The Corporate Tax Mistakes That Cost UAE Businesses Thousands
Since the UAE corporate tax took effect in June 2023, the Federal Tax Authority has been building its audit capabilities and issuing assessments to businesses that get their filings wrong. The mistakes are rarely dramatic — they are quiet errors in calculation, classification, and timing that compound into significant overpayments or trigger penalties that could have been avoided.
This guide documents the most common corporate tax mistakes UAE businesses make, the financial impact of each, and the specific steps to prevent them. Whether you are a mainland LLC in Dubai, a free zone entity in JAFZA, or a sole establishment in Sharjah, these errors apply across entity types.
The businesses that avoid these mistakes share one trait: they treat corporate tax as a year-round process, not an annual filing exercise.
Mistake 1: Miscalculating the AED 375,000 Exemption Band
The Error
The most basic — and most costly — mistake is applying the 9% tax rate to your entire taxable income instead of only the portion above AED 375,000. The UAE corporate tax uses a two-tier structure:
- 0% on the first AED 375,000 of taxable income
- 9% on everything above AED 375,000
The Financial Impact
| Taxable Income | Incorrect Tax (9% on full) | Correct Tax | Overpayment |
|---|---|---|---|
| AED 500,000 | AED 45,000 | AED 11,250 | AED 33,750 |
| AED 750,000 | AED 67,500 | AED 33,750 | AED 33,750 |
| AED 1,000,000 | AED 90,000 | AED 56,250 | AED 33,750 |
| AED 2,000,000 | AED 180,000 | AED 146,250 | AED 33,750 |
The overpayment is always AED 33,750 (which is AED 375,000 × 9%). Every business making this error overpays by exactly that amount.
How to Prevent It
Always apply the two-tier formula: Corporate Tax = (Taxable Income − AED 375,000) × 9% (only when taxable income exceeds AED 375,000)
If your taxable income is below AED 375,000, your tax is zero — though you must still register and file.
Mistake 2: Failing to Identify and Add Back Non-Deductible Expenses
The Error
Not all expenses reduce your taxable income. The UAE corporate tax law specifies several categories of non-deductible expenses that must be added back to your accounting profit when computing taxable income. Many businesses deduct everything that appears in their P&L without checking deductibility.
Common Non-Deductible Expenses
| Expense Type | Deductible? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Staff salaries and benefits | Yes | Fully deductible |
| Office rent | Yes | Fully deductible |
| Government fines and penalties | No | Must add back 100% |
| Donations to non-qualifying entities | No | Only qualifying donations deductible |
| Entertainment expenses (above 50%) | Partially | Only 50% of entertainment is deductible |
| Personal expenses of shareholders | No | Must add back 100% |
| Bribes and illegal payments | No | Must add back 100% |
| Interest exceeding thin capitalization limits | Partially | Subject to general interest deduction limitation |
The Financial Impact
A business with AED 200,000 in non-deductible expenses that fails to add them back understates taxable income by AED 200,000. At 9%, that is AED 18,000 in underpaid tax — plus penalties when the FTA catches it during audit. The FTA penalty for an incorrect return discovered during audit is significantly higher than voluntary correction.
How to Prevent It
Review every expense category against the deductibility rules before filing. Tag non-deductible expenses in your accounting system as they occur — do not wait until year-end to sort through 12 months of transactions.
Mistake 3: Ignoring Transfer Pricing Requirements
The Error
Any transaction between related parties — companies under common ownership, transactions with shareholders, dealings between a mainland entity and its free zone subsidiary — must be conducted at arm's length (market rates). Many UAE businesses treat related party transactions casually, charging below-market management fees or inflating intercompany service charges without documentation.
The Specific Requirements
- All businesses: Must apply arm's length principles to related party transactions
- Revenue above AED 200 million: Must prepare a Master File and Local File
- Disclosure: All related party transactions must be disclosed in the corporate tax return
- Documentation: Maintain contemporaneous documentation supporting your pricing methodology
The Financial Impact
The FTA can adjust your taxable income to reflect arm's length pricing and impose penalties on the adjustment. If you paid AED 500,000 in management fees to a related entity but the market rate is AED 300,000, the FTA adds AED 200,000 to your taxable income — resulting in AED 18,000 additional tax plus a penalty that can reach 50% of the additional tax for fraud cases.
