UAE Taxation & Regulatory Compliance · Corporate Tax Services
Corporate Tax Health Check
Most Corporate Tax exposure in the UAE is not created by a bad-faith decision — it is created quietly, over one or two filing cycles, by positions taken under deadline pressure and never independently re-checked.
Chartered Accountants · Dubai · Since 1986
A Corporate Tax Health Check is a structured, point-in-time diagnostic review of a taxable person's Corporate Tax position — registration, computation, elections, and filed returns — carried out against Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022 on the Taxation of Corporations and Businesses (the UAE Corporate Tax Law), its Executive Regulations, Ministerial and Cabinet Decisions, and the Tax Procedures Law (Federal Decree-Law No. 28 of 2022, as amended). It is a proactive engagement, undertaken by the taxable person's own initiative rather than in response to any Federal Tax Authority (FTA) notification, audit, or query — the objective is to find and quantify gaps in the filing position while they are still curable through the taxable person's own action, before the FTA's own review or risk-based selection process finds them independently.
The review is built around the same technical questions an FTA audit would actually test, applied to a snapshot of the business's current position rather than to a live dispute. It confirms whether Corporate Tax registration was completed correctly and within the applicable timeline, and whether the Tax Registration Number and EmaraTax profile match the trade licence, financial year, and legal structure on record. It re-performs the reconciliation from accounting income to taxable income, checking every add-back and deduction against the specific Corporate Tax Law provision that permits or requires it, and tests whether the realisation-basis election (if made) has been applied consistently across the relevant asset and liability categories. Where the taxable person is a Free Zone entity, the health check independently re-tests the Qualifying Free Zone Person (QFZP) conditions for the period under review — adequate substance in the UAE, the composition of Qualifying versus non-Qualifying Income, the de minimis threshold, and whether audited financial statements exist — because a QFZP claim that is even slightly overstated converts the entire tax period's income to the standard 9% rate rather than a partial adjustment.
Where the business has related-party or Connected Person transactions, the health check evaluates whether those transactions are priced on an arm's length basis, whether a Transfer Pricing Disclosure Form was filed with the return where required, and whether a Local File and Master File exist and were prepared contemporaneously where the applicable revenue or transaction thresholds are met. It also tests the Small Business Relief election, where claimed, against the revenue threshold and the eligibility conditions that must hold in both the relevant and prior tax periods, and checks whether tax loss carry-forwards are being tracked correctly, including the 75% utilisation limit that applies against taxable income in a later period. Across all of this, the review is anchored to the fact that Corporate Tax applies to financial years starting on or after 1 June 2023, and that the earliest filed periods are also the periods filed with the least settled interpretive guidance available at the time — first-year elections and Free Zone assessments made before much of the detailed Ministerial guidance had been fully digested by the market are precisely the positions most worth re-checking now that FTA practice has matured.
A health check produces a written, prioritised diagnostic report — not a verbal assurance and not a filed submission to the FTA. Each finding is classified by its likely materiality and by whether it is a documentation gap that can be closed with better records, a technical position that needs to be corrected going forward, or a genuine historical exposure that may warrant a voluntary disclosure under the Tax Procedures Law before any FTA notification arrives. That last distinction is the one with the sharpest financial consequence: a self-identified correction filed as a voluntary disclosure generally carries a materially more favourable penalty outcome under Cabinet Decision No. 75 of 2023 than the same error found later by the FTA during an audit — but that advantage exists only in the window before an audit notification is issued, which is exactly the window a health check is designed to use while it is still open.
The depth of a health check differs meaningfully between a mainland taxable person and a Free Zone taxable person, even though both start from the same accounting-to-taxable-income reconciliation. For a mainland entity with no Free Zone claim, the review concentrates on the computation itself — add-backs, deductions, exempt income, and the correct treatment of the AED 375,000 0% threshold — together with related-party pricing and Small Business Relief eligibility where claimed. For a Free Zone entity, the review adds an entire additional layer that a mainland-only check does not need: because Free Zone incorporation alone does not confer 0% Corporate Tax treatment, PNPC treats the QFZP determination as a standalone workstream running alongside the computation review, with its own evidence trail — substance, Qualifying Income mix, the de minimis calculation, audited financial statements — rather than a single line item folded into a general checklist. A group with entities in both categories, for instance a mainland trading company and a Free Zone logistics or holding entity, needs both tracks run and reconciled against each other, since intercompany transactions between a mainland entity and a Free Zone entity in the same group carry their own Qualifying Income implications for the Free Zone side.
Timing matters to a health check in a way it does not to most other Corporate Tax engagements, for two separate reasons. First, because a taxable person has no advance visibility into when the FTA may select its filings for audit or review, the window in which a self-identified error can still be corrected through a voluntary disclosure — rather than being found first by the FTA — can close without warning; a health check run today tests exactly the position the FTA would test if it reviewed this taxable person tomorrow. Second, because Corporate Tax is still a comparatively young regime — the earliest tax periods began for financial years starting on or after 1 June 2023 — a filing position taken in year one, when detailed Ministerial guidance on a specific point may not yet have been published or widely understood in the market, can look materially different once assessed against the more developed body of FTA guidance and clarifications available today. A health check does not retroactively change what was filed; it tests whether the position taken then still holds up against the interpretive standard now in force, and flags explicitly where a finding rests on guidance that has become clearer since the original filing was made.
