Introduction: Beyond the Surface of Treaty Benefits
The tax convention between the Republic of France and the United Arab Emirates was signed at Abu Dhabi on 19 July 1989, published in French law by decree No. 90-631 of 13 July 1990 (approved by law No. 90-333 of 10 April 1990) and entered into force on 1 July 1990. It was amended by an avenant signed on 6 December 1993, published by decree No. 95-798 of 14 June 1995 (approved by law No. 94-881 of 14 October 1994), which entered into force on 1 June 1995. The practical scope of the treaty is shaped, on the French side, by the published administrative doctrine (BOFiP, série BOI-INT-CVB-ARE). Its core mechanics include the allocation rules for employment income and business profits, the tie-breaker rules of Article 4 in the event of dual residence, and the double-taxation-relief mechanisms of Articles 23 and 24. The concrete effect of the treaty in a given situation depends on the qualification of each item of income, on the treaty residence of the taxpayer and on the articulation with each State’s domestic law.
However, treaty complexity creates opportunities for misunderstanding. Many expatriates rely on simplified summaries of treaty benefits without examining the underlying articles and their limitations. This article addresses five provisions that create unexpected obligations or planning constraints, often overlooked by individuals in first-generation expatriation planning.
Point 1: Article 19, Section 2 — Public Pensions Remain Taxed by France
The Provision and Its Scope
Article 19 of the Convention addresses taxation of pensions and annuities. The standard rule (Article 19, Section 1) provides that pensions are taxed in the state of residence. However, Article 19, Section 2 creates a critical exception:
This provision means that public pensions — including civil service retirement benefits, military pensions, and statutory state pension schemes — remain subject to French income taxation, even if the individual is a tax resident of the UAE. This is a carved-out exception to the general treaty principle that pensions follow residency.
Public vs. Private Pensions: The Distinction
The treaty distinguishes between public and private pensions based on the source:
- Public pensions: Payments from French government entities, including state ministries, local government, public sector employers, and statutory insurance schemes (CNRACL, CNAVPL for liberal professions, pension schemes for public servants)
- Private pensions: Payments from private insurance contracts, employer-sponsored retirement plans (assurances de groupe), and annuity contracts with private insurers
The critical distinction is the payer, not the recipient's employment history. An individual who was a French civil servant but now receives a pension from a private insurer receives private pension treatment under the treaty. Conversely, an individual receiving a statutory state pension is subject to French taxation even if the individual acquired UAE residency.
Example: A French tax resident who was a secondary school teacher retires and moves to Dubai in 2024. The individual receives a monthly pension from the civil service retirement scheme (retraite de l'Education Nationale, a public scheme). Under Article 19, Section 2, the pension remains taxable in France at French rates, even though the individual is a UAE resident and may have no other French-source income. The individual must file French annual tax returns declaring the pension and paying French tax on the full amount.
Impact on Expatriate Planning
This provision creates a material tax cost for individuals relocating to the UAE after a career in the French public sector. The expected benefit of zero UAE income tax is partially offset by continuing French tax on pensions. The quantum of French tax depends on the pension amount and applicable French tax rates and credits, but typical French tax on a EUR 30,000-40,000 annual pension ranges from EUR 5,000-8,000 annually.
The tax is not completely wasted, however. Under the general treaty principle that foreign tax credits are available to prevent double taxation, if the individual is also subject to UAE taxation on the pension (which is unlikely, as the UAE imposes no personal income tax), a foreign tax credit would apply in France to reduce double taxation. However, since the UAE imposes no personal income tax, no credit is available, and the French tax stands as a permanent cost.
Documentation and Compliance
Individuals receiving public pensions must comply with French non-resident tax filing requirements:
- File a non-resident tax declaration (Déclaration des revenus de non-résident) reporting the full pension annually
- Declare the pension amount and source in the appropriate income category (pensions, French-source)
- Maintain documentation from the pension provider (attestation, annual statement) proving the nature and amount of the pension
- Pay the resulting French tax or arrange withholding through the pension administrator (retenue à la source)
Failure to declare the pension exposes the individual to penalties for non-filing and additional tax assessments with interest. The DGFIP has access to information on French pension payments through internal coordination with pension administrators and will initiate verification procedures if unreported pensions are identified.
