What Redomiciliation Preserves
The key advantage of redomiciliation over dissolution-and-reformation is continuity. The company retains its legal personality — meaning contracts, bank accounts, counterparty relationships, regulatory registrations and corporate history all survive the transfer. There is no winding-down period, no novation of contracts, no re-execution of agreements. The entity simply changes its jurisdiction of registration while remaining the same legal person.
This is particularly valuable for holding structures where the entity holds assets, contracts or licences that would be disruptive to transfer. A BVI holding company with 10 subsidiary shareholdings can redomicile to UAE mainland and continue holding those same shares without needing 10 separate share transfers.
Requirements
The home jurisdiction must permit outbound redomiciliation — most common offshore jurisdictions (BVI, Cayman, Seychelles, Mauritius) do. The company must pass a solvency test and demonstrate that the redomiciliation does not prejudice creditors. The process involves filing with both the departing jurisdiction's registry and the UAE's registrar, along with certified corporate documents.
Strategic Applications
For M&A transactions, redomiciliation enables a seller to move an offshore holding vehicle onshore before a sale — allowing a single UAE share transfer instead of a multi-jurisdiction disposal. For banking, redomiciled companies benefit from mainland banking access, which is substantially easier than offshore banking in the current KYC environment. For tax, a redomiciled entity can access the UAE's treaty network as a UAE-resident company.
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Redomiciliation — the legal continuation of a foreign company into the UAE without dissolving and re-incorporating — is most often driven by one of four motivations: substance consolidation under the new global minimum tax (Pillar Two/DMTT), the cost or instability of the existing jurisdiction (BVI, Cayman, Seychelles), banking access (UAE-registered entities open accounts more readily than offshore vehicles), and the personal residence of beneficial owners. The economic case is rarely about UAE tax in isolation — the corporate tax at 9% is higher than zero — but about the combined effect of substance, banking, treaty access (UAE has 140+ DTTs) and personal mobility through residence visas.
Eligibility — Which Jurisdictions Can Re-Continue Into the UAE
| UAE jurisdiction | Accepts inbound continuation from | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| DIFC | ~80 jurisdictions that permit outbound continuation | Most common for fund managers and family offices |
| ADGM | Common-law jurisdictions including Cayman, BVI, Bermuda, Jersey | Frequent choice for asset managers |
| RAKICC | Most common-law jurisdictions; BVI and Belize the dominant source | Designed for holding companies |
| JAFZA Offshore | Selected jurisdictions on case-by-case basis | Suited to property-holding structures |
| Mainland onshore | Limited; not the typical inbound destination | Substance considerations differ |
The Mechanics: A 8–14 Week Project
The process runs in two halves. The outbound half (in the existing jurisdiction) requires a board resolution, shareholder approval, a creditors' notice (usually 21 days), tax-clearance evidence and a certificate of good standing. The inbound half (in the UAE) requires the proposed UAE entity's constitutional documents, UBO declarations, AML/KYC on all directors and beneficial owners, and a translated copy of the certificate of good standing. A continuation order from the UAE registrar then issues, and the original jurisdiction strikes the entity off only after the UAE certificate is provided. Done well, the project closes in 8–14 weeks; done badly, it stalls on missing creditors' consents or tax-clearance delays.
Tax Consequences — and the Pillar Two Calculus
For most jurisdictions, continuation is not a deemed disposal for local tax purposes. The entity retains its tax book values, accumulated losses (subject to local rules) and its accounting history. In the UAE, the entity enters corporate tax from its first financial period commencing on or after the continuation date; the QFZP regime is available where the entity is in a qualifying free zone and meets the substance and qualifying-income conditions. For large multinationals, the global minimum tax (DMTT in the UAE, 15% on consolidated groups with revenue ≥ EUR 750m) changes the math: a UAE-resident sub-entity at 9% may have its rate topped up to 15% under DMTT, narrowing the gap with higher-tax jurisdictions. For groups below the EUR 750m threshold, the 9% rate stands.
The Practical Decision Tree
Three diagnostic questions usually settle whether redomiciliation is the right answer: (1) is the existing jurisdiction creating substance, banking or compliance friction that the UAE would resolve? (2) is the cost of continuation lower than the cost of starting fresh and migrating contracts? (3) are the beneficial owners willing to take UAE residence — without which the personal-tax benefits are limited. Where the answer to all three is yes, continuation is usually the cleaner route. Where the existing entity is small, dormant or contractually thin, starting fresh in the UAE and winding the old vehicle is often faster.
- Continuation preserves the legal entity — same registration number for contracts, banking and IP rights.
- Eligibility is jurisdiction-pair specific; DIFC, ADGM, RAKICC are the principal inbound destinations.
- Realistic timeline is 8–14 weeks end-to-end, with creditor and tax-clearance windows the most common delay points.
- Most jurisdictions treat continuation as tax-neutral, but UAE Pillar Two/DMTT changes the calculus for large groups.
- For thin or dormant entities, fresh incorporation is often cheaper than continuation.
Polaris Perspective
Polaris advises on redomiciliation strategy — from feasibility assessment through filing, regulatory coordination and post-transfer compliance management.
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