Dubai has a reputation: zero personal tax, sun, skyscrapers, and no government hand in your pocket. Cyprus gets compared to it constantly. After the UAE introduced corporate tax in 2023 and landed on the FATF grey list in 2024, that comparison deserves a proper update.
Here is what the 2026 numbers actually show.
The Tax Stack: Dubai vs Cyprus
Dubai (UAE):
- Corporate tax: 9% on profits above AED 375,000 (roughly EUR 93,000). Below that threshold: 0%.
- Personal income tax: 0%
- Dividends: 0%
- Capital gains: 0%
- VAT: 5%
- Social contributions: none for expatriates (UAE nationals pay into GPSSA)
- Free zone companies: 0% if qualifying activities and substance requirements met
Cyprus (Non-Dom):
- Corporate tax: 15%
- Personal income tax: 0% on dividends for Non-Dom residents
- Dividends: 2.65% GHS contribution (capped at EUR 4,770/year)
- Capital gains: 0% on shares, crypto, and overseas property
- VAT: 19% standard, 5% reduced on some residential
- Effective rate for entrepreneurs: approximately 5%
At the holding company level, the math is close. On EUR 100,000 revenue, Cyprus runs about EUR 5,000 in total tax via the Non-Dom structure. Dubai runs about EUR 9,000 once the 9% corporate rate kicks in above the AED threshold — or zero if you qualify for Small Business Relief (revenue under AED 3 million, available until at least 2026). The "zero tax" narrative depends heavily on that relief remaining in place.
The EU Access Factor
This is where the comparison shifts decisively for anyone with European clients or European banking relationships.
A Cyprus Ltd is an EU company. It can invoice clients across the EU without friction, bank with any European institution, and benefit from EU directives — including the Parent-Subsidiary Directive, which eliminates withholding tax on dividends within the EU. EU counterparties recognize it immediately as a standard corporate entity.
A Dubai company operating from a UAE free zone faces increased scrutiny from EU banks following the UAE's inclusion on the FATF grey list in 2024. Several European financial institutions now apply enhanced due diligence requirements to UAE entities and individuals. If you are invoicing German companies, holding accounts with Dutch banks, or dealing with EU payment processors, the compliance overhead on a UAE entity has grown substantially.
For entrepreneurs with no EU footprint — serving Asian, Middle Eastern, or global markets — this may not matter. But for anyone whose revenue base is European, Cyprus is the operationally simpler choice.
Residency: 60 Days vs Dubai Minimums
Cyprus offers a genuine path to tax residency without uprooting your life. The 60-day tax residency rule lets you establish Cyprus tax residency with as few as 60 days on the island per calendar year, provided you do not spend more than 183 days in any other single country and meet the other conditions.
Dubai requires more substantial presence. UAE residency visa holders are expected to return to the UAE periodically to avoid cancellation, and establishing genuine economic substance under the ESR regulations requires demonstrable real activity.
For a founder who splits time between multiple countries, Cyprus's 60-day route is more workable.
The Company Structure That Gets You to ~5%
The Cyprus Non-Dom status is what takes the effective rate from 15% corporate down to approximately 5% at the shareholder level. Here is how it works: the Cyprus company pays 15% on profits. The net profits distributed as dividends are taxed at 0% income tax for a Non-Dom resident — only the 2.65% GHS contribution applies, capped at EUR 4,770 annually.
On EUR 200,000 distributed profits, the GHS cap means you pay EUR 4,770 in total healthcare-linked contribution regardless of the dividend amount above EUR 180,000. The effective blended rate on the full distribution drops toward 5% as the dividend increases.
Once you have your Yellow Slip — the EU citizen registration document required for everything from opening a bank account to confirming tax residency — you can apply for Non-Dom status through the Tax Department.
Cost of Living: Dubai Is Materially More Expensive
The tax comparison is close. The cost comparison is not. Dubai Marina or Downtown apartments run EUR 2,000 to EUR 4,000 per month for a two-bedroom. Equivalent space in Limassol costs EUR 650 to EUR 900, and in Larnaca EUR 550 to EUR 750. Groceries, restaurants, and transport in Cyprus run 40 to 50% below Western European prices — and significantly below Dubai.
For a founder optimizing net disposable income rather than just headline tax rate, the lifestyle cost gap often exceeds the tax difference.
The Practical Decision
Dubai makes sense if: your clients are in the Middle East or Asia, you have no EU banking dependencies, you want UAE physical presence for networking in that region, and you can manage the enhanced due diligence burden.
Cyprus makes sense if: you invoice EU clients, you want EU banking access without friction, you prefer Mediterranean cost of living, or you want a simpler residency route with fewer day-presence requirements.
The effective tax rates are close enough that the decision should be made on operational grounds — not on the assumption that Dubai means "zero tax" and Cyprus means "real tax."
Not tax or legal advice. Rules change and individual circumstances vary. Consult a licensed Cyprus tax adviser before any structural decisions.
Further reading:
- Cyprus Non-Dom status — the full guide to the ~5% effective rate
- 60-day tax residency rule — how to qualify without living in Cyprus full-time
- Yellow Slip guide — the first document every EU relocator needs
- Holding company Cyprus — how the dividend structure works in practice
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