Key Highlights
Not every UAE trade license unlocks the same markets. Picking the wrong type can block your access to local buyers, restrict your product range, or bring your first shipment to a full stop at customs.
Here’s how it typically plays out for a first-time import-export entrepreneur. You’ve spent months building a supplier relationship in Guangzhou. Your buyer in Amsterdam is waiting. You set up your company, get a free zone trade license, and start moving goods.
Your first container arrives at Jebel Ali port. The customs officer checks your license, flags a mismatch between your listed activity and the product category on the commercial invoice, and holds the shipment for inspection. You call your logistics broker.
There’s no fast fix. The shipment sits. Your buyer moves on within 48 hours. This doesn’t happen because the UAE’s trade system is difficult. It happens because most first-time entrepreneurs don’t realize that a UAE trade license is activity-specific, not a blanket business permit.
Official sources confirm that a valid trade license is a mandatory requirement before any import or export activity can legally take place in the UAE.
The license type you choose determines which goods you can trade, whether you can access the UAE mainland market directly, how customs clearance works, and what your tax obligations look like.
The wrong trade license doesn’t just create a paperwork problem. It can trigger shipment holds, compliance penalties, and lost clients all within the first weeks of operations.
Take a common situation: a foreign entrepreneur sets up in a UAE free zone to benefit from 0% customs duty and 100% foreign ownership. Everything checks out until they try to supply goods directly to a UAE mainland retailer. That’s not permitted under a free zone license alone.
Free zone companies can only access the UAE mainland market through a licensed mainland distributor or by establishing a separate mainland branch or company. Setting up that mainland branch is an additional legal process, with its own approval steps, costs, and timelines, and weeks of delay your buyer won’t always wait for.
The activity-specific nature of UAE trade licenses is the other major trap. You can only legally trade in the activities listed on your license at the time of application.
Official sources confirm there are more than 2,000 approved business activities in the UAE system. If your product category isn’t covered, your customs clearance won’t go through. Getting this right before you apply is far cheaper than fixing it after your first shipment is already at the port.
A UAE trade license for import-export is an official permit that authorizes your company to conduct commercial activities, including importing and exporting goods, within the UAE’s legal framework. For mainland companies, the Department of Economic Development (DED) of the relevant emirate issues it. For free zone companies, the relevant Free Zone Authority issues it.
Your license is activity-specific. The activities listed on it at the time of application are the only ones you can legally operate. The Ministry of Economy recognizes six official license types for mainland businesses: industrial, commercial, professional, tourism, agricultural, and crafts.
For free zones, the Ministry of Economy recognizes commercial, consultancy/service, industrial, educational, media, e-commerce, warehouse, offshore companies, innovation, manufacturing, freelancers, and others.
Your UAE trade license is valid for one year and must be renewed annually. Missing your renewal triggers financial penalties and puts your company in legal non-compliance. The governing legal framework is Federal Decree-Law No. 32 of 2021 on Commercial Companies, as amended by Federal Decree-Law No. 20 of 2025.
There are four main license types relevant to import-export businesses in the UAE: the commercial trade license, the general trading license, the free zone trade license, and the industrial/manufacturing license. Your choice depends on your product categories, your target markets, and whether you need direct UAE mainland access.
A commercial trade license is the standard permit for businesses importing or exporting within defined product categories, such as electronics, food products, machinery, textiles, or building materials. The DED issues it for mainland businesses, and it’s also a recognized license type across UAE free zones, confirmed by the Ministry of Economy.
You can hold more than one approved activity on your commercial license, selecting from over 2,000 options in the UAE’s approved activity list. Your license requires a physical business address—an office, a warehouse, or an approved workspace and the workspace type you choose directly affects how many employee visas you’re eligible for.
A commercial license is the right fit if you’re importing or exporting within one focused product vertical with a defined, consistent supply chain. If your product range stays narrow and predictable, a commercial license covers exactly what you need without the added cost of a broader permit.
A general trading license lets you import, export, distribute, and trade a diverse range of goods across multiple, unrelated industries under one single permit. It removes the need to apply for separate licenses every time you expand into a new product category—a practical advantage for businesses sourcing across product lines.
