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Tax United Arab Emirates 2026: Penalties, VAT Refunds, Audit Powers & Compliance Deadlines

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

The landscape of tax in the United Arab Emirates has shifted materially in the first half of 2026, driven by two interlocking pieces of legislation that every finance and legal team must now act on. Amendments to the Tax Procedures Law took effect on 1 January 2026, introducing a hard five-year deadline on refund claims and excess-credit utilisation, tightening documentary evidence standards and expanding the Federal Tax Authority’s inspection powers. Separately, Cabinet Decision No. 129 of 2025 overhauled the administrative penalty regime with effect from 14 April 2026, recalibrating fines, codifying aggravating factors and resetting the appeal and waiver process.

Together, these UAE tax changes 2026 touch every registered taxpayer, mainland companies, free-zone entities and Qualifying Free Zone Persons alike, and the compliance window is narrow.

Executive Summary: What Changed and Immediate Actions

For busy CFOs and tax directors, the critical takeaways are:

  • 1 January 2026, Tax Procedures Law 2026 amendments live. A statutory five-year cap now applies to VAT refund claims and the carry-forward of excess input-tax credits. Stricter evidentiary standards apply, and the FTA may reject input-tax deductions linked to tax evasion by a counterparty.
  • 1 April 2026, Executive Regulation amendments. Supporting changes to the Executive Regulation of the Tax Procedures Law took effect, adjusting procedural steps for audits, voluntary disclosures and document-preservation obligations.
  • 14 April 2026, Cabinet Decision No. 129 of 2025 enforced. The revised administrative penalty schedule replaces prior penalty tables, introducing recalibrated fixed fines, daily-accrual caps and new aggravating-factor multipliers.

Five immediate actions every UAE taxpayer should take now:

  1. Audit all outstanding VAT refund claims and excess credits against the new five-year expiry window.
  2. Update reverse-charge invoicing templates and ERP settings to reflect the simplified self-invoicing rules.
  3. Preserve and index all documentary evidence required under expanded FTA audit powers.
  4. Map current penalty exposure under the new Cabinet Decision 129 penalty bands.
  5. Brief internal audit, finance and legal teams on the revised voluntary-disclosure triggers and appeal timelines.

2026 Legislative Timeline and Key Documents

Understanding the sequencing of these changes is essential for prioritising compliance work. The table below sets out the must-know dates, the legal instrument behind each change and the primary source to consult.

Effective Date Legal Instrument Key Change Primary Source
1 January 2026 Amendments to Federal Decree-Law No. 28 of 2022 (Tax Procedures Law) Five-year refund/credit deadline; stricter evidence rules; expanded FTA powers Ministry of Finance (mof.gov.ae)
1 January 2026 Federal Decree-Law No. 16 of 2025 (VAT Law amendments) Reverse-charge simplification; removal of certain self-invoicing obligations Federal Tax Authority (tax.gov.ae)
1 April 2026 Amendments to Executive Regulation of the Tax Procedures Law Updated procedural requirements for audits, voluntary disclosures, document preservation DLA Piper Gulf Tax Insights (April 2026)
14 April 2026 Cabinet Decision No. 129 of 2025 Revised administrative penalty regime: new fine bands, aggravating factors, appeal windows Federal Tax Authority (tax.gov.ae)

Primary Texts to Read

  • Federal Decree-Law No. 28 of 2022 (Tax Procedures Law) as amended, the backbone of all procedural rules, including registration, filing, refunds, audits and penalties.
  • Federal Decree-Law No. 16 of 2025, amending the VAT Law (Federal Decree-Law No. 8 of 2017) with changes to reverse-charge, invoicing and input-tax recovery rules.
  • Cabinet Decision No. 129 of 2025, replacing prior penalty tables and introducing the new administrative-penalty framework effective 14 April 2026.
  • Executive Regulation of the Tax Procedures Law (as amended 1 April 2026), the operational detail behind audit conduct, disclosure mechanics and evidentiary standards.