Point 2: Article 26 — Information Exchange and Its Articulation with CRS/AEOI
The Treaty Provision and Parallel Global Standards
Article 26 of the 1989 Convention is a classic mutual legal assistance clause permitting France and the UAE to exchange information on request in specific tax cases. It is not, on its own face, an automatic-exchange instrument. Automatic exchange of financial-account information between the two States is operated under the OECD's Common Reporting Standard (CRS) and the Multilateral Competent Authority Agreement on AEOI — a separate, multilateral framework that the UAE and France implement independently of the bilateral convention. The two channels coexist: CRS / AEOI for systematic, scheduled flows of bank-account data; Article 26 for targeted exchanges-on-request initiated by either tax administration.
Under CRS, financial institutions in the UAE (banks, investment firms, certain insurance companies, certain custodial entities) identify accounts held by French tax residents and report the relevant data to the UAE Federal Tax Authority, which in turn transmits the data to the French DGFIP on the AEOI calendar (typically annual, with reporting in the year following the calendar year covered).
Scope of Automatic Information Exchange
Automatic information exchange under CRS/AEOI (a standard independent of the bilateral treaty) covers:
- Account holder identification: Name, address, tax identification number (TIN), date of birth, and citizenship of the account owner
- Account details: Account number, type (savings, investment, insurance), currency, and opening date
- Financial information: Account balance at year-end, gross interest, dividends, capital gains, and other income
- Transactions: In some cases, major deposits and withdrawals (particularly for accounts exceeding defined thresholds)
Information flows automatically from UAE financial institutions to the UAE FTA, which then exchanges data with the French DGFIP according to the CRS / AEOI calendar. No prior request from French authorities is required; transmission is automatic and scheduled. Coverage extends to reportable accounts identified as held, directly or through certain controlling persons, by French tax residents. The bilateral treaty's Article 26 remains available in addition, for targeted exchange-on-request, but it is not the operative mechanism for these recurring, automatic flows.
Consequences of Unreported Income
Given the automatic nature of information exchange, any UAE-source income (interest, dividends, capital gains) or foreign exchange gains received in UAE bank accounts that is not declared to the French tax authority will be detected when the automatic information reaches the DGFIP.
The timing of detection is typically 6-12 months after year-end. For example, income earned in calendar year 2025 is reported to the UAE FTA in early 2026 and transmitted to the DGFIP by June-September 2026. The DGFIP cross-checks reported income against the automatic information received and identifies discrepancies.
Undisclosed UAE-source income triggers:
- Tax reassessment: the DGFIP recalculates the tax due by including the undisclosed income.
- Surcharges: Article 1729 of the French Tax Code (CGI) provides for a 40% surcharge in the event of deliberate breach (manquement délibéré) and an 80% surcharge in the event of fraudulent manoeuvres or abuse of law established under Articles L. 64 or L. 64 A of the Book of Tax Procedures (LPF). Where the additional tax relates to undisclosed foreign assets, the dedicated 80% surcharge of Article 1729-0 A of the CGI may also apply.
- Late-payment interest: Article 1727 V of the CGI sets the rate at 0.20% per month — i.e. 2.40% per annum — running from the original due date.
- Extended assessment period: the standard three-year period of Article L. 169 of the LPF is extended to ten years where the additional tax relates to assets held abroad through accounts, life-insurance contracts or trusts that have not been disclosed in accordance with Articles 1649 A, 1649 AA or 1649 AB of the CGI.
