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UAE Taxation & Regulatory Compliance · Corporate Tax Services

Small Business Relief Advisory & Filing

Small Business Relief lets an eligible UAE taxable person be treated as having no taxable income for a Corporate Tax period — a genuinely valuable simplification for small and early-stage businesses, but one built entirely on a revenue threshold, an election, and a set of exclusions that must be tested correctly every single period.

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Chartered Accountants · Dubai · Since 1986

What Small Business Relief Advisory & Filing is

Small Business Relief Advisory & Filing is the professional engagement through which a Chartered Accountancy firm determines whether a taxable person qualifies for Small Business Relief under Article 21 of Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022 on the Taxation of Corporations and Businesses (the UAE Corporate Tax Law), prepares the supporting eligibility file, and manages the election and the associated Corporate Tax return filing on the Federal Tax Authority's EmaraTax portal. Small Business Relief is an elective simplification measure: a resident taxable person whose revenue for the relevant tax period and each prior tax period does not exceed the threshold prescribed by Ministerial Decision may elect to be treated, for Corporate Tax purposes, as having derived no taxable income for that period — meaning no Corporate Tax computation, no adjustment schedule, and a materially lighter compliance burden, though the return itself must still be filed.

The relief is deliberately narrow in scope and time-bound. It applies for tax periods ending on or before a date fixed by Cabinet Decision, and the government has signalled it as a transitional measure to ease the compliance burden on small businesses during the early years of the Corporate Tax regime rather than a permanent feature of the law. Eligibility turns on revenue, not profit — a business with thin margins but high turnover can fail the threshold test even if its actual taxable income would have been modest, while a highly profitable business with low turnover can validly claim the relief. Certain categories of taxable person are excluded from electing Small Business Relief regardless of their revenue — including entities that are part of a Multinational Enterprise Group within the meaning of the OECD BEPS Pillar Two framework, and Qualifying Free Zone Persons, whose separate 0% regime on Qualifying Income operates under its own conditions and is not compatible with a Small Business Relief election for the same period.

The consequences of electing Small Business Relief extend beyond the immediate tax period. A taxable person that elects the relief cannot carry forward tax losses incurred in that period to a later period in which the relief is not elected, cannot claim certain reliefs and deductions that would otherwise be available (such as the general interest deduction limitation rules and certain transfers within a Qualifying Group), and — because the revenue test looks at the relevant period and prior periods together — a business that elects relief in one year but breaches the threshold in a subsequent year cannot re-elect for that later year even if a future year's revenue happens to fall back under the threshold. These are not minor technicalities: a fast-growing business that elects relief in its first, lower-revenue year without modelling its likely growth trajectory can find itself worse off than if it had simply computed taxable income properly from the outset, particularly where early losses would otherwise have been available to offset profits in a later, higher-revenue year.

Because the first UAE Corporate Tax periods generally cover financial years starting on or after 1 June 2023, most Small Business Relief elections to date have been first-time elections made without the benefit of a full prior-period track record, and often prepared quickly to meet the initial filing deadline. PNPC's Small Business Relief Advisory & Filing engagement treats the decision to elect as a considered choice, not a default — testing the revenue threshold against properly reconciled accounting records, confirming the taxable person is not in an excluded category, modelling the effect of forgoing loss carry-forward and other reliefs against the business's realistic growth trajectory, and only then preparing the election and filing the return. Where the numbers say relief is the right call, we file it correctly; where they do not, we say so before the election is made rather than after the FTA has tested it.

In practice, the Small Business Relief election is not a standalone application submitted separately to the Federal Tax Authority — it is made by ticking the relevant box within the Corporate Tax return itself on the EmaraTax portal for the relevant tax period. This has a practical consequence that catches some first-time filers off guard: the eligibility test, the exclusion-category screening, and the loss/relief trade-off analysis all need to be finished before the return is prepared, because the return form does not walk a taxable person through the underlying reasoning — it simply records the outcome of a decision that should already have been made. A business that leaves the Small Business Relief question until the return is being completed, rather than treating it as a distinct advisory step earlier in the filing cycle, risks making the election (or declining it) on an incomplete or last-minute analysis.

The prescribed revenue threshold for Small Business Relief is set by Ministerial Decision and is a separate figure, under a separate legal test, from the AED 375,000 taxable-income threshold below which taxable income is taxed at 0% under the standard Corporate Tax computation, and separate again from the AED 375,000 mandatory VAT registration threshold and AED 187,500 voluntary VAT registration threshold under Federal Decree-Law No. 8 of 2017. The recurrence of similar-sounding figures across these three distinct tests — a Small Business Relief revenue threshold, a Corporate Tax 0% taxable-income band, and VAT registration thresholds — is a genuine, recurring source of confusion, because each test measures a different base (gross revenue versus taxable income versus VAT-taxable supplies), operates under a different law, and produces a different consequence if crossed. PNPC treats these as three separate questions in every Small Business Relief engagement rather than allowing a client's memory of one threshold to be applied loosely to another.

Where a taxable person is part of a Tax Group formed under the Corporate Tax Law's Tax Group provisions, the Small Business Relief revenue threshold is tested against the Tax Group as a whole, because a Tax Group is treated as a single taxable person for Corporate Tax purposes once formed — the revenue of every member is relevant to the test, not just the revenue of the entity that might otherwise have qualified on a standalone basis. This means a small, genuinely low-revenue entity can lose access to Small Business Relief purely because it has joined a Tax Group with other, higher-revenue members, which is a structural consequence worth understanding before, rather than after, a Tax Group election is made.

Because Small Business Relief removes the need for a full taxable income computation, it also removes much of the supporting adjustment schedule that a standard filing would otherwise require. This is the source of its genuine compliance-cost benefit, but it applies only to the period for which relief is validly elected; it creates no exemption from maintaining proper accounting records, since the revenue figure relied upon still needs to be substantiated if the FTA asks how it was calculated.

