How to Close a Company in Dubai in 2026: Step-by-Step Guide
How to Close a Company in Dubai in 2026 — Step-by-Step Guide
A practical guide for international founders, expats, and business owners holding a Mainland, Free Zone, DIFC, or ADGM company and considering closure or relocation in the current environment.
- 1Why founders are closing Dubai companies in 2026
- 2Mainland company closure: the process
- 3Free Zone company closure
- 4What happens to your staff and UAE visas
- 5Closing your UAE bank account
- 6What to do before you close: checklist
- 7Alternatives to full closure
Why Founders Are Closing Dubai Companies in 2026
The reasons for closing a UAE entity vary. But the pattern visible in 2026 is distinct from earlier years — and understanding it helps you make the right decision for your own situation.
International businesses operating from Dubai are navigating a significantly more complex environment than three years ago. Regulatory scrutiny has increased across financial services, digital assets, and advisory sectors. Free Zone authorities, VARA, and ADGM are all operating with heightened compliance expectations that require ongoing investment in governance, reporting, and personnel. For many smaller operators or holding structures, that investment no longer makes commercial sense.
Banking access has become the operational pressure point. Business owners report longer account opening timelines, more frequent requests for enhanced due diligence documentation, and — in some cases — restricted access to correspondent banking networks. For businesses that depend on cross-border payment flows, this friction has a direct cost. Some companies are operationally solvent but practically unable to move money at the speed the business requires.
The broader geopolitical landscape in early 2026 adds a further layer of uncertainty. Businesses with shareholders, clients, or supply chains touching regions currently under heightened international scrutiny face compliance overhead that some boards have decided is no longer commercially justified. The AML/KYC compliance burden alone has grown substantially for companies with international ownership structures. The decision to close a UAE entity is rarely simple — but for an increasing number of companies, the calculus has shifted.
Mainland Company Closure — The Process
Closing a DED-licensed Mainland company involves five sequential steps across multiple government authorities. Plan for a minimum of 3–4 months from start to Certificate of Cancellation. See also the guide to Mainland and Free Zone structures for background context.
Submit a closure application to the Dubai Department of Economic Development (DED) with your original trade licence, passport copies of all shareholders, and a board resolution to dissolve. The DED will issue an initial No Objection Certificate (NOC) and trigger the cancellation workflow across linked authorities.
At this point the DED also notifies MOHRE and the FTA that a closure is in progress. You cannot skip to later steps — each authority requires confirmation from the one before it.
The Ministry of Human Resources and Emiratisation (MOHRE) must confirm that all employee obligations are settled before the DED can proceed. This means cancelling all employment contracts, paying all end-of-service gratuities in full, and clearing any outstanding Wage Protection System (WPS) balances.
Outstanding WPS violations — even minor ones — will block the closure completely. Pull your MOHRE compliance report before starting the process and resolve any issues in advance. Timeline depends heavily on the number of employees and the complexity of final gratuity calculations.
The Federal Tax Authority (FTA) issues a clearance certificate confirming there are no outstanding VAT liabilities. You must first deregister — or confirm you are in the process of deregistering — your VAT registration. All outstanding VAT returns must be filed and any balances paid before the FTA will process the clearance.
If you have VAT penalties or unfiled periods, this step takes longer and may require penalty settlement negotiations. Do not assume VAT deregistration is automatic — it requires a separate application to the FTA portal.
UAE law requires publication of a liquidation notice in an Arabic-language newspaper approved by the DED — typically Al Ittihad or Al Bayan. This notice must remain published for a mandatory 45-day creditor window, during which any creditors can come forward and register claims against the company.
You cannot compress or skip this period. The DED will not proceed to final cancellation until the 45-day window has closed with no unresolved creditor claims. Publication costs are typically AED 500–1,500 depending on the newspaper and notice size.
Once the 45-day creditor period has expired and all clearance certificates are in hand — MOHRE, FTA, and bank NOC — you return to the DED with the complete clearance file. The DED reviews the file and, if complete, issues the Certificate of Cancellation.
This is the formal legal confirmation that the company no longer exists. It closes the DED register entry, voids the trade licence, and terminates all associated immigration files. Keep the Certificate of Cancellation permanently — you will need it in future jurisdictions to prove the entity has been properly dissolved.
Free Zone Company Closure — Standard FZ vs DIFC / ADGM
Free Zone closures follow a different path from Mainland — you deal with the Free Zone Authority rather than the DED. But DIFC and ADGM operate under a more rigorous governance framework than standard Free Zones. The process and timeline differ significantly. See the full DIFC / ADGM vs Mainland exit comparison for further detail.
What Happens to Your Staff and UAE Visas
Visa and employment obligations are the most time-sensitive part of any UAE closure. Delays here create fines, blocked clearances, and personal liability for the company's authorised signatory. For a full breakdown see the guide to UAE visa cancellation on company closure.
Every employee whose UAE residency visa is sponsored by the company must have their visa cancelled before the company can be deregistered. MOHRE and GDRFA (the immigration authority) both require confirmation of cancellation as part of the clearance chain.
