
The UAE is one of the most business-friendly jurisdictions in the world for foreign investors. It offers 100% foreign ownership across most sectors, 0% personal income tax, rapid company registration (3–10 working days for most free zone structures), a modern banking system, and a strategic location serving Europe, Asia, and Africa from a single time zone. In 2026, the landscape has matured: corporate tax applies to most businesses, compliance standards are higher than they were five years ago, and the distinction between free zone and mainland formation has become more nuanced since the 2021 ownership reforms. This guide walks through every step of starting a business in the UAE, from choosing a jurisdiction to opening a bank account.
Introduction
The UAE business setup market attracts founders, entrepreneurs, and investors from every country in the world. The reasons are well-documented: no personal income tax, a globally connected infrastructure, political stability, and a regulatory environment that has become progressively more transparent and investor-friendly over the past decade. The 2021 ownership reforms removed the mandatory local sponsor requirement for most mainland activities. The 2023 Corporate Tax Law created a modern, OECD-aligned tax framework. The Golden Visa programme provides long-term residency independent of employer sponsorship.
What has not changed: setting up in the UAE still requires navigating a specific process across regulatory bodies, and getting the jurisdiction and structure wrong creates cost, delay, and compliance risk. This guide eliminates the guesswork.
Common Misconceptions
- "The UAE is completely tax-free for businesses." No longer accurate since June 2023. UAE Corporate Tax applies at 9% on profits above AED 375,000. Free zone entities can qualify for 0% on qualifying income, but this requires active compliance maintenance.
- "I need a UAE national partner to set up a mainland company." Not for most activities since 2021. The large majority of commercial and industrial activities allow 100% foreign ownership on the mainland.
- "Free zone companies can sell anywhere in the UAE." Free zone companies generally cannot sell directly to UAE mainland customers without a distributor, dual licence, or mainland branch.
- "Dubai is the only emirate worth considering." Sharjah, Ras Al Khaimah, and Ajman offer significantly lower-cost free zones that are legitimate, well-regulated, and used by thousands of SMEs.
Step 1: Choose Your Jurisdiction
The Three Main Options
| Jurisdiction | Best for | Can sell in UAE? | Visa eligibility |
| Free zone | Foreign founders, international trade, consultancy, e-commerce, tech, holding | Within the free zone + internationally (mainland needs extra step) | Yes (tied to office category) |
| Mainland | UAE market-facing businesses, retail, F&B, government contracts, services | Unrestricted UAE-wide | Yes (tied to office size) |
| Offshore (RAK ICC / Jafza) | International holding, asset protection, IP vehicles, no UAE operational needs | No | No |
Which Jurisdiction Is Right for You?
- Choose a free zone if you serve international customers, run an online or consultancy business, want a fast setup at the lowest cost, and do not need to sell directly to UAE mainland consumers from day one.
- Choose mainland if your primary market is the UAE local consumer or business market, you want to open a physical location accessible to the public (retail, restaurant, clinic), or you need government contract eligibility.
- Choose offshore if you need only a UAE-incorporated holding or international trading entity with no UAE office, employees, or market access requirements.
Step 2: Choose Your Legal Structure
| Structure | Jurisdiction | Shareholders | Best for |
| FZE (Free Zone Establishment) | Free zone | 1 | Solo founders, single-owner subsidiaries |
| FZCO / FZ-LLC | Free zone | 2–50 | Partnerships, joint ventures |
| Mainland LLC | Mainland | 1–50 | UAE market access, multi-activity licences |
| Sole establishment | Mainland | 1 | Individual professional services |
| Civil company | Mainland | 2+ | Professional partnerships (legal, accounting) |
| Offshore IBC | Offshore | 1–50 | International holding, asset vehicles |
Step 3: Choose Your Business Activity
Your business activity determines which jurisdictions and licence types are available to you, what approvals are needed, and in some cases what capital requirements apply. Key points:
- Every UAE trade licence is issued for specific licensed activities — you cannot conduct activities not on your licence.
- Some activities require sector-specific approvals from regulators beyond the licensing authority (healthcare from MOHAP or DHA; financial services from the SCA, DFSA, or FSRA; education from KHDA; food from Dubai Municipality).
- Activities in certain categories (financial services, weapons, oil and gas, telecommunications) may be restricted on the mainland or require special approval.
- Choosing too narrow an activity list can restrict your business later; choosing too many adds annual fees for each activity group.
Step 4: Choose Your Free Zone (If Applicable)
With 45+ free zones in the UAE, the choice comes down to five factors:
- Activity eligibility — does the zone licence your specific activity?
- Cost — what is the all-in first-year cost (licence + registration + office + visas)?
- Visa quota — how many visas does your chosen office category support?
- Banking relationships — does the zone have established relationships that smooth account opening?
