Corporate Services & PRO (UAE) · PRO & Government Liaison Services
Company Liquidation
A UAE company does not close itself when it stops trading — the licence keeps renewing fines, the immigration file keeps sponsored visas technically open, and the FTA keeps expecting returns until someone formally liquidates the entity.
Chartered Accountants · Dubai · Since 1986
Company liquidation is the formal, government-sanctioned process of winding up a UAE company — settling its liabilities, closing every linked authority file, and permanently cancelling its trade licence and commercial registration. For a mainland LLC or establishment licensed by the Department of Economic Development (DED) — Dubai Economy and Tourism (DET) in Dubai — the process follows the UAE Commercial Companies Law (Federal Decree-Law No. 32 of 2021), which requires a shareholder resolution to liquidate, appointment of a licensed liquidator, publication of a liquidation notice in two local Arabic newspapers, a statutory creditor objection period, and final deregistration once the liquidator confirms all liabilities are settled or resolved. A free zone company instead follows the liquidation rules of its own free zone authority — JAFZA, DMCC, DIFC, ADGM, RAK ICC, SHAMS, RAKEZ, IFZA, Meydan, Ajman Free Zone, and others each run their own notice mechanism, form set, and fee schedule, and these differ meaningfully from the mainland process and from each other.
Free zone liquidation procedures also diverge in structural ways beyond notice mechanics. Common-law free zones — DIFC and ADGM — run liquidation under their own companies regulations modelled on English insolvency and companies law, with their own courts (the DIFC Courts and the ADGM Courts) available if a dispute arises during winding-up, a materially different framework from the civil-law liquidation process most other free zones and the mainland follow. A company registered as a Free Zone Establishment (FZE, single shareholder) or Free Zone Company (FZCO, multiple shareholders) in a civil-law free zone such as DMCC, JAFZA, or RAKEZ instead liquidates under that authority's own regulations, which typically mirror the shareholder-resolution-and-liquidator structure but set their own notice period, fee schedule, and required forms. A company that held Qualifying Free Zone Person status for Corporate Tax purposes should also confirm its final tax period treatment with the FTA before deregistering, since the 0% qualifying-income treatment applies for as long as the entity remains Corporate Tax-registered and meets the conditions — it does not automatically extend past deregistration, and the final period's Corporate Tax return still needs to be filed and settled like any other.
As a PRO and government-liaison engagement, the defining feature of this service is sequencing across authorities that all depend on one another in a fixed order. The company's immigration establishment file cannot close until every sponsored employee's residence visa is cancelled through MOHRE and GDRFA (Dubai) or ICP (the other emirates); visas cannot be cancelled until end-of-service gratuity is settled under the UAE Labour Law; the Federal Tax Authority (FTA) will not confirm a clean tax position until VAT deregistration (and Corporate Tax deregistration, where the company was registered) is filed on EmaraTax; and the licensing authority will not issue the final deregistration certificate until it holds a no-objection from MOHRE, immigration, the FTA, and any sector-specific regulator the company's activity touched. Miss the order, and a file that looks complete stalls on a single missing NOC — usually the one nobody thought to chase because it did not look connected to the licence itself.
Under UAE Government closure guidance, a licence that is simply left to lapse is not a closure route — the entity continues to legally exist, renewal penalties keep accruing on the authority's system, the immigration file stays open, and the sponsor faces travel-ban and blacklisting exposure the longer it sits unresolved. Genuine legal closure requires the statutory notices, resolutions, and clearances described above, run through to a formal liquidation/deregistration certificate — and that certificate, not a lapsed licence, is the only document that ends the company's legal existence.
PNPC's role in this specific engagement is the government-liaison execution layer: coordinating the appointed liquidator's statutory work with the parallel PRO tasks — trade name and licence records, Ejari/lease termination, establishment card cancellation, MOHRE labour file closure, EmaraTax deregistration filing, and NOC collection from every department the company's activity ever touched. We track each authority's own current published liquidation procedure, because free zone requirements are revised periodically and a process that worked for one free zone two years ago is not a safe template for another authority today.
Where the company was a Designated Non-Financial Business or Profession (DNFBP) under UAE AML/CFT law — for example a corporate service provider, real estate broker, or dealer in precious metals and stones — its goAML registration and Ministry of Economy AML reporting obligations need to be formally closed alongside the licence, not simply left dormant. Directors and managers should also be aware that Economic Substance Regulations notification and report filing was discontinued for financial years starting on or after 1 January 2023 under Cabinet Decision No. 98 of 2024, so a company liquidating today generally has no live ESR filing to complete for its final period, though any outstanding ESR obligation from an earlier financial year should be confirmed as closed before deregistration rather than assumed to have lapsed on its own.
Cost and timeline are genuinely case-specific, moving with employee count, whether the company holds property, vehicles, or a customs code, whether newspaper publication is required, and — often the largest variable — whether outstanding fines surface mid-process. PNPC scopes the engagement after an initial assessment and confirms a written, itemised fee separating our professional fee from third-party liquidator charges and government cancellation fees, rather than quoting a flat figure that would not hold across such different cases.
