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How to Do Bookkeeping in the UAE The FTA-Compliant Way
Corporate Tax

How to Do Bookkeeping in the UAE The FTA-Compliant Way

Last Updated: 05 Jun 2026

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Essence Accounting Tax Team FTA-Approved Tax Agency · TAN 30006266
4 min read
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Running a business in the UAE comes with clear legal responsibilities when it comes to financial records. Since the introduction of VAT and Corporate Tax, the Federal Tax Authority (FTA) requires every business  from startups to trading companies  to maintain proper, accurate, and audit-ready bookkeeping.

In this guide, you will learn exactly what FTA-compliant bookkeeping looks like, which records to maintain, and how to avoid costly penalties.


Why Is Bookkeeping Mandatory in the UAE?

Under UAE tax law, all registered businesses  mainland companies, free zones, and SMEs  must maintain organized financial records. Proper bookkeeping is required for:

  • Filing VAT returns correctly

  • Calculating and paying Corporate Tax

  • Passing FTA audits

  • Claiming input VAT on purchases

  • Securing bank loans or investor funding

Failure to maintain proper records can lead to VAT penalties, rejected tax deductions, failed audits, and FTA investigations.


Essential Records Every UAE Business Must Keep

To stay FTA-compliant, your bookkeeping system should include the following:

1. Sales Invoices

Every taxable sale must be supported by a valid tax invoice that includes the invoice number, date, customer details, TRN (if applicable), VAT amount, and total value.

2. Purchase Invoices

Supplier invoices are essential to claim input VAT. Without valid invoices, the FTA can reject your VAT recovery claims.

3. Bank Statements

Reconcile all business bank accounts monthly. This helps detect missing entries, duplicate transactions, or errors.

4. VAT Records

Keep all VAT returns, credit notes, debit notes, and import/export records organized and accessible.

5. Payroll Records

Maintain salary registers, payslips, WPS records, and employee contracts.

6. Fixed Assets & Inventory

Track all assets (computers, vehicles, machinery) with purchase dates, costs, and depreciation. For trading businesses, maintain stock purchase and closing inventory records.


Record Retention Rules in the UAE

The FTA sets strict retention periods for different types of records:


Record Type

Retention Period

General VAT Records

5 Years

Capital Asset Records

10 Years

Real Estate Records

15 Years


All records must be kept in an accessible, readable format  digitally or physically  and be retrievable during audits. The FTA may request Arabic translations in certain cases.


Step-by-Step Bookkeeping Process

  1. Open a dedicated business bank account  never mix personal and business finances.

  2. Choose UAE-compatible accounting software such as Zoho Books, QuickBooks, TallyPrime, or Odoo.

  3. Set up a Chart of Accounts to organize revenue, expenses, assets, liabilities, and VAT.

  4. Record transactions regularly  daily or weekly is best, monthly at minimum.

  5. Reconcile bank accounts monthly and review all VAT treatment per transaction.

  6. Generate monthly financial reports: Profit & Loss, Balance Sheet, and VAT summary.


Common Bookkeeping Mistakes to Avoid

  • Mixing personal and business expenses  a major audit risk

  • Missing or incomplete tax invoices  can lead to rejected VAT claims

  • Updating records only before VAT filing  increases errors significantly

  • Incorrect VAT classification  wrong rates, reverse charge errors, or improper zero-rating

  • Relying on Excel only  manual spreadsheets are increasingly non-compliant as UAE moves toward digital tax


Impact of Corporate Tax on Bookkeeping

Since the UAE's 9% Corporate Tax came into effect, bookkeeping standards have become significantly stricter. Businesses now need accurate records specifically for:

  • Calculating taxable income

  • Validating deductible expenses

  • Transfer pricing documentation

  • Producing audited financial statements

Corporate Tax has made professional bookkeeping essential, not just good practice.


Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Q1. How long should UAE businesses keep their financial records?

VAT records must be kept for at least 5 years. Capital asset records require 10 years, and real estate transaction records must be retained for 15 years as per FTA requirements.

Q2. Is bookkeeping mandatory for free zone companies in the UAE?

Yes. Free zone entities are required to maintain proper financial records under UAE tax law, particularly if they are registered for VAT or Corporate Tax.

Q3. Can I use Excel for bookkeeping in the UAE?

While not strictly prohibited, using only Excel increases compliance risk. The UAE is moving toward digital tax systems and e-invoicing, so cloud-based accounting software is strongly recommended.

Q4. What happens if I don't maintain proper records?

Poor bookkeeping can result in FTA penalties, rejected VAT claims, disallowed tax deductions, failed audits, and even FTA investigations. Some record-keeping penalties can reach AED 10,000 or more for repeat offenses.

Q5. What accounting software is best for UAE businesses?

Popular options include Zoho Books, QuickBooks, TallyPrime, and Odoo. Choose software that supports VAT, Corporate Tax, and is ready for upcoming FTA e-invoicing requirements.


Final Thoughts

FTA-compliant bookkeeping is the backbone of any UAE business. With VAT, Corporate Tax, and upcoming e-invoicing requirements tightening regulations, businesses that maintain accurate and timely financial records are far better positioned for audits, tax filings, and long-term growth.

If you are unsure whether your bookkeeping meets FTA standards, consider working with a UAE-qualified accounting professional to review your records and processes.


FTA-Compliant Bookkeeping Guide | UAE 2025

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