UAEServicesUAE Taxation & Regulatory ComplianceTransfer PricingStrategic Advisory

UAE Taxation & Regulatory Compliance · Transfer Pricing

Strategic Advisory

Most transfer pricing engagements start after a related-party arrangement is already live — the pricing was set for cash-flow or administrative convenience, and documentation is built afterward to explain it.

Speak with a specialist →Chat on WhatsApp

Chartered Accountants · Dubai · Since 1986

What Strategic Advisory is

Transfer Pricing Strategic Advisory is the forward-looking, decision-support engagement that determines how related-party and connected-person pricing should be structured before a transaction happens — as distinct from Local File and Master File documentation, which records and defends pricing after it exists. Under the UAE Corporate Tax Law (Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022, applicable to financial years starting on or after 1 June 2023), Article 34 requires every transaction between Related Parties, and every payment to a Connected Person, to be conducted on arm's length terms, with Ministerial Decision No. 97 of 2023 setting out the acceptable methods and documentation thresholds. Strategic Advisory works within that same legal framework, but its output is a policy, a structure, or a set of modelled options for management to decide between — not a compliance file for the FTA to review.

The engagement typically sits at three kinds of decision point. The first is a new intercompany arrangement — a management fee structure, a cost-sharing agreement, an intellectual property licence, a shared-services model, or an intercompany financing arrangement — where the pricing needs to be set correctly at inception using a Functional, Asset and Risk (FAR) analysis and the appropriate OECD-recognised method (Comparable Uncontrolled Price, Resale Price, Cost Plus, Transactional Net Margin Method, or Profit Split), rather than assumed and tested later. The second is a structural event — an acquisition, a group reorganisation, a mainland-to-Free-Zone conversion, or the onboarding of a new jurisdiction — where the related-party map itself changes and last year's pricing logic may no longer apply to this year's structure. The third is a Qualifying Free Zone Person (QFZP) exposure review, where a Free Zone entity's related-party dealings with mainland or foreign affiliates are modelled specifically to confirm they will not push non-qualifying revenue past the permitted de minimis threshold and put the 0% rate itself at risk.

Strategic Advisory also covers dispute-adjacent decisions that fall short of a formal FTA audit: whether to voluntarily disclose a pricing gap identified internally, how to respond to an informal query before it escalates to a formal information request, whether a Mutual Agreement Procedure (MAP) is worth pursuing where a cross-border adjustment risks double taxation, and how to weigh settlement against reconsideration when the FTA proposes an adjustment. These are judgement calls that require a technical read of the arm's length position combined with a commercial read of the group's risk appetite — output that a Local File, built to document a position already taken, is not designed to produce.

What distinguishes Strategic Advisory from the documentation engagements is timing and audience. Documentation is prepared for the FTA, contemporaneously, to defend a position already implemented. Strategic Advisory is prepared for the Board and senior management, ahead of implementation, to decide what that position should be — modelling two or three structuring options, their respective arm's length ranges, their QFZP and Corporate Tax consequences, and a recommendation. Where a group has both needs — a new structure to design and prior periods to document — PNPC scopes the two as connected but distinct workstreams, because conflating them tends to produce documentation that quietly justifies a decision rather than a decision properly tested before it was made.

