Tax Services for
Healthcare Providers in UAE
The complete 2026 tax guide for UAE healthcare providers โ VAT on medical services, Corporate Tax for hospitals and clinics, DHA compliance, insurance billing, equipment import duties, DHCC free zone tax, and specialist UAE healthcare sector tax advisory.
Healthcare providers in the UAE โ from single-physician general practice clinics and specialist outpatient centres to multi-specialty hospitals, diagnostic laboratories, pharmacies, and telemedicine platforms โ operate under one of the most nuanced and frequently misapplied tax frameworks in the country. UAE VAT draws a precise and legally significant line between zero-rated qualifying healthcare services (preventive and curative medical treatment) and standard-rated cosmetic, aesthetic, and non-therapeutic services โ with the cosmetic vs. therapeutic distinction being the most audited VAT issue in the UAE healthcare sector. Corporate Tax at 9% applies to healthcare businesses above AED 375,000 profit, with significant planning opportunities through Small Business Relief for smaller practices and QFZP optimisation for DHCC-registered entities. Medical equipment, medicines registered with MOHAP, and qualifying diagnostic devices are zero-rated โ while nutritional supplements, cosmeceuticals, and non-MDMA-registered devices attract 5% VAT. Insurance company billing creates specific VAT obligations that most healthcare providers have never correctly addressed. This comprehensive 2026 guide covers every material tax obligation and planning opportunity for UAE healthcare providers โ from the complete VAT classification of medical services and products through Corporate Tax optimisation, equipment import management, pharmacy mixed-portfolio VAT, insurance billing compliance, telemedicine taxation, and the annual compliance calendar โ supported by OneDeskSolution's specialist UAE healthcare tax advisory services.
๐ฅ1. UAE Healthcare Tax Landscape 2026
The UAE's healthcare sector is one of the country's most strategically important and fastest-growing industries โ combining a world-class private healthcare market serving UAE residents and medical tourists with substantial government investment in public healthcare infrastructure. Dubai Healthcare City (DHCC) has established itself as a regional hub for private healthcare delivery and medical education. Abu Dhabi's healthcare ecosystem, anchored by Mubadala Health, attracts international hospital groups and specialist providers. And the UAE's mandatory health insurance system in Dubai and Abu Dhabi has created a deep, structured insurance billing environment that generates billions of dirhams in healthcare claims annually.
For healthcare providers operating in this environment, the UAE's tax framework creates obligations and planning opportunities that are distinctly different from those in virtually any other business sector. The VAT zero-rating for qualifying healthcare services is one of the most practically significant tax provisions in UAE law โ allowing healthcare providers to recover input VAT on all business costs while charging 0% to patients on therapeutic medical care. But the boundary between zero-rated therapeutic services and standard-rated cosmetic and aesthetic services is precisely drawn and actively enforced by the FTA, making correct service classification the most material compliance challenge for UAE healthcare businesses.
Beyond VAT, Corporate Tax at 9% has applied since 2023, with healthcare practices' unique cost structure (medical equipment depreciation, EOSB for clinical staff, consumables) creating specific deductibility considerations. And for DHCC-registered entities, the QFZP free zone CT framework offers a genuine 0% CT opportunity for qualifying income โ but only where the healthcare entity's UAE mainland client revenue remains within the de minimis threshold.
Specialist Tax Advisory for UAE Healthcare Providers
OneDeskSolution's healthcare tax team works with hospitals, clinics, pharmacies, and diagnostic centres across the UAE โ providing VAT classification reviews, quarterly returns, Corporate Tax filing, and FTA audit defence. Contact us today.
