UAE Corporate Tax: Registration Mistakes to Avoid

FTA registration deadlines, filing errors, QFZP confusion, and penalties. A comprehensive guide to UAE corporate tax compliance and risk mitigation.

4 April 2026 | Jonathan Sémon

In Brief — Corporate Tax Registration Errors

The UAE Corporate Tax regime, instituted by Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022 and applicable to fiscal years commencing on or after 1 June 2023, is technically well-structured but administratively demanding. Common registration and filing errors include:

UAE Corporate Tax Framework: Essential Context

The UAE Corporate Tax regime, codified principally in Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022 (as amended), applies to fiscal years commencing on or after 1 June 2023. The standard rate is 9% on taxable income exceeding AED 375,000, while the first AED 375,000 of taxable income is taxed at 0% pursuant to Article 3 of the Decree-Law. A separate Small Business Relief regime (Article 21 of the Decree-Law and Ministerial Decision No. 73/2023) allows qualifying resident Taxable Persons whose Revenue does not exceed AED 3,000,000 to be deemed to have derived no taxable income for the period; the AED 375,000 figure should not be confused with the SBR threshold. Free Zone entities may benefit from a 0% rate on Qualifying Income under the QFZP regime (Articles 18 and 19 of the Decree-Law, Cabinet Decisions No. 100/2023 and No. 265/2023, Ministerial Decision No. 139/2023). All Taxable Persons remain subject to FTA registration, annual filing via EmaraTax and contemporaneous documentation obligations, irrespective of any applicable relief.

Each year, GEOTAX identifies patterns of corporate tax errors among entrepreneurs and investors. Many of these errors are preventable through proper advance planning and early engagement with tax advisors. This article addresses the six most consequential mistakes and provides practical remediation strategies.

Error 1: Late or Omitted FTA Registration

The Registration Deadline

Registration with the Federal Tax Authority (FTA) is mandatory for all Taxable Persons within the meaning of Article 11 of Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022, whether established in a Free Zone or in the Mainland. Contrary to a widespread assumption, the deadline is not uniformly 30 days. FTA Decision No. 3 of 2024 introduced a staggered registration calendar based on the month in which the commercial licence was issued (for example, deadline of 31 May 2024 for licences issued in January or February, 30 June 2024 for those issued in March or April, etc.) and a deadline of three months from the date of incorporation for entities formed on or after 1 March 2024.

Upon submission of the registration application via the EmaraTax portal, the Taxable Person receives a Tax Registration Number (TRN) and a formal registration certificate. The TRN is required for VAT invoicing, banking compliance and any subsequent FTA filing.

Risks of Non-Compliance

Many entrepreneurs discover only months or years after starting operations that they never registered with the FTA. Typical rationalisations include the assumption that the Free Zone authority's general communications dispensed with the FTA registration requirement, or the belief that registration would itself trigger tax liability and could therefore be deferred. These assumptions do not shield the Taxable Person from sanction.

The penalty regime is set out in Cabinet Decision No. 75 of 2023, as amended by Cabinet Decision No. 10 of 2024:

The FTA may further issue a Tax Assessment on the basis of the information available to it, pursuant to Article 24 of Federal Decree-Law No. 28 of 2022 on tax procedures. The Taxable Person then has 40 business days to file a Reconsideration request and, if necessary, to bring the matter before the Tax Disputes Resolution Committee (Article 27).

French perspective: substance, place of effective management and treaty residence

For groups headed in France, the absence of UAE FTA registration does not by itself create a French permanent establishment (PE) of the UAE entity. The existence of a PE is determined by the substantive criteria of Article 5 of the France-UAE Tax Treaty of 19 July 1989 (decree No. 90-631 of 13 July 1990) — fixed place of business, dependent agent, etc. — independently of UAE administrative status.

