UAE Tax Updates 2026: What Finance Teams Need to Know Right Now
April 10, 2026
UAE Tax Updates 2026: What Finance Teams Need to Know Right Now
Three significant updates have landed in the UAE tax framework in 2026. If you’re a CFO, Finance Director, or senior finance leader, these aren’t distant regulatory footnotes — they have direct implications for your compliance calendar, your cash position, and how you structure your finance function.
Here’s what you need to know
What’s changed
The UAE Cabinet has introduced a formal R&D Tax Credit framework under Cabinet Decision No. 215 of 2025, effective 1 January 2026. Ministerial Decision No. 24 of 2026 has since provided the implementation details.
For the first time, UAE businesses conducting qualifying research and development activities can offset their Corporate Tax liability, at rates that scale with the size of their R&D investment.
The credit rates:
Minimum qualifying expenditure per project: AED 500,000.
What counts as qualifying expenditure?
Staff costs (uplifted by 30% for overheads), consumables, subcontracting fees, and contributions under cost-sharing arrangements. Activities must be novel, systematic, and conducted within the UAE; social sciences, humanities, and arts are excluded.
What it means for your business
If your business invests meaningfully in product development, technology, or process innovation, this framework could reduce your Corporate Tax liability significantly. Credits can be carried forward if unused and transferred between entities with at least 75% common ownership.
The catch: pre-approval from the Emirates Research and Development Council is required before you can claim. You’ll also need audited financials, a detailed expenditure breakdown, and seven years of technical documentation.
What to do next
Review your current R&D activities against the qualifying criteria. If you think you may be eligible, begin the pre-approval process with the Council now — this isn’t something you can retrospectively claim without the right documentation in place.
What’s changed
The FTA has issued Decision No. 5, which formalises the framework for how it issues clarifications, directives, and administrative decisions. For businesses navigating complex tax positions, particularly in transfer pricing, VAT recovery, and related-party transactions, this is important operational knowledge.
Key points:
Private clarifications are now formally binding on the FTA where the facts match but they apply only to the specific taxpayer who requested them. They won’t be issued if you’re already under audit or if the matter involves potential tax avoidance.
Advance Pricing Agreements (APAs) are available for related-party transactions with a minimum value of AED 100 million, covering 3–5 years. Currently, only unilateral APAs are permitted.
Input tax apportionment if the standard VAT recovery method produces an unfair result for your business, you can now formally request an alternative method. If approved, you must use it for 2–4 years.
Administrative exceptions on tax invoices, credit notes, and export evidence are available and valid for up to 3 years.
What it means for your business
If you’ve been operating in grey areas, particularly on VAT recovery, intercompany transactions, or export treatment, this framework gives you a legitimate route to get certainty. A private clarification, once issued, is binding on the FTA. That’s meaningful protection.
What to do next
If you have unresolved tax positions, uncertain VAT recovery calculations, or significant related-party transactions, consider whether a formal clarification or APA makes sense. The process requires complete, accurate information; an incomplete application will be closed.
Update 3: Tax Procedures — The 2026 Updates Every Finance Team Needs to Act On
What’s changed
Amendments to the UAE Tax Procedures framework (Cabinet Decision No. 74 of 2023 and related 2026 updates) have introduced changes that affect compliance timelines, voluntary disclosure obligations, and refund windows. These are live now.
The five changes that matter most:
What it means for your business
The historical VAT refund window is the most time-sensitive item here. If your business has been operating since 2018 and hasn’t reviewed early VAT positions, this is worth doing before December 2026. The potential recovery could be material.
What to do next
Run a rapid review of your VAT positions from 2018–2020. Assess whether any errors in your current tax records require voluntary disclosure. And make sure your documentation standards are audit-ready — not just compliant on paper.
How Nishe Can Help
These updates touch three areas where we work every day: Corporate Tax compliance and planning, VAT and tax procedure management, and finance function readiness.
If any of the above has raised questions about your current position, or if you’re not sure whether your business qualifies for the R&D Tax Credit, we’re happy to have a straightforward conversation.
No jargon. No lengthy engagement letters before we’ve even spoken. Just clarity.
Get in touch with the Nishe team
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