- Sector reputation — is the zone known for your sector (DMCC for commodities, DIFC for finance, Dubai Internet City for tech)?
| Best for | Recommended zones |
| Lowest cost (consultancy, services) | IFZA, Meydan, SHAMS, RAKEZ, Ajman Free Zone |
| Technology and IT | Dubai Internet City, IFZA, Meydan |
| Commodities and trading | DMCC, JAFZA, Hamriyah |
| Financial services | DIFC, ADGM |
| Media and creative | Dubai Media City, SHAMS, Al Quoz (DCCA) |
| E-commerce | Dubai CommerCity, Meydan, IFZA |
| Healthcare | Dubai Healthcare City, RAKEZ |
Step 5: Complete Registration
Free Zone Registration Steps
- Reserve a trade name that meets UAE naming conventions.
- Submit initial approval documents (passport copies, business description, application form).
- Select and sign office space agreement (flexi-desk, dedicated desk, or private office).
- Draft and sign the Memorandum of Association.
- Pay licence and registration fees.
- Receive trade licence and establishment (immigration) card.
Mainland Registration Steps
- Confirm your activity is on the DET 100%-ownership eligible list (or determine if a Local Service Agent is required).
- Reserve a trade name with DET.
- Draft and notarise the Memorandum of Association.
- Secure a tenancy contract for office space.
- Obtain any required sector-specific approvals from relevant ministries.
- Submit documents to DET, pay fees, receive trade licence.
Step 6: Apply for Visas
Most business owners in the UAE need both an investor (or partner) visa and, if they have staff, employment visas for employees. The process for an investor visa:
- Entry permit issued by GDRFA — allows you to enter the UAE to complete the process.
- Status change (if already in UAE on another visa).
- Medical fitness test at an approved centre.
- Emirates ID application and biometrics.
- Visa stamp in passport.
Visa quota is determined by your office category: a flexi-desk typically supports 1–2 visas; larger offices support proportionally more. If you plan to hire staff, confirm visa quota before finalising your office choice.
Step 7: Open a Corporate Bank Account
Banking is often the longest step in the setup process. UAE banks apply their own compliance and due diligence independently of the licensing authority. Practical guidance:
- Prepare thorough documentation: trade licence, MOA, establishment card, shareholder KYC (passport, proof of address, CV), description of business model and expected transactions.
- Expect the review process to take 2–8 weeks depending on the bank and complexity of the structure.
- Local commercial banks (Emirates NBD, FAB, ADIB, Mashreq, RAK Bank) are the primary options; international banks typically serve larger entities with specific needs.
- Neo-banks and fintech payment accounts can provide a faster interim solution while a full corporate account is being processed.
- Free zone zone reputation and banking relationships matter — DMCC, DIFC, and ADGM entities generally experience faster bank approvals than entities from lesser-known zones.
Step 8: Register for Corporate Tax and VAT
Corporate Tax
UAE Corporate Tax at 9% on taxable income above AED 375,000 applies from the first financial year starting on or after 1 June 2023. Requirements:
- Every UAE entity — mainland and free zone — must register with the Federal Tax Authority. Registration is mandatory regardless of expected tax liability.
- Annual corporate tax returns must be filed within nine months of the financial year end.
- Free zone entities may qualify for the 0% rate as a Qualifying Free Zone Person, subject to meeting substance and activity conditions.
VAT
- VAT registration is mandatory once taxable supplies exceed the AED 375,000 mandatory threshold.
- Voluntary registration is available from AED 187,500.
- VAT returns are filed quarterly or monthly depending on the business.
Costs Summary
| Setup type | Typical first-year cost (AED) | Timeline |
| Free zone — basic (1 visa, flexi-desk) | 12,000 – 30,000 | 1–2 weeks |
| Free zone — mid-tier (2–3 visas, dedicated desk) | 25,000 – 60,000 | 2–3 weeks |
| Free zone — premium (DIFC, ADGM, DMCC) | 30,000 – 100,000+ | 2–4 weeks |
| Mainland LLC (standard activity) | 15,000 – 35,000 | 2–4 weeks |
| Offshore IBC (RAK ICC) | 8,000 – 15,000 | 3–7 working days |
Real-World Examples
Solo Digital Consultant — Free Zone
A UK-based UX designer relocating to Dubai sets up an FZE in IFZA with a flexi-desk and one investor visa. Total first-year cost: approximately AED 18,000. Corporate Tax registered; VAT not required below the threshold. Operational within two weeks.
Two-Founder E-commerce Startup — Free Zone
Two co-founders from Germany and India set up an FZCO in Dubai CommerCity — purpose-built for e-commerce. First-year cost approximately AED 35,000 including two visas and a dedicated desk. The zone’s logistics infrastructure and sector-specific licences suit their product fulfilment model.
