Tax Services for
Different Business Types
in Dubai 2026
The complete 2026 Dubai tax services guide by business type โ VAT, Corporate Tax, sector-specific deductions, FTA compliance strategies, and specialist advisory for SMEs, retailers, restaurants, real estate, tech startups, healthcare providers, manufacturing companies, professional services, and financial businesses.
Dubai's tax environment in 2026 โ UAE VAT at 5%, Corporate Tax at 9% on profits above AED 375,000, Excise Tax on selected goods, and a rapidly maturing FTA enforcement capability โ affects every business operating in the emirate. But the specific tax obligations, planning opportunities, and compliance challenges differ dramatically by industry. A restaurant's tax position is nothing like a real estate developer's; a technology startup's CT planning is fundamentally different from a manufacturing company's. This comprehensive 2026 guide provides a sector-by-sector breakdown of the key tax services, obligations, and optimisation strategies for every major Dubai business type โ from solo freelancers and SMEs through retail, F&B, healthcare, tech, real estate, financial services, and manufacturing โ and how OneDeskSolution provides specialist Dubai tax advisory tailored to your specific industry and business model.
๐1. Dubai Tax Framework 2026 โ Overview
Dubai and the broader UAE operate a relatively straightforward but increasingly rigorous tax framework in 2026. There are no personal income taxes, no capital gains taxes on most transactions, and no withholding taxes on dividends or interest under domestic law. However, three major taxes now apply to businesses: UAE VAT at 5%, UAE Corporate Tax at 9%, and UAE Excise Tax on selected goods. Every Dubai business โ regardless of sector โ must navigate all three within the context of their specific industry.
| Tax Type | Rate | Who Registers? | Filing Frequency | Key Threshold |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| UAE VAT | 5% (standard); 0% (zero-rated); Exempt | Businesses with taxable supplies >AED 375K/yr | Quarterly (VAT 201) | AED 375,000/yr mandatory; AED 187,500 voluntary |
| UAE Corporate Tax | 0% (profits โคAED 375K or SBR <AED 3M); 9% (profits >AED 375K) | ALL UAE-registered businesses โ mandatory CT registration | Annual (CT 201) | AED 375,000 profit threshold; AED 3M SBR revenue threshold |
| Excise Tax | 50% (tobacco, carbonated drinks); 100% (energy drinks, e-cigarettes) | Importers, producers, and stockpilers of excisable goods | Monthly | No threshold โ applies from first unit imported/produced |
| Customs Duty | 0โ5% (GCC CET); higher on select items | All importers of goods into UAE | Per import declaration | Applies at point of import; no annual threshold |
Every Business Type. Every Tax. Handled by Specialists.
OneDeskSolution provides sector-specific Dubai tax advisory for businesses of every type and size โ VAT registration and returns, Corporate Tax filing, SBR election, industry-specific deductions, and FTA compliance. Get a free consultation today.
๐ค2. Small Businesses & Freelancers
Small businesses and freelancers operating in Dubai with annual revenue under AED 3 million are the biggest beneficiaries of the UAE's Small Business Relief (SBR) โ paying 0% Corporate Tax by actively electing SBR in the annual CT 201 return. The SBR election covers the entire profit, not just the amount above AED 375,000. This means a solo consultant with AED 1.5M revenue and AED 400,000 profit pays zero CT โ a saving of AED 2,250 (the excess above AED 375,000 ร 9% = AED 2,250) with SBR vs. AED 2,250 without. For a more profitable small business with AED 3M revenue and AED 700,000 profit โ the SBR saves AED 29,250 annually (AED 325,000 ร 9%).