When a Corporate Tax Health Check applies to you
You have filed one or more Corporate Tax returns, prepared internally or by a generalist provider, and have never had the underlying positions independently reviewed
You are a Free Zone entity claiming the 0% Qualifying Free Zone Person regime and want the substance, Qualifying Income, and de minimis positions re-tested before the FTA selects your period for review
Your business has related-party or Connected Person transactions and you are not confident the pricing and documentation would withstand FTA scrutiny
You claimed Small Business Relief or made a realisation-basis election in an early return and want the eligibility and consistency of that position confirmed
You are preparing for a fundraise, acquisition, or exit and want a clean, documented Corporate Tax position before external due diligence surfaces gaps you could have found first
Your group structure, activities, or Free Zone status have changed since your original Corporate Tax registration and you are unsure whether your filing positions still reflect that
You have never received any FTA correspondence and want to stay that way — a health check is the lower-cost, lower-pressure alternative to finding out your position was wrong during a live audit
You suspect, but have not confirmed, that an error exists in a filed return and want a professional assessment of whether a voluntary disclosure is warranted before any FTA notification arrives
Your VAT and Corporate Tax records touch the same transactions and you want both positions reconciled proactively rather than discovering an inconsistency only when one tax is queried
You are a Free Zone entity operating across more than one free zone, or maintaining several entities in different free zones within the same group, and want each entity's QFZP position tested individually rather than assumed uniform across the group
Your current bookkeeper or accountant also prepared your Corporate Tax return and you want an independent second opinion on the filed position before relying on it for a board, lender, or investor representation
You are onboarding a new CFO, finance controller, or in-house tax lead and want a documented, independently tested baseline of the Corporate Tax position handed over, rather than relying on the departing team's institutional memory
When a different engagement is more appropriate
You have already received an FTA audit notification, information request, or assessment — that calls for Corporate Tax Audit Assistance or Representation Before Tax Authorities, which are structured around a live statutory response clock, not a diagnostic review
You have not yet registered for Corporate Tax or filed a first return — that calls for Corporate Tax registration and impact assessment, which establish the position rather than review an existing one
You need your current-period return prepared and filed, with no interest yet in reviewing prior periods — that is Corporate Tax Return Filing & Compliance, a recurring compliance engagement rather than a one-off diagnostic
You are asking a narrow, single-transaction question about how a specific arrangement should be treated before it happens — that is Corporate Tax Advisory, a forward-looking structuring engagement rather than a backward-looking review
Your query is purely about VAT treatment with no Corporate Tax dimension — that sits with our VAT compliance and advisory service line, which follows a different statutory framework
You already know a specific error exists and simply need it corrected and filed — that is a direct voluntary disclosure or amendment engagement, not a broad diagnostic review
You want a guaranteed clean bill of health regardless of what the underlying records show — a health check reports what it finds, including exposures the business would rather not have confirmed in writing
You are not prepared to share the filed returns, computation workpapers, financial statements, and underlying ledgers — a health check cannot be performed meaningfully from summary description alone
Your business has already engaged another advisor for the identical scope of review and simply wants a second informal opinion without a documented file — that is better scoped as a limited technical opinion, not a full health check
Your question concerns another jurisdiction's tax law rather than UAE Corporate Tax — that sits with the relevant local advisor in that jurisdiction, though PNPC coordinates cross-border reviews with an India dimension through its own India offices
Corporate Tax Health Check vs related UAE Corporate Tax engagements
| Feature | Corporate Tax Health Check | Corporate Tax Audit Assistance | Corporate Tax Impact Assessment | Annual CT Return Filing & Compliance | Corporate Tax Advisory |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trigger | Taxable person's own initiative, no FTA involvement | FTA audit notification, document request, or assessment already issued | New entity, restructuring, or first-time Corporate Tax applicability assessment | Routine annual filing obligation under the CT Law | A planned transaction or decision needing a tax position before it happens |
| Primary counterpart | None externally — internal diagnostic, client-facing report | FTA audit team, via EmaraTax and correspondence | Internal decision-makers, ahead of registration or a structural change | FTA, via periodic EmaraTax return filing | Internal decision-makers; FTA only if a clarification is sought |
| Core PNPC output | Written, prioritised diagnostic report with materiality-rated findings | Reconstructed technical file, FTA response pack, clarification meeting support | Applicability memo, registration roadmap, and structural recommendations | Filed CT return with supporting workpapers | Structuring memo or FTA clarification request |
| Time pressure | Low — client-driven timeline, no statutory clock running | High — FTA information requests carry fixed response windows with penalty exposure | Moderate — tied to registration deadlines or transaction timing | Fixed annual deadline — generally 9 months from the end of the tax period | Low — advisory timing is generally client-driven |
| What a poor result triggers | Voluntary disclosure assessment, remediation plan, or referral to audit-readiness work | Additional tax assessed, plus audit-specific penalties for non-cooperation | A different registration or structuring path recommended before commitment | Late filing and late payment penalties under Cabinet Decision No. 75 of 2023 | None directly — but a poor structuring decision creates future audit exposure |
| Typical PNPC scope | Registration review, computation re-performance, QFZP re-test, transfer pricing spot-check, prioritised findings report | Full audit lifecycle management, document assembly, FTA liaison, meeting attendance | Scope, structure, and jurisdiction analysis ahead of a decision | Return preparation, computation, and filing on a recurring annual basis | Scenario modelling, memo preparation, and clarification requests |
| Confidentiality of the exercise | Internal diagnostic; findings are the client's own until the client chooses to act on them | FTA is already a party to the record via the audit notification and correspondence | Internal decision-support document, not filed | Filed with the FTA as the statutory return itself | Internal advisory memos and correspondence, not filed |
| Relationship to voluntary disclosure | Directly assesses, for every genuine error found, whether a voluntary disclosure is warranted while the more favourable penalty treatment is still available | Too late for the favourable voluntary-disclosure penalty treatment — the audit notification has already been issued | Establishes the baseline a later disclosure decision would be measured against, but does not itself trigger one | A correctly filed return removes the need for a disclosure on that period | Flags disclosure-worthy questions as they arise, ahead of the next annual filing |
| Repeat frequency | Client-discretion — commonly after the first one or two filing cycles, then periodically or after material change | As triggered by an FTA notification; not on a set cycle | Point-in-time — commonly once at the outset, repeated on material structural change | Recurring, annually, tied to the statutory filing deadline | Continuous, for the life of the advisory relationship |
A health check is frequently the engagement that precedes and prevents the others — a business that runs a health check proactively and remediates what it finds materially reduces the likelihood of a difficult audit later, and often converts what would have been an FTA-discovered adjustment into a lower-penalty voluntary disclosure instead. PNPC scopes the health check independently but designs its findings with exactly that downstream audit-readiness lens in mind.
