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Accounting

Corporate Tax Calculation Examples for UAE Businesses

10 corporate tax calculation examples for UAE businesses. Includes worked AED scenarios for SMEs, free zone companies, startups, and businesses above the threshold.

SmallERP March 12, 2026 14 min read

Understanding UAE Corporate Tax: A Practical Guide with Real Calculations

The UAE corporate tax regime, effective since June 2023, applies a 9% rate on taxable income exceeding AED 375,000. For business owners across Dubai, Abu Dhabi, and Sharjah, understanding exactly how this tax applies to your specific situation is the difference between accurate financial planning and costly surprises.

This guide walks through 10 detailed calculation examples covering mainland SMEs, free zone entities, startups, and businesses navigating the AED 375,000 threshold. Each example uses real AED figures so you can map them directly to your own operations.

Whether you run a trading company in Deira, a consultancy in DIFC, or a tech startup in Abu Dhabi Global Market, these worked scenarios will clarify your corporate tax obligations down to the dirham.

How UAE Corporate Tax Works: The Core Formula

Before diving into examples, here is the fundamental calculation:

Taxable Income = Total Revenue − Allowable Deductions − Exempt Income

Then apply the two-tier rate:

Taxable Income BracketTax Rate
AED 0 – AED 375,0000%
Above AED 375,0009%

Corporate Tax Payable = (Taxable Income − AED 375,000) × 9%

This means every UAE business gets the first AED 375,000 of taxable income completely tax-free. Only the portion above that threshold is taxed at 9%.

Key terms to know:

  • Taxable income: Net profit after allowable deductions
  • Tax period: Your financial year (typically 12 months)
  • Qualifying Free Zone Person (QFZP): Free zone entity meeting specific conditions for 0% rate
  • Small Business Relief: Businesses with revenue under AED 3 million can elect simplified treatment

10 Worked Corporate Tax Calculations

Example 1: Small Trading Company Below Threshold

Business: Al Noor Trading LLC, Sharjah mainland Annual Revenue: AED 850,000 Total Expenses: AED 520,000

ItemAmount (AED)
Revenue850,000
Cost of Goods Sold340,000
Rent72,000
Salaries85,000
Utilities & Other23,000
Total Expenses520,000
Taxable Income330,000

Since AED 330,000 is below the AED 375,000 threshold: Corporate Tax = AED 0

This business pays zero corporate tax. However, it must still register with the FTA and file an annual tax return.

Example 2: Restaurant Chain Above Threshold

Business: Desert Bites Restaurant Group, Dubai mainland Annual Revenue: AED 4,200,000 Total Expenses: AED 3,100,000

ItemAmount (AED)
Revenue4,200,000
Food & Beverage Costs1,470,000
Staff Salaries960,000
Rent (3 locations)420,000
Marketing85,000
Utilities & Maintenance165,000
Total Expenses3,100,000
Taxable Income1,100,000

Tax calculation:

  • First AED 375,000 → 0% = AED 0
  • Remaining AED 725,000 → 9% = AED 65,250

Corporate Tax = AED 65,250

Effective tax rate: AED 65,250 ÷ AED 1,100,000 = 5.93%

Example 3: Freelancer Using Small Business Relief

Business: Sara Ahmed, freelance graphic designer (Dubai freelance permit) Annual Revenue: AED 280,000 Total Expenses: AED 45,000

Taxable income: AED 235,000

Since revenue is under AED 3 million, Sara can elect Small Business Relief, treating her taxable income as AED 0 for this period.

Corporate Tax = AED 0 (with Small Business Relief election)

Without Small Business Relief, tax would also be AED 0 since AED 235,000 falls below the AED 375,000 threshold. However, electing Small Business Relief simplifies record-keeping requirements.

Example 4: IT Consultancy Just Above Threshold

Business: TechServe Consulting, Abu Dhabi mainland Annual Revenue: AED 1,800,000 Total Expenses: AED 1,350,000

ItemAmount (AED)
Revenue1,800,000
Staff Costs840,000
Office Rent144,000
Software Subscriptions96,000
Travel48,000
Professional Services72,000
Other Expenses150,000
Total Expenses1,350,000
Taxable Income450,000

Tax calculation:

  • First AED 375,000 → 0% = AED 0
  • Remaining AED 75,000 → 9% = AED 6,750

Corporate Tax = AED 6,750

Effective tax rate: 1.5% — significantly lower than the headline 9% rate because of the AED 375,000 exemption band.