| Tax Obligation | Position | Key Action |
|---|---|---|
| Corporate Tax registration | Mandatory โ all businesses regardless of size | Register on EmaraTax immediately; AED 10,000 penalty for non-registration |
| SBR election (0% CT) | 0% CT if revenue <AED 3M โ must elect annually | Elect SBR in every CT 201 return; SBR is NOT automatic |
| VAT registration | Mandatory above AED 375,000/yr taxable supplies | Monitor revenue monthly; register before threshold; voluntary registration available for input VAT recovery |
| Key deductions | Office rent; equipment depreciation; professional fees; insurance; home office (business %) | Maintain receipts; separate business and personal; document home office calculation |
๐๏ธ3. Retail & Trading Companies
Retail and trading businesses are among the highest VAT-volume operators in Dubai โ charging 5% on virtually all sales while recovering input VAT on purchases. The key tax challenges for retailers are: VAT on zero-rated goods vs. standard-rated goods (especially mixed-basket retailers selling food, clothing, and electronics together); customs duty on imported stock; inventory accounting for CT purposes; and the correct treatment of discounts, refunds, and loyalty programmes.
| Tax Area | Key Issue | Correct Treatment |
|---|---|---|
| VAT on mixed goods baskets | Selling zero-rated food items alongside standard-rated items | Apply correct VAT rate per product; POS system must be configured with correct VAT codes per item SKU |
| Discounts and promotions | VAT on discounted prices; promotional free gifts | VAT on actual consideration received (post-discount); free gifts may trigger deemed supply if input VAT claimed |
| Import VAT on stock | 5% import VAT on imported goods at UAE border | Recover import VAT as input tax in quarterly VAT 201; retain customs entry documents |
| Inventory write-offs | Obsolete or damaged stock: CT and VAT implications | CT: stock write-off is deductible expense; VAT: input VAT on written-off stock may need to be reversed if originally recovered |
| CT โ COGS methodology | FIFO vs. weighted average for cost of goods sold | IFRS: FIFO or weighted average consistently applied; document method in accounting policies for CT return |
๐ฝ๏ธ4. Restaurants, Cafes & F&B Businesses
The Dubai restaurant and cafe sector carries a straightforward but high-volume VAT obligation โ 5% on all prepared food and beverages served in-house or for delivery. The most common F&B tax errors: not charging VAT on delivery fees (5% applies); treating takeaway as VAT-free (it is not); not recovering input VAT on kitchen equipment purchases; and miscalculating the entertainment expense 50% CT cap.
50% Entertainment Expense Cap for F&B Operators: When restaurant or cafe owners host client dinners, sponsor food for business events, or entertain prospects โ those costs are subject to the 50% CT entertainment cap. Only 50 fils of every AED 1 spent on business entertainment is deductible for CT. Maintain separate account codes for: (a) cost of food sold to paying customers (100% deductible COGS); and (b) food and drink provided for business entertainment (50% capped). Mixing these two categories is one of the most common CT errors for Dubai F&B operators.
๐ข5. Real Estate & Property Businesses
Real estate is one of the most tax-complex sectors in Dubai โ with different VAT treatments for residential vs. commercial property, first supply vs. subsequent supply, and a mix of zero-rated, exempt, and standard-rated activities often within the same development. Key issues: input VAT recovery on residential construction; IFRS 15 percentage-of-completion revenue recognition; RERA escrow compliance; and CT on property development profit.
| Property Activity | VAT | CT Treatment | Key Risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| First sale of new residential unit | 0% Zero-Rated โ recoverable input VAT on construction | 9% CT on developer profit; IFRS 15 PoC revenue recognition | Input VAT incorrectly blocked; PoC revenue misstatement |
| Subsequent residential sale (resale) | Exempt โ no input VAT recovery on related costs | 9% CT on gain | Incorrectly zero-rating exempt resales |
| Commercial property sale/lease | 5% Standard-Rated | 9% CT on profit | Not charging VAT on commercial lease income |
| Real estate brokerage commission | 5% Standard-Rated | 9% CT on commission income | Commission without tax invoice; VAT not declared |
| Property management fees | 5% Standard-Rated | 9% CT on management fees | Straightforward โ invoice with 5% VAT to landlord client |
๐ป6. Technology & Tech Startups
Technology companies in Dubai โ particularly those in free zones like Dubai Internet City, DMCC, DAFZA, and the DIFC โ benefit from some of the most attractive tax planning opportunities in the UAE system. The Qualifying Free Zone Person (QFZP) regime allows free zone tech companies to earn 0% CT on qualifying overseas income; zero-rating applies to services exported to overseas clients; and R&D expenditure receives favourable CT treatment. However, the growing scale of UAE tech businesses also brings transfer pricing obligations and IP valuation complexity.