How to Prevent It
Document the business purpose and market benchmarking for every related party transaction. If you charge a related entity AED 120,000 annually for shared office services, have a written agreement specifying the services provided and evidence that AED 120,000 reflects market rates for comparable services.
Start Free Trial → smallerp.ae/signup — SmallERP flags related party transactions automatically and helps you maintain arm's length documentation.
Mistake 4: Incorrect Free Zone Income Classification
The Error
Free zone companies eligible for the 0% Qualifying Free Zone Person (QFZP) rate often misclassify non-qualifying income as qualifying, or fail to properly segregate the two. The FTA has strict criteria for what constitutes qualifying income:
- Transactions with other free zone persons (subject to conditions)
- Certain activities like manufacturing, processing, and distribution
- Services provided to entities outside the UAE
The De Minimis Rule
Non-qualifying revenue must not exceed the lower of:
- AED 5,000,000, or
- 5% of total revenue
If a free zone company with AED 20 million in total revenue has AED 1.2 million in non-qualifying revenue, that is 6% — exceeding the 5% threshold. The entire entity loses QFZP status, and all income becomes taxable at 9%.
The Financial Impact
| Scenario | Total Revenue | Qualifying | Non-Qualifying | % Non-Qualifying | QFZP Status | Tax Impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Company A | 10,000,000 | 9,600,000 | 400,000 | 4% | Maintained | Tax only on AED 400K portion |
| Company B | 10,000,000 | 9,300,000 | 700,000 | 7% | Lost | Tax on entire income |
Company B's failure to keep non-qualifying revenue under 5% costs it the 0% rate on AED 9.3 million of income.
How to Prevent It
Track every revenue stream against the qualifying income criteria from day one. If you are approaching the 5% threshold, restructure operations before the period ends — for instance, by routing mainland client work through a separate mainland entity rather than the free zone company.
Mistake 5: Not Electing Small Business Relief When Eligible
The Error
Businesses with annual revenue under AED 3 million can elect Small Business Relief, which treats taxable income as zero for the period. But this is an election — you must actively choose it in your tax return. Many qualifying businesses either do not know about it or assume it applies automatically.
The Financial Impact
A business with AED 2.5 million revenue and AED 600,000 taxable income that fails to elect Small Business Relief pays: (600,000 − 375,000) × 9% = AED 20,250 unnecessarily.
Eligibility Check
| Criterion | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Revenue threshold | Under AED 3 million for the tax period |
| Entity type | All taxable persons except QFZPs and members of multinational groups |
| Election | Must be made in the corporate tax return |
| Record keeping | Still required, but simplified |
How to Prevent It
Check your revenue against the AED 3 million threshold at year-end. If eligible, make the election in your tax return. Note: Small Business Relief is a temporary measure and may be phased out — verify its availability for your specific tax period on the FTA website.
Mistake 6: Improper Loss Carry-Forward Treatment
The Error
Tax losses from prior periods can be carried forward to offset future taxable income, but only up to 75% of taxable income in any given period. Two common mistakes:
- Forgetting to carry forward losses entirely (leaving tax benefits unused)
- Offsetting 100% of current income with carried-forward losses (exceeding the 75% cap)
The Financial Impact
Scenario: Company had AED 800,000 loss in Year 1, AED 600,000 taxable income in Year 2.
| Approach | Year 2 Offset | Year 2 Taxable Income | Year 2 Tax | Remaining Loss |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Correct (75% cap) | 450,000 | 150,000 | 0* | 350,000 |
| Error: 100% offset | 600,000 | 0 | 0 | 200,000 |
| Error: No offset | 0 | 600,000 | 20,250 | 800,000 |
*AED 150,000 is below the AED 375,000 threshold, so tax is zero.
Forgetting to use losses cost AED 20,250 in Year 2 tax. Exceeding the 75% cap results in an incorrect return and potential penalties.
How to Prevent It
Maintain a dedicated loss schedule that tracks:
- Opening balance of carried-forward losses
- Current period utilization (capped at 75% of taxable income)
- Closing balance carrying into the next period
Mistake 7: VAT and Corporate Tax Return Inconsistencies
The Error
The FTA cross-references VAT returns with corporate tax returns. If your VAT returns report AED 8 million in taxable supplies but your corporate tax return shows AED 6.5 million in revenue, the discrepancy triggers an audit inquiry.
