Key Highlights
JAFZA generated $190 billion in trade value over the 12 months to May 2025, a 15% year-on-year increase and the highest figure in its 40-year history.
It hosts over 11,000 businesses from 157 countries, contributes 21% of Dubai’s GDP, connects you to 3.5 billion consumers through land, sea, and air networks, and links to 150 ports globally.
In the first four months of 2026 alone, DP World attracted AED 854 million in new JAFZA investments across manufacturing, logistics, food production, and healthcare. You get 100% foreign ownership, 0% customs duties within the zone, UAE Customs Designated Zone VAT benefits, and full repatriation of profits with no currency restrictions.
This guide covers whether JAFZA fits your specific trade model, which license you need, what it realistically costs, and what the 2025 CCL and January 2026 VAT changes mean for your operations.
JAFZA’s core advantage for import-export traders is physical: you’re registered inside the same zone as Jebel Ali Port and Al Maktoum International Airport, with both accessible directly from within your trade address.
Jebel Ali Port processed 15.55 million TEUs in 2025, stable after its highest throughput in nearly a decade, and in October 2025 set a breakbulk record by handling 630,000 tonnes of cargo in a single month, the highest monthly total in nearly two decades.
In the first four months of 2026, JAFZA attracted AED 854 million in new investment commitments, with over 43% of those signed in March and April alone.
As a registered JAFZA trader, you get the following:
JAFZA holds UAE Customs Designated Zone status. Goods moved between UAE Designated Zones are not treated as taxable VAT supplies under standard rules.
If you’re running high-volume re-export operations, that’s a real cash-flow advantage (Federal Decree-Law No. 16 of 2025, Ministry of Finance, effective January 1, 2026).
Four VAT changes took effect on January 1, 2026, under Federal Decree-Laws No. 16 and No. 17 of 2025. You need to act on all four if you’re operating in JAFZA:
JAFZA is worth it if your trade model is internationally focused, high-volume, or depends on port proximity, bonded warehousing, or multi-modal logistics infrastructure. If that describes your operation, the infrastructure justifies the cost.
If you’re primarily targeting UAE domestic retail customers, the calculation is different. JAFZA’s warehouse rental is materially higher than most other UAE free zones, and your total occupancy cost, not just the annual license fee, determines whether it makes financial sense for your business. You can compare free zone cost profiles before you decide.
JAFZA issues several license types relevant to import-export traders. Your choice depends on your product categories, whether you process goods inside the zone, and whether you need logistics services under the same license.
A Trading License is the most common choice for import-export businesses in JAFZA. It covers importing, exporting, storing, and distributing goods within your approved product categories.
You choose one or two product activity groups at the time of application. It does not cover manufacturing. If your model involves importing raw materials, processing them in the zone, and then exporting, you need an Industrial License instead.
A General Trading License covers unlimited product categories with no restrictions on what you trade. It’s the right fit if your business genuinely spans multiple unrelated product lines. It carries a higher annual fee than a standard Trading License, so choose it only if your product breadth actually justifies the cost difference.
Your license type directly sets your employee visa quota, minimum facility requirement, and approved business activities. Confirm your exact approved activity list with JAFZA before submitting your application.
License Type | What It Covers | Notes |
Trading License, 1 group, up to 7 activities | Import, export, storage, distribution in one product category | Most common choice for focused traders |
Trading License, 2 groups, up to 6 activities each | Two product categories | For traders operating across two distinct product groups |
General Trading License | Unlimited product categories | Higher annual fee. Choose only if product breadth justifies it. |
Logistics License | Trading plus warehousing, cargo, or freight forwarding | Suitable if logistics is a core part of your model |
Industrial License | Raw material import, processing in UAE, then export | Separate from Trading License. Not interchangeable. |
Disclaimer: License fees are not fixed public figures and change periodically. Always confirm current applicable fees directly with JAFZA before finalizing your budget.
JAFZA offers four legal entity structures. Your choice affects your share capital requirement, how many shareholders you can have, and your ability to access the UAE mainland from the same corporate structure.
