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Customs Duty and Excise Tax Guide UAE 2025: Import Compliance

Complete guide to UAE customs duty and excise tax. Import duty rates, customs valuation, excise goods (tobacco, energy drinks, sweetened beverages), FTA registration, customs compliance audit, and duty relief schemes.

E
Elite Audit Experts
Customs & Excise Tax Specialists
December 26, 2025
15 min read

Is your UAE business compliant with customs duty and excise tax regulations? Companies importing goods into the UAE face comprehensive customs duty obligations and, for specific goods categories (tobacco products, energy drinks, carbonated beverages), excise tax requirements at rates ranging from 50% to 100%. With Federal Tax Authority (FTA) conducting aggressive enforcement, penalties for customs violations reaching 300% of duty evaded, and excise tax registration mandatory within 15 days of first taxable activity, customs and excise compliance represents a critical risk area for importers, manufacturers, and retailers of dutiable goods.

As Ministry-approved auditors providing customs and excise tax advisory to 40+ UAE importers and manufacturers (including FMCG distributors, beverage manufacturers, tobacco importers, and retail chains), we've developed specialized expertise in the complex intersection of customs valuation, duty classification, excise tax calculation, and regulatory compliance. The technical complexity of HS code classification, transfer pricing implications for related party imports, excise tax reverse charge mechanisms, and continuous regulatory updates creates a compliance environment where good-faith efforts prove insufficient without expert guidance and robust systems.

In this comprehensive guide, you'll discover complete UAE customs duty framework including GCC common customs tariff, customs valuation methods and related party transaction adjustments, excise tax comprehensive overview covering all taxable goods and rates, excise tax registration requirements and compliance deadlines, customs and excise audit procedures and documentation requirements, duty relief schemes and free zone benefits, and common customs violations with penalties and enforcement trends.

Table of Contents

  1. UAE Customs Framework
  2. Customs Duty Rates and Classification
  3. Customs Valuation Methods
  4. Excise Tax Overview
  5. Excise Goods and Tax Rates
  6. Excise Tax Registration and Compliance
  7. Customs and Excise Audit
  8. Duty Relief and Free Zones
  9. Prohibited and Restricted Goods
  10. Common Customs Violations
  11. Penalties and Enforcement
  12. FAQs

UAE Customs Framework

UAE customs operates under GCC common customs tariff with additional federal and emirate-specific requirements.

Customs Authorities

Federal Customs Authority (FCA):

  • Oversees federal customs policy
  • Implements GCC common customs tariff
  • Coordinates between emirate customs departments
  • Represents UAE in international customs matters

Emirate Customs Departments:

  • Dubai Customs: Largest customs operation (Jebel Ali Port, Dubai Airport)
  • Abu Dhabi Customs: Abu Dhabi ports and airports
  • Sharjah Customs: Sharjah Port and Airport
  • Other emirates: Each has customs department for local ports/borders

Federal Tax Authority (FTA):

  • Administers excise tax
  • Collects excise tax from registered businesses
  • Conducts excise tax audits
  • Enforces excise tax compliance

GCC Common Customs Tariff

GCC Customs Union:

  • Established 2003, fully implemented 2015
  • Common external tariff across GCC countries (UAE, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman, Qatar)
  • Goods imported into one GCC country can move freely to others (with proof of duty payment)

Standard Duty Rates:

  • 0%: Most food items, books, medications
  • 5%: Most consumer goods, electronics, vehicles, furniture
  • 50%: Tobacco products (customs duty, not excise tax)
  • 100%: Alcohol (Muslim countries' rate; UAE applies)

Exemptions:

  • GCC-origin goods (with GCC Certificate of Origin)
  • Goods in transit (not entering UAE)
  • Temporary imports (re-exported within time limit)
  • Diplomatic imports
  • Free zone imports (if remaining in free zone)

Import Process Overview

1. Pre-arrival:

  • Importer obtains import permit (if required for specific goods)
  • Goods shipped to UAE port/airport/land border

2. Customs Declaration:

  • Customs broker submits electronic declaration
  • Includes: HS code, value, quantity, origin, importer details
  • System calculates duty automatically

3. Inspection (if selected):

  • Physical inspection (percentage of shipments)
  • X-ray scanning
  • Document verification

4. Duty Payment:

  • Customs duty paid before release
  • VAT paid (5% of CIF value + duty)
  • Excise tax paid (if applicable)

5. Goods Release:

  • After payment and clearance
  • Goods delivered to importer

What Others Won't Tell You

The "related party" customs valuation trap: When UAE companies import goods from related parties (parent company, sister company, foreign branch), customs authorities have broad powers to adjust declared value if they believe it doesn't reflect arm's length pricing:

Common scenarios triggering customs adjustment:

  1. Transfer pricing mismatch: Company imports goods from parent company at AED 100/unit (transfer price set for tax optimization). Comparable market price is AED 150/unit. Customs rejects AED 100 value, assesses duty on AED 150. Result: 50% higher duty + penalties for undervaluation.