| # | Stage & What PNPC Does | What Businesses Get Wrong Without CA Guidance | Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Scoping the Review — Fixing which tax periods, entities, and issues are in scope | We confirm which financial years, which group entities, and which specific concerns (Free Zone status, transfer pricing, a suspected error) the health check should cover. A vague, unscoped 'check everything' request produces a vague, unusable report — we fix the boundary in writing before starting. | Day 1–2 |
| 2 | Registration & Profile Verification — Confirming the basics actually match | We verify the Corporate Tax Registration Number, the registered financial year, the EmaraTax profile details, and whether these match the trade licence, legal structure, and any group registration currently on record. A stale or mismatched EmaraTax profile is a common, entirely avoidable finding that businesses rarely check themselves. | Week 1 |
| 3 | Computation Re-Performance — Rebuilding the accounting-to-taxable-income reconciliation independently | We independently re-derive the taxable income computation from the financial statements, rather than reviewing only the figure the original preparer arrived at — testing every add-back, deduction, and exempt-income treatment against the specific Corporate Tax Law provision it relies on. | Week 1–3 |
| 4 | Election Consistency Check — Realisation basis, Small Business Relief, and other elections | Where a realisation-basis election was made, we test whether it has been applied consistently across the relevant asset and liability categories in every period since election. Where Small Business Relief was claimed, we re-test the revenue threshold and eligibility conditions for each period claimed, since a marginal miscalculation can retroactively invalidate the entire claim. | Week 2 |
| 5 | Free Zone / QFZP Re-Test — Confirming the 0% claim actually holds | For Free Zone clients, we independently re-test the Qualifying Free Zone Person conditions — adequate substance, Qualifying Income composition, the de minimis threshold, and audited financial statements — for each period under review. Losing QFZP status is an all-or-nothing outcome for the tax period, so this is treated as a distinct, high-priority workstream rather than a single checklist line. | Week 2–3, where applicable |
| 6 | Related-Party & Transfer Pricing Spot-Check — Testing whether pricing positions have support | We review whether Connected Person and related-party transactions were priced on an arm's length basis, whether the Transfer Pricing Disclosure Form was filed correctly, and whether a Local File and Master File exist where the applicable thresholds are met. An unsupported intercompany management fee is one of the most common findings at this stage. | Week 2–3 |
| 7 | Loss Carry-Forward & Group Position Review — Checking the numbers are still being tracked correctly | Where tax losses are being carried forward, we confirm the utilisation tracking, including the 75% limit against taxable income in a later period, and where a Tax Group election is in place, we confirm the consolidated position and intra-group eliminations are being maintained correctly. | Week 3 |
| 8 | Documentation Gap Mapping — Identifying which positions lack contemporaneous support | For every material position reviewed, we record whether adequate contemporaneous documentation exists — a benchmarking study, board minutes, a technical memo prepared at the time — versus positions that are correct in outcome but currently undocumented, versus positions that are genuinely unsupported. | Week 3 |
| 9 | Materiality & Risk Rating — Prioritising findings by exposure and likelihood of FTA scrutiny | Every finding is rated for its likely quantum if disallowed and the likelihood an FTA audit would actually surface it, so the client can see immediately which items are urgent versus which are lower-priority housekeeping. | Week 3–4 |
| 10 | Voluntary Disclosure Assessment — Deciding, for each genuine error, whether self-correction is warranted | For any finding that represents a genuine historical error rather than a documentation gap, we assess whether a voluntary disclosure under the Tax Procedures Law is the appropriate next step, given that the favourable penalty treatment for self-correction disappears the moment an FTA audit notification arrives. | Week 4 |
| 11 | Written Diagnostic Report — Delivering findings in a structured, prioritised format | The health check concludes with a written report setting out every finding, its materiality rating, its supporting basis, and a recommended remediation action — not a verbal debrief. This becomes the roadmap for the remediation stage that follows. | Week 4 |
| 12 | Remediation Roadmap Discussion — Agreeing what gets fixed, in what order | We walk the client through the report, agree priorities, and scope any follow-on work — documentation rebuild, a voluntary disclosure filing, a transfer pricing benchmarking study, or a QFZP structuring correction — as distinct, separately scoped engagements. | Week 4–5 |
| 13 | Process Fix for Future Periods — Building the discipline so the next filing is health-check-clean from the outset | Where the review finds recurring process gaps — no contemporaneous workpaper discipline, no transfer pricing calendar, no QFZP substance monitoring — we recommend the specific process change needed so future periods do not repeat the same findings. | Following report delivery |
| 14 | Cross-Check Against VAT Filings — Reconciling Corporate Tax revenue figures against reported VAT turnover | Where the client is also VAT-registered, we compare the revenue figures used in the Corporate Tax computation against VAT-reported turnover for the same periods, since an unexplained gap between the two is exactly the kind of inconsistency a cross-tax review could surface later. | Week 3, in parallel |
| 15 | Group Consistency Check — Confirming similar transactions are treated the same way across every entity in scope | For reviews spanning more than one group entity, we confirm that the same type of transaction or election — a management fee, a Small Business Relief claim, a realisation-basis position — has been treated consistently across entities, since an inconsistent treatment of materially similar items across a group is a specific and avoidable finding. | Week 3–4, where multi-entity |
