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UAE VAT Registration — Do You Need to Register? Thresholds, Process & Deadlines

By Calcureal Research Team · Last updated 2026-07-05

If your taxable supplies exceeded AED 375,000 in the last 12 months or will exceed it in the next 30 days, UAE law requires you to register for VAT. Here is exactly who must register, the step-by-step EmaraTax process, and the AED 20,000 penalty for missing the deadline.

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The Two Thresholds That Determine Your Obligation

UAE VAT registration is governed by Federal Decree-Law No. 8 of 2017. The mandatory registration threshold is AED 375,000 in taxable supplies over any 12-month period. If your business has made or expects to make more than this in taxable supplies — including both 5% standard-rated and 0% zero-rated supplies, but not exempt supplies — you must register before the threshold is crossed.

The voluntary registration threshold is AED 187,500. Businesses whose supplies or taxable expenses exceed this lower threshold may choose to register. Voluntary registration is often worthwhile for B2B businesses that want to reclaim input VAT on their purchases, even if their revenue is below AED 375,000.

The calculation window is retrospective (any trailing 12-month period) or prospective (the next 30 days). If you expect to breach AED 375,000 in the next month, the registration obligation is immediate — you cannot wait until the threshold is actually crossed.

ThresholdAmount (AED)Applies ToConsequence of Missing
Mandatory registration375,000All businesses with taxable suppliesAED 20,000 penalty + back VAT owed
Voluntary registration187,500Businesses with supplies or expenses above thisNo penalty — optional
DeregistrationBelow 187,500Registered businesses falling below thisMay apply to deregister

Who Must Register: Businesses, Freelancers, and Free Zone Companies

Any person conducting an economic activity in the UAE — including sole traders, freelancers, partnerships, LLCs, and joint stock companies — must register if their taxable supplies exceed the mandatory threshold. 'Person' in UAE VAT law includes legal persons (companies) and natural persons (individuals running a business).

Freelancers with a trade licence who invoice clients for services are making taxable supplies. If your total freelance invoicing in a 12-month period exceeds AED 375,000, you must register regardless of your visa type, whether you are an expat or UAE national, or whether your clients are inside or outside the UAE.

Free zone companies are not automatically exempt from VAT. Designated Free Zones (DFZs) — a specific list defined by Cabinet Decision — have special rules for goods traded between DFZ businesses, but services provided from a DFZ to a UAE mainland customer are generally taxable. If your free zone company provides services to mainland UAE clients and your turnover exceeds AED 375,000, you must register. Confirm your specific zone's status with the FTA or a registered tax agent before assuming you are outside scope.

Step-by-Step: Registering on EmaraTax

VAT registration is completed entirely through EmaraTax (emaratax.gov.ae), the FTA's digital tax portal launched in 2023 to replace the original e-Services portal. The process has 7 steps and typically takes 20–40 working days for the FTA to process after submission.

Step 1: Create an EmaraTax account using your Emirates ID or passport number and a valid UAE mobile number for OTP verification. Step 2: Initiate a new VAT registration application from the dashboard. Step 3: Enter your business details — trade licence number, licence authority (DED, ADDED, DIFC, ADGM, free zone authority), business activity, and legal form.

Step 4: Declare your turnover — provide 12-month revenue figures and evidence of when you crossed or expect to cross the threshold. Step 5: Upload supporting documents (see next section). Step 6: Submit the application and receive a Transaction Reference Number (TRN). Step 7: Monitor the application status in EmaraTax — the FTA may request additional documents. Once approved, you receive your VAT Registration Number (TRN) and effective registration date.

StepActionTime RequiredNotes
1Create EmaraTax account10 minutesEmirates ID or passport + UAE mobile
2Start registration application5 minutesFrom EmaraTax dashboard
3Enter business details15 minutesTrade licence info + activity type
4Declare turnover10 minutes12-month figures + threshold evidence
5Upload documents20 minutesSee document list below
6Submit + get TRN referenceInstantSave this reference number
7Wait for FTA decision20–40 working daysCheck EmaraTax for updates

Documents Required for Registration

You will need to upload the following at Step 5: a copy of your valid trade licence (all pages), the Emirates ID of the authorised signatory (or passport if non-resident), a recent bank statement (last 3 months) showing the business account, proof of turnover (sales invoices, bank deposit records, or audited financial statements), and a letter of authorisation if a tax agent is applying on your behalf.