When PRO-led liquidation support is the right engagement
The company has stopped trading permanently and shareholders want the trade licence formally cancelled rather than left to lapse and accrue penalties
A licensed liquidator has already been identified or engaged, and you need the parallel government-liaison work — MOHRE, immigration, FTA, landlord, bank — coordinated alongside the liquidator's statutory process
The company has sponsored employees whose visas, labour cards, and gratuity settlements need to be sequenced correctly with MOHRE and GDRFA/ICP before the immigration file can close
A trade licence has already lapsed and penalties are accumulating, and the shareholder needs a managed route to close the entity rather than continuing to renew a dormant licence indefinitely
The business is winding down as part of a group restructuring, relocation, or India-UAE cross-border consolidation and the UAE entity's closure needs to be sequenced against the parent's reporting calendar
A shareholder or director has discovered a travel ban or immigration hold tracing back to an unresolved company file and needs the underlying government clearances chased and closed
The company was VAT- or Corporate Tax-registered and the FTA deregistration on EmaraTax needs to be filed within the prescribed window as part of the wider closure
You need trade licence cancellation and liquidation-linked NOCs coordinated across the DED/DET or free zone authority, MOHRE, immigration, and the FTA with a single accountable process owner rather than five separate follow-ups
You want the final deregistration certificate and every supporting NOC and clearance handed over as one organised, retrievable file rather than scattered portal confirmations
The matter affects visas, licences, tax registrations, bank accounts, or employee status and needs a clear authority sequence with a named document owner, not informal advice alone
The company is part of a larger group with multiple UAE entities and shareholders need one engagement to sequence the closure of several licences without cross-entity NOCs or shared employees causing one file to block another
Shareholders are based overseas and need the resolution, liquidator engagement, and filings coordinated remotely through Power of Attorney rather than requiring repeated travel to the UAE
When this specific service is not the right starting point
You have not yet decided whether to liquidate, sell, or keep the entity dormant — that structuring decision should come from an advisory conversation before a liquidator is engaged or a resolution is filed
You need the strategic liability assessment, solvency review, and full liquidation advisory build itself — that broader diagnostic sits under our dedicated Company Liquidation Support engagement, which this PRO-led filing and closure work plugs into once the route is decided
The company is genuinely insolvent and creditors are pressing — that calls for the formal insolvency/bankruptcy process under Federal Decree-Law No. 9 of 2016 (as amended) and specialist insolvency counsel, not a voluntary members' liquidation
There is an active shareholder dispute over whether or how to wind up the company — that needs resolving, or taking to counsel, before a valid liquidation resolution can be passed
The company could instead be sold as a going concern or transferred by share sale — that preserves the licence, bank history, and visa quota, all of which liquidation permanently ends
Only one branch, activity, or licence within a larger group needs to close — a licence amendment or branch deregistration may be the correct, narrower step rather than liquidating the whole entity
There is active litigation where the company must remain a party — premature liquidation can complicate or invalidate the proceedings
The client will not confirm the true liability picture — an undisclosed creditor, labour dispute, or bank facility discovered mid-process restarts the statutory notice period and stalls the whole file
You only need a casual cost estimate and are not yet ready to share the trade licence, financials, employee records, and authority correspondence needed to scope the closure properly
The immediate need is purely an individual's visa cancellation or Emirates ID processing with the company otherwise continuing to operate — that sits under visa processing rather than company-wide liquidation
The entity is an offshore company (JAFZA Offshore, RAK ICC, or similar) rather than an onshore free zone or mainland trading entity — offshore strike-off follows the registered agent's own simplified process rather than this onshore liquidation route
Closing a UAE company — liquidation vs the alternatives
| Feature | Voluntary Liquidation (Mainland) | Voluntary Liquidation (Free Zone) | Licence Non-Renewal / Lapse | Formal Insolvency Process |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Governing framework | Commercial Companies Law (Federal Decree-Law No. 32 of 2021) and DED/DET procedure | The specific free zone authority's own liquidation rules and fee schedule | No formal process — the licence simply expires | Federal Decree-Law No. 9 of 2016 (as amended), court/committee-supervised |
| Liquidator required | Yes — licensed liquidator on the DED/DET's recognised panel | Yes — per the free zone's own approved-liquidator rules | Not applicable | Court-appointed trustee/liquidator |
| Public creditor notice | Yes — publication in two local Arabic newspapers, statutory objection window | Yes — per that free zone's own notice mechanism, which may or may not involve newspaper publication | None — creditors have no formal notice or window | Yes — court-supervised creditor claims process |
| Employee/visa closure | Mandatory before the immigration file and licence close | Mandatory before the immigration file and licence close | Not addressed — visas can remain technically open | Handled as part of the winding-up |
| FTA VAT/Corporate Tax deregistration | Required before final certificate | Required before final certificate | Not filed — FTA obligations keep accruing | Required as part of the process |
| Result if done correctly | Formal deregistration certificate; entity legally ceases to exist | Formal deregistration certificate; entity legally ceases to exist | Entity technically still exists with mounting fines and immigration exposure | Entity dissolved after court/process-supervised settlement |
| Risk to shareholders/directors if mishandled | Low if sequenced correctly; high if NOCs or visas are left open | Low if sequenced correctly; high if NOCs or visas are left open | High — accruing fines, travel-ban risk, blacklisting from future licences | Can involve personal-liability review in mismanagement or fraud cases |
| Governing courts / dispute forum | UAE onshore courts (Dubai Courts or the relevant emirate's courts) | Varies by free zone — DIFC and ADGM disputes go to the DIFC Courts or ADGM Courts (common law); other free zones typically route disputes to onshore UAE courts or a free zone tribunal | Not applicable — no formal process to dispute | Specialised court/committee process under Federal Decree-Law No. 9 of 2016 (as amended) |
| AML/DNFBP deregistration (where applicable) | Required if the company was registered as a DNFBP on goAML | Required if the company was registered as a DNFBP on goAML | Not addressed — AML registration stays open | Handled as part of the winding-up |
| Corporate Tax final-period deregistration | Required — final Corporate Tax return filed and settled before FTA deregistration confirmation | Required, including reconciling any Qualifying Free Zone Person qualifying-income position for the final period | Not filed — Corporate Tax obligations keep accruing | Required as part of the process |
This table is directional guidance, not a legal opinion. The right route depends on the company's licensing authority, solvency position, employee count, and whether disputes exist. PNPC confirms the applicable route and current authority procedure before filing begins.