| 16 | Client Sign-Off & Management Representation — Confirming the factual basis before the report is finalised | Before finalising, we ask the client to confirm in writing that the records, ledgers, and disclosures provided for the review are complete and accurate, since the health check's conclusions are only as reliable as the underlying facts it was given. | Week 4 |
Realistic timeline: a health check on a single, straightforward entity with no material Free Zone or transfer pricing complexity typically completes within three to four weeks from full document receipt. A multi-entity group with Free Zone claims and related-party transactions across several periods can extend to six to eight weeks. The single greatest driver of speed is how quickly the client can produce the underlying financial statements, computation workpapers, and supporting records requested at scoping — a health check, unlike an audit response, has no external deadline forcing pace, but delayed document production simply extends the client's own window of uncertainty.
Corporate Tax registration certificate and Tax Registration Number (TRN)
Trade licence copy, including any amendments during the periods under review
Memorandum and Articles of Association, and details of ultimate beneficial ownership and group structure
EmaraTax portal profile details, including registered financial year and activity classification
Free Zone licence and lease/facility documentation, where Qualifying Free Zone Person status is claimed
All filed Corporate Tax returns for the periods under review, together with the underlying computation workpaper
The accounting income to taxable income reconciliation for each period, with the statutory basis for each add-back and deduction
Details of the realisation basis election, if made, and evidence of its application in each subsequent period
Tax loss carry-forward schedules, including 75% utilisation limit tracking
Small Business Relief election documentation and revenue workings, where claimed
Audited or management financial statements for each period under review
General ledger, trial balance, and chart of accounts
Fixed asset register and depreciation/amortisation schedules
Schedules for material expense categories — professional fees, related-party charges, provisions, and write-offs
Transfer Pricing Disclosure Form as filed with each return, where applicable
Local File and Master File, where the taxable person meets the applicable thresholds
Intercompany agreements, invoices, and pricing policies for related-party and Connected Person transactions
Any benchmarking studies or other evidence supporting arm's length pricing
Evidence of adequate substance in the UAE — office lease, qualified full-time employees, and operating expenditure
Income schedules segregating Qualifying Income from non-Qualifying Income, and the de minimis calculation
Details of any transactions with mainland UAE entities or non-Free Zone Persons
Audited financial statements specific to the Free Zone Person
Any prior FTA clarifications, private rulings, or correspondence relevant to the tax positions reviewed
Records of any voluntary disclosures previously filed with the FTA for the entity
Prior tax opinions, memos, or advisory notes from PNPC or another advisor relevant to positions under review
VAT returns filed for the same periods under review, for revenue cross-check purposes
VAT registration certificate and Tax Registration Number
Any FTA correspondence relating to VAT that may be relevant to a Corporate Tax finding on the same transaction
Group organogram showing ownership and control relationships between the entities in scope
Tax Group election documentation and the consolidated return, where a Tax Group is in place
Intra-group transaction schedules and elimination workings supporting the Tax Group's consolidated position
| Phase | Triggered By | PNPC CA Guidance | Risk If Ignored |
|---|---|---|---|
| Initial Health Check | Client's own initiative, no FTA involvement | Full diagnostic review as scoped, delivered as a written, prioritised report with materiality ratings for every finding. | Skipping this step leaves the business's true Corporate Tax position untested until an FTA audit, investor due diligence, or acquisition tests it involuntarily and without the benefit of a self-corrected window. |
| Remediation of Documentation Gaps | Health check identifies positions that are correct but undocumented | Rebuild the contemporaneous file — benchmarking studies, technical memos, board minutes — so future scrutiny of the same position finds it properly supported. | An undocumented position, even if substantively correct, is significantly harder to defend under audit than one supported by a file built at the time. |
| Voluntary Disclosure Decision | Health check identifies a genuine historical error | Assess promptly whether a voluntary disclosure under the Tax Procedures Law is warranted — the penalty advantage over an FTA-identified error is material but exists only before any audit notification arrives. | Delaying this decision risks an FTA notification landing before the disclosure is filed, permanently forfeiting the more favourable penalty treatment. |
| QFZP Structural Correction | Health check identifies a Free Zone substance or income-mix gap | Correct the underlying substance or income composition issue going forward, and assess whether the current or prior period's QFZP claim needs to be revisited. | An uncorrected QFZP gap compounds each subsequent period the entity continues to claim 0% treatment it may not fully support. |
| Transfer Pricing Documentation Build | Health check identifies unsupported related-party pricing | Commission the benchmarking study and prepare the Local File / Master File before the next filing, rather than after an FTA query arrives. | Unsupported related-party pricing is one of the most common and material FTA audit adjustments, and is materially cheaper to fix proactively than to defend reactively. |
| Annual Filing Process Update | Health check identifies a recurring process gap | Rebuild the ongoing filing and documentation workflow — contemporaneous workpaper discipline, a transfer pricing calendar, QFZP substance monitoring — so future periods are filed health-check-clean from the outset. | Without a process fix, the same findings recur in the next health check or, worse, in the next FTA audit. |