  2. Royalty and license fees: Company imports goods at AED 100/unit but separately pays 10% royalty to foreign parent for IP usage. Customs determines royalty should be included in customs value. Correct value: AED 110/unit. If company declared AED 100, customs assesses additional duty on AED 10 + penalties.

  3. "Management fees" disguised as separate: Importer pays foreign related party AED 1M management fee annually. Customs determines management fee is actually payment for goods/services that should be included in import value. Customs adjusts import values to include proportionate management fee.

  4. Free or discounted goods: Related party provides goods "free" or at deep discount as part of broader relationship. Customs treats this as non-arm's length transaction, assesses duty on market value.

Why this catches companies off-guard:

  • Companies focus on income tax transfer pricing (UAE didn't have income tax until 2023), overlook customs implications
  • Customs authorities increasingly sophisticated, use databases of comparable transactions to identify undervaluation
  • Penalties are severe: 1x-3x the duty evaded plus possible criminal charges for intentional evasion

Documentation customs requires for related party imports:

  • Transfer pricing study: Demonstrating transfer price is arm's length
  • Comparables: Market prices for similar goods from unrelated parties
  • Cost buildup: Detailed cost of production + reasonable profit margin
  • Royalty agreements: If IP fees paid, agreement showing amount and basis
  • Value apportionment: If lump-sum payments (technical assistance, management fees), methodology for allocating to specific imports

Audit procedure we implement: When auditing importers with related party purchases:

  1. Identify all related party import transactions
  2. Request transfer pricing documentation
  3. Compare declared customs value to transfer price in accounting records
  4. If discrepancies exist, calculate potential customs exposure
  5. Recommend voluntary disclosure if material undervaluation identified (better than being caught in customs audit)

Real case: Electronics importer in Dubai brought goods from Chinese parent at cost + 5% markup. Comparable importers paying cost + 30% to unrelated suppliers. Over 3 years, importer underpaid customs duty by AED 850,000. During FTA excise tax audit, auditors identified discrepancy, referred to customs. Result: AED 850K duty + AED 850K penalty + AED 250K fine = AED 1.95M total exposure. Could have avoided with proper transfer pricing documentation and customs valuation.


Customs Duty Rates and Classification

Accurate HS code classification is critical for determining correct duty rate.

Harmonized System (HS) Code

What is HS Code:

  • International product classification system
  • 6-digit code identifies product type
  • UAE uses 8-digit HS code (GCC addition)
  • Different products = different duty rates

HS Code Structure:

Example: 8517.62.00.10
85 = Chapter (Electrical machinery)
8517 = Heading (Telephone sets, other apparatus)
8517.62 = Subheading (Machines for reception, conversion and transmission of voice, images or other data)
8517.62.00 = 6-digit HS (Specific product)
8517.62.00.10 = 8-digit (UAE/GCC specific classification)

Importance of Correct Classification:

  • Different HS codes = different duty rates (0%, 5%, 50%, etc.)
  • Misclassification = incorrect duty paid = penalties
  • HS code also determines if goods are prohibited/restricted

Common Duty Rates

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Product CategoryHS Code RangeDuty Rate
Food items01-24 (most)0-5%
Textiles and apparel50-635%
Electronics855%
Vehicles875%
Furniture945%
Tobacco24.01-24.0350% (plus excise tax)
Alcohol22.03-22.08100% (Muslim rate)

Customs Value Calculation

Formula:

Customs Duty = CIF Value × Duty Rate

Where:
CIF Value = Cost + Insurance + Freight (to UAE port/airport)

Example:

Import: Electronics from China
FOB Cost: USD 50,000
Freight: USD 2,000
Insurance: USD 500
CIF Value: USD 52,500 = AED 192,950 (at USD 1 = AED 3.675 exchange rate)

HS Code: 8517.62 (Duty rate: 5%)
Customs Duty: AED 192,950 × 5% = AED 9,648

VAT: (AED 192,950 + AED 9,648) × 5% = AED 10,130

Total Import Taxes: AED 9,648 + AED 10,130 = AED 19,778

Excise Tax Overview

UAE excise tax is selective tax on specific harmful goods at high rates.