When Small Business Relief Advisory & Filing applies to you

Your UAE resident taxable person's revenue for the relevant tax period, and for every prior tax period since Corporate Tax became applicable to you, sits at or below the prescribed Ministerial Decision threshold and you want to confirm eligibility before electing

You are a small or early-stage business preparing your first UAE Corporate Tax return and want a clear recommendation on whether Small Business Relief is the right election for your specific revenue and growth profile

You elected Small Business Relief in a prior period and need the eligibility re-tested for the current period, since a revenue breach in any period can permanently affect future eligibility

You are unsure whether your entity falls into an excluded category — a Multinational Enterprise Group constituent, or a Qualifying Free Zone Person — that would bar a Small Business Relief election regardless of revenue

You want your qualifying revenue figure calculated correctly and consistently with your accounting records, including how related-party revenue and specific income categories should be treated in the threshold test

You are forecasting meaningful revenue growth and want a considered comparison of electing Small Business Relief now versus computing taxable income properly and preserving loss carry-forward and other reliefs for the future

Your business currently has, or expects, tax losses in an early period and needs to understand exactly what electing Small Business Relief would mean for the ability to carry those losses forward

You claimed Small Business Relief in a previous filing without a documented eligibility basis and want that position reviewed and properly evidenced before the FTA examines it

You are part of a group structure and need clarity on how the Small Business Relief revenue test applies at the level of the specific taxable person, not the wider group

Your revenue is close to the prescribed threshold and a small change in classification of a specific income item could determine whether the election is even available

You are considering forming, or have recently formed, a Tax Group with other UAE entities and need to understand how the Small Business Relief revenue test applies to the Tax Group as a single taxable person rather than to your entity alone

You want a plain, written explanation distinguishing the Small Business Relief revenue threshold from the separate AED 375,000 Corporate Tax 0% taxable-income band and the separate VAT registration thresholds, because your business has been conflating the three

When a different engagement is more appropriate

Your revenue clearly and comfortably exceeds the Small Business Relief threshold for the relevant or a prior period — that calls for standard Corporate Tax Return Filing & Compliance with a full taxable income computation, not relief advisory

You are a Qualifying Free Zone Person relying on the 0% regime on Qualifying Income — that is a separate, more detailed eligibility framework and should be addressed through Free Zone / Qualifying Free Zone Person Corporate Tax Advisory rather than Small Business Relief

Your entity is a constituent of a Multinational Enterprise Group within the OECD BEPS Pillar Two definition — Small Business Relief is not available to you regardless of revenue, and the relevant engagement is broader Corporate Tax Advisory or Impact Assessment

You have not yet registered for Corporate Tax or determined your tax period — that calls for Corporate Tax Registration first, since an election can only be made as part of an actual Corporate Tax return

You have already received an FTA audit notification or query specifically challenging a Small Business Relief claim you made — that is better handled through Corporate Tax Audit Assistance or Representation Before Tax Authorities, which manage the FTA response process directly

You want general Corporate Tax planning or structuring advice unrelated to the Small Business Relief threshold and election — that sits with Corporate Tax Advisory

You are deregistering the entity entirely and Small Business Relief is not the live question — that is Corporate Tax De-Registration

You want a guaranteed outcome that Small Business Relief will always produce the lowest possible tax liability — the right answer depends on your specific revenue trajectory, loss position, and business plans, and a properly reasoned recommendation sometimes points away from electing relief

You are actively forming, or already part of, a Tax Group and the real question is whether the Tax Group as a whole should elect Small Business Relief — that decision needs to be modelled at the Tax Group level as part of the Tax Group election analysis, not assessed for your entity in isolation

You need a full accounting-to-taxable-income adjustment schedule prepared regardless of the Small Business Relief outcome — for example because a lender, investor, or auditor requires a computed taxable income figure — which calls for Corporate Tax Return Filing & Compliance rather than relief advisory alone

Structure Comparison

Small Business Relief vs the other routes to a UAE Corporate Tax filing position

FeatureSmall Business Relief ElectionStandard Taxable Income ComputationQualifying Free Zone Person (0% on Qualifying Income)No election — full 9% computation above AED 375,000
Basis of reliefRevenue-based threshold test under Article 21 of the Corporate Tax Law and its Ministerial DecisionActual taxable income computed after all adjustments, with 0% up to AED 375,000 and 9% aboveSubstance, Qualifying Income composition, and de minimis conditions under the Free Zone regimeNo relief elected — full computation applies as the default position
Who can use itResident taxable persons under the prescribed revenue threshold, excluding MNE Group constituents and Qualifying Free Zone PersonsAny taxable person; the default basis for anyone not electing relief or claiming Free Zone statusFree Zone Persons meeting substance and income-composition conditionsAny taxable person that chooses not to, or cannot, elect relief
Compliance burdenMaterially lighter — no detailed taxable income computation required for the periodFull computation: accounting-to-taxable-income reconciliation, adjustments, schedulesFull computation plus ongoing substance and income-mix testingFull computation as under standard basis
Loss carry-forward impactLosses in a relief-elected period cannot be carried forward to a later, non-relief periodLosses computed and carried forward subject to the general utilisation rulesLosses computed and tracked within the Qualifying Income / non-Qualifying Income splitLosses computed and carried forward subject to the general utilisation rules
Effect of exceeding the threshold in a later periodElection is void for that period going forward and cannot generally be reinstated once revenue exceeds itNot applicable — no threshold to breachFailing conditions in any period risks losing Qualifying status for that and potentially future periodsNot applicable
Typical profileEarly-stage or genuinely small resident businesses with modest, stable revenueEstablished businesses with revenue above the relief threshold or complex adjustmentsFree Zone entities with genuine UAE substance and qualifying income streamsAny business that has assessed relief is not the right fit despite eligibility
Related-party / transfer pricing documentationGenerally not required for the period, since no full computation is performedRequired for material related-party transactions under the arm's length principleRequired, including for transactions affecting Qualifying Income statusRequired for material related-party transactions under the arm's length principle
Effect on VAT obligationsNone — VAT is a separate regime under its own thresholds and rulesNone — VAT assessed independentlyNone — VAT assessed independentlyNone — VAT assessed independently
Interaction with a Tax Group electionRevenue tested at Tax Group level once formed, as a single taxable personNot applicable in the same way — each member's figures feed the consolidated computationA Qualifying Free Zone Person's participation in a Tax Group involves its own separate conditionsNot applicable

These are not mutually exclusive over time for the same entity — a business can validly elect Small Business Relief in an early, lower-revenue year and move to a standard computation once revenue grows past the threshold. PNPC's role is to test which basis is correct for the specific period under review and to flag, honestly, where electing relief now could cost more later through forgone loss carry-forward.