| Periodic Re-Check | One to two filing cycles after the initial health check, or after a material business change | Re-run a scoped health check whenever the business structure, Free Zone status, or transaction profile changes materially, and periodically even absent a specific trigger, since FTA interpretive guidance continues to develop. | A position that was defensible under the guidance available at the time of an earlier filing can look different against more settled, current FTA practice — periodic re-checking catches this drift before an audit does. |
| Transaction or Exit Readiness | Fundraise, acquisition, or exit process begins | Use the health check output as the Corporate Tax component of transaction readiness, so buyer or investor due diligence encounters a position PNPC has already tested and, where needed, remediated. | An unresolved Corporate Tax exposure discovered during external due diligence can delay or reprice a transaction and become a specific indemnity or escrow condition. |
| VAT Cross-Check Follow-Up | Health check identifies a revenue inconsistency against filed VAT returns | Reconcile the specific transactions causing the difference and correct whichever filing — VAT or Corporate Tax — reflects the wrong figure. | An unreconciled inconsistency between VAT and Corporate Tax revenue figures is a natural cross-check point and can prompt scrutiny on both taxes rather than one. |
| Group Consistency Correction | Health check identifies inconsistent treatment of the same transaction type across group entities | Standardise the treatment across the group going forward and assess whether prior periods for the inconsistently treated entities also warrant a voluntary disclosure. | Inconsistent treatment of materially similar transactions across group entities is difficult to explain credibly if the FTA reviews more than one entity in the group. |
| Management Representation Retention | Health check report finalised | Retain the signed management representation alongside the report and supporting workpapers as part of the contemporaneous record for the periods reviewed. | Without a retained representation confirming the factual basis provided, the report's conclusions are harder to stand behind if the underlying facts are later disputed. |
Waiting until an FTA audit notification arrives before running any independent review — by then, the favourable voluntary disclosure penalty treatment is no longer available for whatever the review would have found
Treating the health check as a one-time exercise at Corporate Tax's introduction and never repeating it, even though FTA guidance has continued to develop and a business's own structure typically changes within a year or two
Commissioning a health check but delaying the voluntary disclosure decision on a genuine finding for months while other priorities take precedence, during which an FTA notification can arrive and permanently close that window
Running a health check on the current period only, while earlier filed periods that remain open to FTA review and carry equal or greater exposure go unexamined
Scoping the review narrowly around a single worry — one Free Zone entity, for instance — while leaving other entities or periods with equally material but unexamined positions
Providing only summary trial balance figures rather than transaction-level ledger detail, which limits the reviewer to checking the original preparer's arithmetic rather than independently re-deriving the computation
Assuming a Qualifying Free Zone Person claim is permanently settled because it was accepted at registration, without recognising that QFZP status must hold for each tax period independently as income mix and substance can change year to year
Treating a signed intercompany agreement as sufficient support for a related-party charge on its own, with no benchmarking or comparability analysis behind the price itself
Receiving the written report but never formally agreeing and tracking a remediation plan, so the same findings simply repeat in the next filing cycle or the next health check
Fixing the position for the current and future periods without revisiting whether the same error exists in earlier filed returns that may still warrant a voluntary disclosure
Failing to update the underlying process — workpaper discipline, a transfer pricing calendar, QFZP substance monitoring — so the same category of finding recurs in every subsequent review
What exactly is a Corporate Tax Health Check, and how is it different from just filing our return correctly?
Filing correctly addresses the current period going forward. A health check looks backward and sideways — it independently re-tests the positions already taken in filed returns, the registration and profile details on record, and any Free Zone or related-party positions, to confirm they would hold up if the FTA reviewed them today. It is a diagnostic exercise, not a filing exercise, and it produces a written report rather than a submission to the FTA.
We have never had any contact from the FTA. Is a health check still worth doing?
Yes — arguably it is most valuable precisely when there is no live FTA matter, because every finding can still be addressed on the taxable person's own terms and timeline. A health check performed after an audit notification has already arrived is functionally closer to audit-readiness work under time pressure; one performed with no notification pending has the full range of remediation options available, including the more favourable voluntary disclosure route where a genuine error is found.
Will a health check tell the FTA anything about us, or create a record they could use against us?
No — a health check is an internal diagnostic engagement between PNPC and the client. It is not filed with, or reported to, the FTA, and its findings remain the client's own confidential information unless and until the client chooses to act on them, for example by filing a voluntary disclosure. The report itself is a working document to guide the client's own decisions, not a submission.
What does the health check actually check, in plain terms?
It covers four broad areas: whether your Corporate Tax registration and EmaraTax profile are accurate and complete; whether your taxable income computation correctly applies the add-backs, deductions, and elections the Corporate Tax Law requires; whether any Free Zone Qualifying Free Zone Person claim genuinely meets all of its conditions; and whether related-party transactions are priced and documented defensibly. The exact scope is agreed with you at the outset based on your structure and risk profile.
