Key Highlights
Dubai, a city with sunshine year-round, a government committed to 75% clean energy by 2050, and a utility that actively enrolls contractors to connect solar panels to its grid.
Business licenses that once took a week now get processed in a few steps, sometimes on the same day. There are government-backed loans for clean energy businesses, live tenders worth billions, and a 10-year residency program that lets your whole family stay permanently.
That’s the Dubai solar market in 2026. It is structured, funded, and built around a clear entry path.
This guide covers every step you need: business models, the free zone vs. mainland decision, all 8 setup steps, Dubai Electricity and Water Authority (DEWA) contractor enrollment, 2026 tax rules, and how your solar business can qualify you for a UAE Golden Visa.
Keep reading the article to learn more.
Dubai’s numbers are hard to ignore if you’re serious about solar.
The Dubai Clean Energy Strategy 2050 targets 75% clean energy with solar as its primary delivery mechanism. To fund it, the government created the AED 100 billion Dubai Green Fund, which provides concessionary loans at reduced interest rates to clean energy businesses and investors. That fund is not a future promise. It is available to qualified solar businesses right now.
The Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum (MBR) Solar Park is the world’s largest single-site solar park under the Independent Power Producer (IPP) model. DEWA raised its 2030 capacity target from the original 5,000 MW to exceed 8,000 MW, backed by AED 50 billion in total investment.
Phase 7 targets an additional 2,000 MW of solar photovoltaic (PV) panels paired with a 1,400 MW battery energy storage system (BESS), with commissioning phased between 2027 and 2029. When DEWA invited expressions of interest, 47 global companies responded, confirming government procurement as a live, sustained pipeline.
Beyond mega-projects, DEWA’s Shams Dubai net metering program creates a recurring B2B market for licensed contractors. Every property owner who wants rooftop solar in Dubai must use a DEWA-enrolled contractor for the entire process: application, design approval, installation, and grid connection. That is not a one-time event. It is ongoing.
There is also a bigger cultural shift driving this opportunity. Global entrepreneurs are not just coming to the UAE to do business and leave anymore.
JSB Incorporation founder Gaurav Keswani captured it precisely in a Talk 100.3 FM interview: “Before, they would come, spend time, and go back to their home country. Now they want to come, stay, and retire in this part of the world.” Dubai is investing in permanent infrastructure, schools, and a long-term economy. Solar sits at the center of that.
You can start five types of solar businesses in Dubai in 2026. Your model determines your jurisdiction, your license type, and every approval step that follows.
Business Model | Core Activities | Best Jurisdiction |
Solar Installation and Contracting | Rooftop PV installation, electromechanical works, DEWA grid-connection projects | Mainland (DED) |
Solar Equipment Trading | Import/export of panels, inverters, batteries, mounting systems | Mainland or Free Zone |
Solar Engineering and Consultancy | Feasibility studies, energy audits, system design, project management | Free Zone or Mainland |
Solar EPC (Engineering, Procurement, and Construction) | End-to-end design, procurement, and build for commercial clients | Mainland (DED) |
Solar O&M (Operations and Maintenance) | Annual maintenance contracts, performance monitoring, troubleshooting | Mainland (DED) |
Solar installation, EPC, and O&M all involve physical on-ground work in Dubai. A mainland Dubai Department of Economy and Tourism (DED) license is mandatory for all three. A free zone license alone will not cover it.
The UAE mainland now permits 100% foreign ownership for most commercial and professional activities, including solar-related ones.
The single most important setup decision for a solar business in Dubai is jurisdiction. It is determined entirely by your business model.
Mainland (DED): Mandatory for solar installation, EPC, and O&M work physically executed in Dubai. Required for DEWA contractor enrollment. Lets you bid on government and DEWA tenders. Trades freely across all Emirates.
Free Zone: Best suited for solar equipment import, re-export, and consultancy. Offers 100% foreign ownership and customs duty advantages. Cannot execute on-ground Dubai projects without additional steps.