๐ฅ2. Types of UAE Healthcare Providers & Tax Profile
General Practice Clinic
GP consultations; family medicine; preventive care โ primarily zero-rated VAT; standard CT obligations; DHA/MOHAP licensed
Specialist Outpatient
Cardiology, orthopaedics, oncology, neurology โ curative services; zero-rated; complex equipment depreciation CT claims
Pharmacy
Mixed VAT portfolio โ MOHAP-registered medicines (0%) + supplements/cosmeceuticals (5%); POS configuration critical
Diagnostic Lab / Imaging
X-ray, MRI, CT, pathology โ zero-rated when ordered as part of therapeutic care; high-value equipment depreciation
Cosmetic / Aesthetic Clinic
Cosmetic surgery, botox, fillers โ primarily 5% VAT; therapeutic elements require documentation; high audit risk sector
Hospital (Private)
Mixed zero-rated therapeutic + 5% cosmetic; insurance billing; high-value asset depreciation; complex VAT apportionment
| Healthcare Provider Type | VAT Profile | CT Position | Key Tax Risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| GP / family medicine clinic | Primarily 0% Zero-Rated | 9% or 0% SBR (if revenue <AED 3M) | Non-therapeutic services misclassified as zero-rated |
| Pharmacy | Mixed: 0% medicines / 5% supplements | 9% or SBR | Flat 0% across entire pharmacy โ supplements and cosmeceuticals should be 5% |
| Private hospital | Mixed: 0% therapeutic / 5% cosmetic | 9% โ significant revenue; substantial CT liability | Insurance billing VAT; cosmetic vs. therapeutic misclassification |
| Cosmetic/aesthetic clinic | Primarily 5% Standard-Rated | 9% or SBR | Zero-rating cosmetic procedures โ highest FTA audit risk in UAE healthcare |
| Diagnostic lab / imaging | Primarily 0% Zero-Rated | 9% or SBR | Import VAT on lab equipment โ ensure full recovery |
| DHCC entity | Same UAE VAT rules apply | QFZP 0% if qualifying income >95% | QFZP income split monitoring โ UAE mainland patient revenue |
๐ฐ3. UAE Healthcare VAT Framework โ The Core Principle
Under Article 45 of the UAE VAT Executive Regulations, qualifying healthcare services โ defined as preventive healthcare services and curative healthcare services provided by licensed healthcare professionals โ are zero-rated at 0% VAT. This zero-rating is one of the most practically significant and most frequently misapplied provisions in UAE VAT law.
Zero-Rated vs. Exempt โ The Critical Distinction: Zero-rated healthcare services (0% VAT) are taxable supplies โ meaning the healthcare provider charges 0% VAT to patients but retains full input VAT recovery rights on all business costs. If healthcare were VAT-exempt instead of zero-rated, providers would lose input VAT recovery rights โ costing them 5% on all equipment, consumables, rent, utilities, and professional fees. Zero-rating is the superior position โ actively claim all input VAT on costs supporting your therapeutic healthcare services every quarter.
| VAT Category | Rate | Description | Input VAT Recovery |
|---|---|---|---|
| Zero-Rated Healthcare | 0% | Qualifying preventive and curative healthcare services by licensed professionals | Full input VAT recovery on all related costs |
| Standard-Rated Cosmetic | 5% | Cosmetic, aesthetic, and elective non-therapeutic services with no medical necessity | Full input VAT recovery on costs for 5%-rated services |
| Mixed Supply | Analyse | Procedures with both therapeutic and cosmetic elements โ assess primary purpose with clinical documentation | Per service classification determination |
โ 4. Zero-Rated Medical Services (0% VAT)
โ Zero-Rated (0% VAT)
- GP consultation and diagnosis
- Emergency medical treatment
- Inpatient hospital care
- Surgical treatment of disease/injury
- Cancer treatment (oncology)
- Maternity and obstetric care
- Paediatric medical treatment
- Preventive vaccination programmes
- Diagnostic X-ray, MRI, CT, PET scans
- Laboratory tests (therapeutic)
- Physiotherapy (medically prescribed)
- Psychiatric treatment (diagnosed condition)
- Ambulance services (emergency)
- Dental treatment (therapeutic)
- Reconstructive surgery (post-medical necessity)
- Palliative and end-of-life care
โ Standard-Rated (5% VAT)
- Cosmetic surgery (no medical need)
- Botox / fillers (aesthetic use)
- Cosmetic teeth whitening
- Laser hair removal
- Elective body contouring
- Cosmetic veneers
- Gum contouring (cosmetic)
- Smile makeovers
- Non-medical nutritional counselling
- Wellness spa treatments
- Life coaching (non-clinical)
- Medical certificates (employment/travel)
- Purely cosmetic orthodontics
- Non-therapeutic fertility services
- Cosmetic skin resurfacing
Zero-Rating Attaches to the Service, NOT the Provider: The most common and costly UAE healthcare VAT error is assuming that any service delivered by a licensed doctor or in a licensed healthcare facility is automatically zero-rated. The FTA is explicit: zero-rating attaches to the therapeutic nature of the service โ not the provider's qualifications or the facility's classification. A licensed plastic surgeon in a JCI-accredited hospital performing aesthetic rhinoplasty with no documented functional impairment must charge 5% VAT. The same surgeon performing corrective nasal reconstruction following trauma may zero-rate the service with contemporaneous clinical documentation of therapeutic necessity.
