FAQ

UAE Business Compliance
— Answered.

Everything you need to know about licenses, permits, renewals, and fines in the UAE.

LICENSES & PERMITS

The basics every UAE business owner needs to know

Dubai businesses typically need a trade license from their relevant authority — DED for mainland, or a free zone authority (DMCC, DIFC, Meydan, and 40+ others) for a free zone setup. The license type — commercial, professional, or industrial — depends on your business activity. Many companies also require secondary permits from sector regulators such as MOHRE, DHA, KHDA, or the UAE Central Bank.
An Establishment Card is a mandatory MOHRE permit that allows a company to hire employees and interact with government labour services. Any company with existing staff — or planning to hire — must maintain a valid Establishment Card. It renews annually and must be renewed before your trade license, as an expired card blocks all visa and work permit processing.
A mainland license (DED or local authority) lets you trade freely across the UAE and bid on government contracts, though some activities historically required a local UAE national sponsor. A free zone license allows 100% foreign ownership but restricts direct trading on the UAE mainland — you'd need a distributor or mainland subsidiary for local sales. The right choice depends on your customer base and activity type.
In most cases, yes — UAE licensing authorities tie each commercial activity to specific activity codes on your license. Adding a new activity requires a license amendment and may require approvals from sector regulators. DXBComply tracks the activity codes listed on your uploaded license and alerts you when documents are due for renewal or amendment.
RENEWAL TIMELINES

When to start and what to expect

Most UAE authorities recommend starting the renewal process 60–90 days before expiry. DED typically allows renewals up to 60 days in advance; DMCC recommends beginning at least 45 days out. Starting late increases the risk of an expiry gap — even a single day of lapsed status can trigger fines and banking restrictions.
Processing time varies by authority. DED renewals are typically completed within 1–3 business days online. DMCC renewals take 5–10 business days once all documents are submitted. If your activity requires Ministry of Economy or sector approvals (healthcare, education, financial services), add 2–4 weeks. DXBComply's renewal playbooks list the exact timeline for each authority.
No — operating with an expired trade license is a legal violation in the UAE, regardless of whether a renewal application is pending. Banks may freeze accounts, you may be unable to sign contracts, and you risk fines from multiple authorities simultaneously. Some authorities offer a short grace period, but this is discretionary and should never be relied upon for planning.
A standard DMCC renewal requires: a completed renewal application, a valid Establishment Card, a valid office lease agreement, audited financial statements (for some license categories), and payment of the annual renewal fee. Requirements vary slightly by license type. DXBComply's DMCC playbook provides the exact document checklist so nothing is missed.
FINES & PENALTIES

The real cost of missed deadlines

DED fines for an expired mainland trade license start at AED 250 per month and compound over time. However, operating while expired can trigger cascading penalties — MOHRE can issue fines up to AED 10,000, and banks automatically restrict accounts linked to expired licenses until renewal is confirmed. The operational disruption typically far exceeds the direct fine amount.
An expired MOHRE Establishment Card immediately blocks your ability to process new work permits, renew existing employee visas, or use the MOHRE online portal. The direct fine is AED 100 per month per card, but the real cost is operational — an expired card can freeze hiring, renewals, and labour-related government transactions until it's reinstated.
The FTA imposes a late filing penalty of AED 1,000 for the first offence and AED 2,000 for subsequent ones. Late payment incurs a 2% immediate surcharge, a further 4% if still unpaid after 7 days, and 1% daily after 1 month — capped at 300% of the outstanding tax. Quarterly filers who miss a return can face compounding charges that accumulate very quickly.
UAE authorities rarely grant outright waivers, though reconsideration committees exist at DED and MOHRE. Success depends on the reason for delay, your compliance history, and whether you discovered the lapse proactively. Prevention is the only reliable strategy — DXBComply's 90/60/30/7-day reminders are specifically designed to ensure you never reach the deadline unprepared.
USING DXBCOMPLY

How DXBComply works for your business

You upload your UAE documents — trade license, Establishment Card, visas, permits — and DXBComply's AI reads the expiry dates automatically, from both Arabic and English text. The dashboard shows a live status for each document, color-coded by urgency, and sends automated email reminders at 90, 60, 30, and 7 days before each expiry.
Yes — DXBComply's AI extraction engine handles Arabic text natively. Upload Arabic-language documents such as Establishment Cards, Ministry approvals, and visa pages, and the system extracts names, dates, and authority information accurately. All extracted data is shown to you for confirmation before it's saved to your compliance timeline.
Yes. DXBComply supports multi-entity management for business groups and PRO firms. Each company gets its own dashboard and document vault, with a single-login view across all entities. The Group plan supports up to 10 entities; the Starter plan includes one entity. Group plan users also get a client share portal to share a live compliance view with each client.
DXBComply uses AES-256 encryption at rest and TLS 1.3 in transit for all stored documents and data. Your documents are never shared with or sold to third parties. You retain full ownership of your data — you can export or delete it at any time. See our Privacy Policy for full details.

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