The free-zone dimension deserves particular emphasis because it is often the single highest-stakes variable in a UAE structuring decision. A mainland entity is taxed at 9% on taxable income above the AED 375,000 threshold, with income up to that threshold taxed at 0% under Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022. A Free Zone entity that has elected and continues to qualify for Qualifying Free Zone Person status, by contrast, is taxed at 0% on its Qualifying Income, with non-qualifying income taxed at the standard 9% rate above the same threshold — and mispriced or excessive related-party dealings with a mainland or foreign affiliate are one of the more direct routes by which non-qualifying revenue can breach the permitted de minimis threshold and put the entire QFZP election at risk, not merely the specific transaction under review. Strategic Advisory therefore treats any arrangement crossing a mainland-Free Zone boundary, or connecting two Free Zone entities registered under different Free Zone authorities such as DMCC, JAFZA, RAKEZ, IFZA, or Meydan, as needing scrutiny on two separate questions at once: is the price itself arm's length, and does the pattern of related-party dealing threaten the Free Zone entity's preferential tax status. Financial Free Zones with their own regulators — the DIFC under the DFSA and ADGM under the FSRA — add a further layer, since those authorities' own regulatory and reporting requirements sit alongside, not instead of, the federal Corporate Tax and transfer pricing rules that apply uniformly across every Emirate and every Free Zone.

The FTA's own Transfer Pricing Guide (CTGTP1) frames documentation as something that should be contemporaneous — prepared and reassessed at least annually to reflect business, structural and regulatory change — rather than assembled reactively once a request lands. Strategic Advisory is built around that same expectation, just one step earlier in the sequence: the goal is a structure and a recommendation memo that would already read, to an FTA officer encountering it years later, as a genuinely considered decision made in the ordinary course of business, not a position engineered afterward to fit a number management had already settled on. This matters as much for a small, owner-managed group converting a single entity to a Free Zone structure as it does for a multinational group restructuring across several jurisdictions — the depth of the analysis differs with the group's complexity, but the underlying discipline of designing pricing before implementing it, rather than justifying it afterward, does not change with scale.

When Strategic Advisory is the right engagement

A new intercompany arrangement — management fee, cost-sharing, IP licence, shared-services model, or intercompany loan — is being designed and needs its pricing set correctly before go-live

The group is planning an acquisition, divestment, or internal reorganisation that will change the related-party map, and the transfer pricing consequences need modelling before the transaction closes, not after

A Free Zone entity is evaluating or renewing Qualifying Free Zone Person status and needs its related-party exposure tested against the non-qualifying revenue de minimis threshold before the election is confirmed for the year

Management is weighing two or three ways to structure a new cross-border flow — for example, direct sale versus a limited-risk distributor model — and wants the arm's length and Corporate Tax consequences of each modelled before choosing

An informal FTA query or an inconsistency flagged in a prior disclosure has surfaced, and the group needs a strategic read on whether to respond, self-correct, or seek advance clarity before it becomes a formal audit

The group is expanding into Saudi Arabia or another GCC jurisdiction and needs the UAE and destination-country pricing positions designed consistently from the outset, rather than reconciled after each side has filed independently

A Board or investor is asking whether the group's related-party pricing creates transfer pricing risk ahead of a funding round, acquisition, or exit, and wants an independent strategic read rather than a compliance sign-off

The group suspects a historical pricing decision — inherited from a pre-Corporate-Tax era or set for a non-tax reason — may not be defensible, and wants a strategic options review before deciding whether and how to correct it

A transfer pricing adjustment has been proposed by the FTA and the group needs advice on whether to settle, seek reconsideration, or pursue a Mutual Agreement Procedure where a Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement applies

The group is converting a mainland entity into a Free Zone structure, or vice versa, and needs the transfer pricing consequences of that conversion — particularly for existing related-party dealings — modelled before the licence change is applied for

A change in ultimate beneficial ownership, such as a share sale, family succession, or new investor coming in, is about to alter the group's related-party map even though the operating entities themselves remain unchanged

The group is preparing for a funding round, investor due diligence, or an eventual IPO, and wants related-party pricing and governance tightened proactively rather than discovered as a gap during someone else's review

When Strategic Advisory is not the immediate need

The related-party structure and pricing are already settled and stable, and what is needed is simply the annual Local File, Master File, or disclosure form refresh — that is the documentation engagement, not strategic advisory

The business has no related-party or connected-person transactions at all, and no structural change is planned — the arm's length rules, and any advisory around them, only engage where a qualifying relationship exists or is being created

