UAE Corporate Tax Calculation Formula: Step by Step
01
Start with Accounting Net Profit
02
Add Back Non-Deductible Expenses
03
Subtract Exempt Income
04
Apply Tax Loss Relief
05
Apply the Tax Rate
This amount must be paid by the same deadline as your corporate tax filing: nine months from the end of your financial year. For the full calendar, see our corporate tax deadlines guide.
Corporate Tax Calculation Examples for UAE Businesses
Example 1: Mainland LLC (Standard Calculation)
| Line Item | Amount (AED) |
|---|---|
| Total Revenue | 2,500,000 |
| Total Deductible Expenses | (1,800,000) |
| Accounting Net Profit | 700,000 |
| Add: Non-Deductible Expenses (AED 15,000 fine + AED 5,000 personal) |
+20,000 |
| Less: Exempt Income (qualifying dividends) |
(50,000) |
| Adjusted Taxable Income | 670,000 |
| Less: Tax Loss from Prior Period (available: 100,000; 75% cap: 502,500; full loss used) |
(100,000) |
| Final Taxable Income | 570,000 |
| Tax: 0% on first AED 375,000 | 0 |
| Tax: 9% on AED 195,000 (570,000 minus 375,000) |
17,550 |
| Corporate Tax Payable | AED 17,550 |
| Effective Tax Rate | 2.51% |
Notice the effective tax rate: 2.51%, not 9%. The AED 375,000 zero-rate band means the effective rate for most SMEs is significantly lower than the headline rate.
This is one of the most misunderstood aspects of UAE corporate tax. Many business owners hear “9%” and assume that is what they will pay on their entire profit. In reality, every business gets AED 375,000 of profit completely tax-free, and only the amount above that threshold is taxed.
For a company earning AED 570,000 in taxable income, that means paying AED 17,550 on AED 195,000 of income. The other AED 375,000 costs nothing.
Example 2: Qualifying Free Zone Person (QFZP)
De minimis check: Non-qualifying revenue (AED 120,000) equals 3.85% of total revenue (AED 3,120,000). This is below both the 5% threshold and the AED 5 million cap, so QFZP status is maintained.
If non-qualifying revenue had exceeded either threshold, the entire income would be taxed at 9% for five consecutive tax periods. That is not a one-year adjustment. It is a five-year reclassification that could cost hundreds of thousands in additional tax.
For the full eligibility conditions, see our Free Zone corporate tax guide.
Example 3: Small Business Relief (SBR) Election
Different types of businesses operating in the UAE may fall under different corporate tax treatments depending on their legal structure, revenue levels, and regulatory status.
The following table summarizes how corporate tax generally applies to various categories of businesses.
| Business Type | Corporate Tax Treatment | Key Conditions | Practical Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small businesses and startups | 0% corporate tax on taxable income up to AED 375,000 | Must meet taxable income threshold; may elect Small Business Relief if eligible | Supports early-stage companies and SMEs during growth |
| Standard UAE mainland companies | 9% corporate tax on taxable income above AED 375,000 | Applies to most DED-licensed businesses in Abu Dhabi and across the UAE | Main corporate tax regime for UAE businesses |
| Qualifying Free Zone Persons (QFZP) | 0% corporate tax on qualifying income | Must perform qualifying activities, maintain economic substance, and meet de minimis rules | Allows Free Zone companies to maintain preferential tax treatment |
| Large multinational enterprises | Subject to the Pillar Two global minimum tax framework | Applies to multinational groups with global revenues ≥ EUR 750 million | Ensures minimum global tax rate compliance (15%) |
Without SBR, this company would owe AED 2,250 in corporate tax (9% on AED 25,000 above the AED 375,000 threshold).
With SBR elected, the liability is zero. But it must be actively selected on the return form. Forgetting to elect is one of the most common filing mistakes we see. For the full eligibility criteria, see our Small Business Relief guide.
SBR is not available to QFZPs, Tax Group members, or multinational enterprise group members. Losses cannot be carried forward from an SBR period.
What Expenses Are Deductible for UAE Corporate Tax?
Not every expense on your books reduces your tax bill. Knowing the difference before you file prevents corrections, penalties, and FTA queries after submission.
We have seen businesses claim AED 100,000+ in non-deductible expenses as deductions, resulting in understated taxable income that the FTA corrected with interest and penalties attached.
| Deductible (Allowed) | Non-Deductible (Add Back) |
|---|---|
| Employee salaries and benefits (including WPS payroll) |
Government fines and penalties |
| Rent and utilities for business premises | Donations to non-qualifying entities |
| Professional fees (accounting, legal, audit) |
Owner/shareholder personal expenses |
| Depreciation of business assets | Entertainment expenses exceeding 50% cap |
| Interest expense (subject to 30% EBITDA cap for interest >AED 12M) |
Bribes, illegal payments |
| Marketing and advertising costs | Expenses not incurred wholly for business purpose |
| Travel expenses for business purposes | Income tax paid abroad (claimed as Foreign Tax Credit instead) |
| Bad debt provisions (if meeting CT Law criteria) |
Provisions for future losses (unless meeting specific criteria) |
| R&D expenses | Capital expenditures (depreciated, not expensed) |
De minimis check: Non-qualifying revenue (AED 120,000) equals 3.85% of total revenue (AED 3,120,000). This is below both the 5% threshold and the AED 5 million cap, so QFZP status is maintained.
If non-qualifying revenue had exceeded either threshold, the entire income would be taxed at 9% for five consecutive tax periods. That is not a one-year adjustment. It is a five-year reclassification that could cost hundreds of thousands in additional tax.
For the full eligibility conditions, see our Free Zone corporate tax guide.