The 2025 UAE Commercial Companies Law (CCL) Amendment, Federal Decree-Law No. 20 of 2025, effective 14 October 2025, significantly expanded your structural options. Articles 3 and 5 now formally allow free zone companies to establish onshore branches, with the CCL expressly applying to their mainland presence.
Article 9 establishes that all free zone companies carry UAE nationality under the CCL. New Article 15 bis introduces re-domiciliation, allowing a free zone solar company to transfer its registration to the mainland without losing legal continuity or legal personality. Implementing regulations are still pending.
Quick decision framework:
Three entity options are available for solar businesses in Dubai:
Two 2025 CCL amendments directly affect how you structure your LLC. Amended Article 76 now allows LLCs to issue different share classes, Class A and Class B, with differential voting rights, profit entitlements, and liquidation preferences.
Amended Article 14 statutorily recognizes drag-along and tag-along rights that can now be written directly into the Memorandum of Association (MoA), strengthening solar joint ventures.
Verify the exact current DED activity code wording for your specific solar activity on the DED activity directory. Mismatches between your license activity wording and your actual work create DEWA enrollment problems downstream.
Apply via the DED Trader portal for the mainland or your respective free zone authority portal. DED trade name rules prohibit geographic, religious, offensive, or misleading terms, and your name must reflect your business activity.
Documents required: passport copies of all shareholders, draft MoA, and your selected activity description.
The most commonly missed step at this stage is the No Objection Certificate (NOC) from the Ministry of Energy and Infrastructure (MOEI).
It is required in addition to DED initial approval, and most new entrants discover this only after submission, which delays license issuance.
Also check your eligibility for the Dubai Unified License, a consolidated multi-approval process that can significantly cut your submission timeline.
A solar business in Dubai requires approvals from up to five separate government authorities. This is the step most new entrants underestimate.
All approvals must be in hand before your trade license is issued:
Submit to DED or your free zone authority the completed MoA, all government NOCs, a signed tenancy contract (Ejari, Dubai’s official rental registration system, is mandatory for the mainland), and applicable fees.
Three license types apply to solar businesses:
License Type | Applicable Solar Activities |
Commercial | Equipment trading, import/export |
Professional | Consultancy, system design, energy auditing |
Technical-Industrial | Installation, EPC, O&M |
Multiple activities can often be bundled on a single DED license where permitted. Verify current bundling options on the DED portal.
Disclaimer: DED license fees are subject to periodic revision. Always check the current official fee schedule at ded.gov.ae before budgeting. Do not rely on third-party estimates.
Getting a trade license is not enough. DEWA Demand Response Registration and Grid (DRRG) Solar PV enrollment is a separate mandatory step that most new solar businesses discover only when they are about to lose their first contract.
Your trade license authorizes you to operate a solar business. DEWA DRRG enrollment authorizes you to actually connect solar systems to the grid. Without it, you cannot legally submit solar applications, receive design approvals, or invoice DEWA-related work.
Current DEWA DRRG enrollment prerequisites include: qualified engineers on staff, licensed electricians, completion of DEWA Solar PV Certification Training, and compliance with DEWA’s technical safety and design standards.
Verify the most current prerequisites as requirements are updated periodically. DEWA also maintains an approved solar equipment list, and using any product not on that list results in immediate project rejection.
A corporate bank account is required before you can invoice clients, run payroll, or apply for employee visas.
All UAE business bank accounts must be held with a bank licensed by the Central Bank of the UAE (CBUAE).
Standard documentation typically required: valid trade license, MoA, Emirates IDs and passports of all account signatories, and the Ejari tenancy contract. Minimum balance requirements and onboarding timelines vary by bank, so compare CBUAE-licensed banks directly to find the right fit for your transaction volume.
As of 1 January 2026, two new Federal Decree-Laws changed how UAE businesses handle Value Added Tax (VAT) and tax procedures. Solar businesses importing equipment are directly affected.
Corporate Tax (9%): Applies on taxable income above AED 375,000. Solar businesses are not exempt. If you are operating from a free zone, you may qualify for the 0% Qualifying Free Zone Person (QFZP) rate if your business meets the substance and qualifying income conditions.
