The UAE isn't "tax-free" anymore — it's strategically low-tax. And that distinction will define who wins and who gets caught off guard.
Since June 1, 2023, Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022 is in full effect. If you're running a business in the UAE — mainland or free zone — the game has changed.
In this video, I break down the 5 pillars every business owner must understand:
✅ The AED 375,000 threshold & how tax is actually calculated
✅ Why your salary is still protected (Natural Person rule)
✅ The 50% cap on entertainment expenses (Article 32)
✅ The QFZP 5-year penalty trap most Free Zone businesses don't see coming
✅ The 9-month filing window - and how to use it wisely
CA Vivek Shah
Leading a Team of Young & Dynamic Professionals in the fields of Audit, Tax, Finance & Fraud Investi Our clients are spread across various sectors & industries.
We are a Chartered Accountant firm in India, specializing in the fields of Audit, Tax, Financing, Consultancy & Forensic Audit. Our clients range from sole proprietorships to Public Limited Companies listed on the Stock Exchange. Our clients are spread across multiple countries. We provide end-to-end business solutions, so that you can concentrate what you are best at - 'Your Business'.
Here's what nobody is telling you about the history of UAE Corporate Tax.
In this video, I break down:
→ Why the 9% Corporate Tax is a feature, not a bug
→ The invisible tug-of-war between Source vs. Residence taxation
→ How the UAE's 190+ tax treaties protect your profits from double taxation
→ Why ESR reporting was quietly abolished in October 2024
→ What BEPS and OECD alignment actually mean for your business structure
The UAE didn't implement 9% Corporate Tax by accident.
And it isn't losing that edge - it's upgrading it.
Watch the full breakdown 👇
11/05/2026
Beyond the Balance Sheet: 5 Surprising Truths About Transfer Pricing Comparability
Introduction: The "Invisible Price Tag" Dilemma
Setting prices between related business entities is far more complex than a standard commercial transaction. It involves navigating an "invisible price tag" where the goal is to establish an arm’s length result—a price that mirrors what independent companies would agree upon under similar circumstances. Transfer pricing is not merely a mathematical exercise; it is a search for fairness in a global market where no two companies are perfectly alike. This search is anchored by "Comparability Analysis," the critical bridge where transfer pricing theory meets real-world practice.
Takeaway 1: "Identical" is the Enemy of "Comparable"
A common misconception in transfer pricing is that a third-party transaction must be a perfect mirror image of a controlled transaction to be useful. In reality, demanding "identical" data can make benchmarking impossible. To a Senior Specialist, the goal of comparability is not to find a twin, but to identify transactions where the economically relevant characteristics are sufficiently similar to provide a reliable measure.
To measure this similarity, we look to the "five comparability factors" defined by global standards:
1. Characteristics of the property or service transferred.
2. Functional Analysis (FAR), which accounts for functions performed, assets employed, and risks assumed.
3. Contractual terms governing the transaction.
4. Economic circumstances of the respective markets.
5. Business strategies pursued by the entities.
A transaction is considered comparable if any differences in these factors do not materially affect the price or margin, or if reasonably accurate adjustments can be made to eliminate those effects.
"To be comparable does not mean that the two transactions are necessarily identical, but instead means that none of the differences between the transactions could materially affect the factor being examined in the methodology (price or margin) or reasonably accurate adjustments can be made to eliminate the material effects of any such differences."
Takeaway 2: The Loop vs. The Ladder (Why Process Isn't Linear)
Standard practice for comparability analysis follows a structured 9-step process. While this is considered "accepted good practice," it is important to note it is not compulsory; any search leading to reliable results may be acceptable. However, from a strategic perspective, the most common error is viewing these steps as a one-way ladder.
In practice, Steps 5 through 7—determining information sources, selecting the transfer pricing method, and identifying potential comparables—form an iterative loop. If the search for external comparables in Step 7 fails to yield reliable data, or if Step 8 reveals that accurate adjustments for material differences are impossible, the specialist must return to Step 5 to reassess available information or perhaps choose a different methodology altogether. Failing to "loop" back and instead forcing a fit with weak data is a significant risk that makes a transfer pricing study highly vulnerable to audit and adjustment by tax authorities.
Takeaway 3: The "Loss-Maker" Paradox
There is a frequent assumption that a company losing money is an automatic candidate for rejection as a comparable. However, transfer pricing guidance suggests that "extreme results"—whether unusually high profits or significant losses—require investigation rather than immediate dismissal.
A company's status as a comparable is determined by its facts and circumstances, not just its bottom line. An investigation must look at "exceptional items" below the line that may reflect one-time circumstances. A loss-making third party might still be a valid comparable if it shares the same functional profile (FAR) and market conditions as the tested party. The critical question is whether the loss reflects normal business conditions or a level of risk that differs from the taxpayer’s.
"An independent enterprise would not continue loss-generating activities unless it had reasonable expectations of future profits... loss-making comparables that satisfy the comparability analysis should not however be rejected on the sole basis that they suffer losses."
Takeaway 4: The Magic of the "Middle Ground" (The Interquartile Range)
Even after rigorous screening, a set of comparables may still contain minor defects that cannot be quantified or adjusted. To "clean up" this imperfect data, specialists use the interquartile range as a statistical shield. This tool protects the taxpayer from the "tyranny of the average" (the arithmetic mean), which can be easily skewed by a single outlier.
The interquartile range enhances reliability by focusing on the "middle ground" of a dataset. It is derived by dividing the data into four equal parts to identify:
* The Lower Quartile: The middle figure between the lowest value and the median.
* The Median: The middle value of all observations.
* The Upper Quartile: The middle figure between the median and the highest value.