For free zone companies, you may also need a certificate of incorporation from the free zone authority, the memorandum and articles of association, and evidence of taxable supplies to UAE mainland customers. For businesses with multiple trade licences, all related licences should be disclosed even if registering only one entity.

The FTA can and does reject applications for incomplete documentation. Common rejection reasons include bank statements older than 3 months, Emirates IDs that have expired, and turnover evidence that does not clearly show the threshold has been crossed. Prepare all documents before starting the application to avoid gaps.

Deadlines and Penalties

The penalty for late VAT registration is AED 20,000 — a fixed administrative penalty under Cabinet Decision No. 49 of 2021. This applies regardless of the amount of VAT that was due during the unregistered period. On top of the AED 20,000 penalty, the FTA can demand back-payment of all VAT that should have been collected from the date the threshold was crossed, plus late payment penalties of 2% immediately and 4% per month thereafter.

You must register before the end of the month following the month in which you crossed the threshold. If you crossed AED 375,000 in total supplies in March 2026, your registration deadline is 30 April 2026. Registering on 1 May 2026 triggers the AED 20,000 penalty.

If you identify that you have been operating above the threshold unregistered, the best course of action is to register immediately through EmaraTax and proactively disclose the historical period to the FTA. Voluntary disclosure before an FTA audit typically results in reduced penalties under the FTA's published compliance framework.

Deregistration and Group VAT

A registered business can apply to deregister from VAT if its taxable supplies and taxable expenses both fall below AED 187,500 per year and are expected to remain below that level. Deregistration is not automatic — you must submit a deregistration application through EmaraTax. The FTA will assess whether the conditions are genuinely met. You cannot deregister simply because business has slowed temporarily.

Group VAT registration allows two or more persons who are resident in the UAE, related (holding more than 50% common ownership), and making taxable supplies to register as a single VAT group with one TRN. This simplifies intragroup transactions — supplies between group members are disregarded for VAT purposes. The representative member files a single VAT return for the entire group. Group registration is most valuable for holding company structures with multiple UAE subsidiaries.

Use Calcureal's UAE VAT Calculator to check your registration threshold, model your quarterly VAT liability, and calculate tourist refund entitlements.

Sources

  1. Federal Tax Authority — VAT Registration — accessed 2026-07-05
  2. EmaraTax Portal — FTA Digital Services — accessed 2026-07-05
  3. Federal Decree-Law No. 8 of 2017 on Value Added Tax — accessed 2026-07-05
  4. Cabinet Decision No. 49 of 2021 — Administrative Penalties for Tax Violations — accessed 2026-07-05

Frequently Asked Questions

Does a free zone company need to register for VAT?
It depends on whether your free zone is a Designated Free Zone (DFZ) under UAE VAT law and what supplies you make. If your free zone company provides services to UAE mainland customers and your taxable turnover exceeds AED 375,000, you must register for VAT. Goods traded between DFZ businesses in qualifying zones have special treatment, but services are generally taxable. Check the FTA's published list of Designated Free Zones and consult a registered tax agent if your situation is complex.
What if all my supplies are zero-rated? Do I still need to register?
Zero-rated supplies (0% VAT) count toward the registration threshold. If your zero-rated supplies exceed AED 375,000 in a 12-month period, you are technically obligated to register. However, you can apply for a VAT registration exemption if all or substantially all of your supplies are zero-rated — in which case the registration obligation is acknowledged but you are not required to file returns. This exemption requires a specific application to the FTA and is not granted automatically.
Can individuals (not companies) register for VAT?
Yes. UAE VAT law defines 'taxable person' broadly to include natural persons conducting an economic activity — so a freelancer operating under a personal licence, an artist selling work, or a landlord making commercial property supplies can all be required to register. The threshold and process are identical for individuals as for companies. The key question is whether you are conducting an 'economic activity' as defined in Article 1 of the VAT Decree-Law, which covers any regular activity for commercial or professional purposes.
Do I file VAT returns monthly or quarterly?
Most VAT registrants in the UAE file quarterly returns. The FTA assigns a tax period — typically January–March, April–June, July–September, and October–December — and the return and payment are due within 28 days of the end of each period. The FTA can assign monthly filing for larger businesses or businesses with a complex VAT profile. Your filing period is stated in your registration approval letter. Late filing carries an AED 1,000 penalty for the first offence.

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