Entity Type | Best For | Shareholders |
FZE (Free Zone Establishment) | Solo foreign investor | 1 |
FZCO (Free Zone Company) | Business partnerships | 2 to 5 |
Branch of Overseas Registered Company | Extending an existing foreign company into JAFZA without forming a new entity | N/A, parent company required |
Branch of UAE Mainland Company | UAE-registered businesses expanding into JAFZA | N/A, existing UAE entity required |
For FZE and FZCO, your minimum share capital must equal or exceed your annual facility lease cost. No bank deposit is required to meet this rule. Confirm current facility lease rates directly with JAFZA, as rates vary by facility type and change over time.
If you’ve been wondering whether you can run a JAFZA entity and operate on the UAE mainland under the same corporate structure, that question got a clearer answer in October 2025.
Federal Decree-Law No. 20 of 2025 took effect on October 15, 2025, following publication in the UAE Official Gazette on October 14, 2025. It introduced three changes directly relevant to JAFZA traders (Federal Decree-Law No. 20 of 2025):
Implementing regulations for Article 15(bis) are still being issued as of May 2026. Whether this applies to your specific JAFZA entity also depends on JAFZA’s own rules. Confirm the current process with JAFZA directly and with a qualified UAE corporate lawyer before acting on this.
Registering an import-export company in JAFZA follows four steps, managed through JAFZA’s application portal and finalized through the Dubai Trade Portal.
Step 1: Pre-application. Confirm your specific import-export activity is on JAFZA’s approved activity list. Reserve your trade name following JAFZA’s naming rules. Choose your entity type and license category.
Step 2: Application submission. Complete the JAFZA Application Form and EHS (Environment, Health, and Safety) Undertaking Form through JAFZA’s portal. Upload your Project Summary using JAFZA’s provided template. Provide passport and visa copies for all shareholders, directors, and your manager.
If you’re a current UAE resident, include a No Objection Certificate from your existing UAE sponsor. Pay the non-refundable application processing fee at this stage.
Step 3: Facility selection, activity confirmation, and payment. Confirm your product categories and activity groups. Sign your facility lease agreement for your chosen option: flexi-desk, standard office, pre-built warehouse, or industrial plot. Pay your registration fee, first-year license fee, and refundable facility security deposit.
Step 4: Receive documents and activate the Dubai Trade Portal. You’ll receive your Trade License, Certificate of Incorporation, Memorandum of Association, and Share Certificate. Activate your Dubai Trade Portal account. From this point, all customs declarations, trade permits, gate passes, and port logistics run through this platform.
Don’t rely on third-party estimates for processing timelines. They vary by entity type and application completeness. Verify current timelines directly with JAFZA.
For FZE or FZCO (new company):
For Branch of Overseas Registered Company (additional requirements):
Your JAFZA setup cost is not just the license fee. Your facility choice directly determines your employee visa quota and your minimum share capital threshold. These two things are linked, and you need to plan both before you pick a license package.
Facility rental rates are not published as a fixed public schedule and change periodically. Contact JAFZA directly for current pricing before building your cost model.
Cost Item | Notes |
Non-refundable application processing fee | One-time, paid at application stage |
Registration and incorporation fee | Varies by entity type: FZE, FZCO, or Branch |
Annual trade license fee | Varies by license type and activity groups. |
Annual facility lease | Higher than most other UAE free zones for warehouse space. Budget carefully. |
Refundable facility security deposit | Paid upfront, returned on exit |
Annual Immigration Card fee | Required for UAE visa processing |
Visa fees per employee | Entry permit, visa stamping, Emirates ID, annual renewals |
Dubai Trade Portal registration | One-time setup fee |
Sector-specific regulatory approvals | Applies only to restricted or controlled product categories |
Licensed clearing agent fees | Almost always unbudgeted by first-time importers |
Three costs JAFZA traders most often miss:
Starting your JAFZA import-export operations means every trade transaction runs through one platform: Dubai Trade Portal, managed by Dubai Customs. This is where you submit Bills of Entry, pay duties, generate gate passes, and track container movement, all in one place.
Here’s your standard import clearance process from the moment your goods arrive at Jebel Ali Port:
If this is your first import shipment into JAFZA, work with a licensed UAE clearing agent. HS code misclassification and incomplete Bill of Entry submissions are the two most common first-timer mistakes. Both carry financial penalties and delay your cargo release.