- →Cancel each employment contract through MOHRE — issue a formal termination letter and cancel the work permit
- →Cancel the residence visa at GDRFA within 30 days of employment contract termination
- →Provide employees with their final salary, accrued leave payout, and end-of-service gratuity before they exit
If you hold a UAE investor or partner residence visa tied to the company licence, that visa is automatically invalidated when the licence is cancelled. You do not need to submit a separate cancellation application, but you must act before the grace period expires.
- →60-day grace period from licence cancellation before the visa becomes overstayed
- →If you plan to remain in the UAE, you must secure a new visa basis (employment, new company, or family sponsorship) before the grace period closes
- →Emirates ID automatically expires — return or destroy it; do not attempt to use it after visa cancellation
UAE labour law requires end-of-service gratuity for any employee who has completed one full year of service. This is not optional and is not offset against notice periods or other payments. Failure to pay gratuity will block MOHRE clearance — and with it, the entire closure.
- →21 days' basic salary per year for the first 5 years of service; 30 days per year thereafter
- →Gratuity is calculated on basic salary only — exclude housing, transport, and other allowances
- →Pay via WPS or bank transfer; retain proof of payment — MOHRE will request evidence during the clearance review
Closing Your UAE Bank Account
Your corporate bank account cannot stay open after the company is deregistered — and you cannot deregister without a bank NOC confirming the account is closed and all facilities are cleared. These two requirements are mutually dependent. See also the detailed guide to closing a UAE bank account as a foreign business.
Contact your relationship manager or the bank's business banking team in writing — email is sufficient for initiation but most banks require a formal signed letter from the authorised signatory. State clearly that the company is being dissolved and that you require a No Objection Certificate upon account closure.
Do not simply stop using the account. UAE banks will charge maintenance fees on dormant accounts, and an inactive account without a formal closure request remains technically open — blocking your NOC indefinitely.
Before the bank will issue a NOC, every facility linked to the account must be fully settled. This includes credit lines, overdraft facilities, trade finance instruments (letters of credit, bank guarantees), and any corporate cards. The bank will conduct an internal review before confirming clearance.
If you have unexpired bank guarantees issued to third parties — landlords, government entities, or counterparties — you must obtain formal releases from those parties before the bank can cancel the guarantee and proceed with closure. This is the step most businesses underestimate: collecting guarantee releases from multiple counterparties takes time.
Once facilities are cleared, transfer the remaining credit balance to a personal or foreign account. The bank will not close an account with a positive balance unless you explicitly instruct the transfer. Provide full beneficiary details in writing — banks require a formal instruction even for outgoing transfers during account closure.
For international transfers out of the UAE, expect enhanced due diligence documentation: source-of-funds confirmation, company dissolution documents, and — for larger balances — potentially a compliance review. Build time for this. Transfers above AED 100,000 frequently trigger additional KYC requests regardless of your prior banking history.
Once the account is at zero and all facilities are settled, request the formal No Objection Certificate from the bank. This letter confirms that the company holds no outstanding liabilities with the bank and that the bank raises no objection to the company's deregistration. It must be on bank letterhead, signed by an authorised bank officer.
This NOC is a mandatory document for the DED, DIFC Registrar, ADGM Registration Authority, and all major Free Zone authorities. Keep the original — you will need it at the final deregistration stage and may need to present it again in other jurisdictions in the future.
What to Do Before You Close — Pre-Closure Checklist
Most closure delays are caused by issues that were discoverable — and fixable — before the application was submitted. Work through this checklist in the weeks before you initiate anything officially. It will save you months downstream.
Alternatives to Full Closure
Closing is not always the right answer. Before committing to full dissolution, it is worth evaluating three alternatives that may preserve optionality, reduce cost, or better serve your longer-term structure. See also the full guide to alternatives to closing a UAE company in 2026.
Many Free Zones allow you to suspend your licence rather than cancel it. The company remains on the register, all assets and agreements stay in place, and you can reactivate later without going through a new registration process. Suspension typically costs significantly less than a full year's licence renewal and maintenance.
The catch: a dormant company still has ongoing obligations. Audited accounts are generally still required annually. VAT deregistration must be handled separately. And the company cannot trade, invoice, or hold bank accounts in active use during the suspension period.
If the company holds valuable IP, real property, or financial assets, converting it into a passive holding structure may be more efficient than closing it. A UAE holding entity can hold shares in operating subsidiaries, own intellectual property, and receive dividends — with minimal ongoing compliance requirements compared to an active trading company.
This approach is particularly effective where the underlying assets have long-term value and where there is a future possibility of sale, licensing, or new operational deployment. See the guide to holding company structuring in the UAE for design options.
For businesses that are relocating rather than winding down, the preferred sequence is: establish the new entity first, transfer operations, then dissolve the UAE company once the new structure is fully operational. Closing before the new entity is ready creates a gap in contractual standing, banking access, and employment sponsorship.
Common destination jurisdictions for founders leaving UAE include the UK, Singapore, Netherlands, and various EU offshore structures. The company registration advisory service can map the optimal structure based on your shareholder nationalities, banking needs, and target markets.
WCR Legal advises international founders and businesses on UAE company closures, licence cancellations, holding structure transitions, and cross-border relocations. We handle the process end-to-end — from MOHRE clearance to Certificate of Cancellation.