Penalties for Late or Incorrect Corporate Tax Returns in the UAE

Corporate tax is here — and it’s serious business.

 

The UAE’s tax regime may be new, but the rules are firm. If you’re running a company, you’re expected to play by them.

 

Late filings? Mistakes in tax return? They’re not just paperwork issues anymore. They trigger penalties. And in some cases, big ones.

 

In today’s regulatory climate, being late or careless can cost you not just money but also credibility.

 

t’s important to note that penalties for Corporate Tax are governed by a separate set of rules under Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022 and related decisions. The updates in Cabinet Decision No. 129 of 2025 apply specifically to VAT and Excise Tax penalties, not Corporate Tax.

 

This article breaks it all down.

Latest Update: Penalty Relief for First-Time Filers (2025)

Here’s the thing. If you’re filing your first corporate tax return in the UAE, the government’s giving you a bit of room to breathe.

 

As of April 2025, there’s temporary relief in place. File your first return within seven months after your tax period ends, and you won’t get hit with late filing or correction penalties.

 

But don’t confuse this with a free pass. It’s a one-time cushion, not a habit to build.

 

So, who qualifies?

 

Anyone filing their very first UAE corporate tax return. Doesn’t matter if you’re a mainland company or in a free zone. You’re covered if it’s your first go and you’re on time.

 

Wondering what does “on time” mean?

 

Let’s break it down:

 

Say your tax year ends 31 December 2024. You need to file your return by 31 July 2025.

 

If you do it by then? No penalties. But if you file on 1 August? You’re late. 

 

Relief gone. Simple.

 

Don’t mix this up with registration

 

Filing a return is not the same as registering for corporate tax. That’s a separate deadline and a separate penalty if you miss it. This relief only applies to tax return submission, not registration.

 

What this really means is that the grace period is real but limited. It buys you a little time, not immunity.

 

So use it well.

Standard Penalties for Late or Incorrect Corporate Tax Returns

Penalties for Late or Incorrect Corporate Tax Returns in the UAE

The UAE isn’t playing around with corporate tax. You’re expected to file, pay, and report things accurately. If you don’t, you’ll pay for it, literally.

 

Let’s break it down.

Late Filing of Tax Returns

If you miss your tax return deadline, the FTA starts charging you monthly:

  • 14% per annum on the outstanding tax, calculated monthly.
  • The meter starts ticking immediately, meaning every month of delay increases the penalty.

So, if you file 13 months late, your unpaid tax would continue to accumulate with a 14% per annum penalty, compounded monthly. This could add significant fines on top of the tax due — all for something that could’ve been done online in a few clicks through FTA eServices.

Late payment of corporate tax

Filing is one thing. Paying what you owe is another.

 

If you file on time but don’t pay, the FTA charges 14% annual interest on the unpaid tax in the UAE. This is calculated monthly.

 

So every month you delay, your unpaid UAE income tax grows. Slowly, then suddenly.

Not keeping accurate financial records

This one gets people into trouble.

 

If your books are incomplete, sloppy, or missing, you’ll be fined:

  • AED 10,000 the first time
  • AED 20,000 if you do it again within 2 years

Your records don’t need to be fancy. But they must be complete, current, and match what you report in your income tax return.

Filing the return incorrectly

Made a mistake in your income tax return filing? 

  • There’s an AED 500 fine, unless you correct it before the deadline.
  • Zero penalty if corrected before the deadline or if a Voluntary Disclosure (VD) is submitted with zero tax difference.

That’s the key. You’re fine if you catch it early and fix it in time. But if the FTA finds it after the deadline, it’s a penalty.

Not reporting changes to your tax info

If your business details change, like switching legal form, changing your tax period, or restructuring, you’re supposed to report that.

 

If you don’t:

  • It’s AED 1,000 per violation
  • AED 5,000 if it happens again within 24 months 

Log in to Eservices FTA to update your information. It takes five minutes, but skipping it could cost you much more.