How it works
#Stage & What PNPC DoesWhat Businesses Get Wrong Without CA GuidanceTimeline
1Entity and Category Screening — Confirming the taxable person is not in an excluded categoryWe first confirm the entity is a resident taxable person, not a constituent of a Multinational Enterprise Group within the OECD BEPS Pillar Two definition, and not a Qualifying Free Zone Person electing the separate 0% regime — any of these rules out Small Business Relief regardless of revenue. Businesses sometimes assume revenue alone determines eligibility and skip this step entirely.Day 1–2
2Qualifying Revenue Calculation — Building the actual revenue figure the threshold test usesWe calculate revenue for the relevant tax period consistent with the applicable accounting standard and the Corporate Tax Law's revenue recognition principles, reconciling it to the management or audited accounts. A revenue figure pulled loosely from a sales report, without reconciling to the accounting records, is a common source of an eligibility error that only surfaces later.Week 1
3Prior-Period Revenue Check — Testing every prior tax period, not just the current oneThe threshold test looks at the relevant tax period and each prior tax period since the entity became subject to Corporate Tax — a single breach in any earlier period can disqualify the current election even if current-year revenue is comfortably under the threshold. We build this multi-period check explicitly rather than assessing the current year in isolation.Week 1
4Loss and Relief Trade-Off Modelling — Understanding what electing relief actually forgoesWe model the effect of electing Small Business Relief on the ability to carry forward tax losses to a later, non-relief period, and on access to other reliefs (such as Qualifying Group transfers) that would otherwise be available under a standard computation. For a business forecasting near-term losses followed by growth, electing relief in the loss year can be the more expensive choice over a multi-year horizon.Week 1–2
5Growth Trajectory Discussion — A forward-looking view, not just this year's numbersWe discuss realistic revenue projections for the next one to two tax periods, because a business expected to exceed the threshold soon may prefer the discipline of a standard computation from the outset rather than switching bases mid-stream, which can complicate loss tracking and comparability.Week 1–2
6Election Recommendation Memo — A written, reasoned recommendation before anything is filedPNPC documents whether Small Business Relief should be elected, the revenue figures relied upon, the prior-period check performed, and the trade-offs considered — so the client has a clear record of why the election was made, which is itself useful evidence if the position is later reviewed by the FTA.Week 2
7Return Preparation on EmaraTax — Making the election as part of the actual Corporate Tax returnSmall Business Relief is elected within the Corporate Tax return itself on EmaraTax, not through a separate standalone application — we prepare and populate the return accordingly, including the disclosures the relief election requires even though a full income computation is not needed.Week 2–3
8Supporting Workpaper File — Keeping the evidence behind the election, not just the filed returnWe assemble and retain the revenue reconciliation, the category-exclusion check, and the recommendation memo as a supporting file, distinct from the return itself, so the eligibility basis is documented and defensible if queried later.Week 2–3
9Filing and Confirmation — Submission within the statutory filing deadlineThe return is filed through EmaraTax within the applicable filing deadline — generally nine months from the end of the tax period — and confirmation of submission is retained for the client's records.Per the statutory filing deadline
10Annual Re-Testing — Confirming eligibility again for the next tax periodSmall Business Relief is not a one-time determination — we re-run the eligibility test at the start of each subsequent filing cycle, since a revenue increase, a change in group structure, or a Free Zone status change can each affect whether the election remains available.Start of each subsequent tax period
11Threshold Breach Response — Switching cleanly to a standard computation when relief is no longer availableWhere a period's revenue exceeds the threshold, we move the client to a full taxable income computation for that period without disruption, and confirm the correct treatment of any prior relief-period position, including the loss carry-forward restriction that continues to apply to losses from the relief period itself.As soon as a threshold breach is identified
12Post-Filing Retention — Keeping the file ready for future reference or FTA reviewThe filed return, the revenue reconciliation, and the recommendation memo are retained in accordance with the Corporate Tax Law's record-retention requirements, so the eligibility basis for the election remains demonstrable well beyond the filing date itself.Ongoing, per statutory retention period
13Tax Group Cross-Check — Confirming whether a Tax Group changes the revenue testWhere the entity is part of, or considering, a Tax Group, we confirm the eligibility test is run at the Tax Group level, not the standalone entity level — a step easily missed by businesses that assess Small Business Relief before finalising a Tax Group decision.As applicable, alongside Tax Group planning
14Correction Pathway Assessment — Where a prior election needs revisitingFor clients arriving with a prior, unassessed Small Business Relief position, we determine whether a voluntary disclosure is needed before the current period's election can be relied upon, since an uncorrected prior-period issue can affect the current multi-period revenue test.As needed, before current-period filing

Realistic timeline: for a straightforward, clearly eligible small business with organised accounting records, the eligibility test, election, and return filing can typically be completed within two to three weeks. Where prior-period records need reconstruction, or where the growth-trajectory and loss trade-off discussion genuinely changes the recommendation, the process runs longer — the time is better spent getting the election decision right than filing quickly on an unexamined assumption.

Document Checklist
Entity & Registration Documents

UAE Corporate Tax registration certificate and Tax Registration Number (TRN)

Trade licence copy, including any amendments during the tax period under review

Confirmation of tax period start and end dates, and whether this is the entity's first Corporate Tax period

Group structure chart, where relevant, to confirm the entity's status relative to any Multinational Enterprise Group

Free Zone licence, if applicable, to confirm the entity is not a Qualifying Free Zone Person for the period

Revenue & Accounting Records

Management or audited financial statements for the relevant tax period and each relevant prior tax period

Revenue schedule broken down by category, reconciled to the general ledger and trial balance

Details of any related-party or intercompany revenue included in the total, and how it has been treated

Bank statements or sales records supporting the reported revenue figure where accounts are not independently audited

Prior-Period Eligibility Evidence

Revenue figures and, where applicable, prior Corporate Tax returns for every earlier tax period since the entity became subject to Corporate Tax

Any prior Small Business Relief election made, and the workings that supported it at the time

Confirmation of whether revenue in any prior period exceeded the prescribed threshold

Loss & Relief Position

Details of any current or expected tax losses for the period under review

Prior-period loss carry-forward schedule, if any losses exist from an earlier, non-relief period

Details of any Qualifying Group transfers or other reliefs the business may wish to preserve access to

Forward Planning Inputs

Realistic revenue projections for the next one to two tax periods

Business plan or funding-round context, where a step change in revenue is anticipated

Details of any planned restructuring, acquisition, or group change that could affect future eligibility

Governance & Sign-Off

Authorised signatory confirmation for EmaraTax filing

Management sign-off on the revenue figures relied upon for the eligibility test

Written acknowledgement of the recommendation memo before the election is made

Tax Group & Group-Structure Scenarios

Tax Group formation documents or application status, where the entity is or will be part of a Tax Group, since the revenue test applies to the Tax Group as a single taxable person once formed

Combined revenue schedule for all Tax Group members, where relevant, rather than the standalone entity's revenue alone

Details of any recent acquisition, merger, or business combination affecting the entity during or shortly before the relevant tax period

Correction & Voluntary Disclosure Scenarios

Copies of any prior Corporate Tax return where Small Business Relief eligibility was not properly assessed at the time of filing

Working papers or correspondence relating to any previously identified revenue misstatement affecting a prior election

Any voluntary disclosure already submitted, or under consideration, relating to a Small Business Relief position