How is a health check priced, and how long does it take?
Scope and fee depend on the number of entities, tax periods, and the complexity of Free Zone and related-party positions involved — a single straightforward entity with one filed period is a modest, fixed-scope engagement, while a multi-entity group with several periods and Free Zone claims is priced accordingly. We provide a written scope and fee estimate before beginning substantive work. Timelines typically run from a few weeks for a simple entity to six to eight weeks for a more complex group.
We are a Free Zone company. Why does the health check spend so much attention on our Qualifying Free Zone Person status specifically?
Because the QFZP conditions — adequate substance, the Qualifying Income mix, the de minimis threshold, and audited financial statements — must all be satisfied together for a given tax period, and failing any one of them generally means the entity is treated as a standard, non-Qualifying Free Zone Person for that period, converting income that would otherwise have been taxed at 0% to the standard 9% rate. There is no partial credit for mostly meeting the conditions, which makes this one of the highest-consequence areas to get independently re-checked.
If the health check finds an error, what happens next — are we obligated to correct it immediately?
There is no automatic obligation triggered by the health check itself; it is a diagnostic report, and what you do with its findings is your decision. That said, where a genuine error is identified, the practical and financial case for correcting it promptly through a voluntary disclosure is usually strong, because the favourable penalty treatment available for self-correction under the Tax Procedures Law disappears once an FTA audit notification is issued.
Can PNPC do a health check on a return that another firm originally prepared?
Yes, and this is a common scenario. We independently re-derive the computation and re-test the underlying positions from first principles, rather than simply reviewing whether the original preparer's arithmetic was internally consistent — the FTA would test the substance of the position regardless of who prepared the original return, so the health check does too.
Does the health check cover VAT as well, or only Corporate Tax?
The core scope is Corporate Tax, but because VAT and Corporate Tax records frequently touch the same underlying transactions, we flag any VAT-relevant inconsistency we identify during the review even though a full VAT health check is a separate, distinctly scoped engagement. Where a client wants both reviewed together, we can scope a combined engagement.
How often should a business run a Corporate Tax Health Check?
There is no statutory requirement to run one at any particular interval — it is a discretionary, proactive exercise. In practice, running one after the first one or two Corporate Tax filing cycles is valuable given how much interpretive guidance has developed since the earliest returns were filed, and re-running a scoped check after any material business change — a new Free Zone entity, a significant related-party arrangement, a restructuring — is generally worthwhile.
We are about to raise investment or sell part of the business. Should we run a health check before that process starts?
Yes — this is one of the highest-value times to run one. A Corporate Tax exposure discovered by an investor's or buyer's own due diligence team, rather than by you first, tends to get treated more conservatively by the counterparty, can slow the transaction, and can become a specific indemnity or escrow condition in the deal terms. Running the health check first lets you remediate what can be fixed and disclose clearly what cannot, on your own terms.
What if the health check finds nothing wrong at all?
That is a genuinely useful outcome in itself — a clean report gives the business documented assurance, useful for its own governance, for investor or lender conversations, and for board reporting, that its Corporate Tax position has been independently tested and holds up. We do not manufacture findings to justify the engagement; where the position is sound, the report says so plainly.
Does a Corporate Tax Health Check replace the need for an annual statutory audit?
No — they serve different purposes. A statutory financial audit expresses an opinion on whether the financial statements present fairly under the applicable accounting standard. A Corporate Tax Health Check tests whether the Corporate Tax return correctly reflects those financial statements and the specific tax law provisions that convert accounting income into taxable income. The two are complementary; the health check in fact starts by reconciling the audited financial statements to the filed Corporate Tax return as one of its first steps.
If our group has multiple UAE entities, does the health check cover all of them or just one?
Scope is agreed at the outset and can cover a single entity, a subset, or the full group, including entities that have formed a Tax Group election for Corporate Tax purposes. For a Tax Group, the review also tests the consolidated position and the intra-group eliminations, since the FTA generally reviews the group's consolidated return but can still request records from individual member entities.
What documents does PNPC actually need from us on day one to start a health check?
At minimum: the filed Corporate Tax returns and their computation workpapers for the periods in scope, the audited or management financial statements for those periods, the trade licence and EmaraTax profile details, and a schedule of any related-party transactions. Free Zone entities additionally need their Free Zone licence, lease or facility documentation, and evidence supporting the QFZP conditions. We confirm the full list against your specific structure at scoping.
Do you review every period we have ever filed, or just the most recent one?
Scope is agreed at the outset, but reviewing only the most recent period while ignoring earlier filed periods leaves those earlier periods equally exposed and untested — they remain open to FTA review in their own right. Most clients scope the review to cover every period filed to date, particularly for the earliest tax periods, which were filed with the least settled interpretive guidance available at the time.
Can we scope the health check narrowly — just our Free Zone QFZP status, for example — rather than a full review?
Yes. A narrowly scoped review focused on one specific concern is a legitimate and proportionate engagement, and we price and scope it accordingly. The trade-off is that a narrow scope only gives assurance on the area reviewed — it does not tell you whether the computation, related-party pricing, or other positions outside that scope would also hold up.
We have never filed a Corporate Tax return at all yet. Is a health check still the right service?
Not quite — a health check reviews positions already taken in filed returns and an existing registration. If you have not yet registered or filed, the more relevant starting point is a Corporate Tax Impact Assessment, which establishes your taxable person status, applicable tax period, and likely liability from first principles, ahead of registration and the first filing.
