Quick answer: Every juridical person licensed in the UAE and every natural person with business revenue above AED 1 million must register for Corporate Tax with the Federal Tax Authority (FTA) and obtain a Corporate Tax Registration Number (CTID) before their first tax-period return is due. Late registration carries an AED 10,000 penalty under Cabinet Decision No. 129 of 2025. Abdelhamid & Co CPA LLC — registered Tax Agent TAN: 30003958 — assesses your registration obligation, prepares the complete EmaraTax application, obtains your CTID, maintains registration records, and manages de-registration when required. Abdelhamid & Co Certified Public Accountants & Auditors LLC is fully authorised to act before the Federal Tax Authority: Ministry of Economy licence LC0106-01 | Licensed Auditor Registry No. 956 | Tax Agent TAN: 30003958 | Tax Agency TAAN: 20033908 | EAAA Fellow No. 124 | IASCA Fellow No. 1361 | over 25 years of professional experience. We cover all entity types across UAE mainland, free zones, DIFC, and ADGM. See also our full Corporate Tax Services overview. Under Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022 on Corporate Tax, every taxable person must register with the FTA and obtain a CTID. Registration is mandatory for: The FTA has issued phased registration deadlines tied to each entity's licence issuance date and financial-year start. Missing the applicable deadline triggers the AED 10,000 late-registration penalty regardless of the entity's tax position. Contact us for your specific deadline. A newly licensed entity must register within the FTA's phased deadline tied to its licence date or financial-year start. An error in identifying the applicable deadline — or missing it entirely — generates an immediate AED 10,000 penalty under Cabinet Decision No. 129 of 2025, irrespective of taxable income. We identify your exact deadline at the outset and manage the entire process. Free-zone companies, holding companies, investment vehicles, government-related entities, public-benefit organisations, and non-resident entities with UAE activities each face distinct registration rules. Misclassifying an entity as fully exempt when it is only tax-exempt (still registration-obligated) is one of the most common and costly errors we encounter. We provide a written eligibility assessment before any filing. Changing the financial year, restructuring the ownership chain, converting a free-zone entity to mainland status, or entering a Tax Group all affect the registration record and may change mandatory deadlines or the first tax period. FTA registration data must be updated promptly after any material change — failure to do so is an independent violation under Cabinet Decision No. 129 of 2025. De-registration requires satisfying all outstanding tax obligations before the FTA will accept the application. Failing to apply for de-registration after ceasing business keeps the entity registered and liable to file periodic returns — generating accumulating late-filing penalties. We handle all pre-de-registration compliance steps and the formal de-registration application. A natural person whose business revenue has dropped below AED 1 million may be eligible for de-registration, provided all prior-period returns have been filed and taxes settled. We assess eligibility and manage the de-registration process, including preparation of any outstanding returns needed to clear the pre-condition. Entities qualifying for the QFZP 0% rate or Small Business Relief under Cabinet Decision No. 49 of 2023 are still required to register with the FTA and file returns. Exemption means zero tax payable — it does not mean zero compliance obligations. This is the single most frequent misconception we encounter, and it carries the AED 10,000 late-registration penalty if acted upon. The FTA issued entity-specific registration deadlines tied to licence-issuance month and financial-year start. Many businesses registered late because they applied a generic deadline that did not apply to their specific profile. We identify the exact applicable deadline before commencing the filing, eliminating this risk. The financial year entered in the registration application determines the first tax period, the first return due date, and the first tax payment deadline. An error in this field cascades through all subsequent compliance obligations and requires a formal amendment process with the FTA to correct. We verify the financial year against constitutional documents before submission. A foreign company conducting business in the UAE through a Permanent Establishment — including through a UAE-resident agent — is required to register for Corporate Tax on the income attributable to that PE. This obligation is frequently overlooked when the foreign head-office team manages UAE compliance without local professional advice. Any change in the entity's registered data — financial year, registered address, authorised signatory, ownership structure, or trading name — must be notified to the FTA promptly. Under Cabinet Decision No. 129 of 2025, failure to notify constitutes an independent administrative violation subject to separate penalty, regardless of whether the underlying tax returns are filed on time. Before any filing, we analyse your legal structure, licence date, financial year, revenue streams, and free-zone status to determine: whether registration is mandatory, the exact deadline applicable to your entity under FTA phased guidance, whether any exemption applies (and whether it eliminates or only reduces the obligation), and whether QFZP or Small Business Relief elections are relevant. The assessment is provided in writing. We prepare and submit the complete CT registration application through the FTA EmaraTax portal, including: trade licence, constitutional documents, authorised-signatory identification, registered address confirmation, and financial-year designation. We track the application status with the FTA and deliver the issued CTID to management with a full briefing on subsequent compliance obligations — first return due date, payment deadline, and records-retention requirements. We manage all post-registration updates required after material changes — financial-year amendments, address changes, ownership restructures, authorised-signatory changes, and Tax Group entry or exit — ensuring the FTA registration record remains accurate and avoiding the independent violation penalties under Cabinet Decision No. 129 of 2025. When a business ceases activity, is liquidated, or a natural person's revenue falls below the mandatory threshold, we manage the full de-registration process: verifying that all outstanding returns are filed and all taxes and penalties are settled, preparing the de-registration application, submitting it through EmaraTax, and following up until the FTA issues the official de-registration confirmation. We also advise