What the Tax Procedures Law 2026 Changed: Refunds, Credits and Statute Limits

The amendments to Federal Decree-Law No. 28 of 2022 that came into force on 1 January 2026 represent the most significant procedural overhaul since the Tax Procedures Law was first enacted. The changes target three areas that directly affect cash flow and compliance risk for businesses operating across the tax in the United Arab Emirates framework.

Refund Claim Process, What’s New

The centrepiece reform is the introduction of a statutory five-year limitation period for claiming VAT refunds and utilising excess input-tax credits. Under the previous regime, no explicit statutory deadline existed, which allowed businesses to accumulate and carry forward excess credits indefinitely. From 1 January 2026, any refund claim or credit utilisation request must be submitted within five years of the end of the relevant tax period.

In practical terms, a business whose excess credit arose in the tax period ending 31 March 2021 must have submitted its refund application before 31 March 2026, or permanently forfeit the claim. Industry observers expect this deadline to catch a meaningful number of businesses that have been passively rolling forward credits without filing formal refund requests.

The amended law also tightens the documentary evidence required to support refund claims. The FTA may now reject input-tax deductions where it has reason to believe the supplier was involved in tax evasion, even if the claimant itself was not a knowing participant. This imposes a practical due-diligence obligation on purchasers to verify their suppliers’ compliance status.

Examples: Excess Credit Carried Forward vs. Refund Claim

Consider two scenarios that illustrate the operational impact:

  • Scenario A, Carried-forward credit. A manufacturer has AED 500,000 in accumulated excess input tax from the period Q1 2020. Under the old regime, this could roll forward indefinitely. Under the 2026 rules, if not claimed by end of Q1 2025 (five years), the credit expires. Since that window has already passed, the credit is now irrecoverable.
  • Scenario B, Active refund claim. A trading company files a refund request in February 2026 for excess credits from Q4 2022. This falls within the five-year window and will be processed, provided the company can furnish complete supporting documentation (tax invoices, import declarations, proof of payment) meeting the FTA’s enhanced evidentiary threshold.

The lesson is clear: passive carry-forward is no longer a safe strategy. Every taxable person should immediately inventory all outstanding credits, calculate expiry dates and file proactive refund claims where warranted.

Cabinet Decision No. 129 of 2025: The New Penalty Regime

Cabinet Decision No. 129 of 2025 replaced the prior penalty framework with a recalibrated schedule that took effect on 14 April 2026. The decision introduces clearer categorisation of violations, adjusts fixed-fine amounts and, crucially, codifies aggravating-factor multipliers for repeat offenders and cases involving deliberate non-compliance.

Offence Category Previous Penalty Indicative Range New Penalty Under Cabinet Decision 129 Effective
Failure to register within prescribed timeframe AED 20,000 AED 10,000 (first offence); AED 20,000 (repeat) 14 Apr 2026
Late filing of tax return AED 1,000 (first); AED 2,000 (repeat) AED 1,000 (first); escalating for subsequent occurrences within 24 months 14 Apr 2026
Late payment of tax due Varied daily accrual percentages Revised daily percentage with a statutory cap on total accrued penalties 14 Apr 2026
Failure to maintain records for prescribed period AED 10,000 (first); AED 20,000 (repeat) AED 10,000 (first); AED 20,000+ for repeat within 24 months 14 Apr 2026
Filing incorrect tax return (voluntary disclosure made) Percentage of tax difference Reduced percentage where voluntary disclosure is timely; aggravated where deliberate 14 Apr 2026
Tax evasion Up to 3× the evaded tax amount Maintained, with explicit aggravating-factor provisions for organised schemes 14 Apr 2026

The likely practical effect of the new penalty regime is twofold. Penalties for minor first-time offences, such as late registration, have been moderated, which benefits newly established businesses. However, the introduction of codified aggravating factors means that repeat violations or those involving deliberate concealment will attract substantially higher exposure. The appeal window for penalty assessments runs from the date of notification, and taxpayers must lodge an objection with the FTA before escalating to the Tax Disputes Resolution Committee and, thereafter, to the courts.

