Most UAE tech founders pick the wrong freezone. They walk into DMCC because the brand sounds prestigious, sign a AED 40,000 first-year package, and three months later realise their friend down the road got the same operational result out of IFZA for AED 14,000. The licence does the same legal job. The bank treats them the same. The only difference is AED 26,000 of working capital sitting in the wrong place.
This guide is for founders who want the real comparison: freezone versus mainland, which freezone if freezone, and what each one actually costs to run a software, agency, or SaaS business in 2026.
The short version: for most tech SMEs in 2026, IFZA is the right default. Mainland makes sense in three specific cases, all of which most tech founders do not have. Everything below explains why.
What you are actually choosing between
A UAE mainland licence is issued by an emirate's Department of Economic Development (DED in Dubai, DET in Abu Dhabi). It lets you trade anywhere in the UAE, sign UAE government contracts, and hold unlimited visas tied to your office square footage. Cost in Dubai is typically AED 16,000 to AED 30,000 for a tech activity, plus Ejari (tenancy contract), and you need a registered office address.
A freezone licence is issued by one of the 45+ free zones. It lets you operate from inside that freezone and invoice anywhere in the world, including UAE clients. You cannot directly sign UAE government contracts in most cases without a local service agent or going dual-licence. You get a capped visa quota tied to the package. Cost ranges from AED 5,750 (Sharjah, Ajman, RAKEZ) to AED 50,000+ (DIFC, DMCC full setup).
The 100% foreign ownership rule has equalised both sides for tech. Since 2021 expansion, mainland tech businesses no longer need a 51% Emirati partner. So the "freezones give you 100% ownership" advantage is gone for most software activities.
The 2026 cost reality
Here is what the credible freezones and Dubai mainland actually charge for a year-one tech setup with one visa and the minimum workspace.
| Setup | Year-1 cost (AED) | Visa quota | Setup time |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sharjah Media City (Shams) | 8,000 to 15,000 | up to 6 | 2 to 5 days |
| Ajman Free Zone | 7,000 to 14,000 | up to 6 | 3 to 7 days |
| RAKEZ | 8,500 to 16,000 | up to 6 | 3 to 7 days |
| IFZA (Dubai) | 12,500 to 18,500 | up to 5 | 3 to 5 days |
| Meydan (Dubai) | 14,350 to 23,600 | up to 6 | 1 to 3 days |
| DMCC (Dubai) | 35,000 to 45,000 | scales with office | 7 to 14 days |
| DIFC Innovation Licence | 5,500 to 11,000 (subsidised USD 1,500) | up to 4 per desk | 14 to 21 days |
| ADGM Tech Startup | 5,500 to 18,000 | tied to office | 14 to 21 days |
| Dubai DED Mainland | 16,000 to 30,000 | unlimited (office-tied) | 7 to 14 days |
DMCC requires AED 50,000 of share capital to be deposited within six months of licence issuance. None of the others have a meaningful paid-up capital requirement.
For 9 out of 10 tech founders we work with, the right answer sits between IFZA, Meydan, and DIFC Innovation. The northern emirates freezones save AED 4,000 to AED 6,000 a year but cost you in client trust ("you're registered where?") and in driving time for every notarisation.
Corporate tax: same 9% on both
The single biggest misconception in 2026 is that freezones are tax-free. They are not. Since June 2023 UAE federal corporate tax, both freezone and mainland pay 9% on taxable income above AED 375,000 per year.
Freezones still have one advantage. A Qualifying Free Zone Person can keep a 0% rate on its qualifying income, which includes income from transactions with other freezone entities and certain qualifying activities. To stay qualifying, you need adequate substance in the freezone, audited financial statements, transfer pricing compliance, and your non-qualifying income must stay under 5% of revenue or AED 5 million, whichever is lower.
In practice: a tech agency invoicing mostly UAE mainland clients will not qualify, and pays 9% above AED 375,000 either way. A SaaS company invoicing global customers can usually structure things to qualify and keep the 0% on most of it. Talk to a tax advisor; the QFZP rules are stricter than the marketing suggests.
VAT is 5% above AED 375,000 of annual taxable supplies, same in both regimes.
When mainland actually wins
There are exactly three cases where mainland is the right call for a tech business:
You need direct UAE government contracts. Most government tenders require a mainland licence or a freezone licence with a local service agent. If 60% of your pipeline is government, go mainland from day one.
You run a physical retail or service location. A computer repair shop in Karama, a coding bootcamp with a physical campus in JLT, a hardware reseller with a showroom. These need a mainland licence and Ejari.
You expect 20+ visas in 24 months. Freezone visa quotas cap at 6 to 12 for most packages. Mainland is essentially unlimited as long as your office square footage supports it (one visa per 9 square metres).
For everyone else, pure software, agencies, SaaS, consultancy, e-commerce sold globally, freezone is cleaner and cheaper.
Banking: the silent decider
The hidden cost of picking the wrong setup is bank account pain. UAE banks are conservative on early-stage tech licences. They want to see a clean activity description ("Software Development" or "IT Consultancy", not a six-activity grab bag), a real website, a basic business plan, and a UAE residence visa.
In 2026, the ranking for opening speed is:
- Wio: 48 hours digital onboarding, AED 99 to AED 999 a month, no minimum balance on entry plan. Best for early-stage tech founders running mostly digital revenue.
- Mashreq NeoBiz: around 7 days to open, AED 25,000 minimum balance, AED 200 monthly. Best for growing tech teams with international invoicing needs.
- Emirates NBD: 10 to 15 days, AED 50,000 minimum balance. Conservative on first-year tech licences but solid once you have revenue history.
- FAB: 14 to 28 days, larger transaction businesses preferred. Best once you cross AED 1 million annual revenue and need treasury services.
DMCC and DIFC licences get slightly faster bank approvals because of brand recognition. IFZA, Meydan, and Shams pass cleanly with Wio and Mashreq in our experience. ADGM is excellent for fintech-adjacent banking.
The actual recommendation
If you are a solo tech founder or 2-person team building software, SaaS, an agency, or consulting work, with under AED 1 million expected revenue in year one and no government clients, pick IFZA at the AED 14,900 one-visa package. Open with Wio. Move on.
If you are venture-backed, going after fintech, AI, or planning to raise institutional capital in 24 months, pick DIFC Innovation Licence. The subsidised USD 1,500 a year is genuinely good value and the ecosystem matters.
If you are 5+ employees from day one and selling to UAE enterprises, pick DMCC. The brand premium is real with corporate clients and the visa scaling works.
If you need UAE government clients, run a physical retail location, or expect 20+ visas in two years, pick Dubai DED mainland.
If you are price-shopping at all costs and do not care about Dubai postal code prestige, pick Sharjah Media City or RAKEZ. Save AED 4,000 a year.
The biggest mistake is overpaying for a brand you do not need yet. You can always upgrade your licence later. Start cheap, prove revenue, then choose the right home for the next phase.
One last note on dual licensing. Dubai introduced a dual-licence model that lets a freezone company sponsor a parallel mainland licence to serve UAE clients directly without losing freezone substance. The cost is roughly AED 12,000 to AED 18,000 a year on top of your freezone licence. For most tech founders this is overkill in year one, but worth revisiting in year two if a chunky enterprise client appears on the horizon.



