Dubai's 50+ free zones make it one of the world's most attractive locations for foreign entrepreneurs. 100% ownership, fast setup, and no personal income tax have drawn thousands of global founders to set up here. But the process still has steps — and knowing them in advance saves time and money.
Step 1: Choose Your Business Activity
Before anything else, you need to know precisely what your company will do. Free zones categorise activities into groups — general trading, consultancy, technology, media, logistics, etc. Your permitted activities determine which free zone is even open to you, and how many activities you can list on a single licence.
Pro tip: Be as specific as possible about your activities upfront. Adding activities later often requires an amendment fee and restart of approvals.
Step 2: Choose the Right Free Zone
With 50+ options, this is where most founders get overwhelmed. Key factors to compare:
- Activity fit — DMCC for commodities; DIFC for financial services; DAFZ for logistics near the airport; IFZA and Meydan for general business
- Cost — licence fees vary by zone and package
- Visa quota — typically 1–6 visas depending on package; upgrade to more with a larger office
- Office requirement — flexi-desk, co-working, or dedicated office
- Location — proximity to your clients, suppliers or sector cluster
Read our full comparison: Best Free Zones in Dubai by Business Type — 2026
Step 3: Choose Your Legal Structure
Most free zone companies are set up as an FZ-LLC (Free Zone Limited Liability Company) — the simplest structure for 1–50 shareholders. Other options include Free Zone Establishment (FZE, single shareholder) and branches of existing foreign companies.
For most individuals setting up their first business: FZ-LLC or FZE is the right choice.
Step 4: Reserve Your Trade Name
You'll need to submit 2–3 preferred company names to the free zone authority for approval. Names must comply with UAE naming rules:
- No offensive or religious terms
- No names of existing companies (check DED + free zone registers)
- If using a personal name, the full name must be used (no initials only)
- Must end with the correct legal suffix (e.g. "FZ-LLC" or "FZE")
Step 5: Prepare Your Documents
Standard documents required for most free zones:
- Passport copy of all shareholders and directors (valid 6+ months)
- Recent utility bill or bank statement (proof of address, last 3 months)
- CV / business plan (required by some free zones)
- NOC from current UAE employer (if applicable)
- Bank reference letter (some free zones)
When we handle your setup, we prepare, check and submit all documents on your behalf — so nothing comes back rejected.
Step 6: Submit Application & Pay Fees
Applications are typically submitted online through the free zone's portal or via an approved business setup agent (like us). Our company formation service covers the full submission, document preparation, and follow-up. Fees paid at this stage:
- Licence fee (annual)
- Registration fee (one-off)
- Share capital deposit (some zones require a nominal amount)
- Office/flexi-desk fee (annual)
Total first-year cost varies by zone and package — contact us for a personalised quote including our professional fees.
Get an exact quote for your business
We'll compare free zones and give you a fixed cost with no hidden fees — in under 24 hours.
Get my free quoteStep 7: Receive Your Licence & Incorporation Documents
Once approved (typically 3–7 working days), you receive:
- Trade licence (the core legal document)
- Certificate of Incorporation
- Memorandum & Articles of Association
- Share certificate(s)
Step 8: Apply for Your UAE Residence Visa
Your licence allows you to apply for a UAE investor/partner visa. The process takes 7–14 working days and includes — see our visa & immigration service for the full process:
- Entry permit stamped in passport
- Status change (if already in UAE)
- Emirates ID application
- Medical fitness test
- Visa stamping
Step 9: Open a Corporate Bank Account
With your licence in hand, you can approach UAE banks. This step takes the longest — typically 2–6 weeks — and banks are strict on compliance. We help by preparing your full banking pack and making warm introductions to relationship managers. Our legal documentation service covers the compliance paperwork banks require.
See also: Mainland vs Free Zone — which gets a bank account more easily?
Timeline Summary
| Step | Typical Time |
|---|---|
| Name reservation + application submission | 1–2 days |
| Licence approval & issuance | 3–7 working days |
| Visa stamping | 7–14 working days |
| Bank account opening | 2–6 weeks |
| Total (licence to bank) | 4–8 weeks |