The UAE’s introduction of Corporate Tax in June 2023 marked the end of a decades-long era of zero federal taxation for most businesses. For consulting firms, professional services providers, and the CFOs who manage them, the landscape has fundamentally changed. What was once a straightforward operating environment — low compliance burden, no federal income tax — now requires genuine tax planning, proper structuring, and ongoing compliance management.
This guide covers everything a UAE-based consulting firm or professional services business needs to understand and act on in 2025: the corporate tax framework, VAT obligations, transfer pricing rules, free zone considerations, and — critically — the legal planning strategies that minimise your overall tax burden without crossing compliance lines.
The UAE Corporate Tax Framework — What Applies to Consulting Firms
UAE Corporate Tax (CT) applies to juridical persons incorporated in the UAE and foreign entities with a permanent establishment here. For consulting firms — whether structured as LLCs, civil companies, or free zone entities — the key parameters are:
| Category | Tax Rate | Key Condition |
|---|---|---|
| Taxable income up to AED 375,000 | 0% | All mainland entities |
| Taxable income above AED 375,000 | 9% | All mainland entities |
| Qualifying Free Zone Persons (QFZPs) | 0% | Must meet substance & qualifying income tests |
| Non-qualifying free zone income | 9% | Income from mainland UAE activities |
| Multinational groups (Pillar Two) | 15% | Groups with global revenue > EUR 750M |
| Personal income (salaries, dividends) | 0% | Applies to individuals |
Critical point for consulting firms: If you provide services to clients in mainland UAE from a free zone entity, that income is generally treated as non-qualifying income and taxed at 9%. The 0% rate only applies to qualifying income — broadly, income from transactions with other free zone businesses or from international sources.
⚠ Common Mistake — The Free Zone Tax Trap
Many UAE consulting firms assumed that operating from a free zone (DIFC, ADGM, DMCC, Sharjah Media City, etc.) automatically exempts all income from corporate tax. This is incorrect. If your free zone entity derives income from mainland UAE clients, that income is subject to 9% CT unless you restructure. Review your client mix and revenue streams immediately with a UAE tax advisor.
Key Tax Planning Strategies for 2025
1. Entity Structure Optimisation
The most impactful tax planning decision is made at the entity level — before income is earned. Consulting firms operating across the UAE should evaluate whether their current structure is optimal given the CT framework. A dual-entity structure — a qualifying free zone entity for international and free zone client work, and a separate mainland entity for UAE-domiciled client engagements — can be highly effective. However, this must be genuinely commercial and properly documented. Transfer pricing rules apply between related parties, and the FTA will scrutinise arrangements that appear designed purely for tax avoidance.
2. Maximising Allowable Deductions
Under UAE CT, business expenses are deductible if incurred wholly and exclusively for business purposes and not specifically disallowed. For consulting firms, the key deductible categories include:
- Salaries, bonuses, and employment costs — fully deductible including end-of-service gratuity provisions
- Office rent and facilities costs — fully deductible for genuine business premises
- Professional development and training — deductible; invest in qualifications before year-end
- Technology and software subscriptions — fully deductible
- Professional indemnity and liability insurance — fully deductible
- Interest expense — deductible subject to General Interest Limitation Rules (capped at 30% of EBITDA)
- Depreciation on fixed assets — deductible at prescribed rates
💡 Planning Opportunity — Year-End Expense Acceleration
If your taxable income is tracking above AED 375,000, consider accelerating legitimate business expenditure into the current tax period — professional development, technology upgrades, prepaid subscriptions, equipment purchases. This must be genuine expenditure, not artificial deferrals of income or fabricated expenses.
3. Transfer Pricing Compliance and Planning
Transfer pricing rules apply to transactions between related parties — companies under common ownership or control. For consulting firms operating across multiple entities, every intercompany transaction must be priced at arm’s length. Management fees, shared services charges, and intercompany loans must all be substantiated by a transfer pricing analysis. Businesses with related party transactions exceeding AED 40 million must prepare a formal Transfer Pricing Master File and Local File.
4. Small Business Relief — The AED 3M Revenue Threshold
Businesses with revenue not exceeding AED 3,000,000 in a tax period may elect for Small Business Relief, treating their taxable income as zero. This is a significant concession for boutique consulting firms, sole practitioners, and early-stage professional services businesses. Important: Even if you qualify, you must still register for CT and file a return. The relief reduces your tax liability to zero, but does not eliminate the compliance obligation.