How to Apply for a Penalty Waiver

The FTA provides a mechanism for requesting waiver or reduction of administrative penalties through its e-Services portal. The process is as follows:

  1. Log in to the FTA e-Services portal at eservices.tax.gov.ae using the Tax Registration Number (TRN).
  2. Navigate to “Penalty Review” or the equivalent penalty-management section.
  3. Submit a written request specifying the penalty assessment reference number, grounds for waiver (e.g., reasonable cause, first-time offence, voluntary disclosure) and supporting evidence.
  4. Attach all documentary proof, corrected returns, bank statements, correspondence with the FTA and any evidence demonstrating reasonable steps to comply.
  5. Authorised tax agents or legal representatives may submit on behalf of the taxpayer, provided a valid Power of Attorney is uploaded.
  6. The FTA will issue a decision within the timeframe set out in the Tax Procedures Law. If the request is denied, the taxpayer retains the right to escalate via the formal objection and appeals pathway.

VAT Treatment: Reverse Charge, Invoicing and Imports

Federal Decree-Law No. 16 of 2025, effective 1 January 2026, introduced targeted amendments to the VAT Law that directly affect how businesses account for reverse-charge imports in the UAE and document intra-group or cross-border services.

Reverse Charge for Import of Services vs. Goods

Under the reverse-charge mechanism, the recipient of a taxable supply, rather than the supplier, accounts for VAT. This applies both to the import of goods (where customs declarations typically trigger VAT accounting) and to the import of services from non-resident suppliers who are not registered for VAT in the UAE. The 2026 amendments simplify the self-invoicing requirements for recipients, removing the obligation to issue a formal “self-invoice” in certain prescribed circumstances where the underlying import documentation (customs declarations, service contracts) already contains sufficient detail.

The practical implication is that businesses importing services, such as management fees, software licences or consulting services from group companies abroad, should review whether their current self-invoicing process needs updating. Where the import documentation already meets the FTA’s requirements, the additional self-invoice step may no longer be necessary, reducing administrative burden.

Sample Invoice Entries

For transactions where a self-invoice is still required (for example, where no customs declaration exists), the document should contain the following elements:

  • Supplier details: Name, address and (if applicable) tax registration number of the non-resident supplier.
  • Recipient details: Name, address and TRN of the UAE-registered recipient.
  • Description of supply: Nature of goods or services imported.
  • Date of supply: The date on which the supply is treated as taking place under the UAE VAT Law.
  • Value of supply: Consideration in AED (or converted at the applicable Central Bank rate).
  • VAT amount: 5% of the supply value, accounted for as both output tax and (where eligible) input tax on the same return.
  • Reference to reverse-charge provision: A statement that VAT is accounted for by the recipient under the reverse-charge mechanism.

Businesses should update ERP templates and accounts-payable workflows to ensure that the correct fields are populated automatically when processing cross-border invoices.

FTA Audit Powers and What Auditors Will Request

The Executive Regulation amendments effective 1 April 2026 substantially expand FTA audit powers, granting inspectors broader access to premises, documents and digital records. The look-back period for audits now extends further, and the FTA may request records going back to the earliest unclaimed period, up to the full five-year statutory window for refund claims. This makes comprehensive record-keeping not merely advisable but essential.

Likely FTA Document Requests

# Document / Record Type Why the FTA Requests It
1 VAT returns (all periods under review) Baseline reconciliation of declared output and input tax
2 General ledger extracts (VAT accounts) Verify completeness and accuracy of VAT postings
3 Sales invoices and credit notes Substantiate output-tax declarations
4 Purchase invoices and debit notes Validate input-tax claims
5 Import declarations (customs entries) Verify reverse-charge and import-VAT accounting
6 Self-invoices for reverse-charge supplies Confirm correct VAT treatment of imported services
7 Bank statements and proof of payment Corroborate transaction values and timing
8 Contracts and agreements (supply, lease, service) Determine VAT treatment and place-of-supply rules
9 Fixed-asset register Review capital-goods scheme adjustments
10 ERP configuration documentation Assess system controls over tax coding
11 Intercompany pricing documentation Evaluate transfer-pricing impact on VAT values
12 Voluntary-disclosure filings (if any) Assess completeness and timeliness of corrections
13 Exemption or zero-rating certificates Verify eligibility for reduced-rate or exempt treatment
14 Supplier due-diligence records Check that input tax was not claimed on supplies from non-compliant or fictitious suppliers
15 Board minutes or management approvals for tax positions Determine governance and decision-making trail for complex tax treatments

