
Setting up a company in the UAE is now very different from “the old days” of just getting a license and opening a bank account. With the introduction of corporate tax, stronger compliance rules, and closer monitoring by regulators, the first 90 days after incorporation are now critical.
In this guide, we’ll walk through exactly what newly incorporated UAE companies must do in their first 90 days across corporate tax registration, VAT, accounting, licensing, staffing, and compliance – so you stay on the right side of the law and focus on growth.
Since the UAE introduced federal Corporate Tax (CT), most UAE companies are now considered “taxable persons” by default. The standard regime is:
0% on taxable income up to AED 375,000
9% on taxable income above AED 375,000
For many new founders, this is a big culture shift. The UAE is still tax-friendly, but it’s no longer entirely “tax-free”. You need proper records, systems, and registrations – and many of these start within the first 90 days.
Whether you’re in:
Mainland (DED)
A standard free zone (e.g., DMCC, RAKEZ, IFZA, SHAMS)
A financial free zone (e.g., DIFC, ADGM)
you’ll face:
A Corporate Tax registration obligation, with strict deadlines for new juridical persons (most new companies must register within 3 months of incorporation)
Ongoing reporting requirements
Local compliance (UBO, ESR, AML, licence renewals)
So the first 90 days are about getting these foundations right before mistakes become expensive due to hefty fines.
This is the piece you rightly flagged as missing – and it’s now the number one priority.
In simple terms, corporate tax applies to most:
Limited liability companies (LLCs)
Free zone companies
Branches of foreign companies
Certain unincorporated partnerships and individuals with business income above specified thresholds
Some entities (like government bodies, certain natural resource businesses, and qualifying investment funds) may be exempt, but most new commercial companies are in scope, even if they’re making a loss in the first year.
A company incorporated in Dubai on 10 June 2025 must submit its Federal Tax Authority (FTA) Corporate Tax registration within three months of the date of incorporation, i.e. by 10 September 2025 (since the rule is “within 3 months from the date of incorporation or recognition” for resident juridical persons established on/after the effective date).
Missing this can lead to administrative penalties of AED 10,000 and red flags in your tax profile.
Typically, for a newly incorporated company you’ll need:
Trade license and incorporation documents
Articles of association / memorandum
Details of shareholders and directors
Financial year-end (e.g., 31 December)
Contact details and authorised signatory information
This is where it helps to think strategically: your chosen financial year, group structure, and free zone status will all influence your corporate tax position going forward.
Corporate Tax is calculated based on your adjusted accounting net profit, following accepted standards such as IFRS.
That means from day one you should:
Align your chart of accounts with CT categories (deductible vs non-deductible, related party transactions, etc.)
Keep clear intercompany and related party documentation
If you’re in a free zone, understand whether you qualify for a 0% regime on qualifying income and what substance conditions you must meet
A good advisor can design your accounting + tax setup together, rather than treating them as separate tasks.
The standard rules today are:
Mandatory VAT registration: when taxable supplies & imports exceed AED 375,000 in 12 months
Voluntary registration: from AED 187,500
Even if you’re just starting, you must monitor your pipeline and contracts – some startups cross the threshold much faster than expected.
Many B2B startups in the UAE choose to register early because:
Their clients expect a TRN for input tax recovery
Being VAT-registered signals seriousness and structure
It forces discipline in invoicing and record-keeping
The first 90 days are the perfect moment to decide:
Are you planning to hit AED 375,000 within 12–18 months?
Are your customers VAT registered?
Do you have material VAT-bearing expenses that you’d like to recover?
If VAT registration is appropriate, your first 90 days should include:
VAT registration via the FTA portal and obtaining your TRN
Updating invoice formats to meet tax invoice requirements
Setting up your accounting system to code supplies correctly
Creating a simple VAT compliance calendar (return deadlines, payment dates)
This is where most founders are tempted to cut corners – but it’s exactly what Corporate Tax and VAT depend on.
Early decisions to make:
Financial year-end (most choose 31 December, but alignment with group companies or investor needs may matter)
A chart of accounts designed for:
Management reporting
Corporate Tax adjustments
VAT classifications
Clear expense policies (what is reimbursable, how to document it, etc.)
