UAE VAT Filing Overview — Rates, Supply Types, and Who Must File
The UAE introduced Value Added Tax (VAT) on 1 January 2018 under Federal Decree-Law No. 8 of 2017. VAT is a tax on consumption. You charge it when you sell, and you pay it when you buy. The standard rate is 5%, one of the lowest VAT rates in the world.
Every sale you make falls into one of three supply types. Standard-rated supplies carry 5% VAT — this covers most goods and services in the UAE. Zero-rated supplies are taxable at 0% — examples include exports outside the GCC, international transport, and certain healthcare and education services. Exempt supplies carry no VAT at all — examples include most residential property rentals, bare land, and local passenger transport. The difference matters: on zero-rated supplies you can still recover input VAT, but on exempt supplies you cannot.
If your business is VAT-registered, you must file a VAT return — even for periods where you made no sales. A zero-activity period still needs a 'nil return'. You register for VAT once your taxable supplies pass AED 375,000 per year (mandatory) or AED 187,500 (voluntary).
There are two filing frequencies. Filing is monthly if your annual taxable supplies exceed AED 150 million. Everyone else files quarterly — once every three months. The Federal Tax Authority (FTA) assigns your tax period when you register. Whichever frequency applies, your return and payment are both due 28 days after the end of the tax period. If the 28th falls on a weekend or public holiday, the deadline moves to the next business day.
| Supply type | VAT rate | Can you recover input VAT? | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard-rated | 5% | Yes | Retail goods, professional services, restaurants |
| Zero-rated | 0% | Yes | Exports outside GCC, international transport, some healthcare/education |
| Exempt | No VAT | No | Residential property rent, bare land, local passenger transport |
UAE VAT Form 201 — The Boxes Explained With a Worked Example
FTA Form 201 is the standard VAT return. You complete it inside the EmaraTax portal every tax period. The form groups your figures into numbered boxes. You enter the value of your supplies and expenses, and the system calculates the VAT for you. Here is what each box means.
Box 1 — Standard-rated supplies: the total value of sales on which you charged 5% VAT, broken down by Emirate. Box 2 — Tax refunds provided to tourists under the Tax Refunds for Tourists Scheme (only relevant if you are a retailer registered in that scheme). Box 3 — Zero-rated supplies: the value of your 0% sales. Box 4 — Exempt supplies: the value of sales with no VAT. Box 5 — Totals: the combined value and VAT of Boxes 1 to 4, giving your total output side.
Box 6 — Standard-rated expenses: the value of purchases on which you paid 5% VAT and now want to reclaim as input tax. Box 7 — Supplies subject to the reverse charge: imported goods and services where you must self-account for the VAT (more on this below). Box 8 — Net VAT due: this is the number that matters. It equals your output VAT (VAT you collected on sales) minus your input VAT (VAT you paid on purchases). If the result is positive, you pay the FTA. If it is negative, you are in a refund position.
Worked example. Suppose in one quarter you made AED 500,000 of standard-rated sales and AED 200,000 of standard-rated purchases. Your output VAT is AED 500,000 × 5% = AED 25,000 (Box 1). Your input VAT is AED 200,000 × 5% = AED 10,000 (Box 6). Your net VAT payable in Box 8 is AED 25,000 − AED 10,000 = AED 15,000. You pay AED 15,000 to the FTA by the deadline.
| Box | What it captures | Example figure |
|---|---|---|
| Box 1 | Standard-rated supplies (sales at 5%) | AED 500,000 → VAT AED 25,000 |
| Box 2 | Tourist tax refunds provided | AED 0 |
| Box 3 | Zero-rated supplies | AED 0 |
| Box 4 | Exempt supplies | AED 0 |
| Box 5 | Total value of supplies | AED 500,000 |
| Box 6 | Standard-rated expenses (input VAT claimed) | AED 200,000 → VAT AED 10,000 |
| Box 7 | Supplies subject to reverse charge | AED 0 |
| Box 8 | Net VAT payable (Output − Input) | AED 15,000 |
How to File UAE VAT on EmaraTax — Step by Step
EmaraTax replaced the old FTA e-Services portal in November 2022. All VAT returns are now filed there. The process takes about 15 minutes once your records are ready. Follow these eight steps.
Step 1: Log in at emaratax.gov.ae using your registered email and password, or through UAE Pass. Step 2: From the left-hand menu, select 'VAT'. Step 3: Click 'VAT Return' and choose the tax period you are filing for — the open period appears at the top of the list. Step 4: Fill in Boxes 1 to 7 using your accounting records. Enter the net value of supplies and the VAT amount for each box; take the figures straight from your bookkeeping system.
Step 5: The system automatically calculates Box 8, your net VAT payable or refundable. Check that this matches your own workings. Step 6: If you are claiming more input VAT than output VAT (a refund position), upload the supporting documents the portal requests — typically your largest tax invoices. Step 7: Review every box one more time, then submit. Once submitted you receive an acknowledgement reference; keep it.