| Stage | What Happens | Who Acts | Typical Output |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Pre-Closure Assessment | Confirm the licensing authority (DED/DET or the specific free zone), and map every open item — employees, leases, vehicles, bank facilities, tax registrations, litigation — before any filing is made. | PNPC PRO desk with the client | A documented liability and asset checklist scoped to that specific authority's requirements |
| 2. Shareholder/Board Resolution & Liquidator Appointment | Draft and notarise (where required) the resolution to voluntarily liquidate, naming the appointed liquidator; confirm the liquidator is on the authority's recognised panel. | Shareholders sign; PNPC coordinates drafting and liquidator engagement | Filed resolution and liquidator engagement letter |
| 3. Statutory Liquidation Notice | Publish the liquidation notice in two local Arabic newspapers (mainland) or file the free zone's own notice, opening the statutory creditor objection window. | Liquidator files; PNPC coordinates publication and confirms filing with the authority | Newspaper publication proof or free zone notice confirmation |
| 4. Employee & Visa Wind-Down | Cancel labour cards and residence visas through MOHRE and GDRFA/ICP once end-of-service gratuity is settled for each sponsored employee. | PNPC PRO desk with MOHRE/GDRFA/ICP; client settles final payments | Cancelled labour and visa records; MOHRE clearance |
| 5. FTA Deregistration | File VAT deregistration on EmaraTax (generally within the FTA's prescribed window once taxable supplies cease) and Corporate Tax deregistration for the company's final tax period, where registered. | PNPC files via EmaraTax | FTA deregistration confirmation(s) |
| 6. Liability Settlement & Fines Clearance | Settle or formally resolve creditor claims raised in the notice window; clear outstanding traffic, municipality, and immigration fines that would otherwise block a clearance. | Liquidator and PNPC, with client funding settlements | Cleared fines record; liquidator's settlement working papers |
| 7. Bank Account Closure | Close or formally instruct closure of company accounts once the liquidator's process reaches settlement, typically requiring the liquidator's letter and authority in-principle approval. | PNPC liaises with the bank; liquidator issues the required letter | Bank closure confirmation |
| 8. Government NOC Collection | Collect no-objection clearances from MOHRE, immigration, the FTA, and any sector regulator the company's activity touched (health authority, municipality, customs). | PNPC PRO desk, department by department | Full NOC set specific to the company's footprint |
| 9. Final Liquidator's Report | The liquidator files the report confirming assets realised, liabilities settled, and no outstanding objections, within the authority's specified timeframe. | Liquidator files; PNPC reviews and submits alongside the NOC set | Accepted liquidator's report |
| 10. Licence Cancellation & Deregistration Certificate | The licensing authority cancels the trade licence and issues the final liquidation/deregistration certificate — the only document that ends the entity's legal existence. | DED/DET or free zone authority issues; PNPC collects and verifies | Final deregistration certificate |
| 11. Asset & Trademark Wind-Down | Assign any registered trademark through the Ministry of Economy and cancel or transfer vehicle registrations before the entity is struck off — these do not close automatically with the licence. | PNPC coordinates with the Ministry of Economy and traffic authority | Trademark assignment or vehicle transfer confirmation |
| 12. Closure File Handover & Retention Advisory | Hand over the organised closure file — certificate, all NOCs, liquidator's report, EmaraTax confirmations — and advise on the statutory record-retention period. | PNPC compiles and delivers | Retained closure file; retention advisory note |
| 13. AML/DNFBP & Sector Regulator Deregistration | Close the goAML registration and Ministry of Economy AML reporting profile where the company was a DNFBP, and formally deregister from any sector regulator (health authority, KHDA, RERA, SIRA) the licence carried. | PNPC PRO desk, liaising with the Ministry of Economy and the relevant sector regulator | AML deregistration confirmation and sector regulator closure letter, where applicable |
| 14. Offshore / Branch-Specific Closure (Where Applicable) | For an offshore company (JAFZA Offshore, RAK ICC) or a branch of a foreign company, coordinate the registered agent's strike-off process or the branch's parent-company closure resolution alongside the standard onshore steps that still apply to the branch's UAE footprint. | PNPC coordinates with the registered agent or the foreign parent's board | Registered agent's strike-off confirmation or branch closure certificate |
Realistic timeline: roughly 2 to 4 months for a dormant free zone company with no employees and no debts, and 4 to 8 months or longer for a mainland company with staff, leased premises, and active creditors. The statutory creditor notice period is fixed by the relevant authority and is the one stage that cannot be compressed.
