kb-corporate-law-uae

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name: kb-corporate-law-uae
description: Use when advising on UAE corporate law, including mainland LLC and PJSC structures under Federal Decree-Law 32/2021, 100% foreign ownership rules, free zone entity types (DIFC, ADGM, DMCC, JAFZA, and 40+ others), incorporation procedures, beneficial ownership and economic substance requirements, UAE Corporate Tax (9%), and the distinction between onshore and free-zone regulatory regimes. Essential for any entity formation, M&A, or corporate structuring in the UAE.
license: MIT
metadata:
id: kb.corporate-law-UAE
category: kb
practice_area: Corporate Law
jurisdictions: [UAE, DIFC, ADGM]
priority: P0
intent: [UAE corporate law, LLC, free zone, DIFC, ADGM, incorporation, foreign ownership, corporate tax, M&A]
related: [kb-banking-regulation-cbuae, kb-competition-law-mena, kb-aml-fatf-mena, kb-corporate-law-ksa, kb-crypto-vara-dubai]
source: Louis — HAQQ Legal AI (github.com/sboghossian/mini-claude-for-legal)
version: "1.0"

Knowledge Pack — UAE Corporate Law

Scope

This pack covers the UAE corporate law framework, including mainland (onshore) and free-zone entity structures. The UAE has one of the most complex corporate law landscapes in MENA: 40+ free zones each with their own regulations, plus a federal mainland law, plus two common-law free zones (DIFC and ADGM) with their own legislation. This pack is the primary reference for:

  • Choosing between mainland and free zone
  • Entity type selection
  • 100% foreign ownership rules
  • Incorporation procedures
  • Free zone selection (DIFC vs ADGM vs DMCC vs others)
  • Beneficial ownership and economic substance
  • UAE Corporate Tax (9%)
  • Governance and annual obligations

Primary legislation

Statute Scope
Federal Decree-Law 32/2021 (Commercial Companies Law) Onshore mainland companies; replaced 2015 law
Cabinet Decision 55/2021 Strategic sectors list — restricted foreign ownership
Federal Decree-Law 47/2022 (Corporate Tax Law) 9% UAE corporate tax; applies to all UAE entities
Cabinet Decision 31/2019 + 57/2020 Economic Substance Regulations
Cabinet Decision 58/2020 (UBO) Beneficial ownership register requirements
DIFC Laws DIFC entity types; DIFC common-law regime
ADGM Regulations ADGM entity types; ADGM common-law regime
Free zone-specific rules Each free zone has its own regulations

Mainland (onshore) entity types

LLC (Sharikat Dhat Mas'uliyya Mahduda)

The most common form for onshore mainland activities.

Key features:

  • Minimum shareholders: 1 (single-member LLC permitted)
  • Maximum shareholders: 50
  • Minimum capital: No federal minimum (DED/emirate-specific requirements may apply)
  • Management: Manager(s) — appointed by shareholders; can be foreign nationals
  • 100% foreign ownership: permitted since June 2021 for most activities under Federal Decree-Law 32/2021
  • Strategic sectors exception: certain activities reserved for UAE nationals or requiring UAE majority (Cabinet Decision 55/2021 list — oil/gas, banking core activities, some media, military)
  • Shareholding record: registered; "quota" transfers require notarial deed + DED registration

PJSC (Private Joint Stock Company)

  • Minimum shareholders: 3
  • Minimum capital: AED 5,000,000
  • Suitable for larger private companies; more flexible share structures than LLC
  • Board of Directors (5–15 members)
  • Not listed; can convert to PJSC listed on DFM or ADX

Public Joint Stock Company (PJSC — listed)

  • Listed on Dubai Financial Market (DFM) or Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange (ADX)
  • Regulated by SCA (Securities and Commodities Authority) for securities purposes
  • Enhanced governance, disclosure, and audit requirements

Branch of a foreign company

  • Permitted; subject to DED and Ministry of Economy approval
  • Activities restricted to parent company activities
  • Agent/sponsor historically required; now more flexible for many activities
  • Not a separate legal entity — parent fully liable

Civil company (Sharikat Madaniyya)

For licensed professionals (lawyers, doctors, engineers, accountants) — persons providing professional services in their own names. Subject to professional licensing authority rules.


