Building business or working in Dubai means thriving in a tax-free salary environment with a large international job market or setting up a company through one of the UAE’s 40+ free zones or on the mainland, often with 100% foreign ownership. High-income-tax-free salaries and international career opportunities attract employees.
Entrepreneurs are drawn by fast company formation, full foreign ownership, and a 9% corporate tax rate that applies only to profits above AED 375,000. Whether seeking a job or founding a business, Dubai’s work environment attracts international talent and capital, and your path shapes your visa, costs, and obligations.
Why work or build a business in Dubai?
People build careers and businesses in Dubai for tax-free personal income, 100% foreign ownership of businesses, a strategic global location, and a fast, pro-business regulatory environment. For employees, the draw is keeping their entire salary with no income tax. For entrepreneurs, it’s the ability to own their company outright, set up quickly, and access markets across the Middle East, Africa, and South Asia from a single base.
The employee proposition is straightforward: high salaries paid without income tax offer a meaningful real-terms premium over comparable roles in higher-tax countries, alongside international experience and rapid career progression in a growing economy. The entrepreneur proposition goes beyond tax: reforms now allow 100% foreign ownership of mainland companies in many sectors, previously requiring a local partner. Along with long-standing full-ownership free zones, a foreign founder can own and control a UAE business outright, form it in days rather than months, and operate with minimal bureaucracy compared to many markets.
The trade-offs are worth stating honestly. Employment is at-will because your visa is tied to your job. Losing the job starts a limited grace period to find another or leave, so there is less permanence than in some markets. While the tax environment is light, it is not zero: 5% VAT applies, 9% corporate tax applies to larger business profits, and various fees exist. The opportunity is real, but it rewards those who plan around these realities rather than assuming a frictionless, tax-free utopia.
Should you get a job or start a business in Dubai?
You should pursue employment in Dubai if you want an employer to sponsor your visa, a stable salary, and lower personal risk. Start a business if you want ownership, control, and the upside and risk of entrepreneurship. The two paths differ fundamentally in visa sponsorship, cost, risk, and reward. Many people start as employees and transition to business ownership once established.
The employment path is lower-cost and lower-risk to enter: your employer sponsors and pays for your visa, you receive a stable income, and you are protected by UAE labour law. The trade-off is dependence because your residency is tied to your job, and your earnings are capped at your salary. The business path requires upfront investment, such as setup costs, licences, and sometimes office space. It carries commercial risk but offers ownership, uncapped upside, self-sponsorship of your visa, the ability to sponsor others, and the tax advantages of operating a UAE company.
A common and sensible progression is to build a career first by arriving on an employment visa, learning the market, and building a network. Then transition to entrepreneurship or freelancing once you understand the landscape and have capital. The freelance permit is a useful middle path, letting you work independently and self-sponsor without the full cost of a company. The sections below cover each path in turn.
How do you find a job in Dubai?
You find a job in Dubai primarily through online job portals such as Bayt, GulfTalent, Naukrigulf, and LinkedIn, as well as recruitment agencies and direct company applications. LinkedIn and networking are increasingly central for professional roles. The most effective approach combines an active online search with networking and, for many, a period of job searching in the UAE on a job-exploration visa since employers often prefer candidates already in the country.
The practical strategy depends on your situation. For professional and senior roles, LinkedIn and specialist recruiters such as Michael Page, Robert Half, Hays, and Gulf-focused agencies are the primary channels. Networking often matters more than cold applications. For a broad range of roles, job portals like Bayt and GulfTalent carry high volumes of listings. Many candidates improve their odds by entering the UAE on a 60- or 120-day job-exploration visa to interview in person because employers frequently favour candidates already on the ground and able to start quickly.
Your CV and approach need to be locally adapted. A Dubai CV typically includes a photo, nationality, and visa status —unusual by Western standards but standard here—and tailoring applications to the specific role matters. It is essential to know that working on a tourist visa is illegal. If you job-search from inside the UAE, use the proper job-exploration visa. Nationality-specific realities differ, too, which is why we cover the search country by country.
Start with How to Find a Job in Dubai Before You Move, and the country-specific guides for India, the UK, the Philippines, and more. See also Best Job Sites in Dubai and Dubai CV Format.
What salary can you expect in Dubai?