Ongoing obligations
PhaseTriggered ByPNPC CA GuidanceRisk If Ignored
Initial Eligibility AssessmentFirst Corporate Tax return due, or a new tax period commencingFull revenue reconciliation, prior-period check, and exclusion-category screening before any election is made, supported by a written recommendation memo.An election made on an unverified revenue figure or without checking prior periods can later prove invalid, exposing the taxable person to a full recomputation and potential penalties if the FTA identifies the error.
Annual Re-TestingStart of each subsequent tax period after a relief electionRe-run the revenue and exclusion-category test for the new period; do not assume continued eligibility simply because relief was validly elected previously.Continuing to file on a Small Business Relief basis after a threshold breach understates taxable income and can trigger an FTA assessment plus late-payment exposure on the underpaid tax.
Threshold BreachRevenue in a given period exceeds the prescribed thresholdSwitch cleanly to a standard taxable income computation for that period, with the loss carry-forward restriction from any earlier relief period correctly applied and documented.Businesses that do not track the loss carry-forward restriction can mistakenly claim losses from a relief-elected period against a later period's income, which the FTA is entitled to disallow.
Growth or Funding EventSignificant revenue growth, a funding round, or a group restructuringReassess whether continuing to elect Small Business Relief remains the right choice given the updated revenue trajectory, and model the loss carry-forward trade-off before the next filing.A business that keeps electing relief by default after outgrowing its original rationale can forgo materially valuable loss relief in later, higher-revenue periods.
Group Structure ChangeThe entity becomes part of, or is acquired by, a Multinational Enterprise GroupConfirm immediately whether the entity now falls into an excluded category that bars future Small Business Relief elections, regardless of its own revenue level.Continuing to elect relief after becoming part of an excluded group is a straightforward eligibility failure that an FTA review would identify without difficulty.
Free Zone Status ChangeThe entity relocates to, or elects, Qualifying Free Zone Person statusReassess the correct basis of relief — Small Business Relief and the Qualifying Free Zone Person 0% regime address different situations and are not both available for the same period.Attempting to apply both regimes to the same period creates an inconsistent filing position that invites FTA scrutiny.
FTA Query or AuditThe FTA questions a Small Business Relief claim already filedProduce the retained eligibility file — the revenue reconciliation, the prior-period check, and the recommendation memo — as the evidentiary basis for the position taken at the time of filing.A Small Business Relief claim with no contemporaneous eligibility documentation is materially harder to defend under audit than one built and retained at the time of filing.
Record RetentionOngoing, throughout and after the relief periodRetain the revenue workings, exclusion-category check, and recommendation memo for the full statutory record-retention period, generally seven years from the end of the relevant tax period.Records discarded before the retention period expires leave the entity unable to substantiate a prior Small Business Relief election if it is later reviewed.
Tax Group Formation or ChangeThe entity joins, leaves, or changes the composition of a Tax GroupRe-run the Small Business Relief revenue test at the Tax Group level, since a Tax Group is treated as a single taxable person and the combined revenue of all members determines eligibility going forward.Continuing to test eligibility on a standalone basis after joining a Tax Group can result in an invalid election that overstates the entity's actual eligibility.
Acquisition or Business CombinationThe entity acquires, or is acquired by, another business during or shortly before a tax periodAssess the specific transaction structure to determine how it affects the revenue figures used in the eligibility test, rather than assuming the prior period's determination carries forward unchanged.An acquisition that meaningfully changes the entity's revenue profile but is not reflected in the eligibility test can leave an election standing on stale facts.
Common mistakes to avoid
Revenue & Eligibility Testing Mistakes

Relying on a loosely compiled sales report instead of a revenue figure properly reconciled to the general ledger and trial balance

Testing only the current tax period's revenue and skipping the check against every prior tax period since the entity became subject to Corporate Tax

Assuming a free zone licence alone determines Small Business Relief eligibility either way, without checking whether the entity actually is or is not a Qualifying Free Zone Person

Overlooking that a Multinational Enterprise Group constituent is excluded from Small Business Relief regardless of how low its own standalone revenue is

Treating a borderline revenue figure sitting exactly at the prescribed threshold as automatically eligible without checking the precise current wording of the Ministerial Decision

Election & Filing Sequencing Errors

Assuming Small Business Relief removes the obligation to file a Corporate Tax return at all, rather than simplifying the computation within a return that must still be filed

Leaving the Small Business Relief eligibility analysis until the return is already being prepared, instead of treating it as a distinct advisory step earlier in the filing cycle

Electing Small Business Relief before Corporate Tax registration and a confirmed tax period are in place, when the election can only be made as part of an actual Corporate Tax return

Not re-testing eligibility for each subsequent tax period and instead assuming a prior valid election continues to apply automatically

Loss, Growth & Group Trade-Off Mistakes

Electing Small Business Relief in an early loss-making period without modelling the effect of forgoing loss carry-forward against a realistic near-term growth trajectory

Forming or joining a Tax Group without re-testing the Small Business Relief revenue threshold at the combined Tax Group level, since a Tax Group is treated as a single taxable person

Restructuring a business purely to keep revenue under the threshold with no genuine commercial rationale, which risks challenge under the Corporate Tax Law's general anti-abuse provision

Discovering a prior-period revenue misstatement affecting an existing election and leaving it uncorrected rather than addressing it through a voluntary disclosure where warranted

Frequently asked
What is Small Business Relief under UAE Corporate Tax?

Small Business Relief is an elective measure under Article 21 of Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022 that allows an eligible resident taxable person, whose revenue for the relevant tax period and every prior tax period does not exceed the threshold prescribed by Ministerial Decision, to elect to be treated as having derived no taxable income for that period. This removes the need for a full taxable income computation for the period, significantly simplifying the compliance burden, though a Corporate Tax return still needs to be filed.

Practitioner noteWe remind clients that Small Business Relief simplifies the computation, not the filing obligation itself — the return still has to be submitted on time, with the election properly recorded.
How is the revenue threshold for Small Business Relief determined?

The specific revenue threshold is prescribed by Ministerial Decision under the Corporate Tax Law, and the test looks at revenue for the relevant tax period and for every prior tax period since the entity became subject to Corporate Tax — not just the current year in isolation. Revenue for this purpose is generally determined in accordance with the applicable accounting standards used to prepare the entity's financial statements.

Practitioner noteWe always confirm the currently applicable threshold figure against the latest Ministerial Decision before relying on it, since a business's memory of 'the threshold' from an earlier filing cycle is not something we take as read without checking the current guidance.
Can any UAE business elect Small Business Relief if its revenue is under the threshold?

No. Certain categories of taxable person are excluded regardless of revenue — most notably, entities that are constituents of a Multinational Enterprise Group within the OECD BEPS Pillar Two definition, and Qualifying Free Zone Persons that are subject to the separate 0% Qualifying Free Zone Person regime. Meeting the revenue threshold is a necessary condition, not a sufficient one.

Practitioner noteThe exclusion-category check is the first thing we do, before spending any time on the revenue calculation itself — there is no point precisely calculating a revenue figure for an entity that is barred from the election regardless of the number.
What happens if our revenue exceeds the threshold in a later tax period after we elected Small Business Relief in an earlier one?