Refusing to cooperate during a tax audit

If the FTA asks for your records or sends auditors, you need to cooperate. If you ignore them or withhold documents, you’ll get hit with an AED 20,000 fine.

 

It’s not about whether they like your numbers but about transparency.

Tax evasion

This is the big one.

 

If the FTA believes you’re hiding income, faking invoices, cooking the books, or doing anything intentionally to avoid paying federal tax, that’s tax evasion.

 

There’s no fixed fine for this. It depends on the case, but it’s serious:

  • You could face massive fines
  • They could freeze or suspend your license
  • You might end up in court

This isn’t a late fee situation. It’s criminal behavior, and it’s treated that way.

Voluntary Disclosure: Fixing Mistakes Before They Cost You

Let’s be honest. Mistakes happen. You might miscalculate, enter the wrong figure, or leave something out. The key is what you do next.

 

If you spot an error in your Income Tax Return filing after it’s been submitted, the FTA gives you a chance to correct it through voluntary disclosure.

 

Here’s how it works:

 

You log into FTA eServices, file a voluntary disclosure form, and fix the mistake. It’s straightforward, no explanations needed.

 

But here’s the catch:

 

If the correction results in more corporate tax owed, and you delay the disclosure, the penalties start to build.

What kind of penalty?

  • 1% per month
  • On the difference between what you originally paid and what you should have paid

So, let’s say you underpaid by AED 10,000 and only caught the mistake five months later. That’s AED 500 in fines, just for the delay. 

 

Wait longer, and it gets worse.

 

Why timing matters?

 

Correcting the error before the FTA notices makes the penalty smaller. You’re showing good faith and cooperating, and that goes a long way.

 

If they find it first?

 

Now you’re not just wrong, you’re also late. And that can push you into higher penalties or even trigger an audit.

Compliance Best Practices for UAE Businesses

Compliance Best Practices for UAE Businesses

If you want to avoid penalties, you need more than good intentions. You need systems that work, people who understand the rules, and the discipline to stay ahead.

 

Here’s what that looks like in practice:

1. Stay informed

The FTA eServices and the Ministry of Finance don’t make quiet changes. When something shifts; deadlines, relief programs, reporting rules, they announce it. But you have to be paying attention.

 

Check their official channels regularly. Subscribe to alerts. Make it someone’s job to track updates.

2. Keep your records clean, and keep them for five years

You’re legally required to hold onto financial records for at least five years. That includes invoices, receipts, bank statements, and anything else tied to your tax return.

 

Don’t wait for an audit to start organizing. By then, it’s too late.

3. Use proper accounting software

Trying to track corporate tax on Excel? Risky. 

 

Use accounting tools that calculate tax, generate reports, and remind you of due dates. Better yet, pick one that connects directly with eservices fta.

 

Technology doesn’t eliminate errors, but it does reduce them, especially when deadlines start stacking up.

4. Work with tax professionals

You don’t need to hire an in-house tax team. But you should have someone who knows the law, understands your numbers, and can flag risks early.

 

This is especially important before your first  ITR filing, or if your business structure isn’t simple.

5. Train your team

If only one person understands the tax in the UAE rules, that’s a single point of failure. Make sure your finance, operations, and admin teams all understand the basics of what’s required.

 

Short sessions. Clear rules. Written procedures. It’ll save you headaches later.

6. Act quickly on mistakes

If you catch an error in your tax return, file a Voluntary Disclosure (VD) as soon as possible. With the new 1% per month penalty on unpaid tax, the earlier you file, the smaller the penalty. Don’t wait until the FTA notices, fix it promptly to avoid higher fines. 

Impact of Non-Compliance: Financial and Reputational Risks

Let’s not sugarcoat it. UAE income tax non-compliance isn’t just about paying fines. It’s about what those fines do to your business, over time, and in public.