100% foreign ownership — post-2021 reform

Federal Decree-Law 32/2021 was the pivotal reform: it eliminated the requirement for a UAE national shareholder (the 51% local partner requirement) for most mainland activities from June 2021.

Sectors still restricted under Cabinet Decision 55/2021:

Category Ownership requirement
Oil, gas and energy production UAE national or government entity required
Core banking activities CBUAE-specific requirements
Telecommunications services UAE majority preferred; TRA approval
Some media and publishing UAE majority
Military and security Closed or restricted
Some healthcare and education Case-by-case

For activities not on the Cabinet Decision 55/2021 list: 100% foreign ownership is fully permitted.

Practical note: Even with 100% ownership allowed, foreign companies must appoint a registered agent for government communications in some emirate-level processes — this is different from the old "sponsor" requirement and is less intrusive.


Incorporation onshore (Dubai DED example)

  1. Trade name reservation — check availability; must follow DED naming guidelines; Arabic name required
  2. Initial approval — Department of Economic Development (DED) — activity approval; confirm 100% foreign ownership permitted for chosen activities
  3. MOA (Memorandum of Association) — drafted in Arabic; notarized by UAE public notary
  4. Office tenancy — Ejari (tenancy contract) registration required; virtual office no longer sufficient for most activities
  5. Trade license issuance — DED issues; annual renewal required
  6. Chamber of Commerce membership — mandatory; tiered fees
  7. UBO registration — beneficial owner details filed with DED
  8. Economic Substance filing — if carrying out a "relevant activity" (see below)
  9. Corporate Tax registration — with Federal Tax Authority (FTA)

Timeline: 2–4 weeks for straightforward LLC formation in Dubai.


Free zones — overview

The UAE has over 40 free zones across all seven emirates. Free zone entities:

  • Always 100% foreign ownership permitted
  • Cannot directly operate in UAE mainland (must use mainland entity or distributor for mainland sales)
  • Different regulatory environments; often industry-specific
  • No corporate tax traditionally (subject to 9% corporate tax alignment — see below)

Major free zones by sector

Free Zone Emirate Best for
DIFC (Dubai International Financial Centre) Dubai Financial services, professional services, common-law
ADGM (Abu Dhabi Global Market) Abu Dhabi Financial services, crypto, common-law
DMCC (Dubai Multi Commodities Centre) Dubai Trading, commodities, professional services
JAFZA (Jebel Ali Free Zone) Dubai Logistics, manufacturing, import/export
Dubai Silicon Oasis Dubai Technology, software
Dubai Airport Free Zone Dubai Trade, e-commerce
twofour54 Abu Dhabi Media, creative industries
Masdar City Abu Dhabi Clean energy, sustainability
Dubai South Dubai Logistics, aviation, e-commerce
SAIF Zone Sharjah Manufacturing, trading

DIFC (Dubai International Financial Centre)

Common-law jurisdiction

DIFC operates under a common-law legal framework entirely independent of UAE civil law. Its laws are based on English common law. DIFC has its own courts (DIFC Courts of First Instance and Appeal) and its own arbitration centre (DIAC Rules 2022 for DIFC-seated arbitrations).

Entity types

Type Acronym Description
Company limited by shares CLS Standard private company
Company limited by guarantee CLG Non-profit or holding structure
Limited Liability Company LLC Flexible; single or multiple members
Limited Liability Partnership LLP Professional partnerships
General Partnership GP Full-liability partnerships
Recognized Company RC Registered foreign company with DIFC branch

Governance

DIFC entities governed by DIFC Companies Law (and for regulated activities, DFSA rules). Highly English-law influenced. Directors' duties, board structure, and disclosure requirements follow English company law concepts.

DFSA licensing

Financial services activities in DIFC require a DFSA (Dubai Financial Services Authority) license. Categories include: dealing in investments, managing assets, providing custody, fund management, insurance, banking.


ADGM (Abu Dhabi Global Market)

Common-law jurisdiction

ADGM also operates on a common-law basis — independent of UAE civil law; English law heavily influential.

