Moving Your Business to Dubai from the UK: What Actually Happens in 2026
Moving Your Business to Dubai from the UK
Moving a UK business to Dubai works when three things line up, in order: you can actually leave the UK tax net, a UAE bank will take on your profile, and your activity fits a structure the banks engage with. Get those right and the rest is routine. Get one wrong and the rest does not matter. From a clean start it takes about five to six weeks end to end. This page walks through the order it happens in, and links out to the detail on each part.
You have probably already read the marketing — tax-free, business-friendly, easy. None of that is wrong. It is just incomplete. The hard parts are not the ones the adverts talk about.
Moving from Ireland or Australia instead? Same sequence — the home-country tax detail is what changes. There’s a version of this for each.
First: can you actually leave the UK tax net?
Most owners ask about Dubai because of UAE tax. The first real question is about UK tax — whether you can leave it cleanly. A UAE residence visa does not make you non-UK-resident. Your day count does.
UK tax residency is decided by the Statutory Residence Test, HMRC’s rulebook for who counts as resident. In short: there are automatic overseas tests (pass one and you are non-resident — for most leavers, fewer than 16 days in the UK that year), automatic UK tests (183 days and you are resident), and, if neither settles it, a ties test that weighs your days against your remaining UK connections. Most owners moving to Dubai are aiming to be non-resident under that third route, which means counting days and dropping UK ties for the first couple of tax years.
Two things are worth getting advice on before you go, not after. If you leave mid-tax-year, split-year treatment may apply — but it is not automatic, and a holiday plus a Dubai licence does not qualify. And if you are thinking of selling UK shares or assets around the move, the timing window is real and best planned with a UK tax adviser. We are not your UK tax adviser; we work alongside qualified ones in the UK, and equivalent partners on the Irish and Australian side, and keep the two sides joined up.
The blunt version: if you cannot actually leave the UK for the days the test requires — because of family, the business, or property — Dubai is the wrong solution. Living in London and running a UAE company does not make you non-resident, and HMRC’s central management and control test is built to catch exactly that. More on that under structure.
Second: will a UAE bank take on your profile?
This is the part most owners underestimate. The licence is the easy bit. Getting paid into a working business bank account is the operational constraint, and it is where setups come unstuck.
UAE banks run a real compliance review on every business account. The compliance team — not the relationship manager — decides whether the account opens. They look at source of funds, beneficial ownership, whether the business plan is realistic, and whether there is genuine substance in the UAE. They reject a significant number of applications, and they reject quietly: the file goes into “we’ll let you know”, then nothing.
This is why we speak to the bank’s compliance team about the company before the licence is chosen, not after. The wrong order is to set up in a free zone you saw advertised and then go looking for a bank. The right order is to know which banks engage with which profiles, then build the company to fit. A clean file generally needs a coherent commercial story, source-of-funds evidence (commonly around six months of statements for the beneficial owners), clear beneficial ownership, a short realistic business plan, and real substance behind it.
The realistic sequence, from a clean start:
- Company formed and first residence visa issued — about a month.
- Bank account opened — three to four days for a small, low-risk business, or seven to ten days for a larger one, after the Emirates ID is issued. Higher-risk or regulated profiles take longer, because the compliance team has more to review.
- Total from starting to actually trading — company set up, visa stamped, Emirates ID in hand, account open — around five to six weeks.
The “one week” promises in setup adverts are not false on the licence. They are false on the banking. We submit the bank application alongside the licence, in parallel, so the bank’s questions surface in time to deal with — not after the licence is issued and you are sitting waiting. The full picture, including what banks won’t easily take on, is on how to open a UAE business bank account.
Third: does your activity fit the right structure?
Once the UK exit is workable and the banking profile is realistic, the structure is mostly about fit.
Free zone or mainland
For most foreign owners it is a free zone — 100% foreign ownership, its own commercial law, established processes for international owners. Mainland is the right call when you need to trade directly with UAE customers, sell to the UAE public, or run a regulated activity such as healthcare or certain financial services. Full foreign ownership is now available for most mainland activities too, so it is a real option rather than a fallback. Which way you go follows the business. We set out both on the company structures page, and the mainland route in full on the Dubai mainland overview.
Which free zone
There are more than forty free zones in the UAE, and you do not need a survey of all of them. You need the small number that combine bank acceptance, a broad enough activity list, and a substance footprint that matches your reality. For a lot of UK owners that points to IFZA in Dubai, but it is not right for everyone — regulated finance, some media, healthcare and larger or holding structures often point to a different free zone, or to DIFC or ADGM. The decision is activity first, then bank acceptance, then cost — not the price list first. We do not push a particular free zone; the full list and how to weigh them is on the free zone overview, and what a free zone company actually is on free zone company in the UAE.