Ten-step audit-readiness checklist:

  1. Centralise all VAT returns, supporting schedules and amendment records in a single indexed repository.
  2. Reconcile VAT return figures to general-ledger balances for every period within the five-year window.
  3. Verify that all sales and purchase invoices meet the FTA’s mandatory content requirements.
  4. Confirm that reverse-charge self-invoices (where still required) are complete and correctly filed.
  5. Extract and archive customs import declarations with corresponding accounting entries.
  6. Review ERP tax-code mappings for accuracy, check for miscoded exempt, zero-rated or out-of-scope transactions.
  7. Prepare a summary schedule of all refund claims submitted and pending, including expiry dates under the five-year rule.
  8. Compile supplier due-diligence files, including TRN verification and any FTA validation checks.
  9. Document internal-control procedures over VAT, including segregation of duties and approval workflows.
  10. Conduct a mock audit, assign internal audit or an external advisor to simulate an FTA information request using the 15-document table above.

Compliance Playbook: Step-by-Step Actions by Function

Effective implementation requires coordinated action across multiple functions. The following playbook maps critical tasks to the responsible role and organises them into a 30/60/90-day action plan.

Sample 30/60/90-Day Plan

Days 1–30 (Immediate)

  • Tax Director: Inventory all outstanding VAT credits and refund claims; calculate five-year expiry dates; file any claims at risk of expiry.
  • Head of Finance: Update invoice templates and ERP configurations for the simplified reverse-charge rules; run a test batch of transactions.
  • Internal Audit: Conduct a gap analysis of current record-keeping against the expanded FTA document-request list.
  • CFO: Brief the board on penalty-exposure changes under Cabinet Decision 129; approve budget for compliance remediation.

Days 31–60 (Stabilisation)

  • Tax Director: Review supplier due-diligence procedures; implement a TRN-verification protocol for all new and existing suppliers.
  • Head of Finance: Reconcile VAT returns to general-ledger entries for the last five years; flag discrepancies for voluntary-disclosure assessment.
  • Internal Audit: Execute a mock FTA audit using the 15-document request template; report findings and remediation actions.
  • CFO: Evaluate whether any voluntary disclosures should be filed to benefit from reduced penalty treatment under the new regime.

Days 61–90 (Embedding)

  • Tax Director: Formalise a rolling refund-claims calendar to ensure no future credits breach the five-year window.
  • Head of Finance: Implement automated reconciliation checks between VAT returns, customs entries and bank statements.
  • Internal Audit: Update the internal-audit plan to include quarterly VAT-compliance testing aligned with expanded FTA powers.
  • CFO: Sign off on updated tax-risk register and confirm that escalation procedures for penalty assessments are in place.

Tax United Arab Emirates: Obligations by Entity Type

Not every taxpayer is affected identically. The table below distinguishes between the three most common entity classifications and maps their specific obligations and recommended immediate actions under the 2026 changes.