โ5. Cosmetic vs. Therapeutic โ The Critical Distinction
| Procedure | Cosmetic Context (5% VAT) | Therapeutic Context (0% VAT) | Documentation Required for 0% |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rhinoplasty | Aesthetic nose reshaping โ patient preference | Correction of septal deviation with documented functional breathing impairment | ENT assessment; respiratory functional test; clinical notes at time of treatment |
| Botox injections | Anti-wrinkle aesthetic treatment | Hyperhidrosis, chronic migraine, blepharospasm, spasticity treatment | Specialist referral; ICD-10 diagnosis code; clinical (not cosmetic) context |
| Breast surgery | Augmentation for aesthetic improvement | Post-mastectomy reconstruction; documented back pain from macromastia | Oncology/specialist referral; functional impairment documentation |
| Orthodontics | Purely aesthetic alignment โ no functional impairment | Malocclusion causing TMJ pain, difficulty chewing, or speech impairment | Clinical assessment of functional impairment at treatment commencement |
| Eyelid surgery | Cosmetic upper eyelid lift | Ptosis causing visual field restriction โ ophthalmologist documented | Visual field test results; ophthalmology assessment; functional restriction evidence |
| Liposuction | Body contouring for cosmetic reasons | Treatment of lipedema; debulking for mobility-impairing lipohypertrophy | Vascular/lymphatic specialist diagnosis; clinical diagnosis of lipedema |
The Documentation Rule for Borderline Procedures: When a healthcare provider zero-rates a procedure that has both cosmetic and therapeutic elements, the patient's medical record must contain clear, contemporaneous clinical documentation of the therapeutic indication โ created at the time of treatment, not retrospectively in response to an FTA audit. The clinical note must document: the diagnosis, the functional impairment, the clinical rationale for the procedure, and why any cosmetic outcome is secondary to the therapeutic objective. Without this documentation, the FTA will treat the procedure as cosmetic and standard-rated.
๐6. Medicines & Medical Devices VAT
| Product Category | VAT Rate | Condition |
|---|---|---|
| MOHAP-registered prescription medicines (human) | 0% Zero-Rated | Must be registered on the MOHAP drug register; human use only |
| MOHAP-registered OTC medicines (human) | 0% Zero-Rated | MOHAP registration is the test โ not whether prescription or OTC |
| MDMA-registered medical devices (Class I, II, III) | 0% Zero-Rated | Medical Devices and Medicaments Agency registration required |
| Registered vaccines and biologics (human) | 0% Zero-Rated | MOHAP registered; human use |
| Nutritional supplements and vitamins | 5% Standard | Not registered medicines โ regardless of health claims or pharmacy placement |
| Herbal remedies (not MOHAP registered) | 5% Standard | Registration status determines rate โ not the product category label |
| Cosmeceuticals and skincare (pharmacy-sold) | 5% Standard | Cosmetic products โ 5% VAT regardless of pharmacy location |
| Veterinary medicines | 5% Standard | Zero-rating applies to human medicines only |
| Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (APIs) | 5% Standard | Raw materials โ not finished registered medicines |
| Non-MDMA aesthetic devices (laser, IPL) | 5% Standard | Aesthetic equipment not registered as medical devices under MDMA |
The Pharmacy Mixed Portfolio Problem: Most UAE pharmacies sell both MOHAP-registered medicines (zero-rated at 0%) and a range of nutritional supplements, cosmeceuticals, and personal care products (standard-rated at 5%). The pharmacy's Point of Sale system must be configured to apply the correct VAT rate at the product code level โ not at the transaction level. Issuing pharmacy receipts with a flat 0% rate across the entire sale is one of the most common and most FTA-audited errors in the UAE healthcare sector. A pharmacy dispensing AED 100,000/month with 20% of revenue from supplements (AED 20,000) has AED 1,000/month of output VAT that must be declared and remitted.
Healthcare Tax Done Right โ Every Quarter.
OneDeskSolution manages the complete tax function for UAE healthcare providers โ VAT classification, quarterly returns, insurance billing reconciliation, Corporate Tax filing, and FTA audit defence. Contact us today.
