As the UAE’s corporate tax system matures, a major development is reshaping how businesses structure their internal transactions. The release of the Corporate Tax Guide: Advance Pricing Agreements (CTGAPA) marks the first practical roadmap for transfer pricing under the country’s evolving tax regime.
This guidance represents more than a technical update — it signals a structural shift in how companies operating in the United Arab Emirates must approach compliance, transparency and tax certainty.
A clearer framework for arm’s-length pricing
The new guide provides detailed direction on how arm’s-length pricing should apply to transactions between related and connected parties. While the concept is globally recognised, the UAE is now translating it into a structured operational framework.
Importantly, the guide is advisory and subject to change. It is not legally binding, but it serves as a working blueprint for businesses preparing for stricter regulatory oversight.
Advance Pricing Agreements (APAs) are central to this framework. These agreements define acceptable pricing methodologies for intra-group transactions, helping companies avoid disputes, audits and financial penalties. For finance leaders, the message is clear: proactive planning and strong internal controls are becoming essential.
Why APAs matter for UAE businesses
APAs are considered international best practice, and their introduction places the UAE in closer alignment with global tax standards. The impact will be most significant for multinational corporations and large domestic groups with complex cross-entity operations.
An APA does not fix prices. Instead, it approves the method used to determine fair pricing. Each agreement runs for three to five years, requiring ongoing monitoring and preparation for renewal.
The framework outlines three APA categories:
Unilateral APAs (UAPAs): Agreements between a company and the UAE authority, forming the first phase of implementation
Bilateral APAs (BAPAs): Agreements between two national tax regulators
Multilateral APAs (MAPAs): Agreements involving three or more jurisdictions
These mechanisms aim to prevent profit shifting and ensure tax fairness across borders.
Compliance challenges and transition risks
The phased rollout presents both opportunity and uncertainty. Companies may face transitional risks if early pricing strategies later conflict with detailed regulatory requirements.
UAPAs apply only within the UAE. If foreign authorities challenge accepted pricing, businesses could face double taxation — making BAPAs and MAPAs critical for cross-border operations.
Eligibility for an APA requires annual related-party transactions exceeding Dh100 million, calculated at the tax-group level. The application process includes a non-refundable fee and a multi-stage review requiring significant time and internal resources.
A turning point for corporate tax strategy
For organisations already adapting to corporate tax transformation, the APA framework adds another layer of long-term compliance responsibility. This guidance is not a final destination but the beginning of a more sophisticated regulatory architecture.
Transfer pricing in the UAE is moving from theory to enforcement. Businesses must now decide how early they will engage with this framework to secure certainty and minimise risk in an increasingly structured tax environment.