By focusing on the results between the 25th and 75th percentiles, the analysis discards extreme results and provides a robust measure of central tendency, ensuring the final price remains defensible even when unquantifiable data defects exist.
Takeaway 5: Geography as a Hidden Value Driver (Location Savings)
When a multinational group undergoes business restructuring and relocates activities to a low-cost jurisdiction like the UAE, they often generate "Location Specific Advantages" (LSAs), such as location savings on labor and infrastructure.
The strategic "truth" is that there is a strict hierarchy for how these savings are treated. If reliable local market comparables exist, they already reflect the local economic conditions, and specific LSA adjustments are not required. However, if local comparables are unavailable, a four-factor analysis is used to determine how the "net savings" should be shared:
1. Confirming if location savings actually exist.
2. Calculating the exact amount of those savings.
3. Determining the extent to which savings are retained by the group or passed to customers.
4. Analyzing how independent parties would allocate any retained savings based on their functions, risks, and assets.
Conclusion: The Constant State of Flux
Comparability is not a static calculation but a living strategy. According to the UAE Corporate Tax Guide on Transfer Pricing, businesses are required to perform a full refresh of their comparables search every three years, supplemented by a minimum requirement of an annual financial update for those comparables in the interim years. Furthermore, any significant change in the circumstances of the controlled transaction or the related parties requires an immediate re-analysis.
In a global economy where markets and margins shift overnight, can your business afford to view its transfer pricing as a one-time exercise rather than a living strategy?
05/05/2026
Legacy Protection: The Dual Will Strategy
It was 3:00 AM when he realized his father’s UAE bank accounts were frozen — because his Indian Will was not recognized in UAE.
Don't let this be you.
- UAE Foundations: Gold standard for property holding and governance.
- Legal Heir Certificate: Required to establish the basis for transfer of ownership.
- Dual Wills: Separate, jurisdiction-specific Wills are now non-negotiable.
For those with $1M+ across borders, jurisdictional friction is your biggest risk.
Secure your assets & family’s future by registering your will in all countries where you have business interests or assets.
Vivek Shah (CA, LLB)
Crypto Law Update: Institutional Certainty is Here
We've reached a turning point in digital asset regulation. Between VARA's new rulebooks and the unified taxonomy from US regulators, the rules of the game are finally being written.
- VARA Derivatives Rulebook implementation
- SEC-CFTC joint framework taxonomy
- Impact on MiCA transition timelines
Institutional trust follows regulatory clarity.
Vivek Shah, CA, LLB
01/05/2026
Canada Moves to Ban All Crypto ATMs
In a significant regulatory shift, the Canadian federal government has announced plans to ban all cryptocurrency ATMs as part of its April 2026 spring economic statement. The decision follows growing concerns over the use of these machines in fraud and money laundering schemes.
Key implications for cross-border advisors and crypto operators:
• Increased scrutiny on physical crypto infrastructure and unhosted transaction points
• Potential for similar policy shifts across other G7 jurisdictions monitoring AML risks
• Immediate need for MSBs to reassess compliance and reporting protocols within Canada
• Continued tension between decentralized access and institutional oversight
As regulators move toward a more unified digital asset framework, the window for unregulated on-ramps is rapidly closing.
Vivek Shah (CA, LLB)
30/04/2026
The discussion around a White House Strategic Bitcoin Reserve is more than a market headline. It is a policy signal that raises important questions for investors, treasurers, and regulators.
Key implications:
- Bitcoin continues to move closer to mainstream institutional and sovereign consideration.
- Treasury teams will need clearer policies on custody, valuation, risk management, and reporting.
- Market participants should expect continued debate on volatility, governance, and reserve design.
- Legal and compliance teams must stay aligned on disclosure and operational controls.
For businesses and investors, the message is simple: treat digital assets with the same discipline applied to any strategic balance-sheet exposure.
Regards,
Vivek Shah, CA, LLB
24/04/2026
Oman's Royal Decree No. 8/2026 has established the International Financial Centre (IFC) in Muscat, with tax incentives of up to 50 years for eligible businesses.
For international businesses, this is a development worth monitoring closely from both an advisory and compliance perspective:
- The IFC is expected to create a distinct legal and regulatory environment for eligible activities.
- Detailed eligibility conditions and implementation rules will be critical before any structuring decision.
- The 50-year incentive horizon makes the regime strategically relevant for holding structures, regional headquarters, financial services, fintech, and supporting activities.
- Businesses should assess substance, governance, licensing, AML/CFT, transfer pricing, tax residency, and cross-border payment implications.
- Groups with regional operations should also evaluate entity location, permanent establishment risk, and treaty positioning.
- The practical question is not only whether the incentive exists, but whether the proposed activity, structure, and compliance framework satisfy the eventual rules.
23/04/2026
RBI’s Authentication Mechanisms for Digital Payment Transactions Directions, 2025 are a clear shift from OTP-only thinking to principle-based payment security.
For banks, fintechs, PSPs, and card issuers, the compliance and advisory implications are significant:
- Effective date: 1 April 2026 for domestic digital payment transactions.
- For specified non-recurring cross-border card-not-present transactions, the compliance date is 1 October 2026.
- Two-factor authentication remains the minimum standard, but RBI has not prescribed one fixed technology.
- At least one factor must be dynamic or proven for non-card-present transactions.
- SMS OTP can remain a valid factor, but it is no longer the only design option.
- Risk-based authentication is now an operational expectation: device intelligence, behaviour, geolocation, transaction pattern, and fraud signals should drive step-up controls.
- Interoperability and open access matter: authentication and tokenisation services should not create closed ecosystems or vendor lock-in.
- Issuers carry the responsibility for secure implementation and customer compensation where losses arise from non-compliance.
- The framework also reinforces alignment with the DPDP Act, 2023.
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