Within the first 90 days, you should have:
Bank reconciliations set up
Supplier and customer ledgers under control
A folder (digital or system) for supporting documents (contracts, invoices, approvals)
A clear view of cash burn and runway
Many free zones and banks expect audited financial statements for license renewal, shareholder changes, or loan applications, so having clean accounts from month 1 is a big advantage.
With Theta 7 Accountants, your month-end bookkeeping, reconciliations, and management reports are handled by professionals, giving you investor-grade numbers and a clear audit trail if you’re ever reviewed by regulators or auditors.
Good accounting isn’t just “for the accountant” – it directly supports:
Corporate Tax – by giving accurate profit figures and add-backs
VAT – by clearly separating taxable, zero-rated, and exempt supplies
ESR – by evidencing that real activities happen in the UAE
UBO & AML – by providing traceability of flows if questioned
Our approach is simple: one integrated accounting system that serves all regulatory requirements. That means fewer surprises, fewer backdated fixes, and lower risk when authorities ask questions.
Once your trade license is issued, the first 30–60 days usually involve:
Activating the license in the relevant authority portals
Opening your corporate bank account
Arranging any required office lease or flexi-desk confirmations
Linking your license to immigration and labour systems (where applicable)
To hire and sponsor staff, your company will normally need:
An immigration file with the relevant authority
An establishment card (for mainland / some free zones)
A labour file (MOHRE) if you are a mainland employer
Without these, you can’t issue visas or labour contracts – so they’re core items for the first 90 days if you plan to grow a team.
If you’re operating in sectors like:
Healthcare
Education
Food & beverage
Media and advertising
Financial services / fintech
You may need special permits from municipalities, ministries, or regulators. These are best identified before you start trading, to avoid surprise shutdowns or fines.
For mainland entities, you’ll interact with MOHRE, while free zones typically run their own HR and visa portals.
In your first 90 days, you should:
Draft locally compliant employment contracts
Understand probation, notice, and leave entitlements under UAE Labour Law
Decide on your grading and salary structure
Most employers must pay salaries through the Wage Protection System (WPS), which means:
Paying through UAE bank channels
On-time salary payment recorded in the system
Matching employment contracts and payroll records
Document at least basic HR policies on:
Working hours and overtime
Leave and public holidays
Remote work rules (if any)
Reimbursements and allowances
Your first visas are typically processed within those first 90 days:
Entry permit
Medical fitness test
Biometrics for Emirates ID
Visa stamping / e-visa issuance
Small mistakes (wrong profession, missing documents, expired medicals) can cause frustrating delays, which is why many companies prefer to outsource visa handling.
Most UAE entities must identify and report their Ultimate Beneficial Owners (UBOs) to their licensing authorities.
Within the first 90 days you should:
Identify any individuals owning 25% or more (directly or indirectly), or otherwise exercising control
Maintain an internal UBO register
File UBO details with the relevant authority and keep them updated when ownership changes
Non-compliance can result in fines and even license suspension.
If your company carries out “relevant activities” (like headquarters, distribution, financing, IP, holding company activities, etc.), you may need to:
File an ESR notification
Prove that you have adequate substance in the UAE (staff, premises, expenses)
Submit ESR reports if in scope
Even if ESR does not apply in year 1, it’s wise to design your operating model with future ESR compliance in mind.
If you’re in real estate brokerage, precious metals and stones, corporate services, or other designated non-financial sectors, there are AML/CFT obligations:
Customer due diligence and KYC
Monitoring and reporting suspicious transactions
Staff awareness and internal policies
Even if you’re not in a high-risk sector, implementing simple internal controls in your first 90 days protects against fraud and supports trust with banks and investors.
Don’t leave your first 90 days to chance. Let us handle your corporate tax registration, VAT setup, bookkeeping, payroll, UBO/ESR filings, and full compliance—so you can focus on winning customers and scaling your business.
Book your consultation today and let our experts build a compliant, investor-ready finance system for your UAE company.