Substance — the part that is easy to get wrong
Free zone licences run from “a desk and a P.O. box” to “real office, real staff, real spending”. Two tests decide whether that matters. HMRC’s central management and control test looks at where the company is actually run — if the decisions are taken in London, HMRC can treat the UAE company as UK-resident. And the UAE’s Qualifying Free Zone Person regime — the route to 0% UAE corporate tax on qualifying income — requires real substance in the free zone. The licence is necessary. It is not sufficient. Pick activities that match what you are actually going to do; banks read an inflated activity list for what it is.
What happens once you are set up
Past the residence test, with a bank account and a clean structure, a few moving parts run on from there. The detail sits on the UAE corporate tax page; in short:
- UAE corporate tax is 9% on taxable profits above AED 375,000, and 0% below. One threshold, one rate above it.
- Small Business Relief can treat a company with revenue at or below AED 3m as having no taxable income — elected, not automatic.
- The 0% free zone route is available to a Qualifying Free Zone Person that meets the conditions, including real substance, audited accounts and the income tests. You elect into it by meeting the conditions; you do not fall into it by accident.
- VAT is 5%, with mandatory registration at AED 375,000 of taxable turnover (the same figure as the corporate-tax threshold, but measured on turnover, not profit). For most boutique service businesses that comes up in year two or three, not on day one.
The thread running through all of it is substance — whether the company is genuinely being run from the UAE. That is what the tax position needs, what the residency test needs, and what the bank expects. We handle the bookkeeping, VAT and corporate tax in-house, so the accounts that support all three are kept straight from the start.
When the move is not right yet
Some of the most useful conversations end with the owner deciding the move is not right now. The honest patterns:
- You cannot leave the UK for the days the test requires. Family, UK business commitments, property. A UAE company while you stay UK-resident achieves none of the tax goals and adds compliance you did not have before. Wait until a clean exit is possible.
- Your business is entirely UK clients with no UAE activity. A UAE company that does nothing in the UAE has central-management-and-control risk and substance problems. That needs more thought than “just incorporate in Dubai”.
- You are chasing the cheapest setup. The cheapest licence is rarely the cheapest outcome. The cheapest setup is the one that gets the bank account, gets the substance right, and survives the first HMRC and tax-authority reviews. Cut corners and it shows up as a rejected account three months later.
- You want 0% tax while staying in London. That is a tax-residency problem, not a setup one, and the rules are built to catch it. We will say so upfront.
- You are pre-revenue with no working capital. Moving an idea to the UAE does not make it a business. The move works best once there is real revenue behind it. A genuine new business is welcome — the line is real versus not real, not established versus new.
If any of these are true, the answer is usually “not yet”. That is fine, and worth knowing before you spend anything.
How we work
We open companies in the UAE for owners from the UK, Ireland and Australia, and we handle the UAE side as one piece of work — the company, the banking for the business and your personal accounts, the residence visas for you and the family, and then the bookkeeping, accounts and tax each year. You deal with Gareth from the first call onwards. The UK and UAE tax advisers bill you directly for their work; we coordinate with them and do not mark up their fees.
We also turn people away — owners who cannot make the day count, who have a declined banking history we cannot address, or who are after the cheapest possible setup. The conversation works best when both sides are straight about fit. If the UAE is not the right move for your business, we will tell you. Tell us what the business does and where it is heading, and we will tell you whether we are the right firm and how we would do it: talk to us.
Common questions
Can I stop being UK tax resident by moving to Dubai?
Not automatically. UK tax residency is decided by the Statutory Residence Test, not by where you move. For most owners the clean route is an automatic overseas test — typically fewer than 16 days in the UK in the tax year — alongside cutting your UK ties. The day count and the timing of the move decide it, not the move itself.
Will a UAE bank actually open an account for my business?
Not as a formality. UAE banks run a full compliance review on every business account, and the compliance team — not the relationship manager — decides. They look at source of funds, beneficial ownership and whether the activity is realistic. The licence is the easy part; getting the account open is the real constraint, which is why we check the bank's view before the company is formed.
How long does it take to move a UK business to Dubai?
From a clean start, about five to six weeks end to end — company formed, residence visa stamped, Emirates ID issued, bank account open. The licence and visa are the quick parts; the bank account is what sets the pace. A small, low-risk account opens in three to four days once the Emirates ID is issued; a larger one in seven to ten days.
Do I need a free zone or a mainland company?
For most foreign owners it is a free zone — 100% foreign ownership, its own commercial law and established processes for international owners. Mainland is the right call when you need to trade directly with UAE customers, sell to the UAE public, or run a regulated activity. The right answer follows the business, not a default.
Do I still pay UK tax on a UK business after I move?
Yes, on income that stays UK-source. UK rental income and UK trading profits remain UK-taxable wherever you live. Moving personally does not change the UK position on assets that stay in the UK. What the move can change is the tax on new income earned through the UAE — but only once you have genuinely left the UK tax net.
Thinking about moving your business to the UAE?
A short, no-cost conversation: tell us what the business does and where it’s heading, and we’ll tell you the structure that fits — and why.