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Warehouse for a Trading Company in UAE.

Every Indian trader who lands in Dubai gets the same advice: "Pick the cheapest free zone, get a flexi-desk, ship from there." It works — until your first container arrives and you discover the difference between a free zone with a warehouse and a free zone with a bonded warehouse. One of them keeps your customs duty at zero. The other doesn't.

This guide is for trading-company owners shipping physical goods into or through UAE in 2026. We cover the real fees, the bonded-versus-non-bonded split that catches almost everyone, and the 2026 audit rule that quietly killed the cheap-free-zone model for active traders..

What "Warehouse for a Trading Company" Actually Means in UAE

A trading licence on its own gives you the legal right to buy and sell. It does not give you space. To move cargo through UAE legally you also need a warehouse facility — either your own leased unit inside a logistics free zone, or a third-party bonded warehouse you contract by the pallet. The choice changes your duty bill, your VAT exposure, and your customer mix.

✅ Verified May 2026: JAFZA trading licence from AED 15,500. Warehouse and logistics add-on from AED 40,000. Visa packages AED 3,000–5,000 per person. Setup window 7–10 working days once paperwork is in.

Bonded vs Non-Bonded — The Single Decision That Sets Your Cost Base

JAFZA (Jebel Ali) is a fully bonded free zone. Goods sit duty-free until they physically leave the zone. Re-export to India, Oman or Africa pays no UAE customs at all. DMCC (JLT) is a non-bonded commercial zone — moving inventory in usually triggers the 5% CIF customs duty unless you route through a bonded third-party warehouse first.

What you need JAFZA (bonded) DMCC (non-bonded) Mainland warehouse
Duty on incoming cargo 0% until released 5% on arrival 5% on arrival
Re-export to India/Africa Duty-free Refund process Refund process
Sell to UAE mainland Via local distributor Via local distributor Direct
Office & warehouse together Yes, on-site Office in JLT, warehouse elsewhere Yes
Typical Year-1 cost (AED) 40,000–60,000 45,000–65,000 60,000–90,000

"Almost every 'too-expensive' JAFZA quote we re-price ends up cheaper than DMCC once the customer adds the customs duty they didn't realise they were paying on every shipment."

— MakeMyBusiness Advisory Team

The 2026 Audit Rule That Quietly Changed Everything

From financial years starting 1 June 2023 onwards, every UAE free zone trading company must file audited financial statements at licence renewal. DMCC, JAFZA, DAFZA, DIFC, DDA and Meydan now run closed panels of approved auditors — your accountant must be on the list, or the submission is auto-rejected.

Add the 9% Corporate Tax layer. Every free zone entity is now a taxable person and must register with the FTA. Qualifying Free Zone Person (QFZP) status is what keeps the 0% rate — lose any one condition (substance, qualifying income mix, transfer-pricing files) and the whole tax year flips to 9% on all income, plus the four years after.

⚠What this means in practice: Cheap free zone, no audit, no tax" is over. Budget AED 8,000–15,000/year for a panel auditor, and another AED 6,000–10,000 for a corporate tax registration plus annual return. Ignore this and the renewal bill comes with penalties.

Indian Importers — Why JAFZA Still Wins Most Cases

For an Indian trader running an India → UAE → Oman/Africa flow, JAFZA stays the default. Jebel Ali Port is the largest container port in the Middle East, sailings to Mundra and Nhava Sheva clear in under five days, and the bonded status means you can hold inventory in Dubai without bleeding 5% on goods that are only passing through.

DMCC fits if your buyers are in JLT or Dubai mainland and the cargo flow is small or sample-based. Mainland makes sense only when you sell mostly to UAE-based clients and need direct B2B billing without a distributor in the middle.

7–10
Working days — JAFZA licence issue once docs in
AED 15,500
Starting trading-licence fee (JAFZA, 2026)
5 days
Typical sailing — Jebel Ali to India ports

The 4-Question Filter Before You Sign

  1. Is more than 30% of your cargo re-exported? Bonded (JAFZA) almost always wins.
  2. Do you sell directly to UAE businesses? Mainland or freezone-with-distributor.
  3. Will your auditor be on the zone's approved panel? If not, change auditor before you register, not after.
  4. Month 3 — apply for Emirates NBD / HSBC tier-1 account with fintech statements as evidence of operating business.
  5. Will you cross the QFZP income thresholds? Plan tax structure before licensing, not at first return.

FAQ

Plan tax structure before licensing, not at first return.
Only sometimes. Storage inside a designated zone doesn't itself create exemption — the supply chain has to stay zone-to-zone, both parties registered, goods physically inside the boundary. Once any leg touches the mainland, standard 5% VAT applies. Always confirm transaction-by-transaction.
Can I run the warehouse remotely from India?
Operationally yes, but you'll need a UAE resident as PRO and at least one visa-holder on the licence for bank operations. Most Indian trader-owners take a single investor visa themselves for this reason.
How long until I can ship the first container?
Licence in 7–10 days, warehouse handover in 2–3 weeks, customs code 1–2 weeks. Realistic first shipment: 5–6 weeks from kickoff.

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