The UAE Ministry of Finance (MoF) on 31 January 2022, announced the much awaited introduction of the Federal Corporate Tax (CT) on business profits that will be effective for financial years starting on or after 1 June 2023. The UAE Corporate Tax regime has been designed to incorporate best practices globally and minimize the compliance burden on businesses. The Corporate Tax will be payable on the net profits of UAE businesses as reported in their financial statements prepared in accordance with international accounting standards and subject to adjustments in accordance with Corporate Tax Regulations.
While the law has not yet been issued, UAE has publicly communicated the key design principle and policies of the new regime. We have summarized the key aspects in the following article:
The UAE CT regime will become effective for the financial years starting on or after 1st June 2023.
The UAE CT will be a Federal Tax. It will apply to all businesses and commercial activities (individuals and legal persons) carrying out business activities under a commercial (or freelancer) license in the UAE. However, there is an exceptions for Entities engaged in the extraction of natural resources which will remain subject to the Emirate level corporate taxation.
The UAE CT will be levied on the taxable income i.e the accounting net profits of a business after making adjustments to be specified by the UAE CT law. The accounting net profit is the amount reported in the financial statements prepared in accordance with the International accounting Standards.
There will be progressive tax rate as follows:
Foreign CT paid on UAE taxable income will be allowed as a tax credit against UAE CT liability.
Entities subject to UAE CT will be able to carry forward excess losses and will be able to utilise losses incurred as of the CT effective date.
There are certain exemptions suggested in the FAQs
This will be subject to accurate applicability and fulfilment of all necessary conditions to claim the exemptions.
Foreign entities and individuals will be subject to UAE CT only if they conduct a trade or business in the UAE in an ongoing or regular manner. UAE CT will generally not be levied on a foreign investor’s income from dividend, capital gains, interest, royalties and other investment returns.
Free zones will be subject to UAE Corporate Tax Regulations. However, the UAE CT regime will continue to honour the tax incentives currently being given to free zones businesses that comply with all regulatory requirements and that do not conduct business with UAE mainland.
Under the UAE CT regime, UAE businesses will be required to comply with the Transfer pricing rules and documentation requirements as set out in the OECD Transfer Pricing Guidelines.
A UAE group of companies can elect to form a tax group and be treated as a single taxable person provided certain conditions are met. In this case, only one single tax return will need to be filed per group. Tax losses from one Group Company may be used to offset taxable income of another group companies, provided certain conditions are met.
UAE withholding tax will not be applicable on domestic and cross-border payments of any nature under the UAE CT regime.
Individuals will not be subject to Corporate or Personal Tax on salary income, real estate and other investment or on any other income. Further, dividend, capital gains and other income earned from owning shares or other securities in their personal capacity will not be subject to tax. Also, interest and other income earned from Bank deposits or saving schemes will not taxable for individuals.
With the blueprint of UAE CT released by the MOF, it is clear that broadly the corporate tax system will be at a statutory rate of 9% and 0%. The key design features are confirmed but certain uncertainties still prevail. The aim is to keep it simple and straight forward law to ensure minimum compliance burden on UAE Businesses. A detailed law, regulations, guidelines and compliance mechanism would be announced by the MOF in due course.
With this background, the UAE businesses should now gear up and work on developing a road map to prepare for the implementation in 2023. This may have implication on the current legal structure, model operandi, organisation structure, contractual arrangements, etc. Get in touch with us and we will be happy to explain you in detail.
The article is authored by CA Vipul Kothari, Managing Director, Kothari Auditors and Accountants and co-authored by CA Kinjal Mehta, Tax Manager, Global Business Services, DMCC. You can reach them on vipul@vipulkothari.com and kinjal.mehta@gbsei.com.
Disclaimer - The above is only a brief summary of the current update and is based only on information currently available in the public domain which is subject to change. Please note that this is for information purposes only and should not be construed as a professional advice.