Entity Type Key 2026 Obligations (Refunds / Reverse Charge / Audit) Practical Action Within 30 Days
Mainland taxable person Must comply with five-year refund deadline; follow revised reverse-charge invoicing rules; maintain records for expanded FTA audit scope; subject to full Cabinet Decision 129 penalty regime Run complete refund-claims audit; update AR/AP invoice templates; preserve and index all documentary evidence for five-year look-back
Free zone entity (non-QFZP) Same VAT mechanics as mainland; corporate-tax considerations apply where revenue exceeds de minimis thresholds; must register and comply with all Tax Procedures Law requirements Confirm VAT registration status and refund claims; liaise with free-zone authority on documentation standards; review corporate-tax filing obligations
Qualifying Free Zone Person (QFZP) Potential 0% corporate-tax rate subject to meeting qualifying conditions (separate regime); VAT obligations largely unchanged but enhanced evidence rules apply; must demonstrate ongoing compliance with qualifying conditions Verify QFZP status conditions with supporting documentation; implement VAT documentation controls aligned with stricter evidentiary standards; map penalty exposure for any compliance gaps

Conclusion and Next Steps

The 2026 reforms to tax in the United Arab Emirates demand prompt, structured action from every registered taxpayer. Three steps should be prioritised above all others: first, audit and file all at-risk refund claims before the five-year window closes; second, update invoicing and reverse-charge workflows to comply with the simplified requirements; and third, map current penalty exposure under Cabinet Decision 129 and prepare waiver or voluntary-disclosure filings where appropriate. Businesses that act decisively now will protect cash flow, reduce audit risk and position themselves for the more rigorous compliance environment ahead. Those seeking specialist guidance on tax compliance in the United Arab Emirates can find qualified professionals through our directory.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Priju Dominic, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Federal Tax Authority (FTA), Official Site
  2. Federal Tax Authority, e-Services Portal
  3. The Official UAE Government Portal, Taxation
  4. Ministry of Finance (MOF), Corporate Tax in the UAE
  5. PwC, UAE Tax Summaries
  6. DLA Piper, Gulf Tax Insights (April 2026)

FAQs

Q: What is the new VAT rule in UAE 2026?
A: From 1 January 2026, the Tax Procedures Law amendments introduced a five-year deadline to claim VAT refunds or utilise excess input-tax credits. The amendments also simplify certain reverse-charge self-invoicing requirements and strengthen the FTA’s power to reject input-tax claims linked to supplier non-compliance. The standard 5% VAT rate itself has not changed.
A: The key changes are: (1) a statutory five-year limitation period on refund claims and credit utilisation; (2) enhanced documentary-evidence standards for supporting input-tax deductions; (3) expanded FTA audit and inspection powers, including broader access to digital records; and (4) revised conditions for voluntary disclosures and the consequences of non-disclosure.
A: Cabinet Decision No. 129 of 2025, effective 14 April 2026, recalibrates administrative-penalty amounts, introduces codified aggravating-factor multipliers for repeat or deliberate violations and sets caps on daily-accrual penalties. Taxpayers must lodge penalty objections with the FTA within the prescribed period from the date of the assessment notification. If the FTA upholds the penalty, the next step is an appeal to the Tax Disputes Resolution Committee.
A: The reverse-charge mechanism requires the UAE-registered recipient, rather than the non-resident supplier, to account for VAT on imported goods and services at the standard 5% rate. The recipient reports the VAT as output tax and simultaneously claims it as input tax (subject to eligibility) on the same return. The 2026 amendments simplified self-invoicing requirements for this mechanism in certain scenarios.
A: Yes. The standard VAT rate in the United Arab Emirates remains 5% for all taxable supplies. The 2025–2026 legislative changes are procedural and compliance-focused; they do not alter the headline rate. This is confirmed by the official UAE Government portal.
A: Penalty-waiver applications are submitted through the FTA e-Services portal (eservices.tax.gov.ae). Taxpayers, or their authorised tax agents with a valid Power of Attorney, must specify the penalty-assessment reference, state the grounds for waiver (such as reasonable cause or first-time offence) and attach full supporting documentation. The FTA will issue its decision within the statutory timeframe, and a denial can be escalated through the formal appeals process.
A: Refund claims expire five years after the end of the tax period in which the excess credit arose. For example, an excess credit from the tax period ending 30 June 2021 must be claimed by 30 June 2026. Any claim filed after the five-year expiry date will not be processed, and the credit is permanently forfeited.

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Tax United Arab Emirates 2026: Penalties, VAT Refunds, Audit Powers & Compliance Deadlines

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