This deadline Last day to file and keep the AED 10,000 waiver (31 Dec 2025 year-end)

Tax & compliance · Time-sensitive

The AED 10,000 penalty you might not have to pay — if you move before 31 July

If your company registered late for UAE corporate tax, you were hit — or are about to be hit — with an AED 10,000 late-registration penalty. Most founders assume that money is gone. For many of you, it isn't.

In 2025 the Federal Tax Authority announced a waiver initiative: the late-registration penalty is waived, or refunded if you already paid it, provided you file your first corporate tax return (or annual declaration, for exempt persons) within seven months of the end of your first tax period — instead of the usual nine.

The math that matters: if your first tax period ended 31 December 2025 — true for most UAE companies on a calendar financial year — seven months lands on 31 July 2026. File your first return by that date and the AED 10,000 penalty is waived or refunded. File in August or September and you're still on time for the normal deadline, but the waiver is off the table.

Who this applies to

What "filing" actually means here

The waiver condition is a submitted return, not a paid tax bill by that date in every case — but do not cut it fine. In practice, before 31 July you need to:

  1. Close your FY2025 books. Your return is built on financial statements for the first tax period. If your bookkeeping is behind, this is the long pole — start now, not on 25 July.
  2. Confirm your tax position. Standard rates are 0% on taxable income up to AED 375,000 and 9% above it. Free zone companies claiming the 0% qualifying rate need their qualifying-income analysis done before filing, not after.
  3. Check Small Business Relief. If your revenue is under the relief threshold, you may elect relief in the return itself — an election you make while filing, not retroactively.
  4. Submit through EmaraTax. The return is filed in your EmaraTax portal account. Screenshots and the submission reference are your proof — keep them.
The trap in the calendar: 31 July 2026 is a Friday. UAE weekend patterns, bank processing and last-minute EmaraTax load are all reasons to treat Sunday 26 July as your real deadline. A waiver worth AED 10,000 is not something to test the portal's uptime with.

If your year-end isn't 31 December

The seven-month rule follows your first tax period. Year-end 31 March 2026 → waiver filing deadline 31 October 2026. Year-end 30 June 2026 → 31 January 2027. Count seven months from the last day of your first tax period; that's your date.

Questions we keep hearing

"I never registered at all. Does the waiver help me?"

Register first — the penalty applies on late registration, and the waiver then removes it if you make the seven-month filing window. Not registering doesn't avoid the penalty; it compounds the problem.

"My company made no money. Do I still need to do this?"

Yes. Registration and filing are mandatory regardless of profit, including at zero revenue. A nil return filed on time costs you nothing; a missed one costs penalties.

"Can my accountant just handle it?"

Yes — and if your books are messy, a registered tax agent is the fastest safe route this close to the date. What you can't delegate is the decision to start this week.

Want the video version?

We're covering this deadline — and the 30 September filing deadline behind it — on the UAE Founder Guide channel, with the EmaraTax steps on screen.

Watch on YouTube

Verification note: penalty amount, waiver mechanism and seven-month condition verified 06 Jul 2026 against Federal Tax Authority public announcements. Rules can change and individual circumstances differ — confirm your own position at tax.gov.ae or with a registered tax agent before acting. This guide is general information, not tax advice.