The immediate need is a first-time related-party map and threshold determination for an existing, unchanged structure — that initial scoping step typically precedes and informs Strategic Advisory rather than being the advisory itself

An FTA information request has already been issued for existing documentation and the priority is producing the Local File and Master File within the response window — that is documentation and audit-response work, though strategic input can run alongside it

The group wants a CbCR Notification or Report filed — that is a defined, mechanical filing obligation under Cabinet Resolution No. 44 of 2020, handled as a dedicated filing engagement rather than open-ended strategic advisory

Management has already fixed the pricing for a transaction closing imminently and simply wants a document produced to match it — Strategic Advisory tests and shapes a decision before it is made, it does not retrofit a rationale to a number already chosen

The question is genuinely a general Corporate Tax planning one, unconnected to any related-party or connected-person dealing — broader Corporate Tax advisory, not transfer pricing strategy specifically

The group's related-party transactions are all comfortably below the disclosure thresholds and no structural change, new arrangement, or ownership event is contemplated — routine annual monitoring is proportionate, not a full strategic engagement

The underlying need is a broader commercial or legal restructuring — a share sale negotiation, joint venture legal drafting, or shareholder agreement dispute — where transfer pricing is only a minor downstream consideration; that work sits with corporate finance or legal advisory, with PNPC's transfer pricing desk contributing only the pricing dimension

Structure Comparison

Strategic Advisory versus the other transfer pricing engagement types PNPC offers

EngagementPrimary Question AnsweredTimingAudienceTypical Trigger
Strategic AdvisoryWhat should the pricing or structure be, and what are the arm's length and Corporate Tax consequences of each option?Before implementation — proactive, decision-supportBoard and senior managementNew arrangement, restructuring, QFZP review, or an unresolved policy question
Transfer Pricing Advisory & DocumentationIs our existing pricing arm's length, and can we evidence it to the FTA?Contemporaneous to ongoing operations, refreshed annuallyFTA, on requestCorporate Tax return cycle, threshold crossed, or first-time compliance build
Master File & Local File PreparationWhat does the FTA-ready documentation for our existing structure look like?Annual, or ahead of a known FTA request windowFTA, on request within the stipulated periodGroup meets the consolidated or standalone revenue threshold
Benchmarking StudiesWhat is the defensible arm's length range for this specific transaction category?Feeds into both Strategic Advisory and documentationInternal analysis, then FTA if requestedNew pricing decision or annual documentation refresh
Transfer Pricing Policy DesignWhat is the group's standing, prospective pricing rule for this category of transaction?Set once, reviewed periodicallyBoard, then operational finance teamsOutput of a Strategic Advisory engagement, formalised for ongoing use
TP Audit SupportHow do we respond to an FTA query or adjustment on pricing already applied?Reactive — triggered by an FTA actionFTA directly, during audit or reconsiderationFormal information request, audit, or proposed adjustment
CbCR Notification / Report FilingHave we met our jurisdiction-by-jurisdiction reporting obligation to the Ministry of Finance?Annual, mechanical filing calendarMinistry of Finance CbCR portalGroup consolidated revenue meets the CbCR threshold
Transfer Pricing Disclosure Form (TPDF) FilingHas the mandatory disclosure of related-party and Connected Person transactions been completed correctly alongside the Corporate Tax return?Annual, filed with the Corporate Tax returnFTA, via EmaraTaxRelated-party or Connected Person transaction values cross the disclosure threshold under Ministerial Decision No. 97 of 2023
Cross-Border Consistency Review (GCC / India Coordination)Do the UAE and counterparty-jurisdiction pricing positions for the same arrangement align, or will one side's filing contradict the other?Runs alongside Strategic Advisory or documentation for groups spanning more than one jurisdictionInternal — feeds into both the UAE and counterparty-jurisdiction filingsNew or existing intercompany flow between a UAE entity and a related entity in Saudi Arabia, another GCC state, India, or elsewhere

These engagements are frequently sequenced together — a Strategic Advisory conversation about a new arrangement typically produces a policy that then feeds the next annual Local File, and a benchmarking study built for Strategic Advisory purposes is often reused, refreshed, in the following year's documentation. PNPC scopes each separately but designs them to build on one another rather than duplicate work.