That said, an unregistered or under-substanced UAE entity is more vulnerable to characterisation by the French tax administration as having its place of effective management in France (Article 4 of the Treaty and Article 209 I CGI), or to the application of Article 209 B CGI (controlled foreign companies in privileged tax regimes) and Article 123 bis CGI (individuals holding more than 10% of an entity established in a low-tax jurisdiction). Maintaining genuine substance in the UAE — local board meetings, qualified employees, lease and operating expenses commensurate with the activity — and complying with the FTA registration and filing obligations are key to defending the UAE residence and operational profile of the entity in any subsequent French audit.

Prevention and Remediation

To avoid this error:

If late registration is discovered, immediately contact the FTA to bring the entity into compliance. In some cases, the FTA may waive late penalties if the delay was brief and registration occurs promptly upon discovery. However, this waiver is discretionary and is not guaranteed. Early remediation is essential to minimize exposure.

Error 2: Incorrect Selection of Fiscal Year

Fiscal Year Definition and Implications

During FTA registration, the entity must declare its fiscal year — the 12-month period for which financial statements and tax returns are prepared. The standard selection is the calendar year (1 January - 31 December), but the entity may elect an alternative fiscal year if it aligns with operational realities. Permissible fiscal years include:

The fiscal year selection is not trivial. Once selected, it structures the entity's annual compliance cycle, financial statement preparation deadlines, and tax return filing dates. Changes to the fiscal year are permitted but are restricted to once per calendar year and require FTA approval with substantive justification.

Common Fiscal Year Errors

Error 2a: Misaligned Fiscal Year

Many entrepreneurs, rushed during the registration process or unfamiliar with UAE compliance requirements, select a fiscal year misaligned with their operational reality. Common scenarios include:

The consequence is chronic administrative friction: financial close timelines become impossible to meet, statutory filing deadlines are missed, reconciliation with parent company reporting is laborious, and the FTA notices inconsistencies or perceived evasion tactics in the financial statements.

Error 2b: Failure to Update Fiscal Year in Transition

Some entities register with a provisional or interim fiscal year, intending to change to the proper year in the following period. However, the requirement to request FTA approval for any fiscal year change is overlooked, and the entity drifts forward with an incorrect fiscal year, compounding confusion and administrative liability.

Prevention

To avoid fiscal year errors:

Error 3: Failure to Claim Small Business Relief

The Small Business Relief Regime

Article 21 of Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022, supplemented by Ministerial Decision No. 73 of 2023, provides that a resident Taxable Person whose Revenue does not exceed AED 3,000,000 in the relevant tax period and in all prior tax periods since the regime came into force, may elect to be treated as having derived no taxable income for that period. The relief must be expressly elected in the annual Tax Return submitted via EmaraTax — it is not automatic — and the regime is time-limited, applying only to tax periods ending no later than 31 December 2026.

The AED 3,000,000 figure must not be confused with the AED 375,000 threshold of Article 3 of the Decree-Law. The latter is the upper limit of the 0% taxable-income band: only the portion of taxable income exceeding AED 375,000 is taxed at the standard 9% rate. The two concepts apply to different bases (Revenue versus Taxable Income) and operate differently (eligibility threshold versus rate band).

The Omission Pattern and Financial Impact

Despite its simplicity, the SBR election is regularly overlooked. The typical pattern is the following:

Example: a consulting firm with Revenue of AED 700,000 and net accounting income of AED 450,000 for fiscal year 2024. With a timely SBR election, the firm is treated as deriving no taxable income and no Corporate Tax is due. Without the election, the AED 450,000 of accounting income (assumed equal to taxable income for simplicity) is taxed at 9% on the AED 75,000 portion exceeding AED 375,000 — i.e. AED 6,750. The omission is correctable by Voluntary Disclosure, subject to the administrative penalties of Cabinet Decision No. 75/2023.

Reclaiming Overpaid Tax

If an entity realizes it has omitted the Small Business Relief claim, it may file an amended return for prior years within the FTA's three-year statute of limitations (or longer if the original return contained material omissions). However, amended return procedures are not straightforward:

Ensure Proper Corporate Tax Compliance

Corporate tax mistakes compound over time. Early review and correction prevent substantial penalties and retroactive assessments.

