Record retention is not just about alignment, but a legal requirement. The UAE has a complicated structure of record retention obligations across a range of tax and corporate laws, including the Tax Procedures Law, the Corporate Tax Law, the VAT Law, and the Commercial Companies Law.
This complete guide outlines the records your business is required to keep, for how long, and what legal basis allows you to run an efficient, compliant, and risk-free document retention policy.
At its simplest, record retention exists so that the Federal Tax Authority (FTA) is able to establish and verify a person’s (natural or juridical) business tax obligations, taxable income, and their compliance with registration or deregistration for tax purposes.
Not retaining sufficient records or retaining records for too long can subject your business to
The records that should be maintained include:
– Accounting records
– Commercial books
– Tax-related information
– Payment and receipt documentation
– Sales, purchases, income, and expenditure documentation
– Balance sheets and profit/loss accounts
The period of retention will be:
– Five years from the relevant tax year
– +4 years where there is a tax dispute or review
Legal reference: Article 4 of TPL; Article 2 of Executive Regulations to TPL.
Records which should be maintained:
– Tax returns
– Financial statements
– Documentation in support of income, expenditure and profit
– Excluded person documentation
The period of retention will be:
– Seven years from the end of the tax period.
Legal reference: Article 56
In addition, for Transfer Pricing:
Records which should be maintained:
– Master file and local file
– Documentation concerning transactions with related and connected parties
Retention period:
– Seven years
Legal reference: Article 55
Records which should be maintained:
– Tax invoices and credit notes (issued and received)
– Documentation regarding supplies and imports
– Documentation regarding capital assets
– Documentation regarding adjustments and/or corrections
– Documentation regarding real estate transactions
– Documentation regarding transactions broken down by Emirates
– Documentation regarding e-commerce sales
Retention Periods:
Legal References:
Here’s a short list of the maximum required periods for different types of business records in the UAE:
Article 46 of the Tax Procedures Law specifies the period of time that FTA can take action:
Proper bookkeeping is the foundation of record retention compliance. Businesses that outsource or maintain dedicated bookkeeping services in the UAE benefit from systematic record management, timely updates. The law permits either digital or hard copies, with the following conditions:
To ensure that your business is compliant, cross off the following:
Statutory References
For tax practitioners, legal professionals, or compliance practitioners seeking statutory references:
Record retention in the UAE is not universally applicable; different laws require different lengths of time as records must be maintained, and the best course of action is to keep your retention policies aligned to the longest reviewed period, especially if there are multiple laws that apply to the same document.
Doing so will:
• Comply with the law
• Streamline disclosures, audits, etc.
• Eliminate clutter and costs of storage
• Weaken your risk to regulation or institutions
If in doubt, you should consult a reliable accounting firm in Dubai and the UAE, to audit your record retention policy.