Some product categories need prior regulatory approval before you can import them into the UAE. Check the current restricted and prohibited items list before planning your first container.
Your JAFZA free zone company cannot sell goods directly to UAE mainland customers. It’s a firm regulatory boundary confirmed by the UAE’s official government portal.
Your JAFZA entity operates under free zone customs registration, which does not cover direct domestic sales on the mainland.
You have two legitimate ways to reach UAE domestic buyers:
Plan your mainland distribution model before you register in JAFZA, not after your first shipment arrives.
Q1: Can a JAFZA free zone company sell directly to UAE mainland customers?
No. A JAFZA company cannot sell goods directly to UAE mainland buyers under its free zone customs registration. You must either appoint a licensed UAE mainland distributor who imports goods under their own registration or establish a separate mainland entity with its own customs registration. This is confirmed by the UAE official government portal.
Q2: Is JAFZA worth the higher cost compared to cheaper UAE free zones for a small import-export business?
It depends on your trade model. If you’re running high-volume international trade, re-exporting goods, or need direct port access in your logistics chain, JAFZA’s infrastructure offers measurable value. The zone generated $190 billion in trade value over the 12 months to May 2025, a 15% year-on-year increase and the highest figure in its 40-year history.
In the first four months of 2026 alone, it attracted AED 854 million in new investment commitments. If your focus is mainly UAE domestic retail, a more cost-effective free zone may be the smarter starting point.
Always evaluate the total cost of operation, including warehouse rent, visa costs, and clearing agent fees, not just the headline license fee.
Q3: Do you need a clearing agent for your first JAFZA import shipment?
Legally, no. The process runs through the Dubai Trade Portal digitally. But for your first shipment, working with a licensed UAE clearing agent is strongly advisable.
HS code classification errors and incomplete Bill of Entry submissions are the two most common and most costly first-timer mistakes. Both trigger financial penalties and delay your cargo release.
Q4: How has the 2025 UAE CCL amendment changed what a JAFZA company can do on the UAE mainland?
Federal Decree-Law No. 20 of 2025, effective October 15, 2025, now explicitly allows JAFZA free zone companies to establish UAE mainland branches and representative offices where JAFZA’s own legislation permits it. A new Article 15(bis) also lets a JAFZA company transfer its registration to the mainland without dissolving the entity or losing legal continuity.
Implementing regulations are still being finalized as of May 2026. Confirm the current process directly with JAFZA and with a qualified UAE corporate lawyer before acting (Federal Decree-Law No. 20 of 2025; Gibson Dunn, December 2025).
Q5: How do the January 2026 VAT amendments affect JAFZA import-export traders?
Four changes are in effect from January 1, 2026, under Federal Decree-Laws No. 16 and No. 17 of 2025, issued by the UAE Ministry of Finance.
First, reverse charge transactions no longer require a self-invoice, but supporting documents must meet Executive Regulation standards. Second, the FTA can now deny input tax deductions if a supply is determined to be part of a tax evasion arrangement. Strengthen supplier due diligence now.
Third, a 5-year limitation applies for VAT refund submissions, with a transitional window closing January 1, 2027, for certain expired periods. Fourth, the FTA can now issue binding directions on tax law. Monitor official sources regularly and update your compliance procedures when new directions are published.
JAFZA generated $190 billion in trade value over the 12 months to May 2025, attracted AED 854 million in new investments in the first four months of 2026, hosts over 11,000 businesses from 157 countries, and contributes 21% of Dubai’s GDP.
The businesses that make JAFZA work get three things right from day one: the correct license for their specific trade activities, an accurate total cost budget that includes warehouse rent and clearing agent fees, and a mainland distribution plan that is confirmed before the first shipment lands.
JSB Incorporation has helped global entrepreneurs set up trade and import-export operations across 24+ UAE jurisdictions, including JAFZA, DMCC, and IFZA.
Whether you need guidance on choosing between a Trading License and a General Trading License, structuring your entity for mainland access, navigating the 2026 VAT compliance changes, or opening a UAE business bank account, JSB gives you end-to-end support with transparent pricing from day one.
Book your free consultation call today with the experts of JSB Incorporation to learn more.
Also Read:
How to Start a Food Import Business in Dubai (Halal Compliance Guide)
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