๐7. Insurance Company Billing & VAT
- VAT treatment unchanged by insurance billing route: The VAT rate applicable to a healthcare service is determined by the nature of the service โ not by whether the patient pays directly or through an insurance company. A zero-rated therapeutic consultation billed to an insurer is 0% VAT. A standard-rated cosmetic procedure billed to an insurer (where covered) is 5% VAT. The insurance payment route does not change the VAT classification
- Issuing VAT-compliant invoices to insurers: Healthcare providers must issue UAE-compliant tax invoices for all services billed to insurance companies โ showing TRN, treatment description, taxable amount, and the correct VAT rate (0% or 5%). Zero-rated treatments: invoice shows 0% VAT. Standard-rated services: 5% VAT on the invoice to the insurer
- Co-payment VAT treatment: The patient's co-payment portion of a healthcare bill carries the same VAT treatment as the full service. If the treatment is zero-rated therapeutic care: the co-payment is also 0% VAT. If the treatment is standard-rated cosmetic: the co-payment carries 5% VAT. Do not apply different rates to the insurer portion vs. the co-payment portion of the same service
- Insurance claims reconciliation: Healthcare providers billing through multiple insurance networks must maintain their VAT accounting at the individual claim level โ not estimate a blended VAT rate based on practice averages. The split between zero-rated and standard-rated services must be maintained claim by claim for quarterly VAT return preparation
- Insurance administration fees from insurer: Fees charged by insurance networks to providers for network participation, claims processing, or administration โ if charged by a UAE-registered insurer, may carry 5% VAT (input recoverable). If charged by an overseas insurer: potentially reverse charge
- Government healthcare payers (Thiqa, DAMAN) are NOT VAT-exempt: UAE government health insurance programmes (Thiqa in Abu Dhabi, basic health plans) are not VAT-exempt entities. When billing government insurance programmes, apply the same zero-rated (therapeutic) and standard-rated (cosmetic) VAT treatment as for private insurer billing
๐๏ธ8. Corporate Tax for UAE Healthcare Providers
| Healthcare Entity Profile | CT Rate | Conditions | Key CT Actions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small clinic (revenue < AED 3M) | 0% via SBR election | Annual revenue below AED 3M; active SBR election in CT 201 return each year | Annual CT registration and SBR election; mandatory CT 201 return filing even at 0% CT |
| Established clinic / medical centre | 9% above AED 375K profit | Standard CT; IFRS taxable income; equipment depreciation major deduction | Quarterly CT provision; annual CT 201; equipment depreciation optimisation; entertainment add-back |
| DHCC entity (QFZP) | 0% on qualifying income | Qualifying income >95%; UAE substance; TP on intercompany arrangements | Monthly income split monitoring; annual QFZP election; substance documentation |
| Private hospital group | 9% โ material CT liability | High revenue; large workforce; complex cost structure; significant CT base | Quarterly CT provision; equipment depreciation; EOSB deductibility; entertainment 50% add-back; annual CT return |
โ Key CT Deductible Expenses for Healthcare Providers
- Medical equipment depreciation (IAS 16): MRI machines, CT scanners, X-ray units, operating theatre equipment, dental chairs, lab analysers โ all capitalised under IAS 16 and depreciated over useful life (typically 5โ12 years). Annual depreciation is fully CT-deductible. For capital-intensive hospitals and imaging centres, this is often the largest single CT deduction
- Medical consumables and drugs: Medicines, surgical consumables, disposable equipment, reagents, contrast media โ all deductible as cost of treatment in the period consumed
- Clinical staff salaries and EOSB: Doctors, nurses, paramedics, laboratory technicians, pharmacists, and all support staff salaries โ fully deductible including monthly EOSB accrual (21 days per year for first 5 years; 30 days thereafter, on basic salary)