How it works
#Stage & What PNPC DoesWhat Gets Missed Without Strategic AdvisoryTypical Output
1Trigger Identification & Framing — establish what decision actually needs to be madeGroups often bring PNPC a documentation request when the real underlying question is a structuring one — for example, asking for a Local File update when the actual issue is that a new arrangement was never designed with arm's length pricing in mind. We frame the real question before scoping the work.A one-page framing note identifying the actual decision to be tested
2Related-Party & Structural MappingAny restructuring, acquisition, or new entity changes who is a Related Party under Article 35 and who is a Connected Person under Article 36 — a chart drawn before the change is announced no longer reflects the group being advised on.Updated related-party and control map reflecting the proposed or post-transaction structure
3Functional, Asset & Risk (FAR) Modelling for the Proposed ArrangementA new arrangement's FAR profile is often assumed rather than modelled — for example, assuming a distributor is low-risk when it will in fact carry inventory and market risk under the proposed terms, which changes which pricing method actually fits.FAR analysis for each structuring option under consideration
4Method Selection & Options ModellingWhere more than one structuring route is viable, each carries a different arm's length outcome and a different Corporate Tax result — modelling only one option means the Board decides without seeing the trade-off.Side-by-side modelling of two or three structuring options with method, range, and tax consequence for each
5Preliminary Benchmarking (Indicative Range)A structuring decision made without even an indicative arm's length range risks locking in pricing that will not survive benchmarking once the arrangement is live — by then it is a documentation problem, not a design one.Indicative arm's length range for the recommended structure, ahead of a full benchmarking study
6Qualifying Free Zone Person Impact Check (Where a Free Zone Entity Is Involved)The QFZP non-qualifying revenue de minimis threshold is tested against actual related-party income once it is too late to restructure the arrangement — Strategic Advisory tests this before the arrangement is finalised, while the structure can still be adjusted.QFZP exposure assessment and, where needed, structuring recommendations to preserve 0% status
7Cross-Border Consistency Check (GCC / India / Other Jurisdictions)A structure designed only from the UAE side can create a pricing position that the counterparty jurisdiction's own transfer pricing rules reject — the two sides need to be modelled together, not sequentially by two disconnected advisors.Cross-jurisdiction consistency memo where the group spans the UAE and one or more other countries
8Recommendation Memo & Board PresentationA verbal recommendation with no written analysis leaves the Board without a defensible record of why the chosen structure was selected — a record that itself supports the arm's length position if later questioned.Written recommendation memo, presented to the Board or senior management for sign-off
9Policy FormalisationA decision made but never converted into a standing policy tends to drift in practice as different people apply it differently over time — the policy is what keeps future transactions consistent with the decision actually made.Board-approved transfer pricing policy document for the arrangement or structure
10Handover to Documentation WorkstreamStrategic Advisory output that never reaches the team preparing the Local File means the annual documentation is built independently of the policy the Board actually approved, creating an avoidable inconsistency.Structured handover pack — FAR analysis, method rationale, policy — for the next Local File or benchmarking refresh
11Implementation Monitoring (First Cycle)The first period after a new structure goes live is where actual results are checked against the modelled range for the first time — deviations here are cheaper to correct than ones discovered a year later during documentation.First-cycle variance check against the modelled arm's length range
12Stakeholder Communication & Internal RolloutA policy approved by the Board but never actually communicated to the finance team who raises invoices, or the operations team who negotiates terms with a related counterparty, tends to be followed inconsistently or not at all in day-to-day practice.Internal briefing note, or short session, for the finance and operational teams who will apply the new pricing
13Annual Policy Health-Check SchedulingA policy that is never revisited beyond the routine annual documentation refresh can quietly become stale as the business or market conditions evolve, with nobody specifically tasked to ask whether the original recommendation still holds.A scheduled date, tied to the annual documentation cycle, for revisiting whether the Strategic Advisory recommendation remains current

