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Mainland vs Freezone in UAE: Which Should You Choose?

Updated 15 March 2026

Setting up a company in the UAE means making one big decision early on: Mainland or Freezone?

Get this wrong and you’ll either pay more than you need to, or find yourself unable to operate the way you planned.

Here’s the honest breakdown.


What Is a Mainland Company?

A Mainland company (also called an LLC or sole establishment) is licensed by the Department of Economic Development (DED) of the emirate you’re setting up in.

Key facts:

  • Can trade anywhere in the UAE - with government entities, other businesses, and retail customers
  • Can operate from any office, warehouse or retail unit in the UAE
  • Historically required a UAE national sponsor (51% ownership) - this changed in 2021 for most sectors

Since the 2021 law change: Foreign nationals can now own 100% of a mainland company in most business activities. A few restricted sectors (oil & gas, telecoms, some defence) still require a UAE partner.


What Is a Freezone Company?

A Freezone company is licensed by a specific free zone authority (JAFZA, DMCC, RAKEZ, DIFC, etc.) and operates within that zone’s jurisdiction.

Key facts:

  • 100% foreign ownership - always has been
  • Zero corporate tax on income from outside the UAE (within zone activities)
  • Can only trade directly with other freezone companies or internationally - not directly with UAE mainland market without a distributor
  • Each freezone has its own license, fees and requirements

Head-to-Head Comparison

MainlandFreezone
Foreign ownership100% (most sectors)100%
Trade within UAE✅ Yes❌ Limited (needs distributor)
Government contracts✅ Yes❌ Generally no
Office requirementRequired (can be flexi-desk)Flexi-desk often available
Visa allocationBased on office sizeBased on package
Setup costAED 15,000-30,000+AED 8,000-25,000
Annual renewalAED 10,000-20,000AED 7,000-18,000
BankingEasierCan be harder
Corporate tax9% on profits >AED 375k0% (qualifying income)

When to Choose Mainland

Choose Mainland if you:

  • Plan to sell to UAE businesses or consumers directly
  • Want to bid for government contracts
  • Need a physical retail or commercial presence in the UAE
  • Are in professional services (consulting, engineering, legal)
  • Want the most credibility with local banks

Typical cost: AED 18,000-35,000 to set up, AED 12,000-20,000/year to maintain.


When to Choose Freezone

Choose Freezone if you:

  • Primarily serve international clients or export services
  • Are running a remote/digital business
  • Want to minimise costs (especially as a solo founder)
  • Are in tech, media, e-commerce, or consulting for non-UAE clients
  • Want a quick, simple setup process

Most popular freezones:

  • DMCC (Dubai Multi Commodities Centre) - most prestigious, commodity trading focus
  • RAKEZ (Ras Al Khaimah Economic Zone) - cheapest, great for solo founders
  • IFZA (International Freezone Authority) - good balance of cost and credibility
  • DIFC - financial services, very prestigious but expensive
  • Dubai South - logistics, aviation, e-commerce

Typical cost: AED 8,000-20,000 to set up, AED 7,000-15,000/year to maintain.


The Gotcha: Banking

Freezone companies can struggle with UAE bank accounts - some banks are reluctant to open accounts for certain freezones, especially newer or less-known ones.

DMCC and ADGM have the best banking relationships. If banking ease matters, factor this in.

Mainland companies generally have an easier time opening UAE bank accounts.


The VAT Question

Both Mainland and Freezone companies must register for UAE VAT (5%) once turnover exceeds AED 375,000/year.

Freezone companies with “qualifying income” from outside the UAE may be exempt - but get proper accounting advice on this.


My Recommendation

Solo founder / digital business / mainly international clients → RAKEZ or IFZA Freezone. Cheapest, fastest, 100% yours.

Service business selling to UAE companies → Mainland. Worth the slightly higher cost for the ability to trade freely.

Startup planning to raise investment → DIFC or ADGM. Investors recognise these jurisdictions.


Next Steps

Once you’ve decided, read: