A plain-English comparison of UAE free zone and mainland licences — ownership, where you can trade, cost and speed — so you pick the right one the first time.
Choose a free zone if you want 100% ownership, lower cost and faster setup and you sell services, trade internationally, or run an online business — that covers most new founders. Choose mainland if you need to trade directly with the UAE local market, sell physically in the domestic market, open a retail shop, or bid for UAE government contracts. Both now allow 100% foreign ownership for most activities; the real difference is where you're allowed to do business.
| Free zone | Mainland | |
|---|---|---|
| Ownership | 100% foreign | 100% foreign (most activities) |
| Where you can trade | Within the zone, internationally & online; UAE market via a distributor/agent | Directly anywhere in the UAE, incl. government contracts |
| Cost to start | From AED 4,888 all-in | Typically higher (external office often required) |
| Office | Flexi-desk / virtual office accepted | Physical office usually required |
| Speed | ~3–8 working days | Often longer (extra approvals) |
| Best for | Consulting, services, e-commerce, trading-out, holding | Local retail/F&B, domestic distribution, gov. work |
A simplified comparison — your exact rights depend on your specific activity and emirate. We confirm what your activity allows, free, before you commit.
A free zone is usually the better choice when your customers aren't the UAE high street. That includes consultants and agencies, software and tech companies, e-commerce sellers shipping in or out, import/export and re-export traders, freelancers, and holding companies. You get 100% ownership, 0% personal income tax, full profit repatriation, and a flexi-desk that meets the licensing requirement — so you can start lean. With all-in licences from AED 4,888, it's also the cheapest way in.
You need a mainland (DED) licence when you must trade directly inside the UAE market without a local distributor — for example a restaurant or retail shop, a clinic, a company bidding for federal or local government tenders, or certain regulated professional activities. If that's you, mainland is worth the extra cost. If it isn't, you're likely overpaying for permissions you won't use.
Yes — indirectly. A free-zone company can invoice UAE clients for many services, and can sell physical goods into the local market through a UAE-registered distributor or agent, or by setting up a parallel arrangement. Some founders run a free zone now and add a mainland licence later if they grow into local retail. The honest answer is that it depends on your activity, so check before assuming either way.
For most service and online businesses, a free zone is both cheaper and faster — you avoid mandatory external office rent and extra approvals, starting from AED 4,888 all-in. Mainland makes financial sense when direct UAE-market access earns you more than it costs. Compare real free-zone numbers first on our live comparison, then decide.
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For most founders selling services, trading internationally or operating online, a free zone is better — 100% ownership, lower cost (from AED 4,888 all-in) and faster setup. Mainland is better if you need to trade directly in the UAE local market, run a physical shop or clinic, or bid for government contracts.
A free-zone company can invoice UAE clients for many services and can sell physical goods into the local market through a UAE-registered distributor or agent. To trade directly in the domestic market yourself, you'd typically add a mainland licence.
No. UAE free zones allow 100% foreign ownership with no local Emirati sponsor or partner. Mainland now also allows 100% foreign ownership for most activities, though some strategic activities still have requirements.
Usually, yes. Mainland often requires a physical office and extra approvals, raising the cost and timeline, whereas free-zone licences start from AED 4,888 all-in with a flexi-desk that meets the requirement.
Free zones are generally faster — typically 3–8 working days — because they need fewer external approvals than a mainland licence.