A typical Strategic Advisory engagement for a single structuring decision runs a few weeks from framing to Board recommendation, depending on how many options are being modelled and how quickly ownership, financial, and transaction data can be assembled. Engagements tied to a live acquisition or restructuring timeline are sequenced against the deal's own milestones rather than a fixed internal clock.

Document Checklist
Group Structure & the Proposed Change

Current group organisational chart with ownership percentages and jurisdictions of tax residence

Description of the proposed transaction, arrangement, or restructuring — what is changing and why

Draft or term-sheet terms for any new intercompany arrangement under consideration

Trade licences and Free Zone authority details for every UAE entity affected by the proposed change

Qualifying Free Zone Person election status for any Free Zone entity involved

Financial & Corporate Tax Context

Most recent audited or management financial statements for the entities involved

Corporate Tax Registration Number (TRN) for each UAE taxable person affected

Existing related-party disclosure filings and any prior-year Local File or Master File, for consistency with the new decision

Projected or budgeted financials for the arrangement under consideration, where available

Functional, Asset & Risk Inputs for the New Arrangement

Description of which entity will perform which functions under each structuring option being considered

Details of tangible and intangible assets, including any intellectual property, that will sit with each entity under the proposed structure

Risk allocation under each option — who bears market, credit, inventory, and foreign exchange risk

Headcount and functional capability of each entity relevant to performing the proposed role

Existing Agreements & Prior Positions

Any existing intercompany agreements that the new arrangement will replace, sit alongside, or interact with

Prior Board minutes or management decisions relevant to the group's existing pricing approach

Details of any prior FTA query, disclosure inconsistency, or informal correspondence relevant to the entities involved

Cross-Border & Multi-Jurisdiction Inputs (Where Applicable)

Details of any counterparty jurisdiction's own transfer pricing regime relevant to the proposed arrangement — for example, Saudi Arabia's ZATCA rules or India's Section 92 framework

Existing transfer pricing documentation prepared in the counterparty jurisdiction, for consistency review

Confirmation of the counterparty entity's own tax residence and any Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement between its jurisdiction and the UAE

Board Governance & Sign-Off Inputs

Delegation of authority matrix showing who within the group is authorised to approve new intercompany arrangements or pricing policies

Any existing group-wide transfer pricing policy document that a new decision needs to sit consistently within

Related-party approval or disclosure requirements under the company's own Memorandum and Articles of Association, or under the relevant Free Zone authority's rules, where applicable

Names and roles of the Board members or senior managers who will receive the recommendation memo and are authorised to sign off on the selected structure

M&A / Restructuring-Specific Inputs (Where the Trigger Is a Transaction)

Draft or executed Sale and Purchase Agreement (SPA), term sheet, or restructuring plan describing the transaction

Target entity's existing related-party transaction history and any transfer pricing documentation already prepared for it

Post-completion organisational chart showing how the related-party map will look immediately after closing

Any transfer pricing representation, warranty, or disclosure schedule under negotiation as part of the transaction documents