| Tax Area | Dubai Tech Position | Planning Opportunity |
|---|---|---|
| VAT on SaaS/digital services | 5% on UAE user subscriptions; 0% on overseas users | Track user location; zero-rate overseas subscriptions with documentation; recover input VAT on all tech costs |
| QFZP 0% CT on overseas income | Free zone tech companies: 0% CT on qualifying overseas revenue if adequate substance | Ensure genuine QFZP substance; separate UAE income (9%) from overseas income (0%); track qualifying income |
| R&D expenditure CT deduction | R&D costs: potentially 100% CT-deductible; development costs: IAS 38 amortisation if capitalised | Assess whether to expense or capitalise development costs; each approach has different CT timing implications |
| IP โ software / algorithms | IAS 38 amortisation of capitalised IP: CT-deductible; QFZP qualifying IP income: 0% CT if nexus conditions met | QFZP qualifying IP structuring; nexus expenditure tracking; transfer pricing for intercompany IP licences |
| Transfer pricing (TP) | TP Disclosure Form required if related-party transactions >AED 3M | Document intercompany pricing; prepare TP study; TP Disclosure Form with CT 201 |
๐ฅ7. Healthcare & Medical Clinics
Dubai healthcare providers benefit from one of the most tax-advantaged positions in the UAE economy โ with most clinical medical services zero-rated for VAT (0%), allowing full input VAT recovery on all clinic purchases. The key tax services for healthcare businesses: VAT registration (even if all services are zero-rated, to recover input VAT); Corporate Tax filing with SBR for small practices; DHA/DOH licensing fees and professional liability insurance deductions; and the complex VAT analysis for mixed practices offering both medical (zero-rated) and aesthetic/cosmetic (5%) services.
| Healthcare Activity | VAT | CT Deduction |
|---|---|---|
| GP / specialist medical consultations | 0% Zero-Rated | N/A โ zero-rated; input VAT on purchases: 100% recoverable |
| Cosmetic / aesthetic procedures | 5% Standard-Rated | Revenues are CT-taxable; costs are CT-deductible |
| DHA/DOH annual licence fees | N/A (government charge) | 100% CT-deductible |
| Medical professional liability insurance | Insurance: exempt supply | 100% CT-deductible โ mandatory for DHA/DOH licence |
| Medical equipment (purchase) | 5% VAT on purchase โ 100% recoverable | IAS 16 depreciation: 100% CT-deductible over useful life |
๐ญ8. Manufacturing & Industrial Companies
Manufacturing companies in Dubai โ particularly those in Jebel Ali Free Zone (JAFZA), Dubai Industrial City, and Dubai South โ benefit from strategic CT planning opportunities including QFZP free zone status, export zero-rating, and comprehensive equipment and plant depreciation deductions. The key tax services: VAT on domestic vs. export sales; import VAT recovery on raw materials; IAS 16 plant and machinery depreciation; QFZP qualifying income structuring for export revenue; and transfer pricing for intercompany sales of manufactured goods.
