How to Open a Co-working Space Business in Dubai: 2026 Step-by-Step Guide

How to Open a Co-working Space in Dubai: 2026 Guide

Key Highlights

  1. Launching a co-working space in Dubai in 2026 needs a DET mainland or free zone trade licence, an Ejari-registered commercial premises, Dubai Civil Defense fit-out approval, and an Establishment Card.

  2. Dubai Chamber welcomed 53,838 new member companies in the first nine months of 2025, a 4% year-on-year jump, signaling steady demand for flexible workspace.
  3. Federal Decree-Law No. 20 of 2025 reaffirms 100% foreign ownership and introduces Article 15 bis, letting you re-domicile between free zones and the mainland without dissolving your company.
  4. VAT registration is mandatory above AED 375,000 in taxable supplies, and Corporate Tax kicks in at 9% above AED 375,000 in taxable income, both administered by the Federal Tax Authority.

 

You spent the last three months scouting Business Bay. You found a 6,000 sq ft floor with skyline views, the landlord is ready to sign, and you already know the kind of community you want to build. 

Founders, freelancers, designers, the people who keep showing up in your inbox asking when you will open. Then your accountant emails: did you confirm the trade-license activity?” 

What about Civil Defence approval? Is this building even commercially zoned for shared workspace? Suddenly your launch date is at risk and you have not even paid the deposit.

If any of that feels familiar, you are exactly the operator this guide is written for. 

To launch a co-working space in Dubai, you need a trade licence from the Dubai Department of Economy and Tourism (DET) for the mainland or from a free zone authority such as IFZA, Meydan, or DMCC; an Ejari-registered commercial premises; Dubai Civil Defense fit-out approval; and an Establishment Card. 

That is the short answer. The long answer covers how to pick your jurisdiction, what you will actually pay, and the compliance traps that wreck first-time operators.

Is Opening a Co-working Space in Dubai Profitable in 2026?

Short answer: yes, if you pick the right jurisdiction and location. According to the Dubai Government Media Office and the Dubai Chamber of Commerce welcomed 53,838 new member companies in the first nine months of 2025, a 4% year-on-year increase. Most are SMEs and solo founders. They all need somewhere to work.

Three demand signals you can plan around:

  • The Invest in Dubai coworking spaces page actively promotes flexible workspaces.
  • Mainland 100% foreign ownership is now standard, reaffirmed under Federal Decree-Law No. 20 of 2025, which amended the 
  • UAE Commercial Companies Law on the UAE Legislation portal.
  • The UAE offers a Remote Work Visa via Invest in Dubai, pulling more remote professionals who need flexible desks.

 

Mainland or Free Zone: Which Is Better for a Co-working Business?

A mainland (DET) licence is best if you want walk-in clients across Dubai and the right to bid for government work. A free zone licence is cheaper to start, but it limits how directly you can sell to UAE-mainland clients without a distributor or dual licence arrangement.

Factor

Mainland (DET)

Free Zone (e.g., IFZA, Meydan, DMCC)

Issuing authority

Dubai DET

Free zone authority

Trading with UAE market

Yes, direct

Restricted; needs distributor or dual license

Office requirement

Physical commercial unit + Ejari mandatory

Flexi-desks are allowed in many free zones

Foreign ownership

100% (post-2021 reform; reaffirmed under the 2025 CCL amendment)

100%

Best fit

Co-working aimed at retail and walk-in members

Niche or sector-focused hubs (tech, media)

One useful update: the new Article 15 bis, inserted by Federal Decree-Law No. 20 of 2025, accessible via the UAE Legislation portal, introduces a statutory mechanism for re-domiciliation between mainland and free zones. 

If you start in a free zone and outgrow it, you can move the same legal entity onto the mainland without dissolving and reincorporating.

What Is the Right Business Activity for a Co-working Space in Dubai?

Co-working operators in Dubai are typically licensed under the Business Centers Services or Office Space Rental categories. Both fall under the commercial licence category on the mainland.

A related activity, Leasing and Management of Self-Owned Property, sits under the leasing profession regulated by Dubai Law No. 2 of 2003. 

It carries specific conditions, including ownership and bank guarantee rules, and does not apply when you are leasing the premises from a third-party landlord. Pick the wrong activity and your application gets bounced back.

Disclaimer: Activity codes and government fees in this article are indicative based on official UAE sources at the time of writing. Verify the current rate on the official portal before paying anything.

Step-by-Step: How to Get a Co-working Space Trade Licence in Dubai

  1. Choose your jurisdiction. Mainland (DET) for direct UAE-market access or a free zone such as IFZA, Meydan, or DMCC for lower setup costs.
  2. Select your legal form. LLC is the most common structure for co-working operators. The UAE Commercial Companies Law also permits other forms, such as Public Joint Stock Company and Private Joint Stock Company.
  3. Reserve your trade name. Apply through the Invest in Dubai portal. The name has to follow the legal-form acronym (LLC, EST) and cannot use restricted words.
  4. Get initial approval from DET or your chosen free zone authority. This signals the government has no objection in principle.
  5. Lease premises and register Ejari. Mandatory for mainland operations through the Dubai Land Department. Free zone tenancies register with the free zone authority instead.
  6. Obtain external approvals. You will need Dubai Civil Defense approval for the fit-out, Dubai Municipality building approval, and DEWA connection.
  7. Sign the MOA and submit final docs. Passport copies, initial-approval receipt, attested lease, and the Memorandum of Association.
  8. Pay fees and collect your trade licence. You have 30 days from the payment voucher date to pay. Miss it and your application is cancelled.
  9. Apply for your Establishment Card and visa quota. Through GDRFA on the mainland, or your free zone immigration channel.
  10. Register with Dubai Chamber. Mainland businesses must register before commencing economic activity.

