What are the steps to register a company in Dubai? Here is the complete sequence — in plain English — whether you’re pursuing a mainland license or incorporating in a free zone.
Step 1: Define Your Business Activity
Every UAE license is tied to specific approved business activities. There are over 2,000 activities across commercial, professional, industrial, and tourism categories. Your activity determines your license type, which free zones are eligible, and what additional authority approvals may be required.
Be precise. ‘General Trading’ sounds flexible but carries specific regulatory and cost implications. Many businesses benefit from grouping multiple related activities under a single license, getting this right at submission avoids expensive amendments later.
Step 2: Select Your Jurisdiction
Based on your business model, target market, and cost appetite, choose between mainland, free zone, or offshore. The comparison table above is a starting point, follow it with a qualified advisory conversation. The wrong jurisdiction choice is the single most expensive mistake in dubai business setup.
Step 3: Reserve Your Company Name
UAE naming conventions are strict. Your company name cannot contain offensive or religiously sensitive language, cannot use country name abbreviations without approval, and in many cases must include a shareholder’s full name if it’s a named entity. Submit your preferred name and two alternates to the relevant authority before proceeding.
Step 4: Apply for Your Trade License
Submit your application to the DED (mainland) or the relevant free zone authority. Standard documentation includes: passport copies of all shareholders and directors, Memorandum or Articles of Association, proposed activity list, and a lease agreement or office registration. For professional licenses (sole establishments), the process is simpler. For multi-shareholder LLCs, a notarised MOA is required.
Step 5: Secure Office Space
Mainland companies require a valid physical lease registered under Ejari — Dubai’s tenancy registration system. Office size determines visa allocation: typically one visa per 9 sqm of space. Free zones offer flexi-desk and hot-desk options starting from AED 5,000/year, which satisfy the lease requirement at lower cost, though visa quotas may be limited.
Step 6: Process Residency Visas
Once your license is issued, apply for investor/partner visas for shareholders, employment visas for staff, and dependent visas for family members. Each requires a medical fitness test, Emirates ID registration, and residency stamping. Processing time: 2–4 weeks. Visa quota is determined by your office space allocation and not your license type.
Step 7: Open Your Corporate Bank Account
This is consistently the most underestimated step in business setup in Dubai for foreigners. UAE banks operate stringent KYC and compliance protocols. Expect to provide: a business plan, source of funds declaration, projected financials, shareholder background documentation, and in some cases professional references or introductions.
Insider tip: Choose your bank before you start the licensing process. Some UAE banks have preferred onboarding relationships with specific free zones — this alone can cut your account opening timeline by 3–4 weeks. Budget 4–8 weeks for banking, not 1–2.
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