Ongoing obligations
PhaseTriggered ByPNPC GuidanceRisk If Ignored
Pre-Implementation DesignA new intercompany arrangement is being plannedModel the FAR profile and an indicative arm's length range for each viable structuring option before terms are finalised, so the Board chooses between tested alternatives rather than a single unexamined default.Pricing set for administrative convenience, without modelling, is routinely the position that fails benchmarking a year later — by then the arrangement has already been operating on an indefensible basis.
Policy Approval & FormalisationThe Board or senior management selects a structuring optionConvert the recommendation into a written, Board-approved transfer pricing policy — method, pricing band, and review cadence — so the decision is documented at the point it was made, not reconstructed later.An undocumented verbal decision leaves no contemporaneous record supporting the pricing if the arrangement is questioned years afterward.
First-Cycle Implementation CheckThe new arrangement completes its first operating periodCompare actual results to the modelled arm's length range and flag any material deviation early, while the arrangement's terms can still be adjusted prospectively.A deviation discovered only at annual documentation stage may already span a full year of pricing outside the intended range, with less room to correct it without an adjustment.
Structural Change Re-TriggerAcquisition, divestment, new jurisdiction, or Free Zone-to-mainland conversionRe-run the related-party map and re-test every existing policy against the new structure — a policy designed for the prior ownership chain may no longer reflect who is actually related after the change.An outdated policy applied to a changed structure can mean transactions are priced under a rationale that no longer matches the group's actual relationships.
QFZP Annual ReviewYearly Qualifying Free Zone Person status confirmationRe-test related-party income against the non-qualifying revenue de minimis threshold using the latest actual figures, not the assumptions used when the policy was first designed.QFZP status lost through drift in related-party income mix, rather than a single large event, is often the harder scenario to catch — because no single transaction looks like the trigger.
Handover to Annual DocumentationCorporate Tax return cycle approachesEnsure the Board-approved policy, FAR analysis, and indicative benchmarking from the Strategic Advisory phase are handed to the documentation team so the Local File reflects the same rationale the Board actually approved.Documentation built independently of the strategic decision risks quietly justifying a different rationale than the one the Board signed off on, which reads as inconsistency on review.
Dispute or Adjustment ResponseFTA proposes an adjustment or raises an informal queryAssess the strategic options — accept, seek reconsideration, or pursue a Mutual Agreement Procedure where a Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement applies — weighing technical merit against the group's broader risk appetite and cost of escalation.Treating every FTA query as purely a documentation exercise, without a strategic read on settlement versus escalation, can lead to accepting an adjustment that a stronger technical position would have avoided, or escalating a matter not worth the cost of dispute.
Periodic Policy Re-TestMulti-year cycle, or material change in the group's or industry's economicsRevisit whether the originally selected method and pricing band still reflect current market conditions, not just refresh the underlying financial data year over year.A policy left unexamined for years, even while the annual documentation refreshes the numbers, can quietly drift out of step with how the business or its market has actually evolved.
Group Financing / Intercompany Loan Re-Pricing TriggerInterest rates move materially, or an existing intercompany loan's terms are renewed or extendedRe-test whether the loan's interest rate and terms still reflect what an independent lender would charge given current market conditions and the borrower's credit profile, rather than assuming the original rate remains arm's length indefinitely.An intercompany loan priced correctly at inception can drift out of an arm's length range purely because market interest rates have moved, without any deliberate decision by the group to reprice it.
New Jurisdiction EntryGroup establishes its first entity in a new countryModel the new cross-border related-party flows this creates from both the UAE and the destination-country side before the first transaction is invoiced, so the two jurisdictions' positions are designed consistently rather than reconciled after each has filed independently.A UAE-only view of a new cross-border arrangement can create a pricing position the destination jurisdiction's own transfer pricing rules do not accept, discovered only when that jurisdiction later reviews the filing.

Strategic Advisory is not a recurring annual filing in itself — it re-triggers whenever the group faces a genuine structuring or policy decision, and its output feeds the recurring documentation cycle rather than replacing it.

