HomeBlogTransfer Pricing in the UAE in 2026: What Businesses Must Prove to the Tax Authority — and Why Intra-Group Transactions Have Become Risk Zone No. 1

Transfer Pricing in the UAE in 2026: What Businesses Must Prove to the Tax Authority — and Why Intra-Group Transactions Have Become Risk Zone No. 1

February 20, 2026

Transfer Pricing in the UAE in 2026: What Businesses Must Prove to the Tax Authority — and Why Intra-Group Transactions Have Become Risk Zone No. 1 article cover image

In 2026, transfer pricing (TP) in the UAE is no longer “a topic for large groups” and no longer a formality attached to the tax return. It is the framework through which the Federal Tax Authority (FTA) examines the most important question: has profit shifted to the group entity where taxation is more convenient, and does the internal economic model reflect reality?

At the core of the regime lies the Arm’s Length Principle: transactions between related parties must be conducted on terms that would have applied between independent parties. This is embedded in the UAE Corporate Tax regime, and the practical expectations are detailed in the official FTA Transfer Pricing Guide.

1. Why the FTA Is Focusing on Transfer Pricing Now

There are three reasons why 2026 is the year when TP becomes a practical control mechanism rather than a theoretical requirement.

First, the 9% Corporate Tax has made intra-group pricing a direct determinant of taxable income. Any internal price — interest on loans, management fees, royalties, resale margins — affects profit and therefore tax. In a taxable environment, this automatically becomes reviewable.

Second, TP is a universal mechanism for testing economic reality. The tax authority does not debate business strategy. It evaluates facts: who makes decisions, who performs functions, where the people are located, where costs are incurred, and who bears risk. If profit sits where functions do not — that is no longer a stylistic issue; it becomes an Arm’s Length issue assessed through functional analysis.

Third, the FTA explicitly expects contemporaneous documentation — documentation prepared during the period, not retroactively after a request.

2. Who Falls Within the Scope: Related Parties and Connected Persons

Many businesses begin with the assumption: “We do not have related-party transactions.” That assumption often proves incorrect.

If you:

  • pay commission to an entity owned by the same beneficial owner,

  • receive or grant a loan from a shareholder or affiliate,

  • trade goods through group entities,

  • allocate shared marketing or IT expenses across entities,

  • compensate a director or shareholder in a non-market manner,

you are within TP territory.

The FTA guidance makes clear that Transfer Pricing rules apply to both Related Parties and Connected Persons.

The practical point is simple: for the tax authority, substance matters more than labels.

3. Transactions Most Frequently Challenged

Certain types of intra-group transactions consistently attract scrutiny.

Intra-group Services (Management Fees / Shared Services)

A contract and invoice are insufficient. The FTA expects evidence of:

  • what was performed,

  • by whom,

  • when,

  • with what result,

  • and why the fee reflects market conditions.

Vague descriptions such as “strategic support” combined with significant profit impact are high-risk.

Intra-group Loans

Loans without arm’s length interest rates, risk analysis, or repayment terms are vulnerable. The tax authority will assess how an independent lender would have priced the risk.

Royalties and Intellectual Property

Two key questions arise:

  1. Who actually controls and manages the IP?

  2. How does the IP create value within the local entity?

If IP is located in an entity with no real functions, profit allocation becomes questionable.

Intra-group Trading

Where one group entity purchases and resells goods, the FTA expects clarity on:

  • who bears commercial risk,

  • who manages pricing,

  • where operational functions sit,

  • and why the margin is economically justified.

4. The Five Levels of Transfer Pricing Documentation in the UAE

The FTA describes five categories of documentation requirements per tax period.

1. Transfer Pricing Disclosure Form

Submitted together with the Corporate Tax return (due within nine months from the end of the tax period). This form outlines the nature and value of related-party transactions.

It serves as the FTA’s roadmap for identifying risk areas.

2. Master File

Provides a high-level overview of the group:

  • group structure,

  • value chain,

  • TP policy,

  • intangible assets,

  • financing structure.

Often prepared at HQ level — but local alignment must be verified.

3. Local File

The most critical document. It contains:

  • description of the local business,

  • functional analysis (functions, assets, risks),

  • description of controlled transactions,

  • selection of TP method,

  • benchmarking analysis,

  • economic justification.

The Local File must demonstrate that outcomes are consistent with the Arm’s Length Principle.

4. Country-by-Country Report (CbCR)

Applies to multinational groups exceeding AED 3.15 billion in consolidated revenue, under Cabinet Resolution No. 44 of 2020.

Even where not applicable, CbCR provides context for how profit is distributed globally.

5. Additional Supporting Information

The FTA retains authority to request supporting documentation even where formal Master or Local File thresholds are not met.

This may include:

  • calculations,

  • benchmarking studies,

  • correspondence,

  • evidence of services rendered,

  • allocation methodologies,

  • internal policies.

5. Thresholds for Mandatory Documentation

Master and Local Files are mandatory where:

  • the taxpayer is part of an MNE group with consolidated revenue of AED 3.15 billion or more, or

  • the taxpayer’s own revenue exceeds AED 200 million.

Ministerial Decision No. 97 of 2023 sets detailed requirements for maintaining TP documentation.

6. The Most Expensive Mistake: Retrospective Documentation

The FTA expects documentation to be contemporaneous. Preparing documentation only after receiving a request often exposes inconsistencies:

  • contracts dated after transactions,

  • lack of supporting deliverables,

  • inconsistent margins,

  • artificial narratives.

7. Practical Strategy for 2026

A defensible TP framework requires:

  1. Identification of all controlled transactions.

  2. Proper contractual documentation.

  3. Functional (FAR) analysis aligned with reality.

  4. Selection of economically justified TP methods.

  5. Evidence supporting service charges.

  6. Annual review of TP policies.

8. Conclusion

Transfer Pricing in the UAE is no longer a technical annex. It is the language through which profit must be explained.

In 2026, intra-group pricing without documentation is one of the clearest triggers for tax review.

Businesses seeking tax stability, banking credibility, and long-term sustainability must integrate Transfer Pricing into their structural planning — not as paperwork, but as economic logic.

9. Legal and Regulatory References

  1. FTA Corporate Tax Guide: Transfer Pricing (CTGTP1), October 2023

  2. Ministerial Decision No. 97 of 2023 — Requirements for Maintaining Transfer Pricing Documentation

  3. Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022 on the Taxation of Corporations and Businesses

  4. Cabinet Resolution No. 44 of 2020 — Country-by-Country Reporting

  5. OECD Transfer Pricing Guidelines / BEPS Action 13

 

 

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