Original trade licence and commercial registration certificate
Memorandum of Association (MoA) / Articles of Association and any amendments issued since incorporation
Board/shareholder resolution to voluntarily liquidate, naming the appointed liquidator
Share certificates and the current shareholder register
Copies of all prior licence amendments (activity, name, or shareholding changes)
Valid passport and Emirates ID copies for all shareholders and the general manager/authorised signatory
Power of Attorney for any shareholder signing remotely, attested/legalised as required
Corporate shareholder documents — Certificate of Incorporation, board resolution authorising the liquidation, authorised signatory ID — where a shareholder is itself a company
List of all sponsored employees with visa and labour card details
Employment contracts and Wage Protection System (WPS) payroll history for final settlement calculation
End-of-service gratuity calculations under the UAE Labour Law for each departing employee
Establishment immigration card and MOHRE labour establishment card
Latest audited or management financial statements
Bank statements for all company accounts for the recent period
FTA VAT registration certificate (if registered) and VAT filing history for deregistration
FTA Corporate Tax registration certificate (if registered) and Corporate Tax filing status
List of outstanding creditors, vendors, and any disputed liabilities
Tenancy contract (Ejari-registered in Dubai, or the emirate equivalent) and landlord NOC for lease termination
Vehicle registration cards and traffic fine clearance for any company-registered vehicles
Municipality fine clearance certificate
Customs code cancellation confirmation, where the company held an import/export registration
Any registered trademark details, if assignment is required before deregistration
Liquidator engagement letter and proof of the liquidator's licence/panel recognition with the relevant authority
Proof of newspaper publication of the liquidation notice (mainland) or the free zone's equivalent notice confirmation
No-objection certificates from MOHRE, immigration, the FTA, and any sector-specific regulator relevant to the company's activity
Draft and final liquidator's report
goAML registration confirmation and deregistration request, where the company was registered as a Designated Non-Financial Business or Profession (DNFBP)
Any sector regulator licence or registration requiring separate closure — health authority, KHDA, RERA, SIRA, or Central Bank-regulated activity approvals
Record of any Economic Substance Regulations filings from financial years before 1 January 2023, confirmed as closed with no outstanding notification or report
Confirmation of Nafis/Emiratisation compliance status where the mainland company was subject to Emirati workforce quota obligations
Offshore company Certificate of Incorporation and registered agent details, for a JAFZA Offshore, RAK ICC, or similar offshore entity being struck off
Foreign parent company's board resolution and Certificate of Incorporation, where the entity being closed is a UAE branch rather than a locally incorporated company
Registered agent's confirmation of no outstanding annual fees, where an offshore company's strike-off is being processed
Evidence of the branch's original commercial registration and any parent-company guarantee issued at setup, where relevant to closing a branch
| Phase | Triggered By | PNPC PRO/CA Guidance | Risk If Ignored |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-Closure Assessment | Shareholders decide to wind down operations | Confirm the licensing authority and map every open liability — employees, leases, vehicles, tax registrations, litigation — before any resolution is filed. | Filing a resolution without a full liability map leads to mid-process surprises that can restart the statutory notice period. |
| Liquidator Appointment | Shareholder resolution passed | Confirm the liquidator is recognised by the specific authority; scope the engagement to cover both the statutory report and coordination with government departments. | An improperly scoped or unrecognised liquidator appointment can be rejected, wasting time and filing fees. |
| Statutory Notice Period | Liquidator publishes the notice | Track the fixed objection window and respond to any creditor claim raised within it; do not proceed to final report before it lapses. | Proceeding before the notice period lapses, or ignoring a raised objection, can invalidate the liquidation. |
| Employee & Visa Wind-Down | Liquidation process begins | Sequence gratuity settlement, visa cancellation, and labour card closure correctly with MOHRE and immigration. | Unpaid gratuity or an unresolved labour complaint can trigger a sponsor travel ban and block the immigration NOC. |
| Tax Deregistration | Trading activity ceases | File VAT deregistration on EmaraTax within the FTA's prescribed window; file Corporate Tax deregistration where registered, after settling the final return. | Late VAT deregistration attracts an FTA administrative penalty; an unresolved Corporate Tax filing can block the FTA clearance the licensing authority requires. |
| Government NOC Collection | Liabilities settled | Systematically collect NOCs from MOHRE, immigration, the FTA, and any sector regulator the company's activity touched. | A single missing NOC halts the entire deregistration file, however complete every other step is. |
| Final Deregistration | Liquidator's final report accepted | Confirm the licence cancellation and deregistration certificate are issued and retained permanently by shareholders. | Without the final certificate, shareholders cannot prove closure to a bank, immigration authority, or future business partner years later. |
| Asset & Trademark Wind-Down | The company still holds a trademark, vehicles, or other transferable assets | Assign trademarks through the Ministry of Economy and cancel/transfer vehicle registrations before the entity is struck off. | A trademark or asset left in the name of a dissolved company is far harder to assign or transfer afterward. |
| Individual Visa Transition | A shareholder or investor visa was sponsored by the closing company | Plan the shareholder's (and any dependants') new sponsor before the company's immigration file is closed. | Closing the company's immigration file first can leave the shareholder and dependants without valid residence status. |
| Post-Closure Record Retention | Certificate issued | Retain accounting, VAT, and Corporate Tax records for the minimum statutory period even though the company no longer trades. | The FTA can request records after closure; an inability to produce them creates exposure for former directors even after dissolution. |
| AML/DNFBP Deregistration | The company was registered as a DNFBP for AML/CFT purposes | Close the goAML registration and confirm with the Ministry of Economy that no outstanding AML reporting obligation remains before the licence is cancelled. | An open DNFBP registration left unclosed can surface as an outstanding compliance flag against the former directors in a later business venture. |