Common mistakes to avoid
Sequencing & Timing Mistakes

Bringing PNPC a signed intercompany agreement and asking for pricing advice afterward, when the terms are already fixed and the financial statements for the period cannot be reopened

Treating Strategic Advisory as something to run after an acquisition closes rather than during due diligence, when the target's transfer pricing exposure could still have been negotiated into the deal terms

Waiting until the annual documentation cycle to test a new arrangement's pricing, by which point the arrangement has already operated for a full period on an unmodelled basis

Updating a related-party disclosure or CbCR Notification before the Reporting Entity and related-party map have been re-confirmed after a restructuring

Structural & FAR Mistakes

Assuming a newly formed distributor or service entity is automatically low-risk without testing, under the actual proposed terms, who really carries inventory, market, or credit risk

Modelling only one structuring option because it was operationally the easiest to set up, without comparing its arm's length and Corporate Tax consequences against a genuine alternative

Treating a Qualifying Free Zone Person's related-party dealings as low-risk because the entity is 0%-rated, rather than testing whether the arrangement's pricing itself could push non-qualifying revenue past the threshold

Designing a new arrangement from the UAE side only, without checking whether the counterparty jurisdiction's own transfer pricing rules would accept the same position

Governance & Documentation Mistakes

Reaching a structuring decision verbally in a management meeting with no written recommendation memo or Board sign-off, leaving no contemporaneous record if the position is later questioned

Letting the Strategic Advisory recommendation sit separately from the documentation team's Local File, so the annual filing ends up reflecting a different rationale than what the Board actually approved

Assuming a policy decided once at inception remains valid indefinitely, without a scheduled point to re-test it against a materially changed business or market

Frequently asked
How is Strategic Advisory different from having PNPC prepare our Local File and Master File?

Documentation records and defends pricing that already exists, prepared contemporaneously for the FTA to review on request. Strategic Advisory happens before that — modelling what the pricing or structure should be, presenting options to the Board, and producing a recommendation and policy that the documentation team then builds the annual Local File around. Many clients need both, sequenced together, but they are scoped and delivered as distinct pieces of work.

Practitioner noteThe clearest signal a client needs Strategic Advisory rather than documentation is when the real question is 'what should we do' rather than 'can we prove what we already did.'
We are about to sign a new intercompany management fee agreement. Should we get advice before or after signing?

Before. Once the agreement is signed and the arrangement operates on its terms, correcting the pricing retroactively is far more constrained than designing it correctly from the outset — the financial statements for the period cannot be reopened, and a mid-course correction reads differently to a reviewer than pricing that was arm's length from day one. Strategic Advisory is specifically designed to be engaged before terms are finalised.

Practitioner noteWe have had clients bring us a signed agreement asking us to 'make the pricing work' — at that point the options narrow considerably compared to being involved while the term sheet was still a draft.
Can Strategic Advisory help us decide between two different ways of structuring a new cross-border arrangement?

Yes — this is one of the most common uses of the engagement. For example, choosing between a direct sale to a related distributor versus a limited-risk distributor model versus a commissionaire structure each carries a different FAR profile, a different appropriate pricing method, and a different arm's length outcome and Corporate Tax result. PNPC models the viable options side by side so the Board can weigh the trade-offs rather than defaulting to whichever structure was easiest to set up operationally.

Practitioner noteThe 'easiest to set up' option and the 'most defensible and tax-efficient' option are not always the same structure — modelling more than one option is precisely how that gap gets caught before implementation.
How does Strategic Advisory address Qualifying Free Zone Person risk specifically?

A Free Zone entity's related-party dealings with mainland or foreign affiliates can, if mispriced or simply if related-party income grows as a proportion of total revenue, push non-qualifying revenue past the permitted de minimis threshold for Qualifying Income — putting the entire 0% QFZP rate at risk, not just the specific transaction. Strategic Advisory models this exposure ahead of a new arrangement or a material change in related-party volume, so the structure can be adjusted while it is still a design decision rather than a completed year that has to be lived with.

Practitioner noteThis is consistently the highest-stakes conversation we have in a Strategic Advisory engagement — the gap between the 0% QFZP rate and the standard 9% rate on the same income routinely dwarfs every other cost in the engagement.
Our group is planning an acquisition. When should transfer pricing strategic advice start relative to the deal timeline?