Prevention and Eligibility Confirmation

To avoid the Small Business Relief omission:

Error 4: QFZP (Qualified Free Zone Person) Exemption Confusion

Free Zone Tax Exemption Rules

The UAE's Free Zones offer a 0% corporate tax rate to qualifying entities under the Qualified Free Zone Person (QFZP) regime. The QFZP regime is governed by Federal Decree-Law 47/2022 (art. 18-19) and Cabinet Decisions 100/2023 and 265/2023. There is no nationality requirement: QFZP eligibility depends on (i) Free Zone establishment, (ii) generation of Qualifying Income from Qualifying Activities, (iii) compliance with the de minimis rule (non-Qualifying Income ≤ the lower of 5% of total revenue or AED 5,000,000), (iv) substance requirements (Ministerial Decision 139/2023, with no nationality condition), and (v) maintenance of audited financial statements. The 0% rate applies only to Qualifying Income; non-Qualifying Income is taxed at 9%.

However, the exemption does not eliminate FTA registration or filing requirements. A common misconception is that QFZP entities are entirely exempt from corporate tax compliance, including registration and annual reporting. This is false. Even QFZP-exempt entities must:

Common QFZP Misunderstandings

Misunderstanding 1: "QFZP means no FTA registration required"

This is incorrect. QFZP entities must still register with the FTA, using the registration process to declare their exemption status. The difference is the tax treatment after registration, not the registration requirement itself.

Misunderstanding 2: "If I have foreign investors, I am not QFZP"

Incorrect. QFZP eligibility does not depend on the nationality of beneficial owners. Foreign-owned Free Zone entities (LLC, FZ-LLC, branch) may qualify provided they meet the substantive QFZP conditions (Federal Decree-Law 47/2022 art. 18-19; Cabinet Decisions 100/2023 and 265/2023): Free Zone establishment, Qualifying Income from Qualifying Activities, de minimis rule, substance (Ministerial Decision 139/2023, no nationality requirement), and audited financial statements. A failure on any of these substantive conditions — not the shareholder's nationality — triggers the standard 9% corporate tax rate.

Misunderstanding 3: "QFZP exemption covers global income, not just free zone income"

Incorrect. QFZP exemption applies only to income derived from activities within the free zone. Any income generated from business activities outside the free zone (e.g., sales to mainland customers, services provided offshore) is subject to standard corporate tax unless another exemption applies.

Consequences of QFZP Misclassification

Entities that misclassify themselves as QFZP when they do not meet the criteria may face:

Prevention: Beneficial Ownership Documentation

To confirm QFZP eligibility and avoid misclassification risks:

Error 5: Inadequate Transfer Pricing Documentation

Transfer Pricing Obligations in the UAE

Article 34 of Federal Decree-Law No. 47/2022 imposes the arm's length principle on all transactions between Related Parties or Connected Persons within the meaning of Articles 35 and 36 of the same statute. Article 55 and Ministerial Decision No. 97/2023 organise a tiered documentation regime: (i) a Disclosure Form annexed to every annual Tax Return; (ii) a Master File and a Local File required of Taxable Persons that are members of an MNE Group with consolidated revenue of at least AED 3,150,000,000, and of resident Taxable Persons whose own Revenue exceeds AED 200,000,000.

Common types of intercompany transactions subject to transfer pricing rules include:

The Documentation Error Pattern

Many entrepreneurs fail to prepare transfer pricing documentation, assuming it is either unnecessary or cosmetic. This is a critical error. Common rationalization include:

All of these assumptions are incorrect. The FTA has demonstrated increasing sophistication in transfer pricing audits, and documentation is mandatory regardless of entity size. Absence of documentation is treated as a material compliance failure, exposing the entity to:

Acceptable Transfer Pricing Documentation

Minimal acceptable transfer pricing documentation includes:

For complex transactions (e.g., technology licensing, management fee arrangements), formal transfer pricing studies prepared by international transfer pricing specialists are advisable and significantly reduce audit risk.

