Our Expert in United Arab Emirates
Every founder, CFO and company director planning a business setup UAE in 2026 faces the same threshold question: should the entity sit inside a free zone or on the mainland? The answer used to be straightforward, free zones meant zero tax and fast incorporation; the mainland meant local market access. That calculus has shifted. The federal corporate tax introduced by Federal Decree‑Law No. 47 of 2022 applies a 9 % rate on taxable income above AED 375,000, and a free zone company only preserves its 0 % rate on qualifying income if it satisfies Qualifying Free Zone Person (QFZP) substance and activity tests. Meanwhile, Dubai Executive Council Resolution No.
11 of 2025 now lets many free‑zone firms operate on the mainland under permit. This article delivers a decisive, dimension‑by‑dimension comparison of Free Zone vs Mainland UAE 2026, covering tax, market access, cost, enforceability and timing, and closes with a concrete checklist for when to engage a corporate lawyer.
A UAE free zone is a designated economic area governed by its own authority, offering streamlined registration, purpose‑built infrastructure and, historically, tax incentives. The UAE has more than 40 active free zones, each targeting specific sectors: DMCC for commodities trading, Dubai Internet City for technology, JAFZA for logistics and industrial operations, and DIFC and ADGM as international financial centres with common‑law court systems.
Free zone companies are typically incorporated as Free Zone Establishments (FZE, single shareholder) or Free Zone Companies (FZ‑LLC, multiple shareholders). Branches of foreign companies can also register. A core advantage is 100 % foreign ownership by default, no local partner or sponsor is required, and repatriation of profits and capital is unrestricted within the zone’s regulations.
Since the introduction of federal corporate tax, a free zone company is not automatically exempt. To benefit from the 0 % rate on qualifying income, the entity must meet every condition to be classified as a Qualifying Free Zone Person under the corporate tax law and related ministerial decisions. The FTA’s Corporate Tax General Guide sets out these requirements:
A worked example illustrates the stakes: a QFZP earning AED 1,000,000 in qualifying income owes AED 0 in corporate tax. A mainland LLC with the same AED 1,000,000 taxable income owes AED 56,250 (0 % on the first AED 375,000 + 9 % on AED 625,000). That gap narrows dramatically if the free zone entity fails the substance or de minimis tests and loses QFZP status, it then falls under the same 9 % regime.
Free zones work best for businesses that export, serve international clients, or operate within a specific sector ecosystem. Technology start‑ups selling SaaS to global customers, commodities traders routing shipments through JAFZA, and asset‑management firms using DIFC’s common‑law framework all fall squarely into the free zone model. The free zone route is weaker for any company whose primary revenue comes from selling directly to UAE‑mainland customers, that activity typically falls outside qualifying income, undermining the QFZP position and creating market‑access friction.
A mainland company is licensed by the Department of Economy and Tourism (DET, formerly DED) in Dubai or the equivalent authority in another emirate, for example, the Abu Dhabi Department of Economic Development (ADDED). The mainland licence grants the right to trade across the entire UAE without geographic or customer‑type restriction.
Following the 2021 amendments to the Commercial Companies Law, 100 % foreign ownership is permitted for most commercial activities on the mainland. A limited number of strategic activities still require an Emirati partner or shareholder, but the list has narrowed substantially. Licensing involves selecting the correct activity codes, securing initial approval, executing a lease for a physical office (or flexi‑desk where permitted), and obtaining the trade licence. The process is more document‑intensive than a typical free zone package but has been significantly digitalised.
Three scenarios make the mainland the only viable choice:
For a wholesale distributor supplying UAE retailers, or a construction contractor bidding on local projects, the mainland option is not just preferable, it is the only lawful path.
The mainland carries higher upfront administrative friction: mandatory physical office space, longer licensing lead times, and generally higher combined costs of licence fees plus rent, particularly in Dubai and Abu Dhabi. Banking onboarding can also be slower for newly incorporated mainland LLCs compared with entities in established free zones such as DMCC or DIFC. For businesses with no need to sell locally in the UAE, the mainland’s extra overhead delivers no corresponding benefit.
The table below summarises the core dimensions of the Free Zone vs Mainland UAE 2026 decision. Each dimension is expanded in the analysis that follows.
| Dimension | Free Zone (Option A) | Mainland (Option B) |
|---|---|---|
| Ownership | 100 % foreign ownership by default in virtually all zones. | 100 % foreign ownership for most activities post‑2021; limited strategic activities still need an Emirati partner. |
| Market access | Restricted to exports / free zone transactions unless a mainland branch or operating permit is obtained (see Dubai Resolution No. 11/2025). | Unrestricted right to trade across the UAE; eligible for government tenders. |
| Corporate tax (2026) | 0 % on qualifying income if QFZP conditions are met; standard 9 % regime if conditions are breached. | 0 % on first AED 375,000 of taxable income; 9 % above AED 375,000. |
| Licence fees | Typically AED 7,000–35,000 (varies by zone and activity). | Typically AED 12,000–60,000 (varies by emirate and activity). |
| Office / rent | Flexi‑desk and co‑working options widely available; lower initial OPEX in many zones. | Physical office generally required; higher rent in prime emirates. |
| Time to incorporate | Days to two weeks for standard packages. | Two to six weeks typical. |
| Substance / compliance | QFZP demands real substance, local staff, premises, management decisions made in‑zone. Failure forfeits 0 % treatment. | Standard compliance under UAE CT and emirate regulators; no separate substance test for tax rate. |
| Dispute resolution | Governed by free zone authority; DIFC and ADGM courts operate under common‑law principles. Other zones follow UAE civil law forums. | UAE civil courts apply; parties may elect DIAC or other arbitration per contract. |
| Reversibility | Migration to mainland possible but complex; legal and tax advice required. | Can establish a free zone branch or subsidiary; watch tax and contractual implications. |
Tax is now the highest‑stakes dimension in the free zone vs mainland tax decision. Under Federal Decree‑Law No. 47 of 2022, both free zone and mainland entities are subject to corporate tax, the difference lies in rate eligibility.