The election is period-specific and must be re-tested for each tax period. If revenue in a given period exceeds the prescribed threshold, Small Business Relief is not available for that period, and the entity must compute taxable income under the standard rules. Because the eligibility test also looks at prior periods, a breach in one period can also affect whether relief remains available in later periods.

Practitioner noteWe build a running revenue tracker for clients electing Small Business Relief specifically so a threshold breach is caught proactively at planning stage, well before the filing deadline forces a rushed reassessment.
If we elect Small Business Relief and incur a loss in that period, can we carry that loss forward to a future year?

No. Tax losses incurred in a tax period for which Small Business Relief has been elected cannot be carried forward and utilised against taxable income in a subsequent tax period in which the relief is not elected. This is one of the more significant trade-offs of the election and is often underappreciated by businesses that focus only on the immediate compliance simplification.

Practitioner noteThis is the single factor most likely to change our recommendation for an early-stage business — if a client realistically expects a loss this year followed by meaningful profit in the near future, we model whether preserving the loss carry-forward through a standard computation is worth more than the compliance simplification Small Business Relief offers.
Is Small Business Relief a permanent feature of UAE Corporate Tax, or will it expire?

Small Business Relief applies for tax periods ending on or before a date specified by Cabinet Decision, reflecting its role as a transitional simplification measure introduced alongside the early years of the Corporate Tax regime rather than a permanent structural feature of the law. Businesses relying on it should not assume indefinite continued availability without checking the current applicable cut-off.

Practitioner noteWe flag this explicitly to clients so that longer-term tax planning is not built on an assumption that Small Business Relief will always be available — we check the current Cabinet Decision position as part of every annual re-assessment.
Does electing Small Business Relief mean we do not need to file a Corporate Tax return at all?

No. A Corporate Tax return still needs to be filed for the period, and the Small Business Relief election is made as part of that return on EmaraTax. What the relief removes is the need for a full taxable income computation and its associated adjustment schedules — the filing obligation itself remains.

Practitioner noteWe occasionally see businesses assume Small Business Relief means no filing obligation at all — that misunderstanding, if acted on, results in a genuine late-filing exposure even though the underlying tax position may have been perfectly sound.
How does PNPC calculate the qualifying revenue figure for the eligibility test?

We reconcile the revenue figure to the entity's accounting records, prepared in accordance with the applicable accounting standard, and apply the revenue recognition principles relevant under the Corporate Tax Law. Where a business has multiple revenue streams, related-party transactions, or unusual one-off receipts, we work through each category to confirm it is treated consistently with how the Ministerial Decision defines revenue for this specific test.

Practitioner noteA loosely compiled sales report is not the same thing as a properly reconciled revenue figure — we insist on tying the number used for the eligibility test back to the general ledger and trial balance before relying on it.
We are part of a wider group with other UAE and overseas entities. Does the Small Business Relief threshold apply to the group or to our specific entity?

The revenue threshold test is applied at the level of the specific taxable person, though the exclusion for Multinational Enterprise Group constituents looks at the group's characteristics as a whole under the OECD BEPS Pillar Two definition. A UAE entity with modest standalone revenue can still be excluded from electing Small Business Relief if it forms part of a qualifying Multinational Enterprise Group, even though its own revenue is well under the threshold.

Practitioner noteWe always ask for the full group structure at the outset of a Small Business Relief assessment, precisely because the group-level exclusion is easy to miss if we only look at the UAE entity's own accounts in isolation.
What if we made a Small Business Relief election in a prior period without checking eligibility properly — can this be corrected?

Yes, this is a common situation we are asked to review. We independently re-test the eligibility position for the period in question against the properly reconciled revenue figures and the exclusion-category criteria. Where the original election appears to have been invalid, we advise on the appropriate correction, which may include a voluntary disclosure to the FTA depending on the extent and materiality of the error.

Practitioner noteWe would always rather identify and correct an invalid prior election proactively, through a voluntary disclosure where warranted, than have the FTA identify it first during a review — the penalty position is materially different depending on who catches the error.
Can a business that has never registered for Corporate Tax simply elect Small Business Relief instead of registering?

No. Small Business Relief is an election made within a Corporate Tax return, which in turn requires the entity to be registered for Corporate Tax and to have a confirmed tax period. Registration is a separate and prior obligation under the Corporate Tax Law that applies regardless of whether the entity ultimately elects Small Business Relief once registered.

Practitioner noteWe occasionally encounter the assumption that a small business under the revenue threshold does not need to register at all — that is incorrect, and we address registration first before any Small Business Relief conversation makes sense.
Does electing Small Business Relief affect our VAT position or other UAE tax obligations?

No. Small Business Relief is specific to Corporate Tax under Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022 and has no direct effect on VAT obligations under Federal Decree-Law No. 8 of 2017, which operates under its own separate registration thresholds (AED 375,000 mandatory, AED 187,500 voluntary) and compliance framework. A business can validly elect Small Business Relief for Corporate Tax while remaining fully subject to its ordinary VAT obligations.

Practitioner noteWe keep the VAT and Corporate Tax conversations distinct for clients specifically because the thresholds, though similar in magnitude, are entirely separate tests under separate laws — conflating them is a recurring source of confusion we correct early.
What documentation should we retain to support a Small Business Relief election if the FTA later asks about it?

We recommend retaining the revenue reconciliation used for the eligibility test, evidence that the entity is not in an excluded category (such as confirmation it is not a Qualifying Free Zone Person or Multinational Enterprise Group constituent), the filed Corporate Tax return showing the election, and a written record of the basis on which the election was made — for the full statutory record-retention period, generally seven years from the end of the relevant tax period.

Practitioner noteThe recommendation memo we prepare for every Small Business Relief engagement is designed specifically to serve as this contemporaneous evidence — it is written to stand up on its own if reviewed years later, not just to justify the decision at the time it was made.
How does PNPC price a Small Business Relief Advisory & Filing engagement?

PNPC scopes and quotes this engagement based on the complexity of the revenue reconciliation, whether prior periods need to be reconstructed, whether group-structure or exclusion-category questions arise, and whether the loss carry-forward trade-off modelling is a material part of the decision. For a straightforward, clearly eligible small business with organised records, this is typically a modest, fixed-fee engagement bundled with the return filing itself.

Practitioner noteWe provide a written scope and fee estimate before beginning work, and for most small business clients this engagement is genuinely proportionate in cost to the size of the business it is serving.
Is the Small Business Relief revenue threshold the same figure as the AED 375,000 Corporate Tax 0% taxable income band?

No, these are two separate figures under two separate legal tests, even though both are sometimes mentioned in the same breath by business owners. The AED 375,000 figure is the amount of taxable income (not revenue) taxed at 0% under the standard Corporate Tax computation for every taxable person. The Small Business Relief revenue threshold is a distinct figure prescribed by its own Ministerial Decision, measured on gross revenue, and triggers a completely different consequence — being treated as having no taxable income at all for the period, rather than simply having the first tranche of taxable income taxed at 0%.