- Professional indemnity insurance: Medical malpractice insurance premiums โ mandatory for DHA/MOHAP-licensed practitioners; fully deductible
- DHA licensing and CPD costs: Annual DHA/MOHAP licence renewal fees; mandatory CPD (Continuing Professional Development) course costs โ deductible as regulatory compliance costs
- Entertainment (50% non-deductible): Patient gifts, medical conference hospitality, referrer dinners โ only 50% CT-deductible. Tag separately in Chart of Accounts from day one
- DHA/MOHAP fines (100% non-deductible): Regulatory fines from DHA, MOHAP, or Dubai Municipality โ fully non-deductible. Add back 100% in CT return. Never charge regulatory fines to a patient billable matter
๐ข9. DHCC & Free Zone Healthcare Tax
| Aspect | DHCC (Dubai Healthcare City) | Dubai Mainland (DHA) | Abu Dhabi (DoH) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Regulatory authority | DHCC Authority + DHA | DHA (Dubai Health Authority) | Department of Health Abu Dhabi |
| Corporate Tax | QFZP eligible (0% on qualifying income); medical tourism / international patient revenue may qualify | 9% on profits above AED 375K (or 0% SBR if <AED 3M) | 9% on profits above AED 375K |
| VAT treatment | Same UAE federal VAT rules apply โ zero-rated therapeutic, 5% cosmetic | Same UAE federal VAT rules | Same UAE federal VAT rules |
| Annual audit | Mandatory IFRS audit for DHCC entities; submit to DHCC Authority within 90 days of year end | If free zone: mandatory. Mainland LLC: recommended, not universally mandated | Per DoH and licensing requirements |
| Medical tourism advantage | International patient revenue may be QFZP qualifying income if export conditions met | Limited โ primarily UAE patient base | Limited โ primarily UAE patient base |
DHCC QFZP for Medical Tourism Providers: DHCC healthcare providers with a significant international patient base (patients genuinely established outside the UAE receiving healthcare in Dubai) may be able to structure their revenue for QFZP qualification โ where international patient revenue could be analysed as export of healthcare services if patients are not UAE residents. This is complex, fact-specific analysis. Most DHCC healthcare providers primarily serve UAE residents and face challenges maintaining the 95% qualifying income threshold. However, specialty providers actively targeting GCC and international medical tourism should seek specific QFZP eligibility analysis. Contact our advisory team for a DHCC entity QFZP assessment.
๐ฆ10. Medical Equipment Import Duties
| Equipment | HS Code | UAE Customs Duty | Import VAT | CT Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diagnostic imaging equipment (MRI, CT) | HS 90.22 | 0% Duty | 5% VAT (recoverable) | Capitalise; depreciate 8โ12 years; IAS 16 |
| Medical instruments and apparatus (HS 90.18) | HS 90.18 | 0% Duty | 5% VAT (recoverable) | Capitalise or expense depending on value |
| Dental chairs and equipment | HS 94.02 | 0% Duty | 5% VAT (recoverable) | Capitalise; depreciate 8โ10 years |
| Pharmaceutical products (MOHAP registered) | HS 30.04 | 0% Duty | 0% VAT (zero-rated) | Expense as cost of treatment |
| Surgical instruments and implants | HS 90.21 | 0% Duty | 0% VAT (MDMA registered) | Expense as cost of treatment when used |
| Laboratory analysers | HS 90.27 | 0% Duty | 5% VAT (recoverable) | Capitalise; depreciate 5โ8 years |
| Aesthetic laser / IPL devices | HS 90.13 | 5% Duty | 5% VAT (recoverable if 5%-rated services) | Capitalise; depreciate 5โ7 years |
| Hospital beds and furniture | HS 94.02 | 0% Duty | 5% VAT (recoverable) | Capitalise; depreciate 8โ12 years |
Import VAT Recovery on Medical Equipment: When a UAE healthcare provider imports medical equipment with 5% VAT paid at customs (import VAT), this VAT is fully recoverable as input VAT in the quarterly VAT 201 return (Box 6 โ Import VAT). Retain all customs entry documentation showing the import VAT paid โ this is the evidence required for recovery. For a hospital importing an MRI machine at AED 3,000,000 with AED 150,000 import VAT: that AED 150,000 is recoverable in the next quarterly return. Many healthcare providers miss this recovery by not maintaining import documentation systematically.