| Multi-Entity Group Liquidation | A group holds more than one UAE licence and is closing several entities together | Sequence each entity's closure so shared employees, intercompany balances, and cross-entity NOCs are resolved without one entity's open file blocking another's deregistration. | Closing entities independently without a shared sequence can leave an intercompany balance or a shared employee's visa stranded between two closing files. |
Cancelling employee visas before end-of-service gratuity is calculated and settled, which can trigger a labour complaint that then blocks the immigration-side cancellation
Filing VAT or Corporate Tax deregistration on EmaraTax before the final return for that tax period has actually been submitted and any tax due settled
Instructing bank account closure before the liquidator has issued the letter and reached the point in the process where the bank will accept closure instructions
Publishing the statutory liquidation notice before the appointed liquidator's engagement and panel recognition are confirmed with the licensing authority
Submitting the licence cancellation application before every required NOC — MOHRE, immigration, FTA, and any sector regulator — has actually been collected
Not checking for outstanding traffic, municipality, or immigration fines early, so an old forgotten fine surfaces only at final submission and blocks the file
Leaving a registered trademark unassigned in the name of a company that is about to be dissolved, making it far harder to transfer the brand afterward
Not confirming whether the company was registered as a DNFBP on goAML, and therefore leaving that AML registration open after the licence is cancelled
Assuming Economic Substance Regulations obligations from a financial year before 1 January 2023 are automatically closed rather than confirming this with the authority
Not planning a shareholder's or investor's own residence-visa transition before the company's immigration file — the visa that sponsors them — is closed
VAT deregistration filed while earlier VAT return periods remain outstanding or unfiled on EmaraTax
Corporate Tax deregistration filed without the final tax period's return submitted and any Corporate Tax due actually settled
Attempting to proceed to the liquidator's final report before the statutory creditor notice/objection window has lapsed, or while a raised objection remains unresolved
Submitting a liquidator engagement where the liquidator is not on that specific authority's recognised panel, which the authority can reject outright
Incomplete or improperly retained proof of newspaper publication (mainland) or the free zone's own notice confirmation, leaving a gap in the statutory evidence trail
What does PNPC's PRO desk actually do in a company liquidation, versus the liquidator?
The appointed liquidator carries the statutory role — signing the liquidator's report and certifying that liabilities are settled — which by most authorities' rules must be a firm on their recognised liquidator panel. PNPC's PRO desk runs the parallel government-liaison execution: sequencing MOHRE and immigration file closure, filing FTA deregistration on EmaraTax, chasing NOCs across every department the company touched, and coordinating the licence cancellation itself, so the liquidator's statutory process and the authority filings move in step rather than one waiting on the other unnecessarily.
Does the liquidation process differ between mainland and free zone companies?
Yes, materially. A mainland company (DED/DET-licensed) follows the Commercial Companies Law procedure, including Arabic newspaper publication of the liquidation notice and a statutory creditor objection window. A free zone company follows that free zone's own liquidation rules, notice mechanism, and fee schedule — JAFZA, DMCC, DIFC, ADGM, RAK ICC, SHAMS, RAKEZ, and others each publish their own process, and these vary between free zones and from the mainland.
What happens if I simply let the trade licence lapse instead of formally liquidating?
Letting a licence lapse is not a closure route. The company continues to legally exist, renewal penalties keep accruing on the authority's system, the immigration establishment file stays technically open, and the sponsor can face a travel ban or blacklisting from future licences and visas the longer it is left unresolved. Formal liquidation is the only route that actually ends the entity's legal existence.
How long does the statutory creditor notice period last?
For mainland liquidations, the notice/objection period following Arabic newspaper publication is commonly around 45 days, though the precise period should be confirmed against current law and DED/DET practice at the time of filing. Free zone authorities set their own notice periods, which can differ from the mainland timeline and from each other.
What must happen to employee visas before the company can be deregistered?
Every sponsored employee's residence visa and labour card must be formally cancelled through MOHRE and the relevant immigration authority (GDRFA in Dubai, ICP federally) before the company's immigration establishment file can be closed. Employees are entitled to final settlement, including end-of-service gratuity under the UAE Labour Law, before visa cancellation is processed.
Do we need to deregister for VAT and Corporate Tax before the licence can be cancelled?
Yes, if the company was registered. VAT deregistration must be filed with the FTA via EmaraTax once the company stops making taxable supplies or otherwise meets the deregistration conditions, generally within a prescribed window. Corporate Tax deregistration is filed separately once the final tax period's return and any tax due are settled. The licensing authority typically requires confirmation of both before issuing the final deregistration certificate.
What is a No-Objection Certificate (NOC) in this context, and why are so many needed?
An NOC is a written confirmation from a specific government department — MOHRE, immigration, the FTA, or a sector regulator — that the company has no outstanding obligations with that department. The licensing authority will not issue the final deregistration certificate until it holds NOCs, or equivalent clearance, from every department relevant to that company's specific activity and history.
What happens to outstanding traffic or municipality fines during liquidation?
Outstanding fines on company-registered vehicles, municipality violations, and immigration-related fines must generally be cleared before the licensing authority will process final deregistration — these surface in the authority's checks and can silently block an otherwise-complete file.
Can a liquidated company be revived later if the shareholders change their mind?