| Tax item | Free Zone (QFZP) | Mainland |
|---|---|---|
| Corporate tax rate | 0 % on qualifying income (QFZP conditions must be met); 9 % on non‑qualifying income and if QFZP status is lost. | 0 % on first AED 375,000; 9 % on taxable income above AED 375,000. |
| Tax on AED 1,000,000 income | AED 0 (if 100 % qualifying) | AED 56,250 |
| Filing obligation | Annual CT return + audited financials; transfer‑pricing documentation. | Annual CT return; audited financials recommended and increasingly required. |
A free zone company is not exempt from corporate tax by default. The 0 % rate is conditional, and the FTA’s Corporate Tax General Guide makes clear that a QFZP must satisfy substance, qualifying‑income and audit requirements for every tax period. If a single period’s non‑qualifying revenue exceeds the de minimis threshold, the entity is taxed at 9 % on all income for that period. Industry observers expect FTA audits of QFZP claims to intensify through 2026 as the regime matures.
Historically, free zone companies could not sell directly to customers on the UAE mainland without a local distributor or a separately licensed branch. Dubai Executive Council Resolution No. 11 of 2025 changed this for Dubai‑based free zones: qualifying free zone establishments can now apply for a permit to conduct specified activities on the Dubai mainland, subject to conditions and fees set by DET. The likely practical effect is that the bright line between free zone and mainland is blurring, but only in Dubai, and only for businesses that obtain and maintain the correct permits.
For Abu Dhabi, Sharjah and other emirates, the traditional restriction remains: a free zone entity that wants to invoice a mainland customer generally needs a branch, agency arrangement, or dual licensing. A mainland LLC faces no such obstacle, it can trade anywhere in the UAE, bid on government contracts, and open retail outlets without additional permits.
Both structures offer limited liability, shareholders in a mainland LLC and members of a free zone company are generally not personally liable beyond their contributed capital. Practical differences emerge in governance and tax exposure risk:
Speed‑to‑market can determine which option a start‑up prefers. Many free zones offer full incorporation in under two weeks, DMCC, IFZA and Meydan Free Zone routinely complete packages within five to seven business days. Mainland incorporation in Dubai or Abu Dhabi typically takes two to six weeks, factoring in initial approval, lease registration, visa processing, and bank‑account opening. Banking is an independent variable: some free zones maintain partnerships with local banks that accelerate onboarding, while newly formed mainland LLCs (especially those with non‑resident shareholders) may face extended KYC timelines.
Choosing the right structure also determines which courts hear disputes. DIFC and ADGM entities enjoy access to dedicated common‑law courts with English‑language proceedings, internationally recognised judgments, and sophisticated commercial jurisprudence, a significant advantage for cross‑border contracts. Other free zone entities generally fall under the jurisdiction of the zone authority’s dispute mechanism or the UAE civil courts.
Mainland entities default to UAE civil courts (or Dubai International Arbitration Centre / Abu Dhabi arbitration mechanisms per contractual agreement). For businesses whose counterparties are primarily international, the DIFC/ADGM court framework can be a decisive factor favouring those specific financial free zones, even if other aspects of the free zone model are less relevant.
Three regulatory developments are reshaping the Free Zone vs Mainland UAE 2026 landscape:
The net effect: free zones remain attractive, but the margin for error has shrunk. A company that chose a free zone purely for the tax benefit without planning substance and qualifying‑income compliance faces real financial exposure in 2026.
Use the framework below to match your business profile to the right structure. Each trigger condition points to a clear choice.
| If your priority is… | Choose |
|---|---|
| Fast, low‑cost incorporation with an export or international‑client focus | Free Zone (sector‑specific: DMCC for commodities, DIC for tech, JAFZA for logistics) |
| Direct sales to UAE customers, retail, or government contracts | Mainland (LLC or professional licence) |
| 0 % corporate tax on qualifying international income, and you can meet substance tests | Free Zone, but only after verifying QFZP eligibility with a qualified adviser |
| Common‑law court system for international contracts | Free Zone, specifically DIFC or ADGM |
| Simplest banking and onshore procurement | Mainland, or a dual approach (free zone + mainland branch/operating permit) |
| Regulated activity (healthcare, education, contracting, real estate brokerage) | Mainland, zone licensing usually cannot cover these activities |
Choose Free Zone when:
Choose Mainland when:
Practical example, SaaS start‑up vs UAE distributor. A software start‑up selling subscriptions to European and Asian clients, with two developers in Dubai, fits squarely into a free zone (e.g., Dubai Internet City), with QFZP status delivering 0 % tax on qualifying income. A wholesale food distributor supplying restaurants across Dubai, Sharjah and Abu Dhabi has no practical choice but the mainland, its revenue is local, its logistics are local, and the QFZP rules would not shelter it.
Not every incorporation requires external legal counsel. But the following situations move the decision firmly into professional‑advice territory:
Before your first meeting with counsel, prepare: your projected revenue split (UAE vs international), the number and location of staff, your target customer types, your sector/activity codes, and any existing corporate group structure. These inputs allow a lawyer to map your facts directly onto the Free Zone vs Mainland UAE 2026 framework and give a clear recommendation.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Mohammed Haitham A. Salman at Middle East Alliance Legal Consultancy (ME-Alliance), a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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