ESR filing in UAE is a requirement of Economic Substance Regulations UAE for all the businesses that fall under the scope of ESR. The main aim of filing the ESR notification is to let the regulatory authorities collect and govern some significant pieces of information about the licensees and the relevant activities that they have been performing throughout the year. All the required information is essential to be provided by the licensees. Also, filing notification is a prerequisite to ESR reporting and for the ESR test.
The businesses need to carefully determine whether they fall under the scope of ESR or under which category they need to comply with the regulations. According to the guidance provided by the Economic Substance Regulations, filing notification is mandatory for a corporate organization (for example, private or public joint-stock company, limited liability company, etc) and a partnership entity (for example, general partnership, limited liability partnership, etc) only if they execute one or more of the relevant activities within a particular year.
In the UAE, a business that executes one or more than one of the relevant activities within a particular financial year is termed a Licensee. If a business in the UAE is performing any of the relevant activities but is free from certain ESR requirements is called an Exempted Licensee. No matter whether a licensee is exempted or not, it is mandatory to file an ESR notification.
Read also : Adequate or Appropriate Economic Substance in UAE
ESR filing in UAE is mandatory for all the licensees and exempted licensees and every licensee needs to file a notification to the particular authority that regulates it within its registered jurisdiction. Regulatory authorities are specific to the different relevant activities. For instance, if a licensee is performing a banking business in the UAE, it should file a notification to the UAE Central Bank which is a regulatory authority for all the banking businesses in the UAE as per the Cabinet Resolution no. 57. The following information would generally be required to include in the notification;
Since exempted licensees are also required to file a notification, they must provide enough evidence to support their exempted status in all the activities in which they consider themselves to be exempted. In case a licensee fails to prove itself as exempted or lacks enough evidence, it will not fall under the scope of exemption as per ESR in UAE. Such a licensee will then be required to fulfil all the ESR requirements and will need to submit a report like other licensees. Also, it will be required to meet the ESR test.
You should Know : Post Submission Problems and Solutions of ESR Notifications
It does not matter if a licensee performed a relevant activity for a month in a year or for the whole year, it always needs to file a notification if one or more than one of the relevant activities were executed. Whatever activity has been performed within one financial year, needs ESR filing and reporting.
Many businesses in the UAE work together in the form of a group to make the accounting process easy or for VAT purposes. However, when it comes to filing a notification, each licensee needs to file a separate notification. No matter if all the licensees working together in a consolidated group execute the same relevant activity, they still need to file a notification independently.
No, it is not required by the different branches of the same business to file notifications independently. Branches in the UAE do not have a separate legal identity but they are just the extensions of a head office or parent branch. For this reason, only the head office is responsible for filing the notification and submitting the yearly report including all the activities that have been performed in the parent branch and other branches.
Yes, there are proper deadlines according to the ESR regulations and businesses need to comply with these deadlines. All the licensees are supposed to file a notification six months before the financial year-end date. For example, if the year-end date of a business is 31 March, then the notification must be filed before 30 September or if the year-end date of a business is 31 December, then the notification must be filed before 30 June, etc.
The submission of notification is done electronically. A portal is launched by the Ministry of Finance to make the filing process facilitated. In addition to the filing of notification, ESR reports and other important pieces of information are also submitted through this portal only. The Ministry of Finance also publishes the rules and regulations and the procedures of using the portal when the portal is launched.
If a licensee is performing a relevant activity within the year in which it would be liquidated, it still needs to file the notification and submit the report to the regulatory authority for all the activities that have been performed before the liquidation of the business. All the ESR requirements shall be satisfied in this case.
A business whether it is a licensee or exempted licensee needs to file a notification to the relevant authority. If such a business fails to file a notification within the due date will be subjected to a penalty of 20,000 AED.
The regulatory authorities require important information from the licensee such as the relevant activity that it performed and the income that the activity generated and some other information. If a licensee tries to provide the regulatory authority with incorrect information about the business, it would be subjected to a penalty of 50,000 AED. Also, if a licensee claims to be exempted when it is originally not exempted, it would fail the ESR test for the relevant year.
To know more about ESR filing in UAE and if you have other questions about Economic Substance Regulations, consult our experts. If you want to file a notification and are not sure how to do it, let our expert service provider do it perfectly for you. You will be provided with sufficient guidance throughout the procedure. Let our experts provide you with the best.
Bola Olaoye is a Legal Senior Associate and holds an LLB from Adekunle Ajasin University as well as a Bar Certificate from the Council of Legal Education. With experience spanning 14 years, she knows the ins and outs of UAE’s laws and practices and has helped provide clear and concise guidance to clients on the appropriate law-abiding measures to be taken concerning Economic Substance Regulations (ESR).