Once a company is formally deregistered following completed liquidation, it cannot simply be reactivated — its legal existence has ended. Shareholders wishing to resume the same business would need to incorporate a new company as a separate registration process.
What happens to a registered trademark or company vehicles that outlive the entity?
A UAE trademark registered under Federal Decree-Law No. 36 of 2021 is a separate intellectual property right and is not automatically cancelled by liquidation. Shareholders who want to retain the brand should arrange assignment to another entity or individual, through the Ministry of Economy's assignment service, before the company is deregistered. Vehicles need registration cancelled or transferred, with all fines cleared, before the immigration/traffic-linked file can close.
Does liquidation affect a shareholder's own UAE residence visa if it was company-sponsored?
Yes. A shareholder or investor visa sponsored by the company being liquidated must be cancelled or transferred to another valid sponsor — a new employer, a new company, or a family/golden visa route — before or as part of the liquidation, since an individual cannot be left without valid residency status once the sponsoring file closes.
How does PNPC coordinate liquidation for a UAE entity linked to an Indian parent company?
PNPC operates from Dubai and Abu Dhabi as well as Chennai, Bangalore, and Hyderabad. Where a UAE subsidiary or branch is closing as part of a wider India-UAE group restructuring, we coordinate the UAE government-liaison closure alongside the India side's FEMA Overseas Investment reporting — including the disinvestment or Annual Performance Report — under one engagement, so the UAE deregistration certificate date reconciles with the Indian parent's filings.
What documents should shareholders keep after the company is liquidated?
Retain the original final liquidation/deregistration certificate indefinitely — it is the only formal proof the company was closed correctly and may be requested years later for a shareholder's new company registration, a personal visa application, or a bank's KYC review. Accounting, VAT, and Corporate Tax records should be retained for the minimum statutory period even after closure, since the FTA can request them relating to the company's final tax periods.
How does PNPC price this PRO-led liquidation engagement?
PNPC provides a written, itemised proposal after the initial assessment of the licensing authority, employee count, assets, and liabilities, separating our professional fee from the liquidator's own fee and the authority's cancellation and publication charges — because the appropriate scope genuinely differs between a dormant free zone shell with no staff and a mainland company with employees and creditors.
How does liquidating a DIFC or ADGM company differ from liquidating a DMCC or JAFZA company?
DIFC and ADGM are common-law free zones with their own companies regulations modelled on English law, and their own courts — the DIFC Courts and the ADGM Courts — available if a dispute arises during winding-up. DMCC, JAFZA, RAKEZ, and most other free zones instead follow their own civil-law-based liquidation regulations, which broadly mirror the shareholder-resolution-and-liquidator structure but set their own notice mechanism, forms, and fee schedule distinct from DIFC/ADGM and from each other.
Does it matter whether the company is a Free Zone Establishment (FZE) or a Free Zone Company (FZCO) for liquidation purposes?
The core liquidation process — resolution, liquidator appointment, notice, NOC collection, deregistration — applies to both structures. An FZE (single shareholder) generally needs only that one shareholder's resolution, while an FZCO (multiple shareholders) needs a resolution passed in line with its constitutional documents, which can involve coordinating sign-off from more than one shareholder or, for a corporate shareholder, that entity's own authorising board resolution.
Can the company's bank account stay open throughout the liquidation, or should it be closed early?
The bank account generally needs to remain open through most of the process, since it is used to receive any remaining receivables and pay settlement amounts, final salaries, and liquidation-related costs. Closure is typically the second-to-last financial step, coordinated once the liquidator's process reaches settlement and the bank has the liquidator's letter and any authority in-principle approval it requires.
What happens if the company held a customs code and imported or exported goods?
A customs code linked to the company's trade licence needs to be formally cancelled with the relevant customs authority as part of the closure, and any outstanding customs duties, bonds, or guarantees need to be settled or released. This is one of the NOCs the licensing authority checks for before issuing the final deregistration certificate if the company's activity involved import or export.
Does an offshore company like a JAFZA Offshore or RAK ICC entity follow the same liquidation process as an onshore free zone company?
No. Offshore companies do not hold a trade licence or operate physically in the UAE, so they follow their own registered agent's strike-off or voluntary liquidation process rather than the onshore mainland/free zone route described here — though the underlying principle of a resolution, notice, and formal deregistration with the offshore registrar still applies.
What happens if the appointed liquidator becomes unavailable partway through the process?
If a liquidator resigns, becomes unable to continue, or is found not to meet the authority's panel requirements, a replacement liquidator recognised by the same authority needs to be appointed and the authority notified, which can affect the timeline depending on how much of the statutory process had already been completed under the original appointment.
Can a company be liquidated while a former employee has an active labour complaint against it?
An unresolved labour complaint or dispute filed with MOHRE or a free zone labour department is exactly the kind of open liability that can stall the immigration-side file closure and the liquidator's confirmation that liabilities are settled — it generally needs to be resolved or formally addressed before the visa cancellation and final NOC collection can proceed cleanly.
What if a director or shareholder cannot be located to sign the liquidation resolution?
A valid shareholder or board resolution generally requires the signature of the relevant parties per the company's constitutional documents; where someone genuinely cannot be located, the practical route is usually legal advice on the available options under the company's MoA/AoA and, if necessary, the applicable companies law, rather than proceeding without a properly authorised resolution.
Does the company need a final audit report before it can be liquidated?