on the 7-year records-retention obligation that survives de-registration under Article 30 of Federal Decree-Law No. 28 of 2022. We advise on complex or non-standard situations: QFZP registration and income-type classification, Tax Group formation and registration, holding-company PE analysis, government-related entity exemption notifications, and the registration implications of M&A transactions and intra-group restructurings. Written opinions are provided where required to support management decisions. The FTA issued phased registration deadlines tied to each entity's licence-issuance date and financial-year start. As a general rule, registration must be completed before the end of the first tax period. The precise deadline varies by entity profile. Late registration attracts an AED 10,000 penalty under Cabinet Decision No. 129 of 2025, regardless of taxable income. Contact us to determine your exact deadline. Yes — all free-zone companies must register, including those that qualify for the 0% QFZP rate under Ministerial Decision No. 97 of 2023 and Cabinet Decision No. 55 of 2023. Tax exemption applies to the tax payable, not to the registration and filing obligation. A QFZP entity that fails to register is exposed to the AED 10,000 late-registration penalty plus late-filing penalties for each unfiled return period. Core documents include: valid trade licence, constitutional documents (Memorandum and Articles of Association or equivalent), identification of authorised signatory, registered address confirmation, and the entity's designated financial year. The FTA may request additional documents depending on entity type, ownership structure, or activity — for example, audited financial statements for complex structures or documentation of PE status for non-resident entities. We prepare and verify the complete file before submission. Yes. Entities eligible for Small Business Relief under Cabinet Decision No. 49 of 2023 — revenue not exceeding AED 3 million — are still required to register with the FTA and file returns electing the relief, unless the FTA issues specific guidance exempting certain categories. The AED 3 million relief threshold applies to the tax computation, not to the registration obligation. Failure to register while relying on Small Business Relief eligibility generates the standard AED 10,000 late-registration penalty. De-registration applications are submitted through the FTA EmaraTax portal after satisfying all pre-conditions: all outstanding Corporate Tax returns must be filed, all taxes and administrative penalties must be settled, and the entity must demonstrate that the condition triggering registration (business activity or revenue threshold) no longer applies. The FTA reviews the application and may request supporting documentation before issuing the formal de-registration confirmation. Records must be retained for 7 years after de-registration under Article 30 of FDL 28/2022. An AED 10,000 penalty applies to late registration under Cabinet Decision No. 129 of 2025 (effective April 2026, replacing CD 49/2021). Additionally, each unfiled return period after the missed deadline generates a separate late-filing penalty — AED 500 per month for the first 12 months, AED 1,000 per month thereafter. Inaccurate registration information is a further independent violation. Early registration is the only way to avoid these consequences entirely. Yes — voluntary early registration is permitted and advisable for entities that: want to organise their compliance framework in advance, expect revenue to cross the registration threshold soon, or are required to provide a CTID to business partners, financial institutions, or government authorities. Early registration does not accelerate the first return due date, which remains 9 months after the end of the first full tax period. Yes, but only with FTA approval. A change to the registered financial year affects the length and timing of the current and all future tax periods, and the due dates of returns and payments. Changes must be notified to the FTA promptly under the registration-update obligation; failure to notify is a separate violation under Cabinet Decision No. 129 of 2025. We manage the approval process and update all downstream compliance dates accordingly. For a free initial consultation and registration-deadline assessment, contact us today: Abdelhamid & Co Certified Public Accountants & Auditors LLC — Ministry of Economy Licence LC0106-01 | Tax Agent TAN: 30003958 | EAAA Fellow No. 124 | IASCA Fellow No. 1361 Last updated: 28 April 2026 — Reflects Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022 (Corporate Tax), Federal Decree-Law No. 28 of 2022 (Tax Procedures Arts. 25, 30, 43, 72), Cabinet Decision No. 116 of 2022 (Exempt Persons), Cabinet Decision No. 37 of 2023 (Qualifying Public Benefit Entities), Cabinet Decision No. 49 of 2023 (Small Business Relief), Cabinet Decision No. 55 of 2023 (Qualifying Free Zones), Ministerial Decision No. 97 of 2023 (QFZP), and Cabinet Decision No. 129 of 2025 (Administrative Penalties).Corporate Tax Registration and De-Registration Service UAE — CTID Compliance from Day One
Who Must Register for UAE Corporate Tax — and When?
Legal Framework Governing CT Registration and De-Registration
Key Facts — UAE Corporate Tax Registration
When Professional Registration Assistance Becomes Essential
On Incorporation or Commencement of Business
When Registration Obligation Is Uncertain
After Corporate Restructuring or Financial-Year Changes
On Business Cessation or Company Liquidation
When Natural-Person Revenue Falls Below AED 1 Million
Common Corporate Tax Registration Errors We Resolve
Confusing Tax Exemption with Registration Exemption
Missing the Phased Registration Deadline
Incorrect Financial Year in the Registration Application
Overlooking PE Registration for Foreign Entities
Failure to Update Registration Data After Material Changes
Our Corporate Tax Registration and De-Registration Services
Registration Eligibility Assessment and Deadline Determination
Registration Application Preparation and Submission
Registration Data Updates and Amendments
Corporate Tax De-Registration
Consultation on Special Registration Cases
Our Six-Step Registration Process
Why Choose Abdelhamid & Co for CT Registration?
Frequently Asked Questions — UAE Corporate Tax Registration
When must businesses register for UAE Corporate Tax?
Are free-zone companies required to register for UAE Corporate Tax?
What documents are required for Corporate Tax registration?
Must small businesses register even if eligible for Small Business Relief?
How is Corporate Tax de-registration processed?
What are the penalties for late Corporate Tax registration?
Can businesses register voluntarily before the mandatory deadline?
Can the financial year be changed after registration?
Related Services
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