As early as the target's structure and intercompany relationships are known, ideally during due diligence rather than after signing. An acquisition changes the group's related-party map — new entities become related parties, existing pricing policies may no longer fit the combined structure, and any transfer pricing exposure sitting inside the target becomes the acquirer's problem post-completion. Modelling this before close gives the acquirer negotiating leverage and time to plan remediation; discovering it after close leaves only remediation.

Practitioner noteWe treat transfer pricing exposure the same way a financial due diligence team treats a contingent liability — it belongs in the deal conversation, not in a post-completion clean-up project.
Can Strategic Advisory help if we suspect our historical pricing was never properly arm's length?

Yes. This is a common trigger — a group reviews its own structure and suspects an intercompany arrangement set years ago for cash-flow or administrative convenience was never actually tested against the arm's length standard. Strategic Advisory in this scenario assesses the exposure, models corrective options (prospective policy change, and separately, whether historical periods warrant remediation or voluntary disclosure), and lays out the trade-offs for management to decide, rather than PNPC deciding unilaterally what to do about the past.

Practitioner noteComing forward proactively with a considered plan is materially better received by the FTA than waiting for a query to surface the same gap — but the decision on how far back to remediate is a strategic one for the Board, informed by our technical read.
Does Strategic Advisory cover intercompany financing and loan structuring?

Yes. Where a group is designing a new shareholder loan, intercompany financing arrangement, or guarantee structure, Strategic Advisory models the appropriate interest rate, tenure, and terms against what an independent lender would charge given the borrower's credit profile — before the loan is drawn — rather than testing an existing loan's terms retrospectively as part of annual documentation.

Practitioner noteInterest-free or below-market intercompany loans set years ago for cash-flow reasons are one of the more common items we find during a Strategic Advisory structural review — usually never revisited once the immediate cash need passed.
How does PNPC handle a situation where the UAE and a counterparty jurisdiction's transfer pricing rules point to different pricing outcomes?

We model both sides together rather than sequentially. Most GCC states, including Saudi Arabia under its ZATCA rules, and jurisdictions like India under Section 92 of the Income-tax Act, have their own transfer pricing regimes that closely track OECD guidance but are not identical in every respect. Strategic Advisory for a cross-border arrangement identifies where the two jurisdictions' expected outcomes would diverge and recommends a position defensible under both, rather than optimising for one side and hoping the other does not query it.

Practitioner noteAn arrangement priced to satisfy only the UAE side, without checking the counterparty jurisdiction's own rules, is a self-inflicted risk — we flag this specifically for India-UAE and Saudi-UAE structures, which are the corridors we see most often.
What does a Strategic Advisory recommendation memo actually contain?

A framing of the decision being made, the related-party and FAR analysis for each structuring option considered, the pricing method and indicative arm's length range for each option, the Corporate Tax and (where relevant) QFZP consequences of each, a clear recommendation, and the basis for it. It is written for the Board or senior management to make an informed decision, not as a compliance document for the FTA — though its analysis typically feeds directly into the next annual Local File once the decision is implemented.

Practitioner noteWe deliberately write these memos to be read and understood by non-tax-specialist Board members — a recommendation the Board cannot actually follow the reasoning of is not much use as decision support.
Can Strategic Advisory help us respond to an informal FTA query before it becomes a formal audit?

Yes. Where an informal question or an inconsistency flagged during return processing has surfaced but has not yet escalated to a formal information request, there is often a strategic choice about how to respond — clarify factually, proactively provide supporting analysis, or treat it as a signal to get ahead of a fuller review. PNPC assesses the technical merits and advises on the most effective response strategy at this earlier, less adversarial stage.

Practitioner noteHow a group responds to the first informal signal often shapes whether the matter escalates at all — a well-reasoned, prompt response to an early query