Compliance Best Practice
To ensure compliance and avoid penalties:
- Declare all UAE-source income (interest, dividends, capital gains, rental income) in the annual French non-resident return (Déclaration 2042-NR)
- Aggregate income across all UAE accounts and provide a consolidated figure if you hold multiple accounts
- Maintain documentation of all UAE bank accounts, including account statements, year-end balances, and income statements provided by UAE banks
- Report income in the year earned, not the year received. If interest is credited to your account on 31 December 2025, it is taxable in 2025, not 2026
- Obtain annual statements from UAE financial institutions documenting the source and amount of income (interest, dividends, etc.) and retain these for French tax filing
Point 3: Article 13 — Real Estate Gains and Mandatory Reporting
The Treaty Rule on Real Estate Taxation
Article 13 of the Convention allocates to the country where the property is located the right to tax real property gains. This allocation provides the right but does not itself create tax obligation independent of that country's domestic law: gains from real estate sales in the UAE are subject to UAE taxation to the extent that UAE domestic law imposes taxation. Similarly, gains from real estate sales in France are subject to French taxation to the extent that French domestic law imposes taxation.
This rule is favorable to UAE residents: gains realized on UAE real estate sales are not subject to French taxation, even if the seller remains a French resident or citizen.
The Hidden Obligation: Mandatory Declaration in France
However, a critical and often overlooked provision of French tax law requires all non-residents to declare gains from the sale of real property situated outside France. Even though the treaty reserves taxation to the UAE, France still requires declaration of the gain by non-resident individuals.
This dual requirement creates a trap: the individual is required to declare the UAE real estate gain in the French non-resident return (Déclaration 2042-NR), but the actual tax on the gain is paid to the UAE authorities. France does not tax the gain (under the treaty), but demands reporting of it.
Failure to declare a real estate gain, even if no French tax is ultimately due, exposes the individual to:
- Penalty for failure to declare: 1,500 EUR minimum penalty, assessed automatically for non-reporting, independent of the actual tax owed (which may be zero)
- Interest: If French tax is eventually computed and assessed, interest accrues from the original due date
Typical Scenario and Compliance Issue
Example: An individual resident in Dubai owns a villa in Dubai Hills, purchased for AED 2,000,000 in 2018 and sold for AED 3,000,000 in 2024, realizing a gain of AED 1,000,000 (approximately EUR 270,000). Under UAE law, real property gains are subject to UAE tax (if the property was held as a business asset or rental property). The individual pays UAE tax on the gain.
The individual must also declare the gain in the French non-resident return for the year of sale. The declaration is made in the "Gains from sales of capital assets" section of the 2042-NR form. France computes no French tax (under the treaty), but the reporting requirement stands independently.
If the individual omits the gain from the French return, the DGFIP may identify the omission through various means (document research, bank account monitoring, or third-party information from UAE authorities). Upon discovery, the DGFIP issues a penalty notice for non-reporting, typically 1,500-3,000 EUR, regardless of the fact that no French tax was due.
Prevention and Compliance
- Declare all real property sales: Report every gain from sale of real estate, whether in France or abroad, in the non-resident return
- Maintain documentation: Retain the sales contract (murabaha or regular sale agreement), registration documents, and UAE tax assessment or proof of tax payment
- Report the gain in the year of completion, not the year of initial agreement or down payment
- Distinguish between gains and losses: If a property is sold at a loss (sale price below acquisition cost), report the loss; in some cases, it may offset other gains
Optimize Your Treaty Position
Proper application of the France-UAE Treaty requires detailed knowledge of both treaty articles and French non-resident filing requirements. Early coordination prevents penalties and tax disputes.
Point 4: Article 4 — Residency Tie-Breaker Rules and Status Determination
The Dual-Residency Problem
Under the separate tax laws of France and the UAE, an individual might theoretically be considered a tax resident of both countries. For instance, an individual who retains a home in France (available for occupancy) while establishing a business and residence in the UAE might be classified as:
- A French resident under French law (if the permanent home is available in France, or if the center of vital interests — family, economic, and personal ties — is deemed to be in France)
- A UAE resident under UAE law (if the individual is present in the UAE for tax purposes and has significant economic activities there)
Dual residency creates ambiguity about which country has primary taxation rights. The Convention addresses this through "tie-breaker rules" in Article 4.
The Tie-Breaker Sequence
The tie-breaker rules are applied in strict order. The first rule that produces a clear result determines residency for treaty purposes.
