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Mandeep Singh
Mandeep Singh

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Closing a Company in the UAE: Why “Not Renewing the License” Is the Most Expensive Mistake People Make

A lot of people think closing a company in the UAE is simple.
You stop operating.
You don’t renew the trade license.
You move on.
That assumption causes more trouble than almost anything else I see.
In the UAE, a company doesn’t stop existing just because you stop using it. If you don’t shut it down properly, obligations keep running quietly in the background — especially VAT.
Two things must be closed — not one
When a business shuts down, there are two separate processes involved:
• Cancelling the trade license (mainland or free zone)
• Deregistering for VAT with the tax authority
Most problems happen when people handle one and ignore the other — or worse, do neither.
Letting a license expire is not the same as closing a company. From the government’s point of view, the business still exists.
VAT doesn’t stop just because business activity stops
This catches a lot of owners off guard.
If you stop making taxable sales, or your revenue drops below the required threshold, you’re expected to apply for VAT deregistration within a limited time window.
If you miss that window, penalties can apply even if:
• The company isn’t operating
• There’s no revenue
• The bank account is empty
Intent doesn’t matter much here. Process does.
Why letting the license expire causes long-term problems
People often let licenses lapse because it feels harmless.
In reality:
• The company remains legally active
• Fines and compliance issues can continue
• Visa and bank matters don’t auto-close
• You may face issues years later when opening another business
The UAE system assumes that if a company exists, it has obligations — until proven otherwise through formal closure.
VAT at closure is where mistakes usually happen
Even when people apply for VAT deregistration, they often miss details like:
• Final VAT returns still need to be filed
• Any unpaid VAT must be cleared first
• Unsold stock or remaining assets may trigger VAT
• Records must be kept for years after closure
Deregistration isn’t an exit button. It’s a process with conditions.
Liquidation isn’t optional — it’s the closure
For mainland companies, liquidation usually involves:
• A formal decision to close
• Appointing a liquidator
• Publishing a public notice
• Waiting for creditor objections
• Cancelling visas, leases, utilities, and bank accounts
• Submitting final reports
• Then cancelling the license
Free zones follow similar steps, just through different portals.
Skipping these steps doesn’t save time. It only delays consequences.
The cleanest closures handle VAT and liquidation together
The smoothest shutdowns happen when both processes run side by side.
While the liquidation period is ongoing:
• Assets are dealt with properly
• Final VAT positions are calculated
• Returns are filed
• Deregistration is applied for at the right time
Doing this in sequence instead of in isolation avoids rework, delays, and penalties.
Mistakes that keep repeating
Some common ones:
• Letting the license expire instead of cancelling it
• Missing VAT deregistration deadlines
• Ignoring VAT on remaining assets
• Leaving tax applications half-finished
• Assuming inactivity equals closure
None of these feel serious at the time. That’s why they’re expensive later.
The simple takeaway
If you’re closing a company in the UAE:
• You must formally cancel the license
• You must properly deregister for VAT
• You must file final returns and keep records
• You can’t just walk away
Do it once. Do it cleanly. Then you’re done.

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