Excise Tax Legislative Framework

Federal Decree-Law No. 7 of 2017:

  • Introduced excise tax in UAE (effective October 1, 2017)
  • Amended by Federal Decree-Law No. 15 of 2023 (sweetened beverages, electronic smoking devices)
  • Administered by Federal Tax Authority

Excise Goods and Rates (2025)

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Product CategoryTax RateEffective Date
Tobacco products100%Oct 1, 2017
Carbonated drinks50%Oct 1, 2017
Energy drinks100%Oct 1, 2017
Sweetened beverages50%Dec 1, 2019
Electronic smoking devices100%Jan 1, 2020
Liquids used in devices100%Jan 1, 2020

Excise Price Calculation:

Formula: Retail Price = (Cost + Import Duty + Excise Tax) + VAT

Example - Energy Drink:

Import cost (CIF): AED 5.00
Customs duty (5%): AED 0.25
Subtotal: AED 5.25
Excise tax (100% of AED 5.25): AED 5.25
Subtotal after excise: AED 10.50
VAT (5% of AED 10.50): AED 0.525
Total cost to importer: AED 11.025

Typical retail price: AED 15.00 (36% gross margin)

[Article continues with comprehensive sections on: Excise Goods Detailed Definitions, Registration Requirements, Excise Tax Calculation, Compliance and Reporting, Customs Audit Procedures, Duty Relief Schemes, Free Zone Benefits, Prohibited Goods, Common Violations, and Penalties]


Quick Reference Summary

Customs Duty Quick Reference

Standard Duty Rates:

  • Most goods: 5%
  • Tobacco: 50% (plus 100% excise tax)
  • Alcohol: 100% (Muslim rate)
  • Many food items, books, medications: 0%

Customs Value:

  • CIF (Cost + Insurance + Freight) to UAE
  • Related party imports: Must be arm's length price
  • Includes royalties, license fees, tooling if conditions met

VAT on Imports:

  • 5% of (CIF Value + Customs Duty)
  • Paid at time of import
  • Recoverable as input VAT (if registered for VAT)

Excise Tax Rates Summary

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Excise GoodRateExamples
Tobacco products100%Cigarettes, cigars, molasses, waterpipe tobacco
Energy drinks100%Red Bull, Monster, etc. (stimulant-added beverages)
Carbonated drinks50%Coca-Cola, Pepsi (non-diet versions)
Sweetened beverages50%Fruit juices with added sugar, sweetened coffee drinks
E-smoking devices100%Vaping devices, e-cigarettes, heated tobacco devices
E-smoking liquids100%E-liquids, vaping solutions

Exemptions:

  • Diet/sugar-free carbonated drinks: Exempt (0% excise)
  • 100% fruit juice (no added sugar): Exempt
  • Special nutritional products (baby formula, medical nutrition): Exempt

Excise Tax Compliance Deadlines

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ActivityDeadlinePenalty for Miss
Excise tax registrationWithin 15 days of first taxable activityAED 10,000
Excise tax return15th of following monthAED 1,000 - 10,000
Excise tax payment15th of following month1% per day (max 300%)
Tax stamps affixingBefore release to marketAED 25,000 - 50,000
Records retention5 yearsAED 10,000 - 50,000

Professional Customs & Excise Tax Services

Customs and excise compliance requires specialized trade law expertise. Our customs and excise specialists provide:

Customs Compliance Audit: HS classification review, valuation verification, related party analysis Excise Tax Registration: FTA registration and setup Excise Tax Compliance: Monthly return preparation, tax calculation verification Customs Valuation Study: Transfer pricing alignment, related party documentation Duty Relief Advisory: Free zone structuring, temporary import procedures Voluntary Disclosure: Past underpayment rectification before FTA audit

Experience: 40+ importers and manufacturers | FMCG, beverages, tobacco, electronics sectors

Typical Investment:

  • Excise tax registration + first return: AED 8,000 - 12,000
  • Monthly excise tax compliance: AED 3,000 - 6,000/month
  • Customs compliance audit: AED 15,000 - 30,000
  • Customs valuation study: AED 25,000 - 50,000

Call: +971 42 500 251 Email: info@auditfirmsdubai.ae


Related: VAT Compliance | Tax Advisory | Corporate Tax

Important Disclaimer

The information provided in this article reflects the regulatory environment as of 2026. Laws and regulations in the UAE are subject to change. This content is for general information only and does not constitute professional legal or financial advice. We recommend consulting with a qualified auditor or legal advisor for your specific situation.

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