To maintain eligibility, your business must strictly operate as a Qualifying Free Zone Person (QFZP) under the unified tax framework. Failing to hit even a single compliance marker can immediately revoke your 0% rate, locking your business into a standard 9% tax bracket for five consecutive years.
Here is your breakdown of the 2026 requirements, recent expansions, and the structural traps to watch out for.
1. The Core Baseline: Qualifying vs. Excluded Income
To enjoy the 0% corporate tax rate, your revenue stream must stem entirely from Qualifying Activities or transactions conducted with other Free Zone entities.
Qualifying Income (0% Rate): Includes standard corporate operations such as manufacturing, processing goods, holding shares for investment, international logistics, and aircraft leasing.
The 2025/2026 Expansion: Recent updates expanded "Trading of Qualifying Commodities" to include industrial chemicals, environmental assets (like carbon credits), and renewable energy certificates. Additionally, intra-group treasury and financing services are now heavily supported as qualifying lines of business.
Excluded Income (9% Rate Applies): Transactions with individual end-consumers (B2C), retail operations, conventional banking, insurance services, and any revenue derived from mainland real estate.
2. The Three Hard Compliance Pillars
Maintaining your QFZP status requires meeting strict operational benchmarks. The FTA looks at three foundational components:
A. The "Adequate Substance" Rule
Your company cannot just be a paper shell or a flexi-desk setup used to funnel revenue. You must prove that your Core Income-Generating Activities (CIGAs) are physically anchored in the Free Zone. This means:
An adequate number of full-time, qualified employees physically residing and working in the zone.
Incurring proportionate operational expenditure within the Free Zone.
Operating out of a physical commercial office or warehouse suited to your business scale.
B. The De Minimis Threshold
If your company accidentally ears non-qualifying income (such as an ad-hoc consulting service to a mainland company), you are protected only if that revenue stays under the De Minimis threshold.
The Math: Your non-qualifying revenue must not exceed 5% of your total revenue or AED 5 million, whichever is lower. Breach this by even AED 1, and your entire corporate revenue is taxed at 9% for the next 5 years.
C. Strict Transfer Pricing Compliance
If you transact with related parties (subsidiaries, sister companies, or parent entities on the mainland), these transactions must mirror an arm's length principle—meaning they must match market value. You are required to maintain exhaustive Transfer Pricing documentation to pass basic audits.
3. The 2026 Game Changer: The Universal Audit Trap
The single biggest operational shift for Free Zone entities centers around Ministerial Decision No. 84.
Unlike mainland businesses—which are generally exempt from mandatory financial audits unless their revenue crosses AED 50 million—every single QFZP must prepare and submit audited financial statements, regardless of revenue. Even if your Free Zone company records a turnover of just AED 1, you must hire a registered UAE auditor to sign off on your books to legally preserve your 0% tax rate.
Free Zone Tax Options: A Quick Reference
Choosing the wrong corporate structure or relief option can create a long-term tax trap. Use this matrix to guide your 2026 operational planning:
The Verdict: If your business model relies heavily on trading approved international commodities or serving other Free Zone entities, fight hard to maintain your QFZP status. If you are a small services business or retail outfit dealing with the local mainland market, electing out of the QFZP status and utilizing the AED 375,000 profit band might save you thousands in compliance and audit fees.