Entity types

Similar to DIFC: private companies (shares), LLCs, partnerships, recognized companies.

FSRA licensing

Financial Services Regulatory Authority (FSRA) is ADGM's regulator. Covers financial services, funds, insurance, crypto assets (ADGM was the first MENA jurisdiction to regulate crypto, from 2018).

Comparison: DIFC vs ADGM

DIFC ADGM
Location Dubai Abu Dhabi (Al Maryah Island)
Courts DIFC Courts (well-established) ADGM Courts (growing)
Crypto DFSA has crypto framework FSRA — longest track record in MENA (2018+)
Financial services Largest financial centre in MENA Strong; growing
Physical presence Active business district Less established business district
Annual cost Lower for small entities Broadly comparable

Beneficial ownership (UBO)

Cabinet Decision 58/2020 (as amended) requires all mainland UAE companies to:

  • Identify ultimate beneficial owners (individuals with 25%+ economic interest or voting control)
  • File UBO register with the relevant authority (DED for mainland; free zone authority for free zone entities; FTA for Corporate Tax purposes)
  • Update the register within 15 days of any change
  • Maintain the register internally

Penalties: significant fines for non-compliance; licensing issues.


Economic Substance Regulations (ESR)

Cabinet Decisions 31/2019 + 57/2020 require UAE entities carrying out "relevant activities" to demonstrate genuine economic substance in the UAE.

Relevant activities include: banking, insurance, investment fund management, lease-finance, headquarters, shipping, holding company, intellectual property, distribution and service centres.

Substance requirements: adequate employees in UAE; adequate operating expenditure; core income-generating activities performed in UAE; management and control in UAE.

Filing: annual ESR notification + report to the relevant regulatory authority.


UAE Corporate Tax

Federal Decree-Law 47/2022 introduced UAE corporate tax at 9% on taxable income above AED 375,000 (0% below threshold). Effective for financial years starting on or after 1 June 2023.

Key points:

  • Applies to all UAE entities (mainland + free zones)
  • Free zone qualifying income: 0% rate for qualifying income from international business; subject to passing substance tests
  • Dividends from qualifying shareholdings: exempt from corporate tax
  • Capital gains on qualifying participations: exempt
  • Groups: consolidation possible above certain thresholds
  • Transfer pricing: applies to related party transactions

Impact on holding structures: UAE holding companies are increasingly subject to corporate tax analysis. Pure holding structures must demonstrate qualifying status for 0% free zone rate or demonstrate substance.


Governance and annual obligations

LLC annual obligations

  • Annual accounts (audited above threshold; internally prepared for small entities)
  • Trade license renewal (annual)
  • UBO register update (ongoing)
  • ESR notification + report (if relevant activity)
  • Corporate Tax registration + annual return
  • Visa and immigration renewals (employee-related)

PJSC additional obligations

  • Annual General Meeting within 4 months of year-end
  • Statutory audit
  • Board meetings (minimum 4 per year)
  • Director disclosure of conflicts

How to use this pack

Load this pack when the user:

  • Is choosing between mainland, DIFC, ADGM, or another free zone for a UAE entity
  • Needs to understand 100% foreign ownership rules and strategic sector exceptions
  • Is incorporating a UAE entity or advising on the procedure
  • Has questions about Corporate Tax (9%), ESR, or UBO compliance
  • Is structuring an M&A transaction involving UAE entities

Caveats & currency

Federal Decree-Law 32/2021 is the current Commercial Companies Law but implementing regulations continue to develop. UAE Corporate Tax is newly implemented (2023) and FTA guidance is being issued progressively. Free zone rules vary — verify specific free zone regulations directly. DIFC and ADGM update their laws independently.

  • [[kb-banking-regulation-cbuae]] — CBUAE regulation for banking activities
  • [[kb-competition-law-mena]] — UAE competition law context
  • [[kb-aml-fatf-mena]] — AML/UBO compliance
  • [[kb-corporate-law-ksa]] — KSA corporate law for comparison
  • [[kb-crypto-vara-dubai]] — VARA for virtual asset activities