Mainland vs Free Zone vs Offshore Business Setup

Mainland vs Free Zone vs Offshore Business Setup UAE 2026 | OneDeskSolution

Mainland vs Free Zone vs Offshore: UAE Business Setup 2026

The definitive comparison guide — every difference between the three UAE business structures explained clearly so you choose the right one for your goals, market, and budget.

🏢 UAE Business Setup 2026 ⚖️ Comprehensive Comparison 📋 Mainland · Free Zone · Offshore 🗓️ Updated March 2026 ⏱️ 16-min read
📌 Article Summary

Choosing between a mainland, free zone, or offshore business structure in the UAE is the single most consequential business decision an entrepreneur makes when setting up in Dubai or the wider UAE — and it is also the decision most frequently made without enough information. Each structure has fundamentally different rules on who you can sell to, how much it costs, what tax obligations apply, how many visas you can sponsor, and what activities are permitted. Since the introduction of UAE Corporate Tax in 2023 and the expansion of 100% foreign ownership for mainland companies, the traditional advantages and disadvantages have shifted significantly. This expert 2026 guide covers every material difference between mainland, free zone, and offshore UAE business structures — in a clear, side-by-side format with decision frameworks, cost comparisons, tax implications, visa rules, compliance requirements, and a practical guide to which structure works best for which type of business.

💡1. The Three UAE Business Structures

The UAE offers three distinct legal frameworks for business registration, each with its own regulatory environment, commercial rights, and compliance obligations. Understanding the fundamental nature of each is the starting point for any UAE business decision:

🏙️ Mainland Full Market Access
  • Registered with the Dept. of Economic Development (DED)
  • Can trade with all UAE customers — government, private, retail
  • No restrictions on where the business can operate in UAE
  • 100% foreign ownership now permitted for most activities
  • Subject to full UAE labour law (MOHRE, WPS, Emiratisation)
  • Audit required under UAE CCL
🏢 Free Zone Tax Efficient
  • Registered within a specific UAE free zone authority
  • 100% foreign ownership — always (no change needed from 2021 reforms)
  • Historically 0% tax — subject to QFZP conditions for CT
  • Cannot directly trade with UAE mainland without additional arrangements
  • Simpler setup process, flexible office arrangements
  • Mandatory annual statutory audit for licence renewal
🌐 Offshore Asset Protection
  • Registered as a non-resident offshore company (RAK ICC, JAFZA offshore, ADGM)
  • 100% foreign ownership — always
  • No requirement to maintain UAE physical office
  • Cannot conduct business in UAE — no UAE trade permitted
  • Cannot sponsor UAE residence visas (most offshore jurisdictions)
  • Used for asset holding, IP, international trading structures
45+
UAE Free Zones to choose from
100%
Foreign ownership now available for all 3
9%
Corporate Tax rate (above AED 375K profit)
3
Key offshore jurisdictions: RAK ICC, JAFZA, ADGM

👤2. Ownership & Legal Structure

FactorMainlandFree ZoneOffshore
Foreign Ownership100% — for most activities since 2021 reform100% — always permitted100% — always permitted
UAE National RequirementRequired for specific restricted activities (e.g. some professional, security, media)Not requiredNot required
Entity Types AvailableLLC, Sole Est., Branch, Civil Co., PJSCFZE (1 shareholder), FZC (multiple), BranchIBC, Private Company, Foundation
Minimum Share CapitalNo minimum for LLC (as of 2021)Varies — AED 1 to AED 50,000 by free zoneUsually nominal (AED 1,000–10,000)
Local Agent / SponsorRequired for certain restricted professional activitiesNot requiredNot required
Liability ProtectionYes (LLC — limited to capital contribution)Yes (FZE/FZC — limited liability)Yes (fully limited liability)
ℹ️

2021 Mainland Reform: The UAE Commercial Companies Law reform in 2021 opened 100% foreign ownership for the vast majority of mainland commercial activities. However, around 13 strategic sectors remain restricted — including defence, security, certain media, some transport, oil & gas exploration, and specific professional activities. For these restricted sectors, a UAE national partner or agent may still be required for mainland registration. Always verify your specific activity category with a business setup specialist before assuming 100% ownership is available.

🛒3. Trading Rights & Market Access

This is the most commercially critical difference between the three structures — and the one that catches the most businesses out when they set up in the wrong structure for their business model.

