German FinTax
November 17, 2025

The introduction of Corporate Tax in the UAE marked one of the most significant fiscal reforms in the nation’s history. Yet, for Free Zone businesses, the UAE Government has preserved a strategic incentive: the 0% Corporate Tax rate for Qualifying Free Zone Persons (QFZPs).
However, with new decisions—Cabinet Decision No. 100 of 2023, Ministerial Decision No. 229 of 2025, Ministerial Decision No. 230 of 2025, the FTA CTGFZP1 Corporate Tax Guide, and the FTA Business Bulletin, these rules now refine and strengthen the Free Zone regime rather than replace it. The 0% regime has become more structured, more detailed, and more compliance-driven than ever before.
This expanded guide provides a deep, practical, and updated breakdown tailored for UAE businesses and written by German Fintax Consultancy, one of the region’s specialist advisors for Corporate Tax and Free Zone compliance.
A Qualifying Free Zone Person is a Free Zone entity that satisfies all statutory requirements to benefit from the 0% Corporate Tax rate on Qualifying Income.
To maintain QFZP status, a business must:
Both the legal entity and core income-generating activities must be based in the Free Zone.
This includes:
This is based on specific categories of income and activities described later in this guide.
Even a single excluded activity may cause loss of the 0% benefit for that tax period.
Clarification: Under MD 229 (2025), excluded activities do not automatically revoke QFZP status. Only the income from that excluded activity becomes taxable at 9%, unless the activity is more than incidental or the de minimis threshold is breached.
Including:
QFZPs must also submit a “QFZP Disclosure Statement” as part of the Corporate Tax Return.
If such income exists, it is automatically taxed at 9%.
Cabinet Decision 100 establishes the core principle for the Free Zone regime:
only Qualifying Income receives the 0% tax rate.
The Decision defines Qualifying Income under three broad categories:
This includes activities such as:
Subject to:
Example:
A Free Zone IT company providing cloud support to another Free Zone company may treat this as Qualifying Income, subject to conditions.
IP income is only qualifying when the entity can prove:
Pure IP holding companies with no R&D substance do not qualify.
The De Minimis Test
If non-qualifying income exceeds
whichever is lower, the entity loses QFZP status for that tax period.
This is the most crucial update for Free Zone businesses in 2025.
MD 229 of 2025 refines, tightens, and clarifies the list of activities that qualify for 0% tax.
1. Manufacturing & Processing
Includes transforming raw materials into finished goods within a Free Zone.
Example:
A JAFZA-based plant assembling machinery parts qualifies if it maintains adequate substance.
2. Distribution of Goods from a Designated Zone
The heart of many Free Zone operations.
To qualify:
Clarification: MD 229 emphasises that logistics, warehousing, and inventory operations must be ancillary to the core distribution activity. If these generate over 51% of revenue, the entity may need to prove they remain “subordinate” and integrated; it’s not an automatic disqualification.
3. Fund Management & Wealth Management
Applies to entities regulated by:
Subject to licensing and compliance with UAE financial regulations.
4. Headquarter Services
To related parties only.
Includes:
5. Treasury & Financing Services (Related Parties Only)
Allowed only when:
6. Reinsurance Services
Primary insurance is excluded, but reinsurance is qualifying.
7. Aircraft Leasing & Financing
8. Ownership, Management & Operation of Ships
Must comply with maritime laws and substance rules.
9. Qualifying IP Income
Subject to the nexus test.
10. Ancillary Activities
Activity must directly support a core qualifying activity.
Example:
Packaging goods inside a Designated Zone is ancillary to a qualifying distribution activity.
Excluded activities generally trigger 9% taxation on that income, and depending on thresholds and materiality, may also affect QFZP status for that period.
1. Dealing with Natural Persons
Retail, consumer-facing sales, and personal services.
Also, MD 229 confirms that providing portfolio management or investment advisory to natural persons is excluded, even if delivered digitally.
Example:
A Free Zone e-commerce business selling to UAE individuals → excluded activity.
2. Banking, Finance & Insurance (Primary)
Unless explicitly carved out (e.g., reinsurance), these are excluded.
3. Ownership or Exploitation of Immovable Property
Except for:
Residential property always remains excluded.
Disposal of residential property is excluded regardless of Free Zone location.
4. Non-Qualifying IP Income
IP owned without R&D substance fails the test.
5. Certain Commodity Trading & Structured Finance
MD 229 introduces stricter rules for commodities, requiring the use of Recognised Price Reporting Agencies (see MD 230 section).
Clarification: Not all commodity trading is restricted — the MD applies specifically to categories requiring RPRA benchmark pricing per MD 230.
4. New Anti-Avoidance Mechanisms — The 51% Rule
A new, important restriction:
If 51% or more of revenue is earned from warehousing, logistics, distribution, or inventory management, the business may NOT be considered to carry out a Qualifying Activity.
MD 229 does not impose an automatic ban. It requires the business to prove that these activities are truly ancillary to a qualifying distribution function. If not proven, the activity becomes non-qualifying.
This protects the UAE tax base from businesses relabeling basic distribution as “qualifying.”
This decision provides a list of accepted agencies whose pricing benchmarks are required for:
This ensures transactions reflect genuine market pricing.
Clarification: RPRA pricing applies only to certain commodity categories specified in MD 229.
The FTA’s CTGFZP1 guide is the most detailed operational manual for Free Zone taxation.
Key sections include:
FTA expects evidence of:
Red flag: Paper companies or “shell entities” will not qualify.
Businesses must maintain clear bookkeeping separating:
Hybrid or mixed-income companies must apportion revenue.
PE income is always taxable at 9%.
FTA gives examples such as:
All Free Zone entities must comply with TP rules, including:
Especially important for:
CTGFZP1 emphasises that related-party transactions inside Free Zones must still be linked to qualifying activities as they are not automatically qualifying.
The Bulletin serves as a simplified explanation and reinforces:
The Bulletin warns that performing an excluded activity with no revenue may still impact QFZP status if the activity is not incidental.
Income from dividends & capital gains → Generally exempt, but QFZP rules apply only if other activities don’t disqualify them.
Using RPRA pricing + Designated Zone operations → May qualify
Using own non-market benchmarks → Risks 9% tax.
Regulated fund management → Qualifying Income
Selling to natural persons → Excluded activity → 9% tax.
Clarification: This does not automatically revoke QFZP status unless the de minimis threshold or substantive exclusion test is breached.
Services to Free Zone companies → Qualifying
Services to mainland individuals → Non-Qualifying
Clarification: Remote digital delivery to mainland customers does not automatically create a mainland PE unless physical presence or repeated presence exists.
We help businesses with:
Our team ensures your business remains compliant, optimised, and risk-free under UAE Corporate Tax.
The UAE’s Free Zone Corporate Tax regime remains a world-class incentive—but its application is now highly detailed and compliance-centric.
To retain the 0% Corporate Tax benefit, businesses must:
Note that some rules impact FY 2024 filings retrospectively, while MD 229 and MD 230 generally apply from FY 2025 onward unless otherwise stated.
With the right guidance, UAE Free Zone businesses can continue to enjoy the benefits of a preferential tax regime—while staying aligned with evolving regulations.
German Fintax Consultancy is here to help you navigate every step.
German FinTax Consultancy offers expert solutions in taxation, accounting, and compliance to individuals and businesses across the UAE.