The money adds up

One missed filing? That’s a few thousand dirhams. But stack that with late payments, incorrect returns, and missing records, and suddenly you’re bleeding cash every month, not because your business is failing, but because your compliance is.

 

Fines eat into profit. Interest compounds. Penalties pile up. And all of it could’ve been avoided.

The reputation hit is worse

Once you’re flagged as non-compliant, it’s hard to shake off.

 

Banks hesitate. Investors get nervous. Partners start asking questions. And when word gets around that your income tax return isn’t in order, the damage goes far beyond your balance sheet.

 

You don’t want your business name associated with negligence, especially not in a region where trust and transparency carry real weight.

It can get serious

Ignore the rules long enough, and it doesn’t just cost you money. It can cost you your business. 

 

The FTA has the power to escalate:

  • Freeze your accounts
  • Suspend your trade license
  • Take legal action

At that point, it’s not about cleaning up a spreadsheet. It’s about fighting to stay operational.

Build the right culture now

This is where smart businesses separate themselves. The ones that take federal tax compliance seriously don’t just avoid trouble, they build credibility.

 

When compliance becomes part of your internal culture, you stop reacting to rules. You stay ahead of them. That mindset pays off, year after year.

How ADEPTS Can Help Your Business Stay Compliant

Tax return compliance in the UAE isn’t just about filling out forms. It’s about knowing what’s required, doing it right, and staying ready, even when the rules shift.

 

That’s where ADEPTS comes in.

 

We specialize in UAE corporate tax compliance. That includes helping businesses register, file accurately, correct mistakes, and respond to the FTA when needed.

 

Here’s how we can support you:

  • Tailored tax solutions — from registration to income tax return filing to voluntary disclosures

     

  • Direct support with FTA eServices — so you never miss a notice or misread a requirement

     

  • Clean, audit-ready record-keeping systems — built to match your workflows

     

  • Ongoing advisory and training — to help your team understand the rules and avoid repeat mistakes

     

More importantly, we work proactively. We don’t wait for penalties to hit. We help you get ahead of the risks and stay compliant without stress.

 

With the new 1% per month penalty for delayed corrections or voluntary disclosure, timely filing and quick corrections are now more important than ever. We help you fix mistakes before they escalate into bigger fines. 

 

Because staying compliant shouldn’t feel like a scramble, it should feel like business as usual, calm, clear, and under control.

Conclusion

Corporate tax in the UAE is no longer optional, and it’s not something you can afford to get wrong.

 

Timely filing. Accurate reporting. Clean records. These aren’t just checkboxes, they’re the difference between smooth operations and mounting penalties.

 

The rules are clear, and the fines are real. With the new 1% per month penalty for delayed voluntary disclosures and corrections, waiting to fix mistakes can be costly. But with the right support, compliance doesn’t have to be stressful. 

 

ADEPTS helps you stay ahead with expert guidance, smart systems, and ongoing support that keeps you penalty-free and audit-ready.

 

Got questions? Facing deadlines? Let’s make sure your next move is the right one.

FAQs:

You’ll be fined. The AED 10,000 penalty is applied automatically once the waiver window closes. There are no extensions and no exceptions after that point.

Yes. The FTA allows formal reconsideration requests, but you’ll need to present a clear explanation and supporting documents. The sooner you act, the stronger your case.

Yes. If your business is subject to the corporate tax regime, the same rules and penalties apply regardless of your location.

Through your FTA eServices account and your registered email. If you’re not checking both regularly, you could easily miss critical updates.

Keep everything: tax return, financial statements, invoices, contracts, bank records, and any FTA correspondence. Store these securely for at least five years — they’re your first line of defense.

Yes. We handle the entire process — from preparing waiver applications to responding to FTA notices. We ensure your tax return communication stays clear, professional, and timely.

If you miss the deadline to file a voluntary disclosure (VD), the penalties will accumulate at 1% per month on the tax difference until the disclosure is submitted. It’s important to act quickly to reduce penalties.

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