Market / Client Type🏙️ Mainland🏢 Free Zone🌐 Offshore
UAE mainland businesses (B2B)✓ Full accessVia mainland agent or distributor only✗ Not permitted
UAE government contracts & tenders✓ Eligible✗ Not eligible (without mainland)✗ Not permitted
UAE retail consumers (B2C)✓ Full accessLimited — only within free zone or via distributor✗ Not permitted
Other UAE free zone businesses✓ Full access✓ Free zone to free zone permitted✗ Not permitted
GCC businesses (Saudi, Kuwait, etc.)✓ Full access✓ Full accessVia registered agent only
International / overseas businesses✓ Full access✓ Full access✓ Core purpose
Import & re-export through UAE✓ Full access✓ Especially Designated Zones (JAFZA)✗ Not permitted
🚫

The Most Costly Mistake in UAE Business Setup: Setting up a free zone company when your primary market is UAE mainland businesses is the single most common — and most expensive — UAE business structure mistake. A free zone company that directly sells to UAE mainland clients without using a licensed mainland distributor or maintaining a separate mainland entity is technically in violation of UAE trade regulations. This error forces entrepreneurs to either set up a second (mainland) entity or operate in a grey area — both of which are more expensive than getting the structure right from the start. If your primary customers are UAE-based, a mainland company is almost always the correct choice.

Not Sure Which UAE Structure Is Right for You?

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💰4. Setup Costs & Annual Fees 2026

Cost Component🏙️ Mainland🏢 Free Zone🌐 Offshore
Initial setup / licence feeAED 15,000–40,000AED 5,500–25,000AED 3,000–12,000
Annual licence renewalAED 10,000–30,000AED 5,000–20,000AED 2,500–8,000
Office space requirementMandatory physical office (Ejari)Flexi-desk from AED 3,000 or physical officeNo physical office required
Annual office minimum costAED 30,000–100,000+ (Dubai market rent)AED 3,000–15,000 (flexi-desk)AED 0 (no office required)
Statutory audit costAED 5,000–20,000AED 3,000–15,000Not typically required
Visa application per personAED 5,000–8,000AED 4,000–7,000Usually not available
Total Year-1 (indicative range)AED 80,000–200,000+AED 20,000–60,000AED 6,000–25,000

📊 Relative Cost Comparison (indicative Year-1 total)

🏙️ Mainland (Dubai)
AED 80K–200K+ / year
🏢 Free Zone (IFZA/RAKEZ)
AED 20K–60K / year
🌐 Offshore (RAK ICC)
AED 6K–25K / year

*Indicative ranges — actual costs depend on specific free zone, office type, number of visas, and professional service fees.

🪪5. Visa Quota & Employee Rules

Visa / HR Factor🏙️ Mainland🏢 Free Zone🌐 Offshore
UAE Residence VisasYes — company can sponsor employee visasYes — based on visa package chosenTypically NO — offshore companies cannot sponsor visas
Visa quotaBased on office size — typically 2–6 per standard office; more with larger spaceBased on licence package — starter packages typically 1–3 visasN/A — no visa sponsorship
Investor / owner visaYes — 3-year renewableYes — 3-year renewableNo — offshore does not qualify
Golden Visa eligibilityYes (AED 2M+ business value criteria)Yes (AED 2M+ criteria)Limited — offshore investments generally do not qualify
WPS (Wage Protection System)Mandatory for all employeesDepends on free zone — many exemptN/A — no employees in UAE
Emiratisation requirementsMandatory if 50+ employees (mainland)Not applicable (free zone)Not applicable
MOHRE registrationMandatoryVaries by free zone — many exemptNot applicable
⚠️

Offshore Visa Limitation: This is the most commonly misunderstood aspect of UAE offshore companies. Most entrepreneurs attracted to the low cost of offshore setup assume they can also sponsor their own UAE residence visa through the offshore company. In almost all cases — RAK ICC, JAFZA offshore, and most other offshore jurisdictions — offshore companies cannot sponsor UAE residence visas. If you need a UAE residence visa (to live in the UAE, open a UAE personal bank account, or access UAE healthcare), you need either a mainland or a free zone company — not an offshore structure.

🧾6. Tax Implications — VAT, Corporate Tax & QFZP

Tax Aspect🏙️ Mainland🏢 Free Zone🌐 Offshore
Corporate Tax (CT) Rate9% on profits above AED 375,0000% (QFZP qualifying income) or 9%Generally 0% — no UAE taxable income
CT RegistrationMandatory — all entitiesMandatory — all entitiesRequired for UAE-resident entities
QFZP Status (0% CT)Not available — mainland pays 9%Available with conditions metGenerally outside CT scope
VAT RegistrationMandatory if turnover > AED 375KMandatory if turnover > AED 375KGenerally not required (no UAE trading)
VAT on UAE sales5% standard rate5% (non-DZ) or special treatment (DZ)N/A — no UAE sales
Small Business ReliefAvailable (revenue < AED 3M)Available (if not claiming QFZP)Unlikely to apply
💡

The CT Landscape in 2026: The introduction of Corporate Tax has changed the traditional tax calculus for UAE structure decisions. Free zone QFZP status (0% CT on qualifying income) remains a genuine advantage — but requires careful annual compliance monitoring. Mainland companies now face 9% CT on profits above AED 375,000. However, for many businesses the 9% CT is a modest cost compared to the commercial benefit of full UAE market access that mainland status provides. The right structure decision should be based on your business model and target market first — not solely on optimising the tax rate.