Example 5: Free Zone Software Company (Qualifying Income)

Business: CloudTech FZ-LLC, Dubai Internet City Annual Revenue: AED 6,500,000 Revenue Breakdown:

  • Software licensing to overseas clients: AED 5,200,000 (qualifying income)
  • Consulting to mainland UAE clients: AED 1,300,000 (non-qualifying income)

Total Expenses: AED 4,000,000 (allocated proportionally)

Income TypeRevenueAllocated ExpensesTaxable IncomeTax RateTax
Qualifying (export)5,200,0003,200,0002,000,0000%0
Non-qualifying (mainland)1,300,000800,000500,0009%*11,250

*AED 375,000 exemption applies to non-qualifying portion: (500,000 − 375,000) × 9% = AED 11,250

Corporate Tax = AED 11,250

The free zone company saves significantly on the qualifying export income but still pays tax on mainland-sourced revenue exceeding the threshold.

Example 6: E-commerce Business with High Revenue

Business: Gulf Gadgets E-commerce LLC, Dubai mainland Annual Revenue: AED 12,000,000 Total Expenses: AED 9,800,000

ItemAmount (AED)
Revenue12,000,000
Product Purchases7,200,000
Shipping & Logistics960,000
Staff Salaries720,000
Warehouse Rent360,000
Marketing & Ads480,000
Platform Fees80,000
Total Expenses9,800,000
Taxable Income2,200,000

Tax calculation:

  • First AED 375,000 → 0% = AED 0
  • Remaining AED 1,825,000 → 9% = AED 164,250

Corporate Tax = AED 164,250

Effective tax rate: 7.47%

Example 7: Startup in First Year with Net Loss

Business: InnovateME Tech, Abu Dhabi Hub71 Annual Revenue: AED 120,000 Total Expenses: AED 890,000

Taxable income: AED 120,000 − AED 890,000 = -AED 770,000 (loss)

Corporate Tax = AED 0

The AED 770,000 loss can be carried forward to offset future taxable income (up to 75% of taxable income in future periods). If next year's taxable income is AED 600,000, the company can offset up to AED 450,000 (75%) using carried-forward losses.

Business: BuildRight Contracting LLC, Sharjah mainland Annual Revenue: AED 8,500,000 Total Expenses: AED 6,900,000

However, AED 400,000 of expenses were management fees paid to a related entity at above-market rates. The FTA transfer pricing rules require arm's length pricing. Fair market value for those services: AED 250,000.

Adjustment: AED 400,000 − AED 250,000 = AED 150,000 added back to taxable income.

ItemAmount (AED)
Revenue8,500,000
Reported Expenses6,900,000
Transfer Pricing Adjustment+150,000
Adjusted Taxable Income1,750,000

Tax calculation:

  • First AED 375,000 → 0% = AED 0
  • Remaining AED 1,375,000 → 9% = AED 123,750

Corporate Tax = AED 123,750

Without the transfer pricing adjustment, tax would have been AED 110,250 — a difference of AED 13,500 plus potential penalties.

Example 9: Professional Services Firm (Group Relief)

Business: Two related companies under one UAE group

  • Alpha Consulting LLC: Taxable income AED 900,000
  • Beta Services LLC: Taxable loss of AED 200,000

Using Tax Group provisions (where both companies are 75%+ owned by the same parent), losses can be transferred:

CompanyStandalone IncomeAfter Group Relief
Alpha Consulting900,000700,000
Beta Services-200,0000

Alpha's tax calculation after group relief:

  • First AED 375,000 → 0%
  • Remaining AED 325,000 → 9% = AED 29,250

Combined Group Tax = AED 29,250

Without group relief, Alpha alone would pay: (900,000 − 375,000) × 9% = AED 47,250 — saving AED 18,000 through group relief.

Example 10: Mixed Free Zone and Mainland Operations

Business: Gulf Logistics FZE, JAFZA + mainland branch Total Revenue: AED 15,000,000

Income StreamAmount (AED)Classification
Warehousing for international clients8,000,000Qualifying FZ income
Last-mile delivery (mainland)5,000,000Non-qualifying
Administrative services to group2,000,000Non-qualifying
Total15,000,000

Expenses: AED 11,500,000 (allocated: AED 6,100,000 qualifying, AED 5,400,000 non-qualifying)

TypeRevenueExpensesTaxableRateTax
Qualifying8,000,0006,100,0001,900,0000%0
Non-qualifying7,000,0005,400,0001,600,0009%*110,250

*(1,600,000 − 375,000) × 9% = AED 110,250

Corporate Tax = AED 110,250

Start Free Trial → smallerp.ae/signup — SmallERP automates these calculations so you never miscalculate your corporate tax liability.