VAT (5%) changes under Federal Decree-Law No. 16 of 2025, effective 1 January 2026:
Tax Procedures under Federal Decree-Law No. 17 of 2025, effective 1 January 2026: The FTA can now issue binding directions on UAE tax law interpretation. Solar businesses must actively monitor FTA guidance and update internal compliance procedures when new directions are published.
Register for VAT before your first taxable supply and for Corporate Tax promptly after license issuance.
Disclaimer: Corporate tax rates, VAT rules, and QFZP eligibility are subject to regulatory change. Verify all current requirements with the FTA at tax.gov.ae and consult a UAE-registered tax advisor before filing.
Your employee visa quota is determined by your office space size on the mainland or your package tier in a free zone.
Mandatory hires for a solar installation or EPC business: a DEWA-certified solar engineer (prerequisite for DRRG enrollment), licensed electricians, and a project manager. The employee visa process runs through the General Directorate of Residency and Foreigners Affairs (GDRFA) for mainland companies and through the respective free zone authority for free zone companies.
As a business owner, investor, or key engineering professional, you may qualify for a UAE Golden Visa, a 10-year residency that removes re-entry and renewal pressure entirely. The next section covers all three qualification pathways.
Shams Dubai is DEWA’s net metering initiative, allowing building owners in Dubai to install rooftop solar PV systems and export excess power back to the DEWA grid. For a licensed, DEWA-enrolled contractor, it is your primary source of B2B installation work in Dubai.
Every residential and commercial property owner who goes solar in Dubai needs an enrolled contractor for the full process. That is a recurring pipeline, not a one-time project cycle.
Three Shams Dubai rules will directly shape your project delivery:
Approval delays in 2026 are almost always caused by incomplete documentation or use of equipment not on DEWA’s approved product list.
Running a compliant solar business in Dubai means staying on top of five active obligations:
Yes. Starting a solar business in Dubai can qualify you for a 10-year UAE Golden Visa through three distinct pathways, depending on your investment profile.
The UAE Golden Visa does not require re-entry every 6 months to stay valid, unlike a standard UAE residence visa. You can travel for extended periods and your residency will not lapse. The UAE government has also opened a dedicated support hotline, previously reserved for Emirati citizens, to Golden Visa holders.
As JSB founder Gaurav Keswani noted on Talk 100.3 FM, the government now thinks of Golden Visa holders as: “These are my citizens; we need to take care of them.” That shift from temporary resident to valued long-term resident creates real permission to invest in property, enroll your kids in schools, and plan a permanent future.
You need AED 2 million in UAE real estate investment to qualify. Dubai Land Department (DLD) applies a total value rule, not a single-property rule. Your investment can be spread across multiple properties as long as the combined equity value meets AED 2 million.
Here is a real scenario. A couple buys a property together for AED 4 million on a 50/50 ownership split. Each partner holds AED 2 million in equity. Both qualify independently for the Golden Visa, no separate purchases required.
Dubai applies an equity/value test, not a paid-up cash test. The qualifying criterion is the equity you hold, not the cash already paid, which matters greatly for off-plan or mortgaged purchases. Other Emirates may require the full amount to be paid up in cash.
If your solar startup is approved by a UAE-accredited business incubator, you may qualify for the entrepreneur pathway. There is no minimum monthly salary requirement for this route.
The AED 30,000 per month threshold applies only to employment-based Golden Visa applications, and that is one of the most misunderstood distinctions in the entire system. Verify the current accredited incubator list and eligibility conditions.
Qualified engineers, PhD holders, and renewable energy specialists may qualify under the specialized talent pathway. For the employment-based skilled professional route, the minimum monthly salary is AED 30,000 per GDRFA requirements.
That threshold does not apply to investor, entrepreneur, top-100-university graduate, or PhD pathways. Verify current category eligibility and required documents.
As a Golden Visa holder, here is who you can sponsor:
Verify all sponsorship and dependency documentation requirements on the ICP (Federal Authority for Identity, Citizenship, Customs, and Port Security). Golden Residency portal.