๐ฑ11. Telemedicine & Digital Health Tax
| Digital Health Service | VAT | Rate | Key Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Telemedicine consultation (UAE-licensed doctor, UAE patient) | Zero-Rated | 0% | Qualifying healthcare service โ same as in-person. DHA/MOHAP licence required for the consulting doctor |
| Online prescription / medication review | Zero-Rated | 0% | Medical service by licensed practitioner โ zero-rated |
| Telemedicine platform SaaS (B2B to clinic) | Standard-Rated | 5% | Software/platform service โ not a medical service. 5% VAT; reverse charge if overseas platform |
| Remote patient monitoring (MDMA device) | Zero-Rated (device) | 0% | MDMA-registered monitoring device: 0%. Non-registered device: 5%. Monitoring service by licensed clinician: 0% |
| AI diagnostic tool (sold to UAE clinic) | Standard-Rated | 5% | Software tool โ not a medical service or MDMA device. 5% VAT; recoverable by clinic as input VAT |
| Online wellness / fitness subscription | Standard-Rated | 5% | Wellness service โ not qualifying healthcare. 5% VAT throughout |
Reverse Charge on Overseas Telemedicine Software: UAE healthcare providers using overseas telemedicine platforms (Zoom Health, telehealth SaaS tools, practice management systems, electronic health record platforms from international providers) must self-assess 5% reverse charge VAT on every overseas subscription invoice. Declare in Box 3 of the quarterly VAT 201 return; recover in Box 10 if used in making taxable UAE supplies. Net cash impact: zero. But failure to declare Box 3 carries a 50% FTA penalty on the undeclared amount on discovery.
๐ 12. Annual Tax Compliance Calendar โ Healthcare Providers
Classify all revenue: zero-rated therapeutic vs. 5% cosmetic/aesthetic vs. 5% non-medical services. Pharmacy: zero-rated medicines vs. 5% supplements at product code level. Reverse charge on overseas telemedicine software and PMS subscriptions. EOSB accrual for all clinical and administrative staff. WPS payroll processing. IAS 16 depreciation on medical equipment.
File VAT 201. Box 1: cosmetic/standard-rated revenue ร 5%. Box 4: zero-rated therapeutic healthcare. Box 3: reverse charge on overseas medical software. Box 6: import VAT on equipment and medicines. Box 10: input VAT recovery. Pay net VAT due. Reconcile to HIS/billing system revenue reports.
File Q1 VAT. Service classification register review โ update for any new procedures or services added. CT provision update. Insurance billing VAT reconciliation โ confirm correct VAT coding on all insurer claims. DHA licence renewal costs โ expense correctly in accounts.
File Q2 VAT. Mid-year CT estimate. DHCC entity QFZP income split review โ confirm UAE patient vs. international patient revenue ratio. Equipment capex review โ confirm new equipment additions capitalised and depreciation commenced. CPD and training costs โ deductibility confirmed.
File Q3 VAT. Full-year CT estimate. Year-end planning: timing of equipment purchases for IAS 16 capitalisation and depreciation. EOSB provision review โ any clinical staff departures expected? DHCC entity: confirm audit engagement in place for year-end accounts.
IFRS audit mandatory for DHCC and free zone healthcare entities. IAS 16 equipment register review. EOSB provision verification. VAT reconciliation confirmation. Engage MoE-registered auditor with UAE healthcare sector experience.
File CT 201 via EmaraTax. SBR election (small practices); QFZP election (DHCC entities); equipment depreciation deductions; entertainment 50% add-back; DHA fines 100% add-back; EOSB deductibility confirmation. Pay CT due.
๐13. Our Healthcare Tax Services
VAT Classification Review
Complete service portfolio VAT assessment; therapeutic vs. cosmetic classification; POS/HIS system configuration; pharmacy mixed-portfolio setup
Quarterly VAT Returns
Full VAT 201 โ therapeutic/cosmetic split, insurance billing reconciliation, reverse charge on medical software, import VAT recovery
QFZP Monitoring
Monthly income split tracking for DHCC entities; UAE patient vs. international patient revenue; substance documentation; annual election
Corporate Tax Return
Annual CT 201; SBR election; equipment depreciation; EOSB deductibility; entertainment add-back; DHA fines non-deductibility
Healthcare Accounting
IFRS bookkeeping; medical equipment fixed assets register; treatment revenue by VAT category; monthly management accounts
FTA Audit Defence
Registered Tax Agent representation; cosmetic/therapeutic documentation defence; voluntary disclosures; penalty mitigation
โ14. Frequently Asked Questions
๐15. Related Resources
Expert Tax Advisory for UAE Healthcare Providers
From complete VAT classification reviews and quarterly returns through Corporate Tax filing, equipment import advisory, DHCC QFZP monitoring, insurance billing compliance, and FTA audit defence โ OneDeskSolution provides specialist tax services for UAE healthcare providers of every size and specialty. Contact us for a free consultation today.