📋7. Compliance & Reporting Obligations

Compliance Obligation🏙️ Mainland🏢 Free Zone🌐 Offshore
Statutory AuditMandatory (CCL)Mandatory (licence renewal)Not typically required
IFRS Financial StatementsRequiredRequired (IFRS or IFRS for SMEs)Basic accounts only usually
VAT Return FilingQuarterly (if registered)Quarterly (if registered)Not required
CT Return FilingAnnualAnnualIf UAE resident entity
UBO RegisterMandatoryMandatoryMandatory
Annual licence renewalWith DED — annuallyWith free zone — annuallyAnnual registered agent fee
Overall compliance burdenHighMedium-HighLow

🏦8. Banking & Financial Access

Banking Factor🏙️ Mainland🏢 Free Zone🌐 Offshore
UAE corporate bank accountStraightforward — all UAE banksAvailable — some banks more free-zone friendly than othersVery difficult — most UAE banks reject offshore-only companies
Account opening easeGenerally easier — physical presenceModerate — substance evidence requiredVery difficult without resident director
Trade finance accessFull access — Letters of Credit, guaranteesAvailable — sector dependentVery limited
Bank financing / loansFull access with audited accountsAvailable — with audited accountsNot typically available
International bankingFull accessFull accessPossible in some international jurisdictions

📊9. Master Comparison Table

Factor🏙️ Mainland🏢 Free Zone🌐 Offshore
100% Foreign OwnershipYes (most activities)Yes — alwaysYes — always
UAE Market AccessFull — all clientsLimited — via agentNone
Govt TendersEligibleNot eligibleNot eligible
UAE Residence VisasYesYesNo
Physical Office RequiredYes — mandatoryFlexi-desk minimumNo
Corporate Tax Rate9% (above AED 375K)0% QFZP or 9%0% (no UAE trading)
VAT ComplianceRequired if threshold metRequired if threshold metNot required
Statutory AuditRequiredRequired (licence renewal)Not required
Setup Cost (Year 1)Highest (AED 80K–200K+)Medium (AED 20K–60K)Lowest (AED 6K–25K)
UAE Bank AccountEasyModerateVery Difficult
Emiratisation (NAFIS)Required (50+ employees)Not applicableNot applicable
Compliance BurdenHighMedium-HighLow
Best ForUAE market-focused businesses, retail, govt contractors, service firms with UAE clientsInternational businesses, exporters, FDI vehicles, CT-efficient structuresAsset holding, IP structures, international trading, family wealth planning

🎯10. Which Structure Is Best for You?

🏙️

Choose Mainland If You...

Primarily serve UAE-based clients (individuals, businesses, or government). Want to bid for UAE government tenders. Operate a retail business in Dubai. Run a restaurant, hospitality, healthcare, or construction business. Need to employ UAE-resident staff under MOHRE. Want maximum banking access and commercial credibility in the UAE market. Are prepared to invest in a physical office and meet full UAE compliance requirements.

🏢

Choose Free Zone If You...

Primarily serve international/overseas clients or GCC businesses. Work in digital, tech, media, consulting, or services that can be delivered globally without a UAE retail presence. Want to optimise for Corporate Tax efficiency (QFZP 0% rate on qualifying income). Want simpler, faster setup with lower costs than mainland. Want 100% foreign ownership with minimal administrative burden. Are establishing a UAE subsidiary for an overseas parent company. May want UAE residence visas for the owner(s) and a small team.

🌐

Choose Offshore If You...

Need a UAE-registered holding company for international assets or investments. Want to hold UAE real property through a corporate vehicle. Need an international trading company structure without UAE physical presence. Are building a family wealth or succession planning structure. Do NOT need to conduct business in the UAE. Do NOT need UAE residence visas. Want the lowest possible cost corporate vehicle for holding or structuring purposes. Are a non-resident investor wanting UAE corporate asset protection.

📊 Structure Score by Business Need

Business Profile🏙️ Mainland🏢 Free Zone🌐 OffshoreRecommended
UAE retail / F&B business⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐Mainland
IT / digital services to global clients⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐Free Zone
Import/export trading business⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ (JAFZA)Free Zone (DZ)
Holding company / international assets⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐Offshore
Government contracts / tenders⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐Mainland
Professional services (UAE clients)⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ (with agent)Mainland
Regional HQ / international expansion⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐Free Zone