The UAE government has backed the solar sector with four active incentive structures in 2026:
Q1: Do I need DEWA approval to start a solar business in Dubai?
Yes. A trade license alone is not enough. DEWA DRRG Solar PV enrollment is a separate mandatory step. Without it, you cannot legally submit solar applications, receive design approvals, or connect any system to the DEWA grid.
Q2: Can a foreigner own 100% of a solar company in Dubai?
Yes. Both the UAE mainland, following FDI law reforms, and free zones permit 100% foreign ownership for solar installation, trading, and consultancy activities.
Q3: Which is better for a solar business in Dubai, a free zone or the mainland?
It depends entirely on your business model. Solar installation and EPC require a mainland DED license. Solar equipment trading and consultancy can operate from a free zone. The 2025 CCL Amendment’s Article 15 bis now allows re-domiciliation from a free zone to the mainland without losing legal continuity, which is a significant structural option for growing solar businesses.
Q4: Can I sell solar electricity to other customers through the DEWA grid?
No. Wheeling is not permitted under Shams Dubai. Solar energy must be consumed on-site or exported back to DEWA under net metering. It cannot be routed through the DEWA grid to a separate third-party location.
Q5: Is ground-mounted solar allowed under Shams Dubai?
No. Shams Dubai is restricted to rooftop PV systems only. Ground-mounted solar falls under large-scale utility projects managed separately by DEWA, entirely outside the Shams Dubai framework.
Q6: Does starting a solar business in Dubai qualify me for a UAE Golden Visa?
Potentially yes, through three pathways. AED 2 million in real estate carries no salary requirement. An approved entrepreneur or startup route also carries no salary requirement. A specialized talent or engineer route carries the AED 30,000 per month salary threshold only for the employment-based path. That figure does not apply to investor or entrepreneur pathways.
Q7: What taxes apply to a solar business in Dubai in 2026?
Corporate Tax at 9% applies on taxable income above AED 375,000, and VAT at 5% applies on solar equipment sales and installation services. Federal Decree-Laws No. 16 and 17 of 2025, effective 1 January 2026, introduced updated reverse charge documentation rules, a 5-year VAT refund limitation with a transitional window, and FTA binding directions. All three directly affect solar equipment importers and installation contractors.
Q8: How long does DEWA solar approval take in 2026?
Approval timelines depend entirely on the completeness of your submitted documentation and whether your equipment is on DEWA’s approved product list.
Delays are almost always caused by incomplete submissions or non-approved equipment.
Q9: Can I sponsor my family in Dubai as a solar business owner?
Yes. As a Golden Visa holder, you can sponsor your spouse, minor children, adult children who are single and financially dependent on you, and parents with documented financial dependency. The UAE Golden Visa does not require re-entry every 6 months to stay valid, unlike standard UAE residence visas.
Q10: How long does it take to set up a solar business in Dubai?
Before COVID, a Dubai business license required a minimum of one week. Today, the DED process has been significantly streamlined, with some steps completable on the same day. DEWA DRRG enrollment adds additional time based on certification training schedules and document readiness.
Dubai’s solar market in 2026 is structured, government-funded, and growing at a pace few global markets can match. You have the Clean Energy Strategy 2050 pulling demand forward, an AED 100 billion green fund backing clean energy businesses, and Shams Dubai creating a live contractor pipeline right now.
But the setup process is sequential and has specific regulatory requirements at every stage. Missing a single government approval or skipping DEWA DRRG enrollment can cost you weeks and active client contracts. That is where JSB Incorporation makes the real difference.
JSB Incorporation has helped hundreds of global entrepreneurs set up businesses across 24+ UAE jurisdictions, including DMCC, IFZA, and JAFZA, with end-to-end support from trade license to bank account to visa, transparent pricing, and no hidden steps.
Book your free consultation call today with the experts of JSB Incorporation to learn more
Office 2505, 25th Floor, Regal Tower, Business Bay, Dubai, UAE P.O Box 27614.
+971 4 824 4842
info@jsbincorporation.com