The UAE charges no personal income tax — which is exactly why so many people want to be tax resident there. The catch is that residency is settled by a day count.
Why a tax-free country still counts your days
The UAE does not levy a personal income tax on salaries or wages, so the appeal is obvious for anyone who can choose where to base themselves. But "I live in Dubai now" is not, by itself, a tax status. To be treated as a UAE tax resident — to obtain a Tax Residency Certificate, to claim relief under a double-tax treaty, or to help show another country that you have genuinely left its tax net — you have to meet criteria the UAE set out in Cabinet Decision No. 85 of 2022, in force since 1 March 2023.
Most of those criteria come down to a single number: how many days you were physically inside the country.
Three ways to become a UAE tax resident
Under Cabinet Decision 85, an individual is a UAE tax resident if they meet any one of three tests — summarised by the UAE Ministry of Finance and set out in technical guidance from EY:
| Route | Days in the UAE | Extra conditions |
|---|---|---|
| Centre of life | none specified | The UAE is your usual or principal place of residence and the centre of your financial and personal interests |
| 183-day rule | 183+ days | Physical presence over a consecutive 12-month period |
| 90-day rule | 90+ days | In a consecutive 12-month period, and you are a UAE national, a UAE residence-permit holder, or a GCC national, and you have a permanent home in the UAE or carry on employment or a business there |
Two of the three are explicit day-count tests. Even the "centre of life" route, which sets no minimum, is far easier to defend if you can show where you actually spent your time.
Note the window. The 183- and 90-day thresholds are measured over ==a rolling, consecutive 12-month period — not a tidy calendar year==, and the days do not have to be consecutive. That makes the count harder to keep in your head than an annual tally, because the relevant year is always sliding forward.
How a "day" is counted
The detail that trips people up sits in Ministerial Decision No. 27 of 2023, which clarifies the counting. All days, or parts of a day, on which you are physically present in the UAE are counted. As EY summarises, "all days or parts of a day in which an individual is physically present in the UAE will be counted as UAE days." So both your arrival day and your departure day are UAE days — and even a long layover at a UAE airport can add one to the tally.
==Any part of a day you are physically present counts as a full UAE day — arrival and departure days included.==
There is one narrow relief: a day spent in the UAE because of an exceptional circumstance — an unforeseeable event beyond your control that happens while you are already in the country and stops you leaving as planned — may be disregarded. It is an exception, not a planning tool.
The definitions behind the tests matter too. A permanent place of residence is a home continuously available to you (the authorities point to a title deed or a tenancy contract as evidence); the centre of financial and personal interests is the place where your personal and economic ties are closest. If you want the underlying mechanics of part-days and presence across different regimes, see What counts as a 'day' for visas and tax.
Domestic residency is not the end of the story
Being a UAE tax resident under these rules is a domestic status. It does not automatically switch off tax residency somewhere else. Many countries run their own presence-and-ties tests, and you can be resident in two places at once — at which point a double-tax treaty's tie-breaker decides which one prevails. We unpack that in Dual tax residency and the treaty tie-breaker.
There is a practical wrinkle, too. A Tax Residency Certificate issued for treaty purposes generally rests on the 183-day route rather than the lighter 90-day domestic test — so the day count you can actually evidence may decide which certificate you can obtain. Requirements vary and change; confirm the current position with the Federal Tax Authority before you rely on any of this.
The whole thing rests on a number you can prove
Strip away the labels and UAE tax residency is an exercise in counting days against a window that keeps moving. Ninety or 183 days, in any consecutive 12 months, where every part-day counts and the days need not be consecutive — and where the burden is on you to evidence them with entry and exit records. People who reconstruct that from memory at certificate time, or when another country asks where they really were, tend to guess, and guesses are easy to check against border data.
This is the quiet problem Countly was built for. It keeps an exact, automatic, on-device record of which days you spent in each country and when you crossed each border — the contemporaneous log that a rolling 90/183-day test, or a tax authority on the other side, will eventually ask you to produce. No account, no cloud, no analytics; just the count, on your phone.
This article is general information, not legal or tax advice. UAE rules can change and your situation is specific — check the UAE Ministry of Finance and Federal Tax Authority, and take professional advice.
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