Salaries in Dubai vary widely by industry and seniority. Because there is no income tax, the figures below represent take-home pay. A mid-level professional typically earns AED 15,000–35,000 per month, while senior and specialised roles command AED 40,000–100,000+. What counts as a good salary depends heavily on your lifestyle. If you are supporting a family, the absence of income tax means Dubai salaries stretch further than equivalent gross figures in taxed economies.
The table below gives indicative monthly salary ranges across common sectors as of 2026. Actual pay depends on the company, experience, qualifications, and negotiation, and total packages often include allowances (housing, transport) in addition to basic salary. This distinction matters because your end-of-service gratuity is calculated on basic salary only.
| Sector / role level | Mid-level (AED/mo) | Senior (AED/mo) |
| Technology / software | 18,000–35,000 | 40,000–80,000 |
| Finance / banking | 20,000–40,000 | 50,000–120,000 |
| Marketing / media | 12,000–25,000 | 30,000–60,000 |
| Engineering / construction | 15,000–30,000 | 35,000–70,000 |
| Healthcare (doctors/specialists) | 25,000–45,000 | 50,000–100,000+ |
| Education / teaching | 10,000–20,000 | 22,000–40,000 |
| Hospitality / retail | 6,000–15,000 | 20,000–45,000 |
| Legal | 20,000–40,000 | 50,000–110,000 |
Detailed breakdowns by role in the Dubai Salary Guide by Profession, UAE Salaries for Tech Roles, Finance Roles, and What Is a Good Salary in Dubai?
What are your rights as an employee in Dubai?
Employees in Dubai are protected by the UAE Labour Law, administered by the Ministry of Human Resources and Emiratisation (MoHRE), which governs contracts, working hours, leave, end-of-service gratuity, and termination. Key entitlements include a maximum standard working week, paid annual leave of 30 days after a year of service, paid sick leave, and an end-of-service gratuity paid as a lump sum on leaving — protections that apply to most private-sector employees regardless of nationality.
The core entitlements every employee should know: annual leave of 30 calendar days per year after completing one year of service, public holidays on top of that, sick leave provisions, and maternity leave for female employees. Working hours are capped by law (reduced during Ramadan), and overtime rules apply. Crucially, the end-of-service gratuity — roughly 21 days’ basic pay per year for the first five years and 30 days’ basic pay per year thereafter — is a legal entitlement that serves as a substitute for a pension, and it’s calculated on basic salary, not the total package.
Two protections matter especially. Your employer cannot withhold your passport (a once-common practice now illegal), and disputes can be taken to MoHRE, which provides a structured, low-cost resolution process before any court involvement. Since recent labour-law reforms, contracts are limited-term, and the system has moved toward greater flexibility and clearer worker protections. Understanding these rights before signing a contract and knowing that MoHRE is there if something goes wrong protects you throughout your employment.
See UAE Labour Law 2026 Changes and End-of-Service Gratuity Calculation for the details.
How do you start a business in Dubai (free zone vs mainland)?
You start a business in Dubai by choosing between a free zone (100% foreign ownership, simpler setup, but historically restricted to operating within the zone or internationally) and the mainland (able to trade freely across the UAE market, now with 100% foreign ownership permitted in most sectors), then selecting a business activity, applying for a licence, and arranging visas. The choice between free zone and mainland is the single most important decision, and it depends on where and how your business will actually operate.
The free zone route suits businesses that trade internationally, operate online, or serve clients outside the UAE — it offers 100% foreign ownership, fast setup (often within days), simplified administration, and potential corporate tax advantages for qualifying income. Still, a pure free-zone company faces restrictions on directly trading in the wider UAE mainland market without additional arrangements. There are over 40 free zones, each with its own pricing, permitted activities, and specialisations (media, tech, commodities, healthcare, and general-purpose zones).
The mainland route suits businesses that need to trade directly with the UAE market, take government contracts, or open retail premises anywhere in the emirate — and since ownership reforms, foreign founders can now own 100% of a mainland company in most sectors, removing the old requirement for a local Emirati partner. The mainland setup can cost more and involves the Department of Economy and Tourism and MoHRE, but it removes the free-zone trading restriction.
| Factor | Free zone | Mainland |
| Foreign ownership | 100% | 100% (most sectors) |
| Trade in UAE mainland market | Restricted (needs arrangement) | Unrestricted |
| Setup speed | Days (fastest) | Slightly longer |
| Typical cost | Lower entry options | Often higher |
| Office requirement | Flexi-desk options | Physical office often needed |
| Best for | Online, international, service businesses | UAE-market retail, government contracts |
Compare the major zones in Start a Business in Dubai — Free Zone vs Mainland, and the individual guides to IFZA, Meydan, DMCC, and RAKEZ.
How much does it cost to set up a business in Dubai?
Setting up a business in Dubai costs approximately AED 12,000–30,000 for a basic free-zone company at the value end. Costs rise to AED 30,000–50,000 or more for mainland setups or free-zone packages with multiple visas and office space. The total depends on the chosen free zone, the number of visas you need, whether you require physical office space, and your business activity. The headline licence fee is only part of the picture.
The cost components to budget for include the trade licence itself, which is the core annual fee, registration and establishment fees, visa costs for you and any employees (each visa adds several thousand dirhams), office or flexi-desk costs ranging from a low-cost virtual desk to a full office, and any activity-specific approvals. Value-focused free zones, such as IFZA and some RAK zones, offer competitive entry packages. Premium zones like DMCC cost more but offer prestige and sector-specific advantages.
The honest advice most setup consultancies won’t plainly give is to match the zone to your actual needs rather than chasing either the cheapest headline price or the most prestigious name. A cheap package that lacks the visa allocation or activity permissions you need costs more to fix later. At the same time, an expensive prestige zone is a waste of money if your business does not benefit from its specific advantages. Getting the choice right the first time is where honest, product-neutral advice genuinely saves money.
See Cost of Setting Up a Dubai Business — Real Numbers and Cheapest Free Zone in UAE for the breakdown.
Can you freelance in Dubai?
Yes, you can legally freelance in Dubai by obtaining a freelance permit from a free zone. This allows you to work independently for multiple clients and self-sponsor your residence visa without setting up a full company. Freelance permits are a fast-growing, lower-cost route for independent professionals such as writers, designers, consultants, developers, and media professionals who want to work for themselves without the overhead of a full company setup.
The freelance permit licenses you as an individual professional under a free zone. GoFreelance, TECOM, and various other free zones offer freelance packages. It typically costs less than a full company setup, allows you to invoice clients, open a business bank account, and, in some cases, sponsor your own visa and your family. The permit defines the permitted activities. Media, tech, education, and consulting activities are commonly available.
Freelancing suits the growing number of remote workers and independent professionals drawn to Dubai’s tax environment and lifestyle. It is often the ideal middle path for someone who wants the independence and self-sponsorship of business ownership without the cost and complexity of a full LLC. It can later be upgraded to a full company as the business grows. Note that freelance income above the corporate-tax threshold is still subject to the 9% corporate tax.
Full guide: UAE Freelance Permit — Which Free Zone Is Best for Freelancers.
What taxes and compliance requirements apply to businesses in Dubai?
Dubai businesses are subject to a 9% corporate tax on profits above AED 375,000. They must register for corporate tax with the Federal Tax Authority and, if their taxable turnover exceeds the mandatory threshold, register for and charge 5% VAT. Below the AED 375,000 profit threshold, no corporate tax is due, so many small businesses and freelancers pay no corporate tax. However, registration and compliance obligations can still apply even when no tax is owed.
The compliance essentials are: corporate tax registration is required for businesses, including qualifying free-zone entities and freelancers who meet the criteria, even when profits fall below the taxable threshold. VAT registration becomes mandatory once taxable turnover exceeds the registration threshold, with voluntary registration available below it. Free-zone businesses that meet specific qualifying free zone person conditions can access a 0% corporate tax rate on qualifying income, one of the enduring attractions of free-zone structuring. However, the qualifying conditions are specific and worth professional advice.
The practical takeaway is that Dubai’s business tax environment remains light by global standards but is no longer a zero-compliance environment since the introduction of corporate tax in 2023. Businesses need to register, keep proper records, and file obligations that are straightforward but real. Because this directly affects personal and business finances, our Money & Admin pillar covers tax details in full.
See UAE Corporate Tax for Freelancers and Small Business, UAE VAT for Expats, and Best Banks for UAE Business Accounts.
Frequently asked questions about business and career in Dubai.
Can foreigners own 100% of a business in Dubai?