Practitioner noteWe draw this distinction explicitly and in writing for every client, because a business that has heard 'AED 375,000' used in both contexts naturally assumes it is one test — it is not, and conflating them can lead to a materially wrong conclusion about whether relief is even relevant to their situation.
Is the Small Business Relief revenue threshold the same as the VAT registration thresholds?

No. The VAT mandatory registration threshold (AED 375,000) and voluntary registration threshold (AED 187,500) apply to VAT-taxable supplies under Federal Decree-Law No. 8 of 2017, an entirely separate law from the Corporate Tax Law under which Small Business Relief is granted. A business's VAT registration position has no bearing on whether it is eligible to elect Small Business Relief for Corporate Tax, and vice versa.

Practitioner noteWe keep a client's VAT threshold conversation and their Small Business Relief conversation in clearly separate sections of any advisory note we prepare, specifically to avoid the two being read together as if they were one test.
If we form a Tax Group with another UAE entity, does the Small Business Relief revenue test still apply to our entity individually?

No. Once a Tax Group is formed, the Tax Group is treated as a single taxable person for Corporate Tax purposes, and the Small Business Relief revenue threshold is tested against the combined revenue of the Tax Group as a whole rather than against any individual member's standalone revenue. A small, low-revenue entity that would otherwise clearly qualify on its own can lose access to Small Business Relief simply by joining a Tax Group with higher-revenue members.

Practitioner noteThis is one of the first questions we raise whenever a Small Business Relief client mentions they are considering a Tax Group election with another entity — the two decisions need to be modelled together, not made independently of each other.
Can a natural person carrying on a business in the UAE elect Small Business Relief?

Small Business Relief is available to eligible resident taxable persons under the Corporate Tax Law, which can include a natural person conducting a business or business activity in the UAE where that activity brings them within the scope of Corporate Tax. As with any taxable person, eligibility still depends on the revenue threshold test, the prior-period check, and confirming the individual is not in an excluded category.

Practitioner noteWe assess a sole proprietor or individual business owner's Corporate Tax scope first — since not every individual's activity is within scope in the first place — before moving on to whether Small Business Relief is the right election once scope is confirmed.
Our business had zero or near-zero revenue this period. Do we still need to go through the Small Business Relief eligibility process?

Yes, formally the same process applies, though the outcome is usually straightforward. A dormant or pre-revenue business with revenue clearly at nil or near-nil will typically pass the revenue threshold test comfortably, but the exclusion-category screening (Multinational Enterprise Group membership, Qualifying Free Zone Person status) and the prior-period check still need to be confirmed, and a Corporate Tax return generally still needs to be filed.

Practitioner noteWe do not skip the exclusion-category check for a dormant entity just because the revenue side of the test is obviously satisfied — the two parts of the test are independent, and skipping one because the other looks easy is exactly the kind of shortcut that later causes problems.
Our first tax period was shorter than 12 months because we incorporated partway through the year. Does that change how the revenue threshold is tested?

A shortened first tax period is a fact we account for specifically when testing revenue against the prescribed threshold, since the threshold and the accompanying guidance address how revenue is measured for periods that are not a full 12 months. We do not simply apply the same revenue figure a full-year entity would use without first checking the current Ministerial Decision and FTA guidance on how a short first period is treated.

Practitioner noteWe treat a short first tax period as a flag to check the current guidance carefully rather than assuming a straightforward pro-rata approach applies without confirmation — this is an area where relying on outdated or generic guidance can produce the wrong answer.
We are a free zone company but have not elected, or do not qualify for, Qualifying Free Zone Person status. Are we still excluded from Small Business Relief?

Not necessarily. The Small Business Relief exclusion applies specifically to entities that are Qualifying Free Zone Persons benefiting from the separate 0% Qualifying Income regime — it does not automatically exclude every entity that happens to hold a free zone licence. A free zone entity that has not elected, or does not meet the conditions for, Qualifying Free Zone Person status is generally assessed as a standard taxable person and can potentially be eligible for Small Business Relief on the same basis as a mainland entity, subject to the usual revenue and exclusion-category tests.

Practitioner noteWe see this misunderstood in both directions — some free zone clients assume they are automatically excluded from Small Business Relief simply because they are in a free zone, and others assume they automatically qualify for the 0% Qualifying Free Zone Person regime for the same reason. Neither assumption is safe without testing the specific facts.
Can we elect Small Business Relief for this period and then decide not to elect it next period if our circumstances change?

Yes, in principle — the election is made period by period, and a taxable person that elects relief in one tax period is not obligated to elect it again in a subsequent period, provided the entity remains eligible or simply chooses a standard computation instead. What is not generally available is re-electing relief for a later period after revenue has exceeded the threshold in an intervening period, since the multi-period eligibility test looks backward across prior periods as well as the current one.

Practitioner noteWe remind clients that the flexibility runs in only one direction — moving from relief to a standard computation is straightforward, but moving back to relief after a threshold breach generally is not, so the decision each period should be made on its own merits rather than assumed reversible.
If we restructure our business specifically to keep revenue under the Small Business Relief threshold, could that be challenged by the FTA under the general anti-abuse rule?

Potentially, yes. The Corporate Tax Law includes a general anti-abuse provision that allows the FTA to disregard or adjust an arrangement entered into with the main purpose, or one of the main purposes, of obtaining a Corporate Tax advantage inconsistent with the intention of the law and lacking valid commercial or economic reasons. An artificial split of a genuinely larger business into smaller entities purely to keep each one under the Small Business Relief threshold, with no real commercial rationale for the split, is the kind of arrangement this provision exists to address.

Practitioner noteWe only ever recommend Small Business Relief on the basis of a business's genuine, organically arrived-at revenue position — never as the output of an artificial restructuring designed to manufacture eligibility, which is a structure we would decline to support.
We discovered a prior-period revenue figure was misstated after we had already elected Small Business Relief based on it. What should we do?

The corrected revenue figure needs to be re-tested against the threshold for the period in question, and if the correction means the original election was not actually valid, this generally needs to be addressed through a voluntary disclosure to the FTA rather than left unaddressed. Acting on this proactively, once the misstatement is identified, is materially better than waiting for the FTA to identify the same discrepancy independently.

Practitioner noteWe treat a discovered revenue misstatement affecting a Small Business Relief election as urgent, not routine — the earlier a correction is made through the appropriate channel, the more favourably it is generally viewed relative to the same issue surfacing through an FTA review.
Does electing Small Business Relief prevent us from later claiming Small Business Relief has never been used in disputes with the FTA about our overall filing history?