Prevention and Best Practice

To ensure transfer pricing compliance:

Error 6: Inadequate Expense Deduction Documentation

Allowable Deductions and Documentation Standards

Under UAE corporate tax law, entities are allowed to deduct expenses incurred in generating taxable income, provided the expenses are:

However, certain categories of expense are specifically non-deductible or subject to limitations:

Common Documentation Failures

Many entities claim deductions without proper supporting documentation or claim expenses that fall outside allowable categories. Common errors include:

FTA Audit Outcomes

When the FTA audits corporate tax returns, it systematically challenges expenses lacking supporting documentation. The outcome typically includes:

Prevention: Documentation Discipline

To ensure compliance with expense deduction requirements:

Jonathan Sémon

Jonathan Sémon

Tax Attorney, Paris Bar

Jonathan Sémon is a senior international tax attorney with over 20 years of experience advising French and expatriate clients on cross-border taxation and UAE corporate compliance. He specializes in corporate tax registration, compliance risk management, and FTA audit representation for multinational enterprises and entrepreneurs operating in the Emirates.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the FTA registration deadline for UAE corporate tax?
Registration with the Federal Tax Authority must occur within 30 days from the earlier of: (1) the date of legal creation or incorporation, or (2) the date of commencement of business activity. Registration deadlines may vary by taxpayer category per FTA Decision No. 3 of 2024. The deadline is strict. Failure to register within the prescribed period results in a penalty of AED 10,000 (per Cabinet Decision No. 75 of 2023). Additionally, the FTA may issue a unilateral reassessment covering all unreported activity, using estimated income calculations that are often unfavorable to the taxpayer.
Are Free Zone entities exempt from corporate tax registration?
All entities, including those in Free Zones, must register with the FTA. Free Zone entities may qualify for the 0% Corporate Tax rate if they meet the Qualified Free Zone Person (QFZP) substantive criteria (Federal Decree-Law 47/2022 art. 18-19; Cabinet Decisions 100/2023 and 265/2023): Free Zone establishment, Qualifying Income from Qualifying Activities, the de minimis rule (non-Qualifying Income ≤ the lower of 5% of total revenue or AED 5,000,000), substance requirements (Ministerial Decision 139/2023 — no nationality requirement), and audited financial statements. The 0% rate applies only to Qualifying Income; non-Qualifying Income is taxed at the standard 9% rate. Annual returns must be filed regardless.
What is the Small Business Relief and how do I claim it?
Small Business Relief provides a complete exemption from corporate tax for entities with net revenue (not gross revenue) below 375,000 AED in the fiscal year. The exemption must be explicitly claimed in the corporate tax return (Corporate Tax registration via EmaraTax portal) or declared at FTA registration. Many qualifying entities inadvertently omit the claim, resulting in unnecessary tax payments. To claim relief, declare eligibility at registration and reaffirm in each annual return. Monitor revenue annually; loss of eligibility occurs if net revenue exceeds the threshold. Entities below the threshold are completely exempt and pay zero corporate tax.
Can I change my fiscal year after registration?
Fiscal year changes are permitted but are restricted to once per calendar year and require FTA approval with substantive justification. Changes to the fiscal year must be requested in writing, accompanied by business documentation supporting the change (e.g., restructuring, alignment with parent company reporting). Improper fiscal year selection at registration creates ongoing administrative complications. It is advisable to align the fiscal year with the entity's natural operational cycle at registration to avoid the need for future changes.

Prevent Corporate Tax Mistakes Before They Happen

Corporate tax compliance in the UAE is achievable with proper planning and early engagement with experienced advisors. GEOTAX provides FTA registration, tax return preparation, compliance review, and audit representation to ensure your business is properly registered and reporting to UAE tax authorities.

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