The key legal distinction is this: a commercial license covers trading within defined activity categories. A general trading license covers a broader, multi-sector range under one permit. It’s available on the mainland through the DED and across most UAE free zones.
A general trading license costs more than a single-activity commercial license, and that cost difference reflects the product flexibility and market scalability it provides.
One rule applies regardless of which license type you hold. Certain product categories always require additional government approvals before you can legally trade them:
A UAE free zone trade license gives you 100% foreign ownership, 0% customs duty on goods stored for re-export, full profit repatriation, and no personal income tax, making it the preferred structure for international re-export and logistics businesses. The UAE has more than 40 multidisciplinary free zones where foreigners can hold 100% company ownership, per the Ministry of Economy.
The restriction you must plan around: “To sell goods or services locally, a free zone company must either work through a licensed mainland distributor or establish a mainland branch or company.” Direct sales in the mainland are generally not permitted unless the company obtains the required mainland licences or approvals.”
This rule is further governed by Executive Council Resolution No. 11 of 2025 for the Emirate of Dubai. If your primary revenue comes from international trade and re-exports rather than UAE mainland retail, a free zone license gives you the strongest cost and ownership structure available.
An industrial or manufacturing license is required when your business imports raw materials, processes or manufactures goods inside the UAE, and then exports the finished product. This makes it the right license for businesses that add value in the UAE rather than simply trading existing goods.
Both Industrial License and Manufacturing License are officially recognized free zone license categories per the Ministry of Economy.
For mainland businesses, the industrial license is one of the six official license types and requires additional approval from the Ministry of Industry and Advanced Technology or the Ministry of Economy for a national industrial license. It’s the correct structure for food processors, textile manufacturers, electronics assemblers, and industrial equipment producers.
Your choice between a free zone and a mainland trade license comes down to three factors: whether you need direct UAE mainland market access, how much customs duty exposure you can absorb, and your visa and ownership requirements.
Factor | Mainland (DED License) | Free Zone License |
Foreign ownership | 100% for most activities; limited exceptions for strategic-impact sectors | 100% standard across all UAE free zones |
Customs duty on imports | Standard UAE customs duty applies on goods entering the UAE. | 0% on goods imported into and stored within the free zone |
UAE mainland market access | Unrestricted direct access to all UAE mainland buyers | Only through a licensed mainland distributor or registered mainland branch |
Re-export capability | Permitted | Permitted, duty-free while goods remain inside the zone |
Corporate tax | 0% on taxable income up to AED 375,000; 9% on income above AED 375,000, per FTA | Free zone persons may qualify for 0% on qualifying income, subject to FTA conditions |
Personal income tax | None | None |
Visa allocation | No fixed ceiling on number of visas | Depends on office or workspace type selected |
Service agent requirement | Not required for most activities post-2025 CCL Amendment | Not required |
Setup process | 9 official steps; Basher platform enables 15-minute online setup for eligible applications | Streamlined digital process: activity, legal form, trade name, workspace, initial approval, registration |
Disclaimer: Corporate tax rates, free zone qualifying income rules, and customs duty structures are subject to updates by the Federal Tax Authority and UAE Customs. Verify your current obligations before making structural or financial decisions.
Getting your UAE trade license follows a government-defined sequence whether you’re setting up on the mainland or in a free zone.
For a mainland trade license:
For a free zone trade license:
The Basher platform is a government-integrated eService that enables investors to establish their businesses in the UAE within 15 minutes through a unified online platform connected with federal and local government entities.
Yes and this is the compliance gap that catches the most first-time import-export businesses off guard. Your UAE trade license does not authorize the physical movement of goods. Customs registration is a completely separate, mandatory step you must complete before your first shipment moves through any UAE port, airport, or land crossing.
Import-export businesses must register with the customs authority of their respective emirate to legally clear goods. For Dubai-based businesses, that means registering through the Dubai Trade Portal to obtain your Customs Client Code, the unique identifier required on every trade transaction. Here’s the general process:
Don’t wait until your first shipment is booked to start this process. Complete your customs registration immediately after receiving your trade license.