Yes — foreigners can own 100% of a business in Dubai, both in the free zones (which have always allowed full foreign ownership) and, since ownership reforms, on the mainland in most business sectors. The old requirement for a local Emirati partner holding 51% of a mainland company has been removed for most activities, meaning a foreign founder can now own and control a UAE business outright. A small number of strategic sectors remain subject to restrictions.
How much money do you need to start a business in Dubai?
You need approximately AED 12,000–30,000 to set up a basic free-zone company in Dubai, rising to AED 30,000–50,000 or more for mainland setups, or packages that include multiple visas and office space. The cost depends on the free zone, the number of visas required, office needs, and business activity. Value-free zones offer competitive entry packages, while premium zones and mainland setups cost more but remove certain restrictions.
Is it better to set up in a free zone or on the mainland?
A free zone is better if your business operates online, internationally, or serves clients outside the UAE, because it offers a fast, lower-cost setup with 100% ownership; the mainland is better if you need to trade directly across the UAE market, take government contracts, or open retail premises anywhere in the emirate. The right choice depends entirely on where and how your business will operate, and choosing correctly the first time avoids costly restructuring later.
How do I find a job in Dubai from abroad?
You find a job in Dubai from abroad primarily through LinkedIn, job portals like Bayt and GulfTalent, and recruitment agencies, though many employers prefer candidates already in the UAE. A common strategy is to apply online from home and, if possible, enter the UAE on a job-exploration visa to interview in person, since being on the ground and able to start quickly significantly improves your chances. Adapting your CV to the local format (including photo and visa status) also helps.
What is a good salary in Dubai?
A good salary in Dubai depends on your circumstances. Still, a single professional generally lives comfortably on AED 15,000–20,000 per month, while a family typically needs AED 25,000–40,000 or more per month before school fees are included. Because there is no income tax, these are take-home figures. What counts as “good” is heavily driven by your housing choice, whether you support a family, and your lifestyle — the same salary stretches very differently across these variables.
Do businesses pay tax in Dubai?
Businesses in Dubai pay a 9% corporate tax on profits above AED 375,000, introduced in 2023, while profits below that threshold are not taxed. Businesses must also register for and charge 5% VAT once their taxable turnover exceeds the mandatory registration threshold. Qualifying free-zone businesses can access a 0% corporate-tax rate on qualifying income under specific conditions, which is one reason free-zone structuring remains popular.
Can I get a visa by starting a business in Dubai?
Yes — setting up a business in Dubai allows you to self-sponsor your own residence visa as the company owner, and to sponsor visas for employees and often family members. This is one of the key advantages of the entrepreneurship path over employment: rather than depending on an employer for sponsorship, you control your own residency through your company. The number of visas available depends on your free zone package or mainland setup and, in some cases, your office space.
Can I freelance in Dubai without a company?
Yes, you can freelance legally in Dubai with a freelance permit from a free zone, without setting up a full company. The permit licenses you as an individual professional, allows you to invoice clients and open a business bank account, and lets you self-sponsor your residence visa, all at a lower cost than a full company setup. It’s a popular middle path for independent professionals, and it can be upgraded to a full company later as the business grows.
Your next steps
This guide is an overview of working life in Dubai. The cluster pages below go deep on each path.
- Finding a job: How to Find a Job in Dubai Before You Move, and the country-specific guides
- Understanding pay: Dubai Salary Guide by Profession
- Knowing your rights: UAE Labour Law and End-of-Service Gratuity.
- Setting up a company: Free Zone vs Mainland and the IFZA / Meydan / DMCC / RAKEZ guides
- Going independent: UAE Freelance Permit guide.
- Business finances: Corporate Tax and Best Banks for UAE Business Accounts
Weighing up a job offer or a business setup and want a steer? Message us on WhatsApp — we’re Dubai residents and can point you to the right guide or setup partner for your situation.
Last reviewed: June 2026 by RaynaSean, Dubai-resident writer covering work and business in the UAE since 2020.
Primary sources: Ministry of Human Resources & Emiratisation (mohre.gov.ae), Dubai Department of Economy & Tourism, Federal Tax Authority, and individual free zone authorities.
Disclaimer: This guide is informational, not legal, financial, or business setup advice. Costs, salaries, tax rules, and labour law change; verify current details with official sources or a licensed adviser before making decisions.