โ๏ธ9. Professional Services
Professional services firms โ law practices, accounting firms, management consultancies, architectural and engineering companies โ face a relatively clean VAT position (5% on UAE-based services; 0% on services to overseas clients) but complex CT questions around: partner profit allocation (salary vs. profit share), professional indemnity insurance deductions, overseas client zero-rating documentation, and the 50% entertainment cap on client hospitality.
| Tax Issue | Treatment | Planning Point |
|---|---|---|
| Services to UAE clients | 5% VAT โ issue tax invoice; declare in quarterly VAT 201 | Ensure all client invoices include 5% VAT and valid client TRN for B2B invoices |
| Services to overseas clients | 0% Zero-Rated โ services consumed outside UAE | Retain evidence of client's overseas location; document service delivery from UAE; zero-rate with documentation |
| Partner drawings vs. salary | Salary: CT-deductible; profit distribution: not deductible | Structure partner remuneration carefully; market-rate salary component is CT-deductible; profit sharing above salary is not |
| Professional indemnity insurance | 100% CT-deductible | Fully deductible as mandatory professional cost; retain PI policy documents |
| Client entertainment | 50% CT cap | Tag client meals, gifts, and events separately; apply 50% add-back in CT computation |
Sector-Specific Dubai Tax Advisory โ We Know Your Industry
Whether you run a retail shop, a technology startup, a healthcare clinic, or a real estate development company โ OneDeskSolution provides specialist Dubai tax advisory tailored to your sector. VAT, Corporate Tax, CT return filing, FTA compliance, and sector-specific optimisation. Contact us today.
๐ฆ10. Financial & Insurance Services
Financial services businesses face the most complex VAT position of any sector in Dubai โ most core financial services (interest income, loan origination, insurance premiums, currency exchange margin) are VAT-exempt, creating partial exemption situations where input VAT recovery is limited. The key tax services: partial exemption methodology; VAT on fee-based services (asset management, advisory, custody); DIFC/ADGM regulatory tax framework; and CT on banking and financial institution profits.
| Financial Service | VAT | Input VAT Recovery |
|---|---|---|
| Interest income / lending | Exempt โ no output VAT | No input VAT recovery on costs directly attributable to exempt lending |
| Asset management / advisory fees | 5% Standard-Rated | 100% input VAT recovery on costs directly attributable to fee income |
| Insurance premiums | Exempt โ no output VAT | Input VAT on insurance operations: blocked (partial exemption) |
| Currency exchange (margin) | Exempt | Input VAT on FX operations: partial exemption applies |
| Overhead / shared costs | Partial exemption โ apportion by revenue ratio | Taxable revenue รท total revenue ร input VAT = recoverable amount |
๐ช11. Events & Entertainment Companies
Dubai's events sector carries some of the most complex VAT positions in the UAE โ principal vs. agent analysis for gross vs. net revenue recognition; reverse charge VAT on overseas artist and entertainer fees (one of the most frequently missed obligations); ticketing revenue VAT timing; and the critical 50% entertainment expense cap for CT. Events companies must also navigate sponsorship VAT, client deposit accounting under IFRS 15, and FTA audit risk from high-value transactions.
Reverse Charge on Overseas Artists โ Most Missed Events VAT: When a Dubai event company pays an overseas performer (international DJ, celebrity, keynote speaker), 5% output VAT must be declared on the artist fee (Box 3 VAT 201) AND claimed as input VAT (Box 10). Net effect: zero cost โ but failure to declare creates a significant FTA penalty of 50% of the underdeclared output VAT. This is the most frequently cited VAT error in FTA audits of UAE event management companies.
๐12. E-Commerce & Online Businesses
E-commerce and digital businesses in Dubai face a dual VAT obligation: 5% on sales to UAE-resident customers and 0% on exports to overseas customers. The critical compliance requirement is maintaining documentation of the customer's location to support the zero-rating of overseas sales. Platform-based businesses must also analyse whether they are acting as principal (gross revenue, all VAT on platform) or agent (commission only, VAT on commission).
