German FinTax
December 4, 2025

With the introduction of UAE Corporate Tax under Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022, interest expense is no longer automatically deductible. To prevent excessive debt-based tax planning and align with international BEPS standards, the UAE implemented the Interest Deduction Limitation Rules (IDLR) framework, supported by Ministerial Decision No. 126 of 2023 (General Interest Deduction Limitation Rule) and the FTA Guide on Interest Deduction Limitation Rules (CTGIDL1).
These rules now operate as mandatory limitations that override general deductibility, even if interest is otherwise wholly and exclusively incurred.
For UAE businesses with loans, Islamic finance facilities, leasing, bonds, or shareholder financing, these rules have a direct financial impact, affecting cash tax costs, funding structures, and investment decisions.
With the introduction of UAE Corporate Tax under Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022, interest expense is no longer a “free” deduction. The UAE has implemented Interest Deduction Limitation Rules (IDLR) to prevent excessive debt funding from being used to erode the tax base and to align with global BEPS standards.
CTGIDL1 specifically highlights that the purpose of IDLR is to restrict “debt-pushdown” structures and artificial leverage commonly seen in M&A transactions and group reorganisations.
For many UAE businesses—especially those with bank borrowings, intra-group loans, leasing, or project finance—IDLR will directly affect how much interest is deductible each year and how to model financing structures going forward.
This article summarises the rules based on:
The guidance clarifies computational steps, gives binding interpretations, and resolves ambiguities left open in MD 126.
The UAE IDLR framework is built from several layers:
Articles 30 and 31 take priority over general deductibility and transfer pricing once triggered.
MD 126 provides the operative formulas and is the legal backbone of IDLR calculation.
CTGIDL1 confirms that taxpayers must apply SIDLR before applying GIDLR in this order is mandatory.
The FTA guide confirms a four-step hierarchy for testing interest deductions:
1. General deductibility rules – interest must be:
CTGIDL1 stresses that improper documentation automatically pushes interest into “non-deductible” before IDLR even applies.
2. Arm’s length principle – particularly for Related Parties or Connected Persons, interest must be at market value / arm’s length. Any non-arm’s-length excess is disallowed first.
Any transfer-pricing adjustment reduces NIE before computing GIDLR.
3. Specific Interest Deduction Limitation Rule (SIDLR) – may completely disallow interest on certain related-party loans (e.g. loans used to fund dividends or equity acquisitions).
4. General Interest Deduction Limitation Rule (GIDLR) – caps the remaining Net Interest Expenditure to the higher of:
This order is legally enforced. A taxpayer cannot skip to GIDLR if SIDLR is triggered.
“Interest” is wider than just bank loan interest. Under the Corporate Tax Law and MD 126 it includes:
CTGIDL1 clarifies that lease interest under IFRS 16 is always included, even if presented within operating expenses.
Additionally, interest embedded in supplier credit or deferred payment arrangements may also fall under IDLR if financing is implicit.
In practice, this means IDLR can affect:
FTA emphasises substance over form; renaming interest as “profit share”, “service fee”, or “financing margin” does not avoid IDLR.
Net Interest Expenditure (NIE) is the central concept for GIDLR.
NIE = Total Interest expenditure (including carried-forward disallowed NIE)
minus
Total Interest Income for the Tax Period
Certain items are excluded from NIE for GIDLR purposes, such as:
CTGIDL1 makes it clear that interest income cannot be “reclassified” to reduce NIE unless its character is genuinely interest in nature.
Under Article 30 and MD 126.
The de minimis threshold is absolute; once NIE exceeds AED 12m, the full 30% EBITDA test applies.
The AED 12m threshold must be pro-rated for short or long tax periods—this is directly stated in MD 126.
Below summarised:
but not more than the actual NIE. Any excess is disallowed and may be carried forward. The AED 12 million threshold must be pro-rated where the Tax Period is more or less than 12 months.
Adjusted EBITDA starts from Taxable Income and adds back specific items under MD 126.
Unlike accounting EBITDA, Adjusted EBITDA is purely tax-driven and must follow the formula in MD 126.