Requirements vary by authority and company type — some free zones and larger mainland entities expect audited financial statements to support the liquidator's confirmation of the company's financial position, while smaller or dormant entities may proceed on the liquidator's own review without a fresh statutory audit. We confirm the specific authority's expectation as part of the pre-closure assessment.
How are intercompany loans or balances with a group entity treated during liquidation?
Any intercompany receivable or payable is a liability or asset like any other and needs to be settled, formally waived, or otherwise resolved and documented as part of the liquidator's process before the final report can confirm all liabilities are settled — an unresolved intercompany balance is a common source of delay in group liquidations.
If the company has an outstanding Economic Substance Regulations obligation from before 2023, does that block liquidation now?
ESR notification and report filing was discontinued for financial years starting on or after 1 January 2023, so there is generally no live ESR obligation for the company's final period. However, if an earlier financial year's ESR notification or report was never filed, that gap should be confirmed as resolved with the relevant regulatory authority before assuming the company's compliance position is fully clean for deregistration purposes.
How is a DNFBP's AML/goAML registration closed when the company liquidates?
Where the company was registered as a Designated Non-Financial Business or Profession on the Ministry of Economy's goAML platform — for example a corporate service provider, real estate broker, or dealer in precious metals — that AML registration needs to be formally closed alongside the licence cancellation, rather than left open after the entity is otherwise dissolved.
Can a company that owns UAE real estate be liquidated in the normal process?
Yes, but any company-owned real estate needs to be sold, transferred, or otherwise formally dealt with as part of the liquidator's asset realisation process before the final report can confirm the company holds no remaining assets — this typically adds coordination with the relevant land department or RERA-equivalent authority to the standard liquidation steps.
What happens if a creditor formally objects during the statutory notice period?
A creditor claim raised within the statutory objection window needs to be reviewed and either settled, formally disputed, or otherwise resolved before the liquidator can proceed to the final report confirming no outstanding objections — an unresolved objection is one of the few things that can genuinely stop a liquidation mid-process.
Does a dormant company with no activity for years still need the full liquidation process to close properly?
Yes. A dormant company with no employees, no debts, and no recent trading activity generally moves through the process faster because there is less to settle, but it still requires the shareholder resolution, liquidator appointment, statutory notice, and final deregistration — there is no shortcut that skips the formal process just because the company was inactive.
Can liquidation proceed if VAT returns are overdue or unfiled?
Outstanding VAT returns generally need to be filed and any tax due settled before VAT deregistration will be accepted by the FTA, since deregistration confirms the company's tax position is clean up to the point of ceasing taxable supplies. Unfiled returns discovered during closure need to be brought current first.
Can a company liquidate while the FTA is actively reviewing or auditing its VAT or Corporate Tax position?
An open FTA review, audit, or assessment generally needs to be resolved, or the FTA's position on the closure needs to be clarified, before deregistration can be finalised — proceeding to liquidate while an active FTA matter is unresolved risks the deregistration being incomplete or the FTA raising the matter with former directors afterward.
Beyond trademark assignment, what other role does the Ministry of Economy play in liquidation?
The Ministry of Economy administers UAE trademark registrations (assignment being the most common liquidation-linked action) and, separately, oversees AML/CFT compliance for DNFBPs through the goAML platform — so for a company that was both a trademark holder and a DNFBP, the Ministry of Economy is a touchpoint on two separate, unrelated tracks of the same closure.
Does liquidating a UAE branch of a foreign company differ from liquidating a locally incorporated entity?
A UAE branch of a foreign company is closed through the parent company's own board resolution authorising closure, alongside the same onshore steps — employee visa wind-down, FTA deregistration, NOC collection, licence cancellation — that apply to a locally incorporated entity, since the branch still operates under a UAE trade licence and establishment file even though it has no separate shareholding structure of its own.
Can the entire liquidation process be handled by Power of Attorney if shareholders are based overseas?
Much of the process — liquidator coordination, filing, NOC collection, licence cancellation — can be handled by PNPC under a Power of Attorney from overseas shareholders, though the underlying resolution to liquidate and certain liquidator or bank instructions may still require original signatures or specific authentication depending on the authority and the bank involved.
What if the company sponsors a Golden Visa holder as an investor, rather than a standard investor visa?
A Golden Visa tied to the company as an investor route still needs to be addressed as part of the immigration file closure — the individual's long-term residence status generally needs a transition plan (a different qualifying route, or another sponsor) before the company's immigration file is closed, similar in principle to a standard investor visa but against the Golden Visa's own longer validity and category rules.
How does PNPC coordinate liquidation across a group with multiple UAE entities closing together?
We sequence each entity's closure so that shared employees, intercompany balances, and any cross-entity NOCs or guarantees are resolved in an order that does not let one entity's open file block another's deregistration — rather than treating each licence as an entirely separate, disconnected engagement.
Does a recent change to a free zone's own liquidation procedure affect an in-progress closure?
Free zone authorities periodically revise their liquidation forms, fee schedules, and notice mechanisms, and a procedural change announced mid-process can affect document requirements or the next filing step, which is why PNPC checks the current published procedure at each stage of a longer-running case rather than relying solely on the process confirmed at intake.
Does a mainland company need to deregister from any Emiratisation or Nafis-related obligations before closing?
Mainland companies subject to UAE Emiratisation quota obligations should confirm their compliance status is current and any associated contribution or reporting obligations are addressed as part of the closure, since an unresolved Emiratisation compliance flag sits alongside the other MOHRE-linked items the licensing authority checks before final deregistration.