Step 8: Pay immediately. Payment is due on the same 28-day deadline as the return, so do not wait. You can pay by e-Dirham card, credit or debit card, or bank transfer (using your unique GIBAN account number shown in EmaraTax). Bank transfers can take two to three days to clear, so allow time — the payment must reach the FTA by the deadline, not just be initiated by it.
Common UAE VAT Mistakes That Trigger FTA Penalties
Most VAT penalties come from a handful of avoidable errors. Knowing them saves you real money, because UAE VAT penalties are fixed by law and add up fast.
Filing late: the FTA charges a fixed penalty of AED 1,000 for a first late return, rising to AED 2,000 if you file late again within 24 months. This applies even to a nil return. Underpaying or paying late: you face 2% of the unpaid tax the moment payment is overdue, a further 4% monthly penalty from one calendar month after the due date, and a daily penalty of 1% for each day the tax stays unpaid after that, up to a maximum of 300%.
Forgetting the reverse charge: many businesses fail to declare imported services in Box 7. If you pay an overseas provider for cloud software, online advertising, or consultancy, you must self-account for 5% VAT under the reverse charge. You add it as output tax and reclaim it as input tax in the same return, so it is usually cash-neutral — but omitting it is still a reporting error the FTA can penalise.
Mixing exempt and taxable income without an apportionment (partial exemption) calculation: if you make both taxable and exempt supplies, you cannot recover all your input VAT. You must apportion it. Claiming the full amount overstates your recovery and invites a correction plus penalty. When in doubt, apportion conservatively and keep your workings.
| Breach | Penalty |
|---|---|
| Late VAT return (first offence) | AED 1,000 fixed |
| Late VAT return (repeated within 24 months) | AED 2,000 fixed |
| Late payment — immediate | 2% of unpaid tax |
| Late payment — after one month | 4% monthly penalty |
| Continued non-payment | 1% daily, up to 300% maximum |
| Failure to keep required records | AED 10,000 first time, AED 20,000 repeated |
UAE VAT Input Tax Recovery — What You Can and Cannot Claim
Input tax is the VAT you pay on business purchases. Recovering it is how VAT stays neutral for businesses. But the FTA blocks recovery on certain costs, so know the rules before you claim.
You can recover input VAT on purchases directly related to your taxable supplies: stock, raw materials, professional fees, rent on commercial premises, business assets like equipment and machinery, and staff costs where the benefit provided to employees is itself subject to VAT. To claim, you must hold a valid tax invoice showing the supplier's TRN (Tax Registration Number).
You cannot recover input VAT on entertainment expenses — hospitality provided to customers, potential customers, officials, or shareholders, such as meals, event tickets, or accommodation for guests. You cannot recover VAT on motor vehicles that are available for personal use, even partly. And you cannot recover input VAT on costs that relate only to exempt supplies.
Timing matters. You should recover input VAT in the tax period in which you receive the tax invoice and intend to make payment. If you miss it, you generally have until the return covering the period after you were entitled to claim — and the wider record-retention window means invoices must be kept for five years. As a rule, claim in the same period wherever possible; do not let recoverable VAT sit unclaimed.
UAE VAT Refund Process — When the FTA Owes You
When Box 8 is negative, you paid more input VAT than you collected in output VAT. The FTA owes you the difference. This is common for exporters (zero-rated sales) and for businesses in a heavy investment phase buying lots of assets.
You have a choice: carry the credit forward to offset future VAT liabilities, or claim a cash refund. To claim a refund, submit a VAT refund request on EmaraTax after filing the return that shows the credit. The FTA's stated target is to process refund claims within 20 business days, though complex or first-time claims can take longer while they review your documents.
For refund amounts over AED 10,000, the FTA usually asks for supporting documents — typically your five highest-value tax invoices on both the sales and purchase side, and proof of export for zero-rated supplies. Upload these promptly to avoid delay. Once approved, the refund is credited to the bank account registered in your EmaraTax profile, so make sure your IBAN is correct and in your business name before you file.
UAE VAT Record-Keeping Requirements
The law requires you to keep VAT records for a minimum of five years from the end of the tax period they relate to. For real estate, the retention period is longer — up to 15 years. The FTA can audit you within this window, so incomplete records are a real risk.
You must keep: all tax invoices you issued to customers, all tax invoices you received from suppliers, import and export documents, contracts and agreements, credit and debit notes, and your accounting books and ledgers. You also need records of goods and services you could not recover input VAT on, and of any exempt or zero-rated supplies.
Digital records are fully acceptable, and most businesses now keep everything electronically. The condition is that the record preserves the original information accurately and remains readable and retrievable throughout the retention period. Failure to keep the required records carries a penalty of AED 10,000 for a first offence and AED 20,000 for repeated offences — so treat record-keeping as part of filing, not an afterthought.