Restaurant Owner — Mainland
A UAE-based entrepreneur opening a physical restaurant registers a mainland LLC under the Department of Economy and Tourism. The mainland licence permits walk-in public access, which a free zone licence would not. Setup cost approximately AED 28,000 plus any food establishment approvals from Dubai Municipality.
Regional Holding Group — Free Zone
A regional conglomerate sets up a DMCC FZ-LLC as the UAE apex holding entity for its Middle East subsidiaries. The DMCC licence, combined with a private office for corporate governance substance, and QFZP qualification, creates a structured, tax-efficient holding layer above the operating entities.
Common Mistakes
- Budgeting only the licence fee and ignoring visa and office costs. The all-in first-year cost is typically 40–60% higher than the headline licence fee once visas and office space are added.
- Not registering for Corporate Tax. Mandatory for all UAE entities. The fixed penalty for late registration adds unnecessary cost from day one.
- Choosing a free zone that doesn’t license the intended activity. Activity eligibility must be confirmed before paying any fees.
- Ignoring banking preparation. Bank account opening is independent of licensing and can take 2–8 weeks. Starting the preparation early reduces the gap between receiving a license and being able to transact.
- Assuming the mainland requires a local sponsor. For most commercial activities, 100% foreign ownership on the mainland has been available since 2021. The sponsor requirement is now the exception, not the rule.
Expert Insights from MSZ Consultancy
The most important shift in how we advise new business founders in 2026 versus even two years ago is the corporate tax conversation. Every new client meeting now includes a discussion of which corporate tax position applies to their planned structure — QFZP or standard rate, participation exemption applicability, whether the business model fits the free zone activity restrictions — before we discuss which zone has the best license package pricing. Getting the tax position wrong at setup creates a restructuring problem that is far more expensive than the setup saving.
We also see a consistent pattern: founders who take the time to plan their business activity list correctly before applying save considerable time and cost compared to those who take the first available generic package and then try to add activities or change jurisdictions six months in. The UAE setup process rewards preparation.
Conclusion
Starting a business in the UAE in 2026 is genuinely accessible for foreign founders — faster and less expensive than most comparable jurisdictions, with 100% foreign ownership, no personal income tax, and a regulatory environment that has become more transparent and predictable over the past decade. The keys to a smooth setup are choosing the right jurisdiction for your activity and market, budgeting the full all-in cost, planning your visa needs from day one, and building your corporate tax compliance into the structure from the start. Get those four things right and the UAE is as business-friendly as its reputation suggests.
Ready to start your UAE business? Contact MSZ Consultancy for a free consultation and an all-in cost comparison for your specific activity, jurisdiction, and visa requirements.

Mohammed Sultan Zubair
Founder & Managing Director - MSZ Corporate Services Provider
Mohammed Sultan Zubair is a leading business consultant and entrepreneur based in Dubai, recognized for his expertise in business setup in the UAE and Saudi Arabia. As the Founder and Managing Director of MSZ Corporate Services Provider, he has helped entrepreneurs, investors, and multinational companies establish and expand their businesses across the Middle East.
With over 15 years of industry experience, Zubair specializes in company formation in UAE mainland, free zones, and offshore jurisdictions, as well as Saudi Arabia business setup, regulatory compliance, and cross-border expansion strategies.
His mission is to simplify business setup in the Middle East, enabling clients to focus on growth while MSZ handles complexity.
Frequently Asked Questions
Free zone company registration typically takes 3–10 working days once documents are complete. Mainland registration takes 1–3 weeks. Bank account opening adds 2–8 weeks to the timeline.
Initial company registration can be completed remotely for most free zones and for offshore entities. Visa issuance requires physical presence in the UAE for biometrics and medical testing.
The lowest-cost options are offshore IBCs (from AED 8,000) and entry-level free zone packages (from approximately AED 11,900). These are no-visa, basic-activity packages; add AED 4,000–7,500 per visa.
Yes since June 2023. Corporate tax applies at 9% on profits above AED 375,000. Free zone entities can qualify for a 0% rate on qualifying income as a Qualifying Free Zone Person.
Yes. Free zone companies have always permitted 100% foreign ownership. Mainland companies also permit 100% foreign ownership for most commercial and industrial activities since the 2021 reform.
Typically: passport copies of all shareholders and directors, proof of address, a brief business description or plan, and (for corporate shareholders) parent company incorporation documents.
Yes. Free zone and mainland companies can sponsor investor and employee visas. The number of visas depends on office category and zone rules. Offshore companies cannot sponsor UAE visas.
Free zone companies can use a flexi-desk. Mainland companies require a physical office with a valid tenancy contract. Offshore companies need only a registered agent address.



