Importing into the United Arab Emirates or the wider Gulf Cooperation Council is straightforward once you understand three things: the tariff, the classification, and the paperwork.
The 5% Common External Tariff
The GCC operates a customs union with a common external tariff of 5% on the CIF value of most imported goods. Some categories differ: many foodstuffs, medicines and books are duty-free, while tobacco and alcohol carry much higher rates. The 5% is an indicative default — your customs broker confirms the binding rate for your specific goods.
HS Codes: the Key to Everything
Every product is classified under the Harmonized System (HS), a global standard maintained by the World Customs Organization. The first six digits are international; countries add more for national tariff lines. The HS code drives the duty rate, any restrictions, and whether permits are required. Getting it wrong means delays, fines, or over-paying duty for years.
Documents Customs Will Want
- Commercial invoice (with value, HS code, country of origin).
- Packing list.
- Bill of Lading / Air Waybill.
- Certificate of Origin — often attested, and key for preferential GCC treatment.
- Import permits for regulated goods (food, pharma, telecoms, etc.).
VAT and the 5% Layer
On top of duty, the UAE applies 5% VAT on most imports, generally recoverable by VAT-registered businesses. Customs duty is a cost; import VAT is usually a cash-flow item, not a final cost, for registered importers.
Free Zone vs Mainland
Goods brought into a UAE free zone are generally not subject to import duty while they remain there — useful for storage, light assembly or re-export. Duty is triggered when goods cross into the mainland (the local market). This is why so much regional trade is structured around free zones such as Jebel Ali.
Sources & Further Reading
- UAE Federal Customs Authority and Dubai Customs published tariffs and procedures.
- GCC Common Customs Law (unified customs union framework).
- World Customs Organization — Harmonized System (HS) nomenclature.
- UAE Federal Tax Authority — VAT on imports.
Rates and rules change; confirm with a licensed customs broker before you ship.