Does the health check assess whether a Tax Group election was made and structured correctly?
Yes, where a Tax Group election is in place. We review whether the ownership and control conditions for the group continue to be satisfied, whether the consolidated return correctly reflects intra-group eliminations, and whether each member entity's individual position — including QFZP status for any Free Zone member — has been correctly incorporated into the group position.
What happens if the health check's conclusion differs from a position our statutory auditor already signed off on?
A statutory audit opinion addresses whether the financial statements present fairly under the applicable accounting standard — it is not itself an opinion on whether the Corporate Tax return correctly applies the Corporate Tax Law to those financial statements. It is entirely possible, and not unusual, for financial statements to be fairly presented while the tax computation built from them still contains an error. Where our findings differ from an existing position, we set out the specific legal basis for our conclusion so the client and their other advisors can evaluate it directly.
Is a Corporate Tax Health Check the same thing as tax due diligence for an acquisition?
They overlap heavily but are not identical. A health check is scoped around the target's own filed positions and internal risk tolerance. Tax due diligence for a transaction is scoped around what a specific buyer or investor needs to know to price and structure a deal, and often needs to be delivered to a tighter timeline and in a format suited to transaction documentation (representations, warranties, indemnity schedules). We can run either, and a recent health check materially shortens a subsequent due diligence exercise.
Can a health check be done without our company's name attached, just to test the waters?
No — a meaningful health check requires reviewing your actual filed returns, computation workpapers, and financial statements, which cannot be done anonymously. What we can do is have an initial, no-commitment scoping conversation about your general situation before any engagement or document sharing begins, so you understand what a review would involve before committing to it.
What happens if we simply ignore the health check's findings?
Nothing happens automatically — the report is not filed with or reported to the FTA. But an ignored finding does not disappear; it remains exactly the exposure it was when identified, and it stays that way until either the business corrects it or the FTA finds it independently, at which point the more favourable voluntary disclosure penalty treatment is no longer available.
Does PNPC retain the health check workpapers, and for how long?
Yes. We retain the report and its supporting workpapers as part of our own engagement file, consistent with the broader Corporate Tax record-retention expectation of seven years from the end of the relevant tax period. We recommend clients retain their own copy of the report and the underlying evidence for at least the same period.
If we already filed a voluntary disclosure for an earlier period, does the health check review whether it was done correctly?
Yes. A prior voluntary disclosure is itself a position that can be tested — we review whether the disclosure correctly and completely addressed the underlying error, or whether it left a related issue unaddressed. A disclosure that fixed the symptom but not the root cause can leave a recurring version of the same error in later periods.
What if our records for an early period are incomplete or partially missing?
We work with what is available and are explicit in the report about which conclusions rest on complete records versus which are qualified because supporting documentation for that specific period could not be located. An incomplete record for an early period is itself a finding worth noting, since it affects how defensible that period's position would be if the FTA asked for the same documentation.
Can the health check be limited to just the current tax period, skipping earlier ones we are less worried about?
Yes, scope is the client's decision. The consideration to weigh is that the earliest filed periods are often the ones with the least settled interpretive guidance behind them at the time of filing, which can make them, in practice, more rather than less likely to contain a finding — 'less worried about' and 'lower risk' are not always the same thing until the review is actually done.
Does the health check look at our historical Economic Substance Regulations (ESR) position as well as Corporate Tax?
Where relevant, yes. ESR notification and reporting obligations were discontinued for financial years starting on or after 1 January 2023 under Cabinet Decision No. 98 of 2024, so there is no ongoing ESR filing to test for current periods. Where an entity has an earlier financial year with a historical ESR filing history, we review that history for completeness as part of the broader diagnostic, and note that the substance evidence gathered for a QFZP determination under Corporate Tax is a separate, distinct legal test in its own right.
What is the practical difference between a 'documentation gap' finding and a 'genuine error' finding?
A documentation gap means the underlying position is substantively correct but the contemporaneous evidence supporting it — a benchmarking study, board minutes, a technical memo prepared at the time — is thin or missing; the fix is to build that record now. A genuine error means the position itself is wrong under the Corporate Tax Law, regardless of documentation; the fix generally involves correcting the position and assessing whether a voluntary disclosure is warranted. The two require materially different remediation, which is why we classify every finding as one or the other rather than a single undifferentiated 'issue'.
If we are a UAE branch of a foreign parent company, does the health check also assess Permanent Establishment risk?
Yes, this is a standard part of the review for any client with a foreign parent, affiliate, or personnel working across borders. We assess whether the UAE branch's own filed position correctly reflects income attributable to the UAE presence, and separately flag where foreign group personnel working extensively on UAE matters — or UAE personnel supporting foreign operations — could be creating a Permanent Establishment question that has not yet been considered on either side.
Can PNPC run a health check on our Corporate Tax position while another firm remains our ongoing advisor?
Yes, and this is a common and entirely workable arrangement. The health check is a discrete, bounded engagement — it does not require replacing your existing advisor, and many clients use it specifically as an independent check alongside an existing advisory relationship, then decide separately whether to act on any findings through their existing advisor, through PNPC, or jointly.
Is a health check a good step before switching to a new Corporate Tax advisor?
Yes — it gives the incoming advisor a documented, independently tested starting point rather than having to take the prior filings on trust, and it gives you clarity on whether anything needs remediating before responsibility for the position transitions. Many clients commission a health check specifically at the point of changing advisors for exactly this reason.