5. VAT Planning and Cash Flow Management
VAT at 5% has been in place since 2018 and remains the most operationally significant tax for most UAE consulting firms. Three key planning areas in 2025:
Input VAT Recovery — Are You Claiming Everything?
Many firms under-claim input VAT on business expenses because their accounting processes do not capture all eligible invoices. Conduct a quarterly review of all supplier invoices to ensure VAT is reclaimed on every eligible expense — software, professional services, office supplies, travel expenses.
Export of Services — Zero-Rating Qualification
Consulting services provided to clients outside the UAE can be zero-rated if specific conditions are met — principally that the recipient benefits from the service outside the UAE and has no UAE establishment. Correctly zero-rating export services eliminates 5% from your invoice and improves competitiveness with international clients.
VAT Cash Flow — Never Treat Collected VAT as Operating Cash
You collect VAT from clients monthly but remit quarterly to the FTA. This creates a significant working capital trap for businesses that spend collected VAT. Ring-fence all collected VAT in a separate sub-account. The penalty for late VAT payment is 2% of the overdue amount per month — an expensive cash flow mistake.
UAE CT Registration and Compliance Deadlines
⚠ Penalty Risk — Late CT Registration
The FTA imposes penalties of AED 10,000 for late corporate tax registration. If you have not yet registered your UAE business for CT, do so immediately through the EmaraTax portal (tax.gov.ae). There is no grace period, and the FTA has begun issuing penalties to non-compliant businesses.
| Compliance Obligation | Deadline | Portal |
|---|---|---|
| CT Registration | Based on licence month (FTA guidance) | EmaraTax |
| CT Return Filing | 9 months after financial year end | EmaraTax |
| CT Payment | 9 months after financial year end | EmaraTax |
| VAT Return (Quarterly) | 28 days after quarter end | EmaraTax |
| VAT Return (Monthly) | 28 days after month end | EmaraTax |
| Transfer Pricing Disclosure | Filed with CT return | EmaraTax |
| Economic Substance Report | 12 months after financial year end | Licensing authority |
Free Zone Entities — The Qualifying Income Rules
For consulting firms in UAE free zones — DIFC, ADGM, DMCC, Sharjah Media City, Dubai Internet City — the 0% CT rate is available only for Qualifying Free Zone Persons (QFZPs) earning Qualifying Income. Qualifying Income generally includes: income from transactions with other free zone persons and from international transactions. Non-Qualifying Income (taxed at 9%) includes: income from providing services to mainland UAE entities and income from excluded activities.
To maintain QFZP status, a free zone entity must also meet a substance requirement — adequate employees, premises, and operating expenditure in the free zone commensurate with its activities. A shell entity with no employees and no operational substance will not qualify.
“The UAE tax framework rewards genuine economic substance and penalises artificial structures. Build your entity around real business activity — where your people are, where decisions are made, where value is created — and the tax treatment will follow naturally.”
— Tariq Salam, CFO · ACCA & ICAEW · Top10ConsultingFirms.comYour 2025 Tax Planning Action Plan
✦ 10 Actions Every UAE Consulting CFO Should Take Now
- Register for CT immediately if not already done — AED 10,000 penalty for late registration
- Assess your entity structure — is your mainland/free zone setup optimal under the CT framework?
- Review free zone income — identify qualifying vs. non-qualifying income and model the tax impact
- Document all related party transactions — intercompany fees and shared services must be at arm’s length
- Assess Small Business Relief eligibility — revenue below AED 3M may qualify for 0% CT
- Conduct an input VAT recovery audit — ensure all eligible VAT on expenses is being claimed
- Ring-fence collected VAT — never use VAT balances as operating cash
- Review international service contracts — ensure export services are correctly zero-rated
- Accelerate legitimate year-end expenditure — professional development, technology, equipment
- Appoint a UAE CT-qualified tax advisor — the framework is new and FTA guidance is still evolving
Tariq Salam is a qualified CFO and dual member of ACCA and ICAEW with extensive experience advising mid-market businesses across the UAE and GCC on tax compliance, working capital management, and corporate finance strategy. He writes on CFO leadership, UAE tax strategy, cash flow management, and consulting industry intelligence at Top10ConsultingFirms.com.