Introduction
The UAE Corporate Tax regime has increased scrutiny on transactions between Free Zone Companies (FZCs) and Mainland entities. While FZCs may enjoy certain tax incentives, these do not lessen compliance obligations. The Federal Tax Authority closely monitors related-party transactions between FZCs and Mainland companies due to their differing tax profiles—FZCs with preferential treatment and Mainland entities subject to 9% corporate tax.
What is a Free Zone Company (FZC)?
An FZC is a legal entity registered in one of the UAE’s designated Free Zones, often chosen for its business-friendly regulations, customs advantages, and foreign ownership flexibility.
Taxation of Free Zone Companies
Under UAE Corporate Tax law, FZCs are not automatically exempt. Their tax treatment depends on whether they qualify as a Qualified Free Zone Person (QFZP):
- If they meet all QFZP conditions: They may enjoy a 0% corporate tax rate on qualifying income.
- If they fail to meet any condition: The entity’s entire taxable income will be subject to the standard 9% corporate tax (on income above AED 375,000).
What is a Mainland Entity?
A Mainland entity is any company incorporated outside Free Zones under the UAE’s general commercial licensing system. These entities are subject to 9% corporate tax on taxable profits exceeding AED 375,000.
Corporate groups frequently include both Mainland and Free Zone entities. This structure naturally results in intercompany transactions, which, given their tax impact, require careful attention to transfer pricing compliance.
What are Related Party Transactions (RPTs)?
RPTs are transactions between entities that are under common control, ownership, or management. Examples include shared services (HR, IT, finance), intercompany financing arrangements, transfers of goods, assets, or IP, cost allocations or management support fees.
All such transactions must be conducted at arm’s length, meaning they must reflect the same terms and pricing as those that would have been agreed upon by independent, unrelated parties.
For a detailed overview of related-party rules under UAE transfer pricing, read our guide on Related Parties in UAE Transfer Pricing.
Why Related Party Transactions Matter in the FZC–Mainland Context
When a Free Zone Company interacts with a Mainland entity within the same group, the tax differential (0% vs. 9%) inherently creates risk areas that attract FTA attention.
Key reasons to ensure compliance:
- Prevent unintentional profit shifting that may be viewed as tax avoidance.
- Protect Free Zone benefits—mispricing could lead to income being reclassified as non-qualifying.
- Minimize the risk of audits, penalties, and denied expense deductions.
- Maintain corporate credibility and readiness for transfer pricing reviews.
Practical Examples and Risk Areas
1. Director Compensation Split
Scenario: A CEO manages both the Free Zone and Mainland companies, yet salary is paid solely by the Free Zone entity.
- Risk: Unequal expense allocation reduces the mainland’s costs artificially while impacting the Free Zone’s taxable profile. In such cases, conducting a functional benefit analysis and allocate expenses proportionately will be required.
2. Goods Transfer with No Mark-Up
Scenario: A Free Zone trading company sources goods and resells them to its Mainland affiliate at cost, with the mainland entity capturing the final market margin.
- Risk and Recommended Approach: Artificial profit booking in the mainland entity could jeopardize Free Zone tax benefits. In this case, one needs to establish a defensible arm’s length markup could be required.
What is the Arm’s Length Principle (ALP)?
The ALP is the foundation of UAE transfer pricing compliance. It mandates that intercompany transactions mirror the terms and prices of third-party deals.
Ensure proper compliance with UAE disclosure requirements. Learn more from our UAE Transfer Pricing Disclosure Form guide.
Key steps for businesses:
- Identify the type and nature of each intercompany transaction.
- Perform a Functional, Asset, and Risk (FAR) analysis.
- Select an appropriate transfer pricing method (CUP, TNMM, Resale Price, etc.).
- Benchmark against reliable external data of independent comparable companies.
- Document every step (Local File, Master File, disclosure forms).
For Free Zone Companies, adherence to ALP is not optional—it is a statutory requirement to maintain compliance and, if applicable, retain QFZP benefits.
Documentation & Reporting Requirements
Beyond setting arm’s length prices, businesses must also focus on proper agreements, disclosures, and record-keeping.
Common industry pitfalls include:
- Operating without formal intercompany contracts.
- Failing to charge for shared services.
- Applying arbitrary markups without benchmarking.
- Assuming internal cost equals fair market value.
- Ignoring director services, shared infrastructure, or cost allocation policies.
For insights on preparing a comprehensive TP Master File as per FTA guidelines, visit our Master File Transfer Pricing Requirements guide.
Final Thoughts
The UAE continues to offer a competitive tax environment, but tax advantages come with stricter expectations for transparency and compliance. For Free Zone Companies engaging in related party transactions with Mainland entities, proactive transfer pricing planning is not optional—it is essential.
To preserve Free Zone benefits, avoid tax disputes, and maintain operational efficiency:
- Formalize all intercompany arrangements.
- Benchmark and document pricing policies.
- Prepare for FTA scrutiny well in advance rather than reacting to audits.
In short, a structured, well-documented transfer pricing framework is now a core business requirement—not just a best practice.
Reach out to us for a drafting clear documentation & framing the TP Policy on rakesh@bclglobiz.com.