German FinTax
December 24, 2025

Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) play a critical role in the UAE’s real estate and capital markets ecosystem, enabling investors to gain exposure to income-generating real estate assets through professionally managed, regulated vehicles. With the introduction of UAE Corporate Tax (CT), the tax treatment of REITs—and more importantly, their investors—has become a key area of focus for fund sponsors, asset managers, and corporate investors.
To provide certainty and alignment with international best practices, the UAE Ministry of Finance and the Federal Tax Authority (FTA) have introduced a specific exemption framework for Real Estate Investment Trusts that qualify as Qualifying Investment Funds (QIFs) coupled with a ring-fenced investor-level taxation mechanism to ensure income from UAE immovable property remains within the tax base.
This article explains:
Under Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022 on the Taxation of Corporations and Businesses, entities carrying on business in the UAE are generally subject to Corporate Tax at 9%, unless a specific exemption applies.
REITs may qualify for Corporate Tax exemption only if they are approved by the FTA as a Qualifying Investment Fund, subject to compliance with:
The exemption is conditional, revocable, and tested on a continuous basis. Failure to meet any prescribed condition can result in immediate loss of exemption and exposure to Corporate Tax at the REIT level.
While exemption removes Corporate Tax at the REIT level, it does not eliminate taxation entirely. Instead, the UAE CT regime introduces a controlled investor-level inclusion rule, ensuring that income derived from UAE immovable property is taxed once, but not twice.
A REIT seeking exemption must meet both general QIF requirements and additional REIT-specific conditions prescribed under Cabinet and ministerial decisions. Failure to meet these conditions may result in loss of exemption and full Corporate Tax exposure at the entity level. These conditions are cumulative.
A fundamental requirement is that the REIT must hold a significant portfolio of UAE real estate. Specifically:
Valuation must be performed using acceptable methodologies and tested consistently. Indirect ownership, joint ventures, or partially owned structures may be excluded from the calculation, increasing the risk of falling below the threshold.
This requirement ensures that the exemption is reserved for genuine real estate investment platforms rather than incidental property-holding entities.
To maintain its status as a REIT:
Vacant properties, development-stage assets, mixed-use assets, or properties temporarily not generating rental income can adversely impact this test if not actively managed. This is one of the most common exemption failure points in practice.
This condition reinforces the core REIT principle of stable, recurring rental income, rather than speculative development or trading activity.
A REIT must satisfy one of the following ownership gateways both of which are subject to anti-avoidance and look-through rules:
Option A: Listed REIT structure
Option B: Institutional investor structure
This dual-route approach provides flexibility while ensuring transparency, governance, and appropriate investor diversity.
Ownership conditions are not tested once. They must be satisfied on a continuous basis. Breaches, even temporary, can trigger loss of exemption. Fragmentation or nominee arrangements may be disregarded under look-through rules.
Even where exempt:
This reporting obligation is particularly critical given the investor-level taxation mechanism discussed below.
This obligation is not optional. The law effectively shifts part of the investor’s Corporate Tax compliance burden onto the REIT. Inadequate disclosures can expose the REIT to regulatory scrutiny and risk exemption withdrawal.
To support capital market development:
The relief is strictly time-bound and narrow in scope. REITs must meet full listing requirements once the concession period ends, failing which exemption may be lost.
Early-stage REIT sponsors should carefully assess eligibility for this relief as part of their structuring strategy.
A common misconception is that Corporate Tax exemption at the REIT level results in tax-free income for investors. This is incorrect for juridical person investors under UAE CT law.
For tax periods commencing on or after 1 January 2025:
This mechanism is prescribed under Ministerial Decisions implementing the Corporate Tax Law and is designed to treat investors as earning real estate income indirectly, while avoiding double taxation.
For non-resident investors, taxation applies only to UAE-sourced immovable property income, subject to attribution and Permanent Establishment considerations.
This approach ensures that income derived from UAE real estate remains taxable, while avoiding double taxation at both the REIT and investor levels.
Immovable Property Income broadly includes net realised income arising from:
Key technical points:
Investor taxation outcomes may be affected by:
Where distributions are declared within the legally prescribed timeframe following the REIT’s financial year-end, a fully exiting investor may not be required to include that period’s immovable property income. This outcome is highly fact-specific and depends on entitlement, record dates, and declaration mechanics.
German Fintax Consultancy provides end-to-end advisory support to UAE businesses involved in REIT structures, including:
Our approach combines technical precision, regulatory awareness, and commercial understanding, ensuring your REIT structure remains compliant, defensible, and aligned with UAE Corporate Tax law.
German FinTax Consultancy offers expert solutions in taxation, accounting, and compliance to individuals and businesses across the UAE.
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