A valid Small Business Relief election, properly evidenced, is simply the correct application of the law for that period and forms part of the entity's normal filing history — it does not create any adverse inference about the business's broader compliance record. What matters if the FTA later reviews the position is whether the election was validly made and properly documented at the time, not whether relief was elected at all.

Practitioner noteSome clients worry, without real basis, that electing a simplification measure like Small Business Relief somehow signals something negative to the FTA — it does not; what actually matters is whether the underlying eligibility test was performed and evidenced correctly.
Can our tax agent or a generalist bookkeeper make the Small Business Relief eligibility determination for us, or does it need to be a Chartered Accountant?

There is no statutory requirement that only a Chartered Accountant can make the determination, and businesses can and do make it themselves or with a range of service providers. What matters is the quality and defensibility of the underlying revenue reconciliation, exclusion-category screening, and trade-off analysis — a determination made without properly reconciling the revenue figure to the accounting records, or without checking the exclusion categories, carries real risk regardless of who prepared it.

Practitioner noteWe are candid that the value we add is in the rigour of the underlying analysis and the documented reasoning behind it, not in any formal requirement that only a CA firm can perform this specific task — the risk sits in a rushed or unreconciled determination, whoever makes it.
We are acquiring another UAE business partway through our tax period. Does the acquired entity's revenue get combined with ours for the Small Business Relief test?

This depends on the specific structure of the acquisition — whether it is a share acquisition leaving the acquired entity as a separate taxable person, an asset acquisition folded into your existing entity, or a step toward forming a Tax Group — and each structure has a different effect on how revenue is measured for the eligibility test going forward. We assess the specific transaction structure rather than applying a generic combination rule.

Practitioner noteAcquisitions and business combinations are exactly the kind of event that should trigger a fresh Small Business Relief eligibility check before the next filing, not an assumption that the prior period's determination still holds unchanged.
If we change our financial year end while electing Small Business Relief, does that affect our eligibility?

A change in financial year end changes the tax periods being tested and can create a transitional period of a different length, which needs to be factored into how revenue is measured and compared to the prescribed threshold for that transitional period specifically. Any change to the financial year end also requires the appropriate FTA notification and approval process to be followed correctly.

Practitioner noteWe treat a financial year end change as a trigger for a full re-run of the Small Business Relief eligibility test for the affected periods, not a routine administrative change that leaves the prior year's determination untouched.
Our accountant already filed our Corporate Tax return without properly assessing Small Business Relief eligibility. Can PNPC review it after the fact?

Yes. We regularly review filed returns where the Small Business Relief position — whether relief was elected, or whether it should have been but was not — appears not to have been properly assessed at the time of filing. Where the review identifies that the wrong position was taken, we advise on the correction process, which may include a voluntary disclosure depending on the nature and materiality of the issue.

Practitioner noteWe would rather review and, where needed, correct a prior filing proactively than have a client wait for an FTA query to surface the same gap — the earlier a correction is initiated, the more favourable the position generally is.
Does Small Business Relief affect our eligibility for the participation exemption on dividends or capital gains from a qualifying shareholding?

Because Small Business Relief treats the taxable person as having no taxable income for the period, the detailed computation questions that the participation exemption would otherwise address — ownership percentage, holding period, exempt treatment of a specific dividend or gain — generally do not need to be worked through for a period in which relief is validly elected, since there is no taxable income computation being performed for that period in the first place.

Practitioner noteThis is one of the genuine simplification benefits of the relief — clients with a straightforward shareholding structure and modest revenue do not need a full participation exemption analysis for a relief-elected period, though we still confirm the underlying facts in case the position changes in a future period.
How does PNPC verify that revenue figures reported to us for the Small Business Relief test are complete and not understated?

We reconcile the reported revenue figure against the general ledger and trial balance, cross-check it where relevant against VAT return figures already filed for the same periods (since VAT-taxable supply figures are a useful, though not identical, sense-check on revenue), and ask specifically about any revenue streams — related-party income, one-off receipts, income from less conventional sources — that might not appear in a routine sales report.

Practitioner noteA VAT return and a Small Business Relief revenue figure measure different things and will not match exactly, but a large, unexplained gap between the two is worth investigating before we finalise the eligibility conclusion — it is often the first sign that a revenue stream has been missed.
What happens to a Small Business Relief election if the business is later found not to have met the exclusion-category conditions after all?

If it is established that the entity was, in fact, part of an excluded category — for example a Multinational Enterprise Group constituent — for the period in which relief was elected, the election was not validly available regardless of the revenue figure, and the position generally needs to be corrected, which may mean recomputing taxable income for that period under the standard rules and addressing the correction with the FTA through a voluntary disclosure.

Practitioner noteThis is exactly why we always screen the exclusion categories first, before any revenue work — an entity that turns out to have been excluded all along has an invalid election regardless of how carefully the revenue figure was calculated.
Do we need audited financial statements to support a Small Business Relief election, or are management accounts sufficient?

Small Business Relief itself does not impose a blanket statutory audit requirement beyond whatever audit obligation already applies to the entity under its licence, free zone authority rules, or the Corporate Tax Law more generally. Properly prepared management accounts, reconciled to underlying records, are generally sufficient to support the revenue figure relied upon for the eligibility test, though an entity that is separately required to be audited should still base the figure on its audited numbers once available.

Practitioner noteWe do not insist on an audit specifically because a client is electing Small Business Relief where one is not otherwise required — but we do insist on the underlying management accounts being properly reconciled, audited or not.
Can Small Business Relief be elected for a period in which the business also claims Small Business Relief was elected incorrectly in a prior period that has not yet been corrected?

We would generally address and correct the prior period's position first, or at least concurrently, rather than layering a new period's election on top of an unresolved prior-period issue — an uncorrected prior error can affect the multi-period revenue test for the current period's eligibility, since that test looks at prior periods as part of the current determination.

Practitioner noteWe always ask about the status of every prior Corporate Tax filing before finalising a current-period Small Business Relief recommendation, precisely because an unresolved prior-period issue can directly affect whether the current election is even available.
If our revenue this period is exactly at the prescribed threshold, are we eligible for Small Business Relief?

The precise wording of the applicable Ministerial Decision determines whether the threshold is an 'at or below' test or a strict 'below' test, and this distinction genuinely matters for a business whose revenue sits exactly at the boundary. We confirm the exact current wording of the applicable threshold provision before relying on a borderline revenue figure, rather than assuming either outcome.

Practitioner noteA borderline revenue figure is exactly the situation where we insist on checking the precise, current wording of the Ministerial Decision rather than working from a general recollection of 'the threshold' — the difference between an inclusive and exclusive test can determine the outcome for a client sitting right at the line.
Does PNPC provide ongoing monitoring so we know as soon as our revenue is trending toward the Small Business Relief threshold mid-year?

