What Is Transfer Pricing in the UAE?

Transfer pricing refers to the pricing of transactions between related parties   entities that share common ownership, control, or influence. In a business context, these transactions include the sale of goods, provision of services, licensing of intellectual property, financing arrangements, and cost sharing agreements between group companies. When two unrelated businesses transact, the price is naturally set by market forces. When related parties transact, there is a risk that prices are set artificially to shift profits to lower tax jurisdictions or reduce taxable income in the UAE.

To prevent this, the UAE Corporate Tax Law requires that all related party and connected person transactions be priced as though they occurred between independent parties under comparable conditions. This is the arm’s length principle, and it is the cornerstone of the UAE’s transfer pricing framework.

The Arm’s Length Principle Under UAE Law

Articles 34 through 36 of the CT Law establish the arm’s length standard for the UAE.Article 34 requires that transactions between related parties and connected persons reflect the pricing that would have been agreed between independent parties in comparable circumstances. Article 35 defines who qualifies as a related party   including entities with 50% or more common ownership, directors, and individuals with significant influence over a business. Article 36 extends the rules to connected persons, a broader category that captures transactions where the relationship, while not meeting the formal related party threshold, still creates a risk of non arm’s length pricing.

The UAE’s approach is fully aligned with the OECD Transfer Pricing Guidelines, which serve as the primary interpretive reference.The FTA’s Transfer Pricing Guide, published in October 2023, confirms this alignment and provides practical guidance on documentation, acceptable pricing methods, and compliance expectations.

Who Must Comply with UAE Transfer Pricing Rules?

Transfer pricing rules apply to every taxable person that engages in transactions with related parties or connected persons. This includes mainland companies transacting with domestic or foreign group entities, Free Zone entities dealing with mainland affiliates or other group companies (a critical compliance area for uae free zone corporate tax purposes), multinational groups with UAE subsidiaries, and natural persons conducting business with related entities. Importantly, the rules apply equally to domestic transactions between UAE based related parties   not only to cross border dealings. A mainland parent company transacting with its Abu Dhabi Free Zone subsidiary, for example, must ensure arm’s length pricing on every intercompany transaction

UAE Transfer Pricing Documentation Requirements

Article 55 of the Corporate Tax Law requires businesses with related party transactions to maintain comprehensive transfer pricing documentation. The documentation framework follows the OECD’s three tiered approach and includes the following components:

Master File

The master file provides a high level overview of the multinational group’s global business operations, organisational structure, intangible assets, intercompany financial activities, and overall transfer pricing policies. It gives the FTA context for understanding how the UAE entity fits within the broader group and how transfer prices are determined across jurisdictions. Even purely domestic groups with related party transactions are expected to maintain a master file that documents their organisational structure and pricing policies.

Local File

The local file is specific to the UAE entity and provides detailed information on its related party transactions, the pricing methodologies applied, and the economic analysis (benchmarking study) supporting the arm’s length nature of each material transaction. The local file must include a functional analysis of the UAE entity   describing its functions performed, assets used, and risks assumed   along with comparability analyses and the selected transfer pricing method for each transaction category.

Transfer Pricing Disclosure Form

In addition to maintaining the master file and local file, businesses must submit a transfer pricing disclosure form alongside their annual corporate tax return through EmaraTax. This form summarises the related party transactions conducted during the tax period and is a mandatory component of the corporate tax filing uae process. Failure to submit the disclosure form or to maintain adequate TP documentation exposesthe business to penalties under Cabinet Decision No. 75 of 2023

Accepted Transfer Pricing Methods

The FTA accepts the five OECD approved transfer pricing methods: the Comparable Uncontrolled Price (CUP) method, the Resale Price method, the Cost Plus method, the Transactional Net Margin Method (TNMM), and the Transactional Profit Split method. The choice of method must be justified based on the nature of the transaction, the availability of comparable data, and the functional profile of the parties involved. The FTA TP Guide emphasises that businesses should select the most appropriate method for each transaction category rather than applying a single method across all dealings

How to Comply with UAE Transfer Pricing Rules: Step by Step

Navigating UAE transfer pricing requires a systematic approach to ensure arm’s length compliance and avoid penalties. This five-step process guides you from mapping related-party transactions to submitting your annual corporate tax filing uae. By establishing clear documentation and benchmarking, you can protect your business from the uae corporate tax penalty framework and maintain defensible financial practices year after year.

01

Identify Related Party and Connected-Person Transactions

Begin by mapping every transaction your UAE entity conducts with related parties and connected persons, as defined under Articles 35 and 36 of the CT Law. This includes intercompany sales of goods, service fees, management charges, IP royalties, financing arrangements (loans, guarantees), and cost-sharing contributions. Identify each counterparty, the nature and value of each transaction, and the contractual terms that govern it. This transaction map forms the foundation of your entire TP compliance process.
02

 Conduct a Functional Analysis

For each material related party transaction, analyse the functions performed, assets used, and risks assumed by your UAE entity and the counterparty. The functional analysis determines the economic substance each party contributes to the transaction and is the basis for selecting the appropriate transfer pricing method. A manufacturing entity that bears significant production risk, for example, warrants a different pricing approach than a limited risk distributor or a routine service provider.
03

Select the Transfer Pricing Method and Benchmark

Based on the functional analysis, select the most appropriate OECD approved transfer pricing method for each transaction category. Conduct a benchmarking study using comparable data to establish the arm’s length price or margin range. The FTA expects the method selection and benchmarking to be documented in the local file, with clear justification for why the chosen method is the most reliable for each transaction. If your pricing falls outside the arm’s length range, adjustments may be required to bring the reported income in line with market conditions. Non compliance with arm’s length standards can trigger penalties under the uae corporate tax penalty framework
04

 Prepare and Maintain TP Documentation

Compile the master file, local file, and transfer pricing disclosure form. The master file documents the group’s global structure, policies, and intercompany flows. The local file details each UAE transaction, including the functional analysis, method selection, benchmarking results, and financial data. The disclosure form summarises the related party transactions for the tax period and must be submitted with your annual corporate tax filing uae through EmaraTax. All documentation should be finalised before the filing deadline and retained for at least seven years.
05

Submit, Monitor, and Update Annually

File the transfer pricing disclosure form as part of your annual corporate tax return submission. After filing, monitor your related party transactions throughout the following tax period to identify any material changes in business activities, counterparties, pricing terms, or market conditions that could affect the arm’s length position. Update your benchmarking studies and local file annually to reflect current data. Transfer pricing compliance is not a one time exercise   it requires ongoing vigilance and annual refreshment of documentation to remain defensible in the event of an FTA review.
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