How is a finding's materiality actually rated — what makes something 'high' versus 'low'?
We rate each finding on two dimensions: the likely quantum of adjustment if the position were disallowed, and the likelihood the position would actually be tested and surface under FTA scrutiny given its nature and how common it is as a review focus. A finding that is both financially significant and squarely within an area the FTA is known to test closely — QFZP status or related-party pricing, for instance — is rated highest priority; a small, low-probability documentation gap is rated lower.
If the health check finds our QFZP status has failed, does that mean we owe 9% on everything, retroactively, for every past period?
A QFZP failure generally means the entity's income for the specific tax period in which the conditions were not met is taxed at the standard rate rather than 0% on Qualifying Income for that period — it is assessed period by period, not as a single blanket retroactive reclassification across every year the entity has ever filed. Whether an earlier period is also affected depends on whether the same failure existed in that earlier period specifically, which is exactly what the health check tests for each period in scope.
Can a health check be run mid-year, before the current period's return is even due?
Yes. A mid-year health check typically focuses on already-filed prior periods rather than the current, still-open period, though it can also flag emerging issues in the current period's data as an early warning ahead of the eventual filing. Running it mid-year, rather than waiting until immediately before the filing deadline, gives more time to act on any findings before the next return is prepared.
Does the health check specifically re-test our interest deduction position, or is that folded into the general computation review?
Where the business has material third-party or related-party financing, we test the interest deduction position as its own specific line — confirming whether the general interest deduction limitation has been correctly applied against the relevant adjusted earnings figure, and whether any related-party financing arrangements underlying the interest expense have arm's length support of their own.
Does the health check test whether Small Business Relief exclusions for multinational group members were correctly applied?
Yes, where Small Business Relief has been claimed. Small Business Relief is not available to certain categories of taxable person, including members of a multinational enterprise group meeting the relevant consolidated revenue criteria, among other exclusions set out in the applicable Ministerial Decision. We re-test whether the claimant genuinely fell outside these exclusions for each period the relief was claimed, since this is a condition that can change if the wider group's structure or revenue changes.
PNPC Corporate Tax Health Check vs a typical generalist review
| Dimension | Typical generalist / internal review | PNPC Corporate Tax Health Check |
|---|---|---|
| Basis of review | Reviews whether the original preparer's arithmetic is internally consistent | Independently re-derives the taxable income computation from first principles against the current Corporate Tax Law |
| Free Zone / QFZP testing | Often takes the original QFZP claim at face value | Independently re-tests every QFZP condition — substance, income mix, de minimis, audited statements — for the period |
| Transfer pricing coverage | Frequently limited to confirming a disclosure form was filed | Tests whether the underlying pricing has actual arm's length support, not just whether the form exists |
| Output format | A verbal debrief or a short informal note | A written, prioritised report with materiality ratings and a recommended action for every finding |
| Voluntary disclosure guidance | Rarely addressed as a distinct, time-sensitive decision | Explicitly assessed for every genuine error found, with the penalty-timing consequence made clear |
| Continuity with audit defence | No natural link to what an actual FTA audit would test | Built using the same technical lens PNPC applies in live Corporate Tax Audit Assistance engagements |
| Firm grounding | Variable — depends on the individual reviewer's current knowledge | A practising Chartered Accountancy firm since 1986, with a dedicated UAE Corporate Tax team tracking FTA practice as it develops |
| Handling of documentation gaps | Notes that a gap exists without distinguishing a documentation shortfall from a substantive error | Explicitly separates a correct-but-undocumented position from a genuinely unsupported one, since the remediation for each is different |
| Multi-period consistency check | Typically reviews the most recently filed period only | Checks consistency of the same election or position across every period in scope, since an inconsistency between periods is itself a finding |
| Cross-check against VAT | Rarely cross-references VAT filings against the Corporate Tax computation | Reconciles revenue used in the Corporate Tax computation against VAT-reported turnover for the same periods |
| Group-level consistency | Reviews entities independently without comparing treatment across the group | Checks whether the same transaction type or election is treated consistently across every group entity in scope |
- 01
Full Corporate Tax registration and EmaraTax profile verification
- 02
Independent re-derivation of the accounting-to-taxable-income computation for every period in scope
- 03
Realisation-basis election and Small Business Relief eligibility re-testing
- 04
Qualifying Free Zone Person condition re-test — substance, Qualifying Income mix, de minimis, audited statements
- 05
Related-party and Connected Person transfer pricing spot-check, including Transfer Pricing Disclosure Form review
- 06
Local File / Master File existence and adequacy check where thresholds apply
- 07
Tax loss carry-forward and utilisation-limit verification
- 08
Tax Group consolidated position and intra-group elimination review, where applicable
- 09
Documentation gap mapping — distinguishing correct-but-undocumented positions from genuinely unsupported ones
- 10
Materiality and FTA-scrutiny-likelihood rating for every finding
- 11
Voluntary disclosure assessment for any genuine historical error identified
- 12
Written, prioritised diagnostic report with a recommended remediation roadmap
- 13
Direct continuity into Corporate Tax Audit Assistance or Representation Before Tax Authorities, using the same technical file, if a matter later escalates
- 14
Access to PNPC's Dubai Corporate Tax team, backed by our Chennai, Bangalore, and Hyderabad offices for any cross-border India-UAE dimension
Find out exactly where your Corporate Tax position stands — on your own terms, before the FTA asks.
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