12. Frequently Asked Questions

What is the main difference between a mainland and free zone company in UAE?
The most fundamental difference is market access and trading rights. A mainland company (registered with DED) can conduct business with any customer anywhere in the UAE — UAE residents, businesses, and government entities — without restriction, and can bid for government tenders. A free zone company is restricted to conducting business within its specific free zone, with international clients, and with other UAE free zone companies. It cannot directly supply or sell to UAE mainland businesses or consumers without using a licensed mainland distributor or separate mainland entity. Both structures now allow 100% foreign ownership for most activities. Other key differences include: mainland companies have higher setup and operating costs (mandatory physical office, higher rents), are subject to UAE MOHRE labour regulations including Emiratisation, but pay 9% Corporate Tax. Free zone companies have lower costs, simpler setup, potential for 0% Corporate Tax under QFZP conditions, but face the trading restriction on UAE mainland customers and mandatory annual statutory audit for licence renewal.
Can a free zone company sell to UAE mainland customers?
A free zone company cannot directly sell goods or services to UAE mainland customers under most circumstances. There are two main ways a free zone business can access the UAE mainland market: (1) Appoint a UAE mainland distributor or commercial agent — a UAE mainland-licensed company acts as the distributor and sells to mainland clients on the free zone company's behalf. The distributor purchases from the free zone company and re-sells to mainland customers. (2) Set up a mainland entity in addition — the free zone entity provides services or goods to its mainland sister company, which then serves the UAE mainland market. This dual-entity structure (free zone + mainland) is very common among serious UAE businesses and allows optimisation for both tax efficiency and market access. The cost of operating both a free zone and a mainland entity is typically AED 30,000–60,000 annually for the additional mainland licence and office. Note: goods transferred from a non-Designated Zone free zone to the UAE mainland are treated as an import and subject to 5% UAE Customs Duty in addition to VAT.
Is a free zone company better than a mainland company in UAE for Corporate Tax?
For Corporate Tax purposes, a free zone company has a potential advantage through QFZP (Qualifying Free Zone Person) status, which allows 0% Corporate Tax on qualifying income — compared to 9% for mainland companies on profits above AED 375,000. However, the QFZP advantage is conditional and requires: (1) Adequate UAE substance (real employees, UAE-based management). (2) Only qualifying income — income from other free zone entities, qualifying activities, or qualifying IP. (3) Non-qualifying income below the de minimis threshold (AED 5M or 5% of revenue). (4) Transfer pricing compliance. If your free zone company derives significant income from mainland UAE clients, those are likely non-qualifying revenues — and if they exceed the de minimis threshold, your entire income becomes subject to 9% CT for that year. For mainland businesses, 9% CT is the standard — but for many businesses the full UAE market access that mainland status provides (government tenders, direct B2C sales, no restrictions) generates revenue growth that more than offsets the 9% tax. Structure decisions should be based on your business model first, not solely on tax optimisation.
Can I get a UAE residence visa through an offshore company?
In almost all cases, no. UAE offshore companies — whether RAK ICC, JAFZA offshore, or ADGM offshore structures — typically cannot sponsor UAE residence visas for owners, directors, or employees. Offshore companies are specifically designed for non-UAE resident use — they are meant to be managed from outside the UAE without physical presence. If you need a UAE residence visa to live in the UAE, open a UAE bank account, access UAE healthcare, or enrol children in UAE schools, you must establish either a mainland company or a free zone company that includes a visa package in its licence. Free zone visa packages start from a single investor visa in the simplest packages (e.g., IFZA, RAKEZ) at an additional AED 4,000–7,000 per visa above the basic licence cost. The only exception is JAFZA offshore, which in certain circumstances can be used to facilitate visa arrangements, but this is not standard and depends on specific arrangements.
Which UAE business structure is cheapest to set up in 2026?
The cheapest UAE business structure in 2026 is an offshore company — with setup costs starting from approximately AED 3,000–8,000 for a RAK ICC offshore company and annual renewal from AED 2,500–5,000. However, offshore comes with the significant limitation of no UAE trading, no visa sponsorship, and very restricted UAE banking access. Among structures that allow UAE operations and visa sponsorship, free zone companies are significantly cheaper than mainland. Budget UAE free zones like IFZA, RAKEZ, and SHAMS offer complete free zone company packages (licence + flexi-desk + 1–2 visas) starting from approximately AED 10,000–15,000 for the first year. Mainland companies in Dubai have a significantly higher cost floor due to mandatory physical office rental (minimum AED 30,000–50,000/year in Dubai) plus DED licensing fees (AED 15,000–30,000), making total first-year costs typically AED 80,000–150,000 for a standard mainland setup. The cheapest structure that provides full UAE market access and visa sponsorship is a mainland company in a lower-cost emirate (Ajman, Sharjah) or a well-priced free zone like RAKEZ — but the right choice ultimately depends on your business needs, not just the cost.

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© 2026 OneDeskSolution. Informational purposes only — not legal advice. UAE regulations change; always verify current requirements with a licensed UAE business setup professional. All information current as of March 2026.
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