UAE Tax Procedures Overhaul: What the April 2026 Amendments Mean for Your Business
The UAE Ministry of Finance has introduced major amendments to the country’s Tax Procedures Law, effective April 1, 2026. If your business has tax credit balances, open audit exposure, or pending voluntary disclosures — this affects you now.
What Changed and Why It Matters
The changes update the Executive Regulations under Federal Decree-Law No. 17 of 2025. They touch four critical areas: refund timelines, audit windows, voluntary disclosures, and record retention.
1. Tax Refund Claims Now Have a 5-Year Deadline
Previously, unused tax credit balances could be carried forward indefinitely. Under the new rules, taxpayers must claim refunds within five years or permanently lose the right to recover those amounts. This applies across all UAE taxes — VAT, Corporate Tax, and Excise.
Action Required: If your business has unclaimed VAT refunds or credit balances sitting in your FTA account, review them immediately. The FTA has provided a transitional window until December 31, 2026, to claim or offset existing balances.
2. FTA Can Now Audit Up to 15 Years Back
The standard audit limitation was five years. Under the revised rules, the FTA can extend audits to 15 years in cases involving tax evasion or failure to register. Businesses with registration gaps or historical under-declarations face a much longer exposure window.
3. Voluntary Disclosure Rules Clarified
If an error does not affect the amount of tax due, it may now be corrected in a future return rather than requiring a formal voluntary disclosure. However, in cases specified by the FTA, a formal disclosure is still required. When in doubt, always consult a tax professional — filing incorrectly can still attract penalties.
4. FTA Can Issue Binding Interpretive Decisions
The FTA has been granted authority to issue binding directives clarifying how tax laws apply to specific transactions. These decisions bind both the regulator and the taxpayer — a significant development for businesses seeking certainty on complex arrangements.
What UAE Businesses Should Do Now
- Review all FTA credit balances and pending refund claims
- Identify any balances approaching the five-year threshold
- Upgrade your record retention policy to cover 15-year exposure scenarios
- Assess your voluntary disclosure position for all open periods
- Consider a formal tax health check with a qualified advisor
FSH Professional Perspective
These amendments represent a fundamental shift in UAE tax enforcement. The combination of stricter refund deadlines, longer audit windows, and binding FTA directives means businesses can no longer afford a passive approach to tax management. At FSH Financial Consultants, we advise clients to treat compliance as an ongoing operational priority — not just an annual filing exercise.
Contact FSH Financial Consultants at info@fshconsultants.com for a tax compliance review.