 

The fastest documented path is the federal Bashr platform, which can issue a licence in 15 minutes once approvals and documents are in place.

Also Read: UAE Business Bank Accounts for Startups & SMEs in 2026: Best Options by Use Case

How Much Does It Cost to Open a Co-working Space in Dubai?

A realistic 2026 setup budget ranges from roughly AED 25,000 for a lean free-zone licence with minimal premises to AED 250,000 or more for a mainland co-working with a leased commercial fit-out, before you spend anything on rent, furniture, and IT.

Cost item

Indicative range (AED)

Source

DET trade licence (mainland)

Activity-dependent. Verify live

Invest in Dubai

Free zone licence (e.g., IFZA Zero-Visa)

From 11,900 (April 2026 promo)

IFZA April 2026 price list

Establishment Card

2,000 (initial), 2,200 (renewal)

IFZA Schedule of Fees, Feb 2026

Residence Visa (2 years)

3,750 per visa

IFZA Schedule of Fees, Feb 2026

Ejari registration

Per official schedule. Verify live

Dubai Land Department

Civil Defence fit-out approval

Project-dependent

Dubai Civil Defence

Dubai Municipality housing fee

5% of annual rent

u.ae leasing-property page

Disclaimer: Do not treat any DET commercial licence figure as fixed. It varies by activity, legal form, and shareholder structure. Use the official Invest in Dubai cost calculator for an exact quote, and verify every line item against current UAE government sources before you commit.

What Are the Mandatory Compliance and Operational Requirements?

Co-working is a regulated, premises-heavy business. Skip any of the following and you risk fines, shutdowns, or an unsafe space.

  • Ejari registration for the premises with the Dubai Land Department.
  • Dubai Civil Defense approval covering fire alarms, sprinklers, emergency exits, and evacuation plans.
  • Dubai Municipality occupancy approval for shared workspace floor plans.
  • VAT registration with the FTA. Mandatory if taxable supplies exceed AED 375,000 per year. New procedures apply under Federal Decree-Law No. 16 and No. 17 of 2025, effective 1 January 2026, via the UAE Ministry of Finance
  • Corporate Tax registration with the FTA. The rate is 9% on taxable income above AED 375,000.
  • WPS and MOHRE registration for staff salaries (mainland employers).
  • Member contracts and data handling must comply with the UAE PDPL, Federal Decree-Law No. 45 of 2021.

 

Where Should You Locate Your Co-working Space in Dubai?

Pick neighborhoods with high SME and freelancer density. Business Bay, JLT, DIFC, Dubai Silicon Oasis, Al Quoz, Meydan, Dubai South, and Bur Dubai/Karama all work for different operator profiles. Members weigh parking and metro access heavily. If your building has neither, your conversion rate will suffer.

One non-negotiable: your unit must sit in a commercially zoned building. Verify zoning with Dubai Municipality before you sign a lease, not after.

Common Mistakes First-Time Co-working Operators Make in Dubai

  • Picking residential-zoned premises. The trade licence cannot be issued, and you lose your deposit.
  • Skipping Civil Defence pre-approval before fit-out, then paying for costly rework.
  • Choosing Leasing and Management of Self-Owned Property when the premises are leased from a third party. Wrong activity, application rejected.
  • Underestimating annual visa quota, which is tied to your office area.
  • Ignoring the VAT threshold of AED 375,000 once memberships scale.

 

Also Read: Low-Investment Business Setup Ideas in Dubai 2026: Top Sectors for Entrepreneurs Under AED 50,000

FAQs

  1. Can a foreigner own 100% of a co-working space business in Dubai?

Yes. Mainland and free zone both allow 100% foreign ownership for this activity, reaffirmed under Federal Decree-Law No. 20 of 2025, accessible via the UAE Legislation portal.

  1. How long does it take to get a co-working trade licence in Dubai?

The UAE mainland setup page indicates licences can be issued in 15 minutes via the federal Bashr platform once approvals and documents are in place. Conventional DET processing takes longer.

  1. Do I need an Ejari for a free zone co-working business?

No. Free zones use their own tenancy registration. Ejari is mandatory only for mainland premises through the Dubai Land Department.

  1. Is a co-working space subject to UAE Corporate Tax?

Yes. The rate is 9% on taxable income above AED 375,000, per Federal Tax Authority rules.

  1. Can I run a co-working space from a virtual office?

No. The operator needs a physical commercial unit. Your members can use it as a virtual address if rules allow, but the operation itself cannot run from one.

  1. Which is cheaper, IFZA or DET mainland for a co-working business?

IFZA (free zone) is cheaper to start. DET mainland gives full UAE-market access. Use the Invest in Dubai cost calculator for an exact comparison.

Ready to Open Your Co-working Space?

You have the framework. Now you need execution. JSB Incorporation helps global founders set up across 24+ UAE jurisdictions, including DMCC, IFZA, JAFZA, and DET mainland, with transparent pricing, fast turnaround, and end-to-end support covering licensing, banking, visas, and tax registration. 

If you want a co-working setup that opens on schedule, with the right activity code and zero compliance surprises, talk to the JSB team at jsb.ae and map out your jurisdiction strategy before signing a lease.

Book your free consultation call today with the experts of JSB Incorporation to learn more.

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