Relief in Return
Even exempt entities and SBR-eligible businesses must file annual CT returns by the FTA deadline (9 months after financial year end). Reliefs like SBR and Participation Exemption are claimed within the CT return โ not via a separate form.
Maintain 5-Year Record-Keeping
All supporting records โ financial statements, activity logs, subsidiary ownership certificates, and exemption applications โ must be retained for a minimum of 5 years (7 years for real estate-related records) and be available for FTA inspection on request.
12. Compliance Risks & Common CT Exemption Mistakes
- ๐จ Assuming Free Zone = Automatic 0% Tax: Being incorporated in a UAE free zone does NOT automatically grant 0% CT. QFZP conditions โ substance, qualifying activities, de minimis โ must all be satisfied simultaneously. Many free zone companies unknowingly fail the substance or qualifying income tests.
- ๐จ Failing to Register for CT: Even if a business believes it is exempt, most entities must still register with the FTA. Failure to register can result in penalties of up to AED 10,000 for first-time non-registration.
- ๐จ Exceeding the SBR Revenue Threshold Mid-Year: If revenue exceeds AED 3M during a period where SBR was elected, the election is invalid for that entire period โ not from the date of threshold breach. Revenue forecasting is essential before electing SBR.
- โ Incorrect Qualifying Income Classification: Misclassifying non-qualifying income as qualifying income is one of the most common QFZP errors โ particularly for businesses that sell to UAE mainland customers or provide retail/consumer-facing services.
- โ Inadequate Substance Documentation: FTA will scrutinise QFZP substance claims. Entities that have UAE free zone licences but conduct management, sales, or decision-making outside the UAE risk losing QFZP status retroactively.
- โ Participation Exemption โ Missing the 5% / 12-Month Tests: Companies that receive dividends or realise gains on small or short-term shareholdings without meeting both the 5% ownership and 12-month holding conditions lose the Participation Exemption โ making those receipts fully taxable at 9%.
Maximise Your Legitimate UAE CT Exemptions in 2026
Don't leave money on the table. OneDeskSolution's UAE Corporate Tax team analyses your business structure, activities, and income streams to identify every exemption, relief, and deduction you are entitled to โ legally and accurately. Contact us today for a comprehensive CT exemption review.
13. Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
These are the most-searched questions on Google, ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity, and DeepSeek about UAE Corporate Tax exemptions and qualifying activities:
14. Related Articles & Resources
Explore these additional expert guides from OneDeskSolution to strengthen your UAE tax and business compliance knowledge:
Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute professional tax, legal, or financial advice. UAE Corporate Tax law and FTA guidance are subject to change. Always consult a qualified UAE tax advisor for guidance specific to your business situation. References are based on Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022 and associated Ministerial Decisions as of May 2026.
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