What happens if shareholders disagree on who should be appointed as liquidator?
Since the liquidator's appointment is typically confirmed in the shareholder resolution itself, a disagreement over who to appoint needs to be resolved among the shareholders — through negotiation or, where necessary, formal dispute resolution — before a valid resolution naming the liquidator can be passed and filed.
Can a genuinely dormant shell company's liquidation move faster than a trading company's?
Generally yes, in relative terms — with no employees to offboard, no active creditors, and often no property or vehicles, a dormant shell company has fewer open items for the liquidator and PRO desk to work through, though it still needs to complete every stage of the formal process, including the fixed statutory notice period, which does not compress regardless of how simple the underlying company is.
What single document finally confirms a UAE company's liquidation is complete?
The final liquidation/deregistration certificate issued by the licensing authority — the DED/DET for mainland companies or the relevant free zone authority — is the document that confirms the entity's legal existence has ended. No other certificate, NOC, or portal confirmation substitutes for it.
Does PNPC perform the liquidator's statutory role itself, or only the surrounding PRO coordination?
PNPC's role in this engagement is the PRO and government-liaison coordination layer — the statutory liquidator role, where a licensed liquidator's certification is legally required, is carried out by a liquidator on the relevant authority's recognised panel, whom PNPC helps identify, engage, and coordinate with throughout the process.
What happens to company vehicles that are leased rather than owned outright?
A leased company vehicle needs its lease formally terminated or transferred with the leasing company, and any outstanding traffic fines or lease payments cleared, rather than simply handed back — an unresolved leased-vehicle account can leave an open financial obligation that surfaces during the fines and clearance checks before final deregistration.
Does the closure file PNPC hands over include proof of AML and sector regulator deregistration, or only the licence-related documents?
The organised closure file we hand over includes every clearance obtained for that specific company's footprint — which, where relevant, includes goAML/DNFBP deregistration confirmation and any sector regulator closure letter, alongside the final certificate, NOCs, liquidator's report, and FTA deregistration confirmations.
PNPC PRO-led liquidation coordination vs handling authority filings directly
| Factor | Handling It Directly / Via a Generic PRO Agent | PNPC Global Managed Liquidation Coordination |
|---|---|---|
| Authority-specific procedure | Learned reactively, department by department, often after a rejection | Confirmed against the specific mainland or free zone authority's current published requirements before filing begins |
| Employee & MOHRE sequencing | Visa cancellation attempted before gratuity is settled, stalling the file | Gratuity settlement, labour card closure, and visa cancellation sequenced correctly with MOHRE and immigration |
| FTA VAT/Corporate Tax deregistration | Often left until the final stage, risking penalties and delay | Filed via EmaraTax in parallel with the liquidation, tracked to completion |
| NOC tracking | Chased department by department as issues surface | Tracked as a single checklist against the company's specific licensing and activity footprint |
| Statutory notice management | Timeline often misunderstood or assumed compressible | Managed against the actual statutory notice period with realistic expectations set upfront |
| Cross-border India-UAE coordination | Two disconnected local advisors, context lost in handoff | One engagement spanning PNPC's UAE and India offices |
| Trademark & asset wind-down | Often overlooked, orphaned in a dissolved company's name | Trademark assignment and vehicle transfer completed before the entity is struck off |
| Closure file handover | Portal confirmations scattered across emails and downloads | One organised, retained closure file — certificate, NOCs, liquidator's report, EmaraTax confirmations |
| AML/DNFBP & sector regulator closure | Often missed entirely — goAML and sector regulator files left open after the licence is cancelled | Identified at assessment stage and closed alongside the licence, not treated as an afterthought |
| Offshore & branch-specific liquidation | Generic PRO agents often apply an onshore checklist to an offshore or branch closure, missing registered-agent or parent-resolution steps | Offshore strike-off and branch closure handled against the correct, entity-specific process from the outset |
| Overseas shareholder coordination | Repeated requests for in-person signatures, slowing the file when shareholders are abroad | Power of Attorney and remote-signing coordination built into the process from day one for overseas shareholders |
- 01
Pre-closure assessment of licensing authority, employees, assets, liabilities, and litigation exposure
- 02
Coordination of shareholder/board resolution drafting and licensed liquidator appointment
- 03
Statutory liquidation notice publication (mainland) or the relevant free zone notice process
- 04
Employee visa cancellation, gratuity settlement coordination, and MOHRE/immigration file closure
- 05
VAT and Corporate Tax deregistration filing through EmaraTax
- 06
Multi-department NOC collection tracked against the company's specific footprint
- 07
Fines check across traffic, municipality, and immigration systems before final submission
- 08
Bank account closure coordination with the liquidator's clearance
- 09
Final liquidator's report review and licensing authority submission
- 10
Trademark assignment via the Ministry of Economy and vehicle registration transfer/cancellation before deregistration
- 11
Licence cancellation and collection of the final deregistration certificate
- 12
Cross-border coordination with PNPC's India offices for FEMA ODI disinvestment/APR reporting where a group entity is winding down on both sides
- 13
Shareholder and dependant residence-visa transition planning before the company's immigration file is closed
- 14
Post-closure record retention advisory for accounting, VAT, and Corporate Tax records
- 15
Organised closure handover file retained and retrievable years later
Closing a UAE company correctly, in the right order, is what actually protects your name, your travel freedom, and your ability to do business here again — talk to PNPC's PRO desk before a licence quietly lapses.
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