Pitfall: Inadequate UAE Residency Documentation
Many French expatriates underestimate the strength of French residency ties, particularly if they maintain a family home in France or retain French business interests. If a French individual relocates to the UAE but:
- Maintains a home (even if not regularly occupied) in France
- Does not formally establish UAE residency with proper documentation
- Does not update French administrative records to reflect changed residence
...then the individual risks being classified as a French resident under the tie-breaker rules, despite genuine physical and economic presence in the UAE.
This classification has serious consequences: if France determines that the individual is a French resident, France asserts taxation rights over worldwide income, and the individual must file a full French resident tax return, not a non-resident return. This can result in reassessment of UAE-source income as French-source income.
Prevention: Residency Establishment
To ensure treaty application and UAE residency status recognition:
- Obtain formal UAE residency documentation: Secure a UAE residence visa and maintain a valid residence permit. This is the primary objective evidence of UAE residency.
- Establish a permanent home in the UAE: Own or rent a residential property in the UAE and maintain it as your primary residence. Documentation of the lease or ownership deed is critical.
- Notify French authorities of residency change: File a change-of-residence notification with the French commune (local government) where you previously resided. This updates administrative records and evidences your intent to leave France.
- Update the French tax authority: Notify the DGFIP of your change of residence, providing documentation of UAE residence (visa, tenancy agreement, utility bills).
- If you own real property in France, document that it is not available for your habitual occupancy. If the property is rented to third parties, maintain lease documentation showing ongoing rental arrangements.
- Document the center of vital interests in the UAE: Establish family presence (spouse, children enrolled in UAE schools), business activities, economic interests (bank accounts, business ownership), and professional connections in the UAE.
Point 5: Absence of Anti-Abuse Protections and Aggressive Tax Strategies
The Treaty's Silence on Limitation of Benefits
Modern bilateral tax treaties typically include "limitation of benefits" (LOB) clauses designed to prevent treaty abuse. These clauses restrict treaty benefits to individuals and entities that satisfy defined criteria (e.g., stock ownership tests, business activity requirements), preventing treaty benefits from being claimed by persons whose principal purpose is to obtain a tax advantage.
The 1989 France-UAE Convention, even as amended in 2013, does not include a comprehensive limitation-of-benefits clause. This omission creates potential for aggressive tax strategies that both tax authorities would challenge if discovered, but the treaty text itself does not explicitly prohibit.
Implications for Planning
Examples of strategies that might be challenged despite treaty authorization:
- Treaty-shopping via entities: An individual of non-UAE nationality establishes a UAE company with no real business activity, claims treaty benefits on investment income, and routes income through the company to avoid French tax. Both France and the UAE may challenge this structure as an abuse of the convention, even though the treaty text does not explicitly limit LOB.
- Artificial management relocation: A French business relocates its management and control to the UAE ostensibly to claim UAE residency and treaty benefits, but the business is later shown to have continued to be managed from France. France may deny treaty benefits on grounds of substance-over-form principles.
- Short-term residency claims: An individual establishes minimal UAE presence solely to claim non-resident tax status and treaty exemptions, while maintaining primary economic and family ties to France. The tie-breaker rules and substance-over-form principles may override the treaty claim.
Risk Management: Substance over Form
To ensure that treaty benefits are sustainable and not vulnerable to challenge:
- Establish genuine economic substance in the UAE. Do not relocate solely for tax reasons; develop real business activities, employment, and economic ties.
- Maintain clear geographic separation between French and UAE activities. If French activities continue, ensure they are limited and do not dominate your economic profile.
- Document the commercial rationale for any entities or structures. If you establish a UAE company, document its business purpose, operations, and income-generation activities.
- Comply fully with both jurisdictions' documentation and reporting requirements. Aggressive strategies often unravel when tax authorities examine supporting documentation.
Frequently Asked Questions
Expert Treaty Guidance for France-UAE Residents
The France-UAE Tax Convention offers significant benefits, but only when properly understood and applied. GEOTAX provides treaty interpretation, compliance planning, and dual-jurisdiction tax optimization to ensure you benefit from the convention while maintaining full compliance with both jurisdictions.