Common Reasons for Legitimate Differences
| Reason | VAT Impact | CT Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Timing differences (accrual vs. tax point) | Reported when invoice issued | Reported when earned |
| Deposits and advances | VAT due on receipt | Revenue recognized on delivery |
| Asset disposals | Included in VAT return | May be capital gains |
| Foreign currency adjustments | Reported at VAT rate date | May use different FX rate |
How to Prevent It
Prepare a formal reconciliation between your VAT output figures and corporate tax revenue before filing. Document every difference with its cause. This reconciliation should be part of your filing checklist — not an afterthought when the FTA asks questions.
Mistake 8: Missing the 9-Month Filing Deadline
The Error
Corporate tax returns and payments are due within 9 months of your financial year-end. Late filing incurs AED 1,000 per month, capped at AED 12,000. Late payment triggers additional monthly penalties on the outstanding amount.
The Financial Impact
| Months Late | Filing Penalty | Potential Payment Penalty | Total Exposure |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | AED 1,000 | Variable | AED 1,000+ |
| 3 | AED 3,000 | Variable | AED 3,000+ |
| 6 | AED 6,000 | Variable | AED 6,000+ |
| 12 | AED 12,000 | Variable | AED 12,000+ |
How to Prevent It
Set three reminders:
- Month 6: Begin preparation — gather financial records, start tax computation
- Month 7: Complete computation, prepare return draft
- Month 8: File and pay, leaving a 1-month buffer for issues
Mistake 9: Not Maintaining Adequate Records
The Error
UAE corporate tax law requires businesses to maintain records for 7 years from the end of the relevant tax period. This includes financial statements, invoices, contracts, bank statements, and all documentation supporting your tax return. Many businesses maintain records for 2-3 years and then discard them.
The Financial Impact
If the FTA requests documentation during an audit and you cannot produce it, the FTA can make an assessment based on available information — typically resulting in higher taxable income than your actual figures. Plus penalties for failure to maintain records.
How to Prevent It
Use a digital record-keeping system that automatically archives all financial documents. Cloud-based accounting software ensures records are never accidentally deleted and remain accessible for the required 7-year period.
Mistake 10: Overlooking End-of-Service Benefit Deductions
The Error
Under UAE labor law (MOHRE regulations), employers must pay end-of-service gratuity to employees upon termination. This obligation accrues over time but is only paid when the employee leaves. Many businesses only record the expense when payment occurs (cash basis) rather than accruing it annually (accrual basis).
The Financial Impact
A company with 20 employees averaging AED 8,000 monthly salary accrues approximately AED 39,000 in gratuity per year (21 days per year of service × daily rate). Failing to accrue this means understating expenses by AED 39,000 and overpaying corporate tax by AED 3,510 (if above the threshold).
How to Prevent It
Accrue end-of-service benefits monthly in your accounting system. The liability grows with each month of employee service and should be reflected in your P&L as a staff cost deduction.
How SmallERP Prevents These Mistakes
SmallERP is designed specifically for UAE businesses navigating corporate tax compliance. Here is how it addresses each mistake:
Automatic Two-Tier Calculation: SmallERP always applies the correct 0%/9% rate structure — the AED 375,000 exemption is built into every tax computation.
Expense Classification: SmallERP flags non-deductible expenses at the point of entry. Government fines, excessive entertainment, and shareholder personal expenses are tagged automatically, ensuring accurate add-backs.
Related Party Tracking: Tag related party transactions within SmallERP, and the system monitors them against arm's length benchmarks, alerting you to potential transfer pricing issues.
Deadline Management: SmallERP sends filing reminders at 6, 7, and 8 months after your period end — matching the preparation timeline that avoids last-minute rushes.
Loss Schedule: Carried-forward losses are tracked automatically with the 75% utilization cap applied correctly every period.
Use the Corporate Tax Calculator → smallerp.ae/tools/corporate-tax-calculator to verify your calculations against SmallERP's automated computation.
Start Free Trial → smallerp.ae/signup — Stop making corporate tax mistakes that cost you thousands.