UAE-Specific Rules and Regulations You Must Know

FTA Registration Requirements

Every taxable person must register for corporate tax with the Federal Tax Authority (FTA). This includes:

  • All UAE mainland companies (regardless of income level)
  • Free zone companies
  • Foreign entities with a permanent establishment in the UAE
  • Individual businesses exceeding AED 1 million in turnover

Registration is done through the EmaraTax portal. Failure to register by the deadline results in penalties starting at AED 10,000.

Key Deadlines

  • Tax return filing: Within 9 months from the end of the relevant tax period
  • Tax payment: Same deadline as filing — within 9 months
  • Registration: Must be completed by the date specified by the FTA (varies by entity type)
  • Transfer pricing documentation: Must be maintained contemporaneously

Free Zone Qualifying Conditions

To benefit from the 0% corporate tax rate, a Qualifying Free Zone Person must:

  1. Maintain adequate substance in the UAE (staff, assets, expenditure)
  2. Derive qualifying income (transactions with other free zone persons, or certain services to anyone)
  3. Not have elected to be subject to the standard 9% rate
  4. Comply with transfer pricing rules
  5. Prepare audited financial statements
  6. Meet the de minimis threshold: non-qualifying revenue must not exceed the lower of AED 5 million or 5% of total revenue

Exempt Income Categories

Certain income types are fully exempt from corporate tax:

  • Dividends from UAE companies (participation exemption)
  • Capital gains from qualifying shareholdings
  • Income of qualifying investment funds
  • Foreign branch profits (with election)

Common Calculation Mistakes to Avoid

Mistake 1: Forgetting the AED 375,000 Exemption Band

Some businesses calculate 9% on their entire taxable income instead of only the amount above AED 375,000. On AED 1,000,000 taxable income, this error means paying AED 90,000 instead of the correct AED 56,250 — an overpayment of AED 33,750.

Mistake 2: Incorrectly Allocating Free Zone Expenses

Free zone companies must accurately allocate expenses between qualifying and non-qualifying income. Using a blanket allocation method without supporting documentation can lead to FTA adjustments and penalties.

Mistake 3: Ignoring Transfer Pricing Requirements

Related party transactions above AED 200 million require a Master File and Local File. All related party transactions, regardless of size, must be at arm's length. The FTA is actively auditing transfer pricing arrangements.

Mistake 4: Not Carrying Forward Losses Properly

Tax losses can be carried forward but can only offset up to 75% of taxable income in any given period. Some businesses either forget to carry forward losses or try to offset 100% of future income.

Mistake 5: Misclassifying Small Business Relief Eligibility

Small Business Relief is available for businesses with revenue under AED 3 million, but it's an election — not automatic. You must actively elect it in your tax return. Also, this relief is temporary and will eventually be phased out.

MistakeFinancial ImpactHow to Avoid
Missing AED 375K bandOverpay by up to AED 33,750Always apply two-tier calculation
Wrong expense allocationFTA adjustment + penaltiesDocument allocation methodology
Transfer pricing gaps50% penalty on adjustmentsMaintain contemporaneous documentation
Loss carry-forward errorsLost tax benefitsTrack losses in dedicated schedule
SBR misclassificationMissed savings or wrong filingCheck revenue threshold annually

How SmallERP Simplifies Corporate Tax Calculations

Managing corporate tax calculations across multiple scenarios, free zone splits, and related party transactions is exactly where SmallERP delivers the most value for UAE businesses.

Automated Tax Computation: SmallERP automatically applies the two-tier rate structure to your actual financial data. As your revenue and expenses flow through the system, your corporate tax estimate updates in real time — no spreadsheets required.

Free Zone Income Segregation: For businesses with both qualifying and non-qualifying income, SmallERP tracks each revenue stream separately and allocates expenses using defensible methodologies that align with FTA requirements.

Loss Tracking: SmallERP maintains a running schedule of carried-forward losses and automatically applies the 75% utilization cap when projecting future tax obligations.

Transfer Pricing Documentation: Tag related party transactions within SmallERP, and the system flags amounts that may require arm's length benchmarking — before the FTA finds them.

Start Free Trial → smallerp.ae/signup — Connect your accounts and see your projected corporate tax liability within minutes.

Use SmallERP's Corporate Tax Calculator → smallerp.ae/tools/corporate-tax-calculator to run quick scenarios before committing to business decisions.

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