If Adjusted EBITDA is negative, GIDLR treats it as zero.
Adjusted EBITDA for GIDLR purposes should be arrived by adding:
If the resulting Adjusted EBITDA is negative, it is treated as zero for GIDLR.
Assume a UAE company (not a bank/insurer) has for the 2025 Tax Period:
Step 1 – Adjusted EBITDA
Step 2 – 30% cap
Step 3 – De minimis
Step 4 – Deductible NIE
Step 5 – Carry-forward
CTGIDL1 confirms this method and the necessity of adding back D&A and NIE fully, even if partially disallowed.
Any NIE disallowed by GIDLR in a Tax Period:
MD 126 states that carried-forward NIE cannot create or increase a tax loss—this is an important compliance point businesses often miss.
If a Taxable Person deregisters (e.g., a foreign PE ceases), any unutilised carried-forward NIE is normally forfeited.
Where a Subsidiary joins a Tax Group, its carried-forward NIE can only be used against the portion of the Tax Group’s Taxable Income attributable to that Subsidiary.
SIDLR is a targeted anti-avoidance rule under Article 31 that can fully disallow interest on certain Related Party loans, irrespective of the 30% EBITDA cap.
Interest on a loan from a Related Party is not deductible if the loan is used (directly or indirectly) to:
CTGIDL1 adds that “indirect use of funds” is enough to trigger SIDLR, even if the loan proceeds are routed through intermediaries.
However, SIDLR does not apply if the Taxable Person can demonstrate that obtaining the loan and carrying out the transaction was not mainly to obtain a Corporate Tax advantage (the main-purpose test).
In addition, where the lender is in a jurisdiction that effectively taxes the interest income at ≥ 9% (after transfer-pricing adjustments), the rules provide a safe harbour and SIDLR may not apply.
Practical Takeaway:
Before relying on interest deductibility for intra-group financing, businesses must check both SIDLR (use of funds, main-purpose, lender’s tax profile) and GIDLR (30% cap and AED 12m).
The GIDLR does not apply to:
CTGIDL1 clarifies that investment holding entities are fully subject to GIDLR, even if they conduct limited activities.
However:
NIE on certain historical financial liabilities (debt instruments or other liabilities with terms agreed before 9 December 2022) can be outside GIDLR, subject to MD 126 conditions, including:
Businesses with pre-December 2022 financing should keep strong documentation of:
MD 126 is strict: ANY modification to a loan after 9 December 2022 potentially removes grandfathering, even if commercially minor.
FTA expects businesses to maintain full loan documentation to prove “no modification.”
NIE relating to a Qualifying Infrastructure Project (QIP) undertaken by a Qualifying Infrastructure Project Person can be excluded from GIDLR, where the conditions in Article 14 of MD 126 are met.
In broad terms (simplified), a Qualifying Infrastructure Project Person is a Resident Person that in the relevant Tax Period:
Even where NIE on a QIP is exempt from GIDLR, the general deductibility rules and SIDLR still apply.
CTGIDL1 further clarifies that QIP relief is project-specific, not entity-wide. Only interest tied to the certified QIP is excluded.
Where a Taxable Person elects Small Business Relief (SBR) and is treated as having no Taxable Income for that period, any disallowed NIE from earlier periods can still be carried forward and used in a future period when SBR is not claimed.
Important point: SBR does not eliminate IDLR obligations for the year—NIE carry-forward tracking still applies.
Where a Tax Group is formed under Article 40 of the CT Law:
Carried-forward NIE:
Group financing structures should therefore be planned together with any current or future tax-grouping decisions.
CTGIDL1 stresses that internal interest within a tax group is eliminated entirely before computing NIE.
You should pay particular attention to IDLR if you are:
1. Map your financing
2. Run a GIDLR model
3. Check SIDLR exposure
4. Review documentation
Maintain:
5. Consider restructuring
6. Align with tax group / SBR strategy
At German FinTax Consultancy, we work with UAE businesses across sectors to:
German FinTax Consultancy offers expert solutions in taxation, accounting, and compliance to individuals and businesses across the UAE.
Copyright © 2026 German FinTax Consultancy. All rights reserved