Yes. For clients electing or considering Small Business Relief, we typically build a running revenue tracker updated through the year rather than waiting until year-end to test the position — this gives the client visibility, well before the filing deadline, if revenue is trending toward or past the prescribed threshold, so the transition to a standard computation (and the accounting adjustments it requires) is not a last-minute scramble.

Practitioner noteClients who only discover a threshold breach at year-end have far less time to prepare the standard taxable income computation properly — a mid-year tracker turns that into a planned transition rather than a rushed one.
Is there a limit on how many tax periods in total a business can elect Small Business Relief?

Because Small Business Relief applies for tax periods ending on or before a date fixed by Cabinet Decision, there is an overall time-bound cap on the measure itself, separate from any per-entity limit on the number of periods for which an individual taxable person may elect relief. We confirm the currently applicable Cabinet Decision cut-off and any specific per-entity period limits set out in the governing Ministerial Decision as part of every eligibility assessment, since relying on an earlier understanding of these limits without checking current guidance is a real risk given how the regime continues to be refined.

Practitioner noteWe do not treat 'we have always been eligible before' as sufficient evidence that a business remains eligible now — both the overall sunset date and any specific period limits need to be checked against current guidance at every re-assessment.
We want to elect Small Business Relief purely because filing feels simpler, even though a standard computation might actually produce a lower or similar tax outcome. Is that a valid reason to elect?

Compliance simplicity is a legitimate factor in the decision, and Small Business Relief is deliberately designed as a simplification measure for genuinely eligible small businesses — there is nothing improper about weighing administrative ease alongside the numeric outcome. What we insist on is that the client understands the full trade-off, including the loss carry-forward restriction, before choosing simplicity over a standard computation that might otherwise have been available and beneficial.

Practitioner noteWe are comfortable recommending relief for compliance-simplicity reasons where the numbers are genuinely close either way — what we will not do is let a client elect it without first understanding what, specifically, they are giving up by doing so.
How does PNPC coordinate a Small Business Relief engagement with a broader Corporate Tax Impact Assessment if we need both?

Where a client needs a full Corporate Tax Impact Assessment — covering taxable person status, Free Zone qualification, related-party exposure, and Tax Group feasibility across a wider group — the Small Business Relief question for any qualifying entity is addressed as one component of that broader assessment rather than as a disconnected, separately scoped exercise, so the eligibility conclusion is consistent with the group's wider Corporate Tax position.

Practitioner noteWe avoid running a standalone Small Business Relief assessment in isolation for a client who actually needs the fuller group-level picture — a relief conclusion reached without that wider context can turn out to be incomplete once the Tax Group and Free Zone questions are properly worked through.
What is the practical first step to start a Small Business Relief Advisory & Filing engagement with PNPC?

We begin with a short scoping conversation to understand the entity's structure, whether this is a first-time or repeat election, whether a group or Tax Group question is involved, and the general state of the accounting records — from which we confirm the engagement scope, request the specific supporting documents needed, and set a realistic timeline against the applicable filing deadline.

Practitioner noteWe keep this initial scoping conversation free of charge, because scoping the engagement accurately against the entity's actual facts — rather than quoting blind — is in both our interests before any fee is agreed.
Why PNPC Global

PNPC Small Business Relief advisory vs typical alternatives

FactorPNPC DubaiGeneralist Bookkeeper/Typing CentreFiling Without a Trade-Off Assessment
Tests revenue against every relevant prior period, not just the current yearYes — the multi-period check is built into every engagementRarely — often limited to the current period's figures onlyNo — a single-year view misses a prior-period breach
Screens for exclusion categories (MNE Group, Qualifying Free Zone Person)Yes, before any revenue calculation is relied uponRarely addressed explicitlyNo — often assumed away without checking
Models the loss carry-forward trade-off against realistic growth plansYes — a written comparison before the election is madeNo — typically treats the election as a simple yes/no based on revenue aloneNo — the trade-off is often discovered only once losses are actually forgone
Provides a written, reasoned recommendation memoYes — retained as contemporaneous evidence for the electionNo — rarely documents the basis for the decisionNo documentation exists if the FTA later asks
Re-tests eligibility every subsequent tax periodYes — built into an ongoing annual processInconsistent — often only revisited if the client raises itNo — elections are frequently left unchecked year over year
Coordinates the election with the actual EmaraTax return filingYes — a single, integrated engagementSometimes, though often as a bare-minimum portal entryVaries — the return may be filed correctly even where the underlying decision was not properly assessed
Practising CA firm with UAE and India presence since 1986YesNo — single-service, procedural providerNot applicable
Distinguishes the Small Business Relief threshold from the AED 375,000 Corporate Tax 0% band and VAT thresholdsYes — explained clearly and in writing to every clientOften blurred together in generic guidanceNo — a common and costly source of confusion
Tests the revenue threshold at Tax Group level where a Tax Group appliesYes — cross-checked explicitly whenever a Tax Group is in playRarely considered together with Tax Group planningNo — often assessed on a standalone basis in error
Reviews and corrects prior, improperly assessed electionsYes — including advising on voluntary disclosure where warrantedInconsistent — often not proactively identifiedNo — an unassessed prior election is often left unexamined
Runs a mid-year revenue tracker to flag a coming threshold breach earlyYes — built into ongoing engagements electing reliefRarely offered as a standing serviceNo — breaches are typically discovered only at year-end
Coordinates Small Business Relief with a wider Corporate Tax Impact Assessment where neededYes — treated as one component of a consistent group-level positionRarely connected to broader group analysisNo — assessed in isolation from the wider Corporate Tax picture

What the PNPC package includes

  1. 01

    Full exclusion-category screening — Multinational Enterprise Group and Qualifying Free Zone Person status checked before proceeding

  2. 02

    Qualifying revenue calculation reconciled to your accounting records and the applicable accounting standard

  3. 03

    Multi-period revenue check covering the relevant tax period and every prior tax period since Corporate Tax registration

  4. 04

    Loss carry-forward and relief trade-off modelling against your realistic revenue growth trajectory

  5. 05

    Written, reasoned recommendation memo on whether to elect Small Business Relief, retained as contemporaneous evidence

  6. 06

    Preparation and filing of the Corporate Tax return on EmaraTax with the election correctly recorded

  7. 07

    Supporting workpaper file — revenue reconciliation, exclusion checks, and recommendation memo — retained for the statutory period

  8. 08

    Annual re-testing of eligibility for every subsequent tax period

  9. 09

    Clean transition support to a standard taxable income computation the moment a threshold breach occurs

  10. 10

    Coordination with related engagements — Corporate Tax Registration, Free Zone / QFZP Advisory, and Corporate Tax Return Filing — so the Small Business Relief position is consistent with your wider Corporate Tax file

Before you elect Small Business Relief, let PNPC's Dubai team test whether it is actually the cheaper choice over the next few years, not just this one.

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