| E-Commerce Scenario | VAT | CT Opportunity |
|---|---|---|
| Physical goods sold to UAE customers | 5% โ standard retail VAT applies | COGS and fulfilment costs: 100% CT-deductible |
| Physical goods exported overseas | 0% Zero-Rated โ retain export documentation | QFZP: 0% CT on qualifying export income with free zone substance |
| Digital subscriptions (UAE users) | 5% VAT on subscription value | Platform costs, hosting, content creation: 100% CT-deductible |
| Digital subscriptions (overseas users) | 0% Zero-Rated โ services consumed outside UAE | QFZP analysis for overseas subscription income |
| Marketplace commission income | 5% VAT on commission charged to sellers | Commission: taxable income; platform development costs: CT-deductible |
๐13. Tax Comparison Matrix โ All Dubai Business Sectors
| Business Sector | VAT Rate | CT Rate | Key Deduction | Main Risk | Planning Priority |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SME / Freelancer | 5% if >AED 375K | 0% SBR (<AED 3M) | Office; equipment; professional fees | Missing SBR election; not registering CT | SBR election annually |
| Retail / Trading | 5% (most goods) | 9% on profits | COGS; rent; staff | Mixed goods VAT errors; inventory write-offs | POS VAT configuration; import VAT recovery |
| Restaurant / F&B | 5% all prepared food | 9% (or SBR) | COGS; rent; staff; equipment depreciation | VAT on delivery fees; entertainment 50% cap | Separate COGS from entertainment costs |
| Real Estate Developer | 0% residential; 5% commercial | 9% โ complex | Construction costs; staff; IFRS 15 PoC | Input VAT blocking on residential; PoC errors | IFRS 15 methodology; input VAT maximisation |
| Technology / SaaS | 5% UAE; 0% overseas | QFZP 0% overseas; 9% UAE | R&D; staff; IP amortisation | QFZP substance; TP documentation | QFZP structuring; export zero-rating |
| Healthcare Clinic | 0% medical; 5% cosmetic | 0% SBR (most small clinics) | DHA fees; insurance; staff; equipment | Not recovering input VAT; missing SBR | VAT registration for input recovery; SBR |
| Manufacturing | 5% domestic; 0% exports | 9% (QFZP for free zone) | Plant depreciation; raw materials; staff | Import VAT timing; export documentation | QFZP analysis; export zero-rating documentation |
| Professional Services | 5% UAE; 0% overseas | 9% or SBR | Staff; PI insurance; office | Partner salary vs. profit; entertainment cap | Overseas client zero-rating; entertainment tracking |
| Financial Services | Exempt (core); 5% fees | 9% โ complex CT | Partial exemption apportionment | Partial exemption errors; input VAT blocking | Partial exemption methodology review |
| Events / Entertainment | 5% (+ reverse charge) | 9%; 50% entertainment cap | Event delivery costs; staff | Missing reverse charge VAT on overseas artists | Reverse charge compliance; principal/agent |
| E-Commerce | 5% UAE; 0% overseas | QFZP or SBR | Platform costs; fulfilment; staff | Customer location documentation; platform VAT | Zero-rating documentation; QFZP for overseas |
๐14. Our Dubai Tax Services
VAT Services
VAT registration; quarterly returns; sector-specific VAT analysis; zero-rating; partial exemption; FTA readiness
Corporate Tax
CT registration; annual CT 201 filing; SBR election; QFZP analysis; deduction maximisation; sector-specific CT planning
Accounting & Bookkeeping
IFRS-compliant bookkeeping; monthly management accounts; payroll; EOSB; financial statements; all sectors
Audit & Assurance
Statutory audit; free zone submission; government contract audit; VAT audit; internal controls review
Tax Advisory
Tax planning; sector-specific strategy; QFZP structuring; transfer pricing; SBR optimisation; group planning
FTA Compliance
FTA audit defence; voluntary disclosure; Tax Agent representation; penalty mitigation; VAT/CT reconciliation
โ15. Frequently Asked Questions
๐16. Related Resources
Dubai Tax Services Tailored to Your Business Type
Every Dubai business type has unique tax obligations, planning opportunities, and compliance risks. OneDeskSolution provides specialist VAT, Corporate Tax, audit, and advisory services tailored to your specific sector โ from retail and restaurants to real estate, technology, healthcare, and financial services. Contact us for a free sector-specific tax consultation today.

