What Is VAT Return Filing in the UAE?
VAT return filing is the formal submission of Form VAT 201, which summarises your output VAT collected on sales and your input VAT paid on business expenses for each tax period. The difference between the two is your net VAT liability, either an amount payable to the FTA or, in certain cases, a refundable credit.
Tax periods are assigned by the FTA at the time of registration. Most businesses file quarterly, meaning four returns per year, each due within 28 days of the period end. Businesses with annual turnover of AED 150 million or more are assigned monthly tax periods. The filing deadline is non-negotiable: if the 28th day falls on a weekend or public holiday, the deadline moves to the preceding business day, not the following one. Both the return submission and the corresponding payment must be completed by the same deadline.
The legal basis for VAT return filing is Federal Decree-Law No. 8 of 2017, as amended by Federal Decree-Law No. 16 of 2025 (effective 1 January 2026). The Executive Regulation (Cabinet Decision No. 52 of 2017) provides the detailed procedural requirements. Under the current penalty framework, late filing triggers AED 1,000 per return for a first offence and AED 2,000 for repeat violations within 24 months. Late payment carries a 2% immediate surcharge, an additional 4% on the 7th day, and 1% per day thereafter up to a maximum of 300% of the unpaid amount. Under Cabinet Decision No. 129 of 2025 (effective 14 April 2026), this penalty structure is being reformed and harmonised across VAT, Excise Tax, and Corporate Tax.
For businesses that also file Corporate Tax returns, the underlying financial records must support both obligations. Errors in your VAT data can cascade into your CT computation if the same accounting system feeds both filings. Professional accounting services in abu dhabi that structure records for dual-purpose compliance are the most effective way to prevent misalignment between your VAT and CT filings.