For UAE import-export businesses in 2026, corporate tax applies at 0% on taxable income up to AED 375,000 and at 9% on income above that threshold, as confirmed by the Federal Tax Authority. Free zone persons may qualify for a 0% rate on qualifying income, subject to specific FTA conditions.
When you move goods from a UAE free zone into the mainland market, those goods become subject to UAE customs duty at that point. Goods that stay inside the free zone and are re-exported internationally remain exempt throughout.
The 2026 VAT Law Amendment, Federal Decree-Law No. 16 of 2025, effective January 1, 2026, introduced four changes that directly affect your import-export operations:
Disclaimer: VAT rates, corporate tax thresholds, and free zone qualifying income conditions are updated by the Federal Tax Authority. Verify your specific obligations before filing.
The documents required for your UAE trade license application depend on whether you’re applying for a free zone or a mainland license.
For a free zone trade license:
Additional documents required for a mainland license:
If you’re applying in a regulated product category such as food, pharmaceuticals, or telecom equipment—collect those additional regulatory approvals before starting your trade license application to avoid delays.
Q: Do I need a customs code even if I already have a UAE trade license?
Yes. A trade license and a Customs Client Code are two entirely separate registrations. Your trade license is your legal business permit.
Your Customs Client Code, issued by Dubai Customs or the relevant emirate’s customs authority, is the distinct registration required to physically clear goods at UAE ports, airports, and land crossings.
Q: Can a free zone company sell imported goods directly to UAE mainland buyers?
Free zone companies must either use a licensed mainland distributor or establish a mainland branch or company to access the local UAE market. Direct mainland sales without the required mainland approvals aren’t permitted under UAE law.
Q: What’s the difference between a general trading license and a commercial trade license in the UAE?
A commercial license covers trading within defined, specific activity categories. A general trading license lets you trade across a broader, multi-sector range under one permit.
Even with a general trading license, regulated products, including pharmaceuticals, telecom equipment, and food, always require additional government approvals.
Q: Which UAE free zone is best for an import-export business?
The right free zone depends on your product category and logistics setup. Key factors are proximity to Jebel Ali Port (relevant for JAFZA), overall cost structure, product-sector specialization, and visa allocation requirements. Use official free zone authority websites and the Ministry of Economy’s free zone directory.
Q: What goods require additional permits beyond a trade license for import-export in the UAE?
These product categories always require additional government approvals:
Q: Can a foreigner own 100% of an import-export company in the UAE?
Yes. In all UAE free zones, 100% foreign ownership is the default. On the mainland, 100% foreign ownership is permitted for most commercial activities, with limited exceptions for activities classified as having strategic national impact.
Q: How long does getting a UAE trade license take for an import-export business?
On the mainland, the Basher platform enables eligible businesses to complete setup in as little as 15 minutes online. The conventional mainland process follows 9 official steps.
Free zone licensing generally follows a streamlined digital process, and in most cases your license is issued within 14 working days of approval. Current timelines for specific free zones can be verified at the official free zone authority websites.
Getting your trade license right the first time means choosing the correct activity codes, deciding between a free zone and mainland structure based on where you’ll actually sell, completing customs registration before your first shipment, and staying compliant with the 2026 VAT amendments. Miss any one of these and you’re looking at delays, penalties, or legal exposure you didn’t budget for.
JSB Incorporation has helped entrepreneurs set up import-export companies across 24+ UAE jurisdictions, including DMCC, IFZA, and JAFZA. Their team handles everything from trade license selection and activity code matching to customs code registration, bank account opening, VAT registration, and ongoing compliance support.
You get transparent pricing with no hidden fees and a setup that holds up under regulatory scrutiny from day one. Whether you’re entering the UAE as a first-time investor or restructuring an existing business for better market access, JSB’s team completes the process in weeks rather than months.
Book your free consultation call today with the experts of JSB Incorporation to learn more.
Also Read:
Commercial vs Professional vs Industrial Trade License in UAE in 2026 – Full Comparison
New Trade License Requirements in Dubai for 2026: Your Complete Guide to Starting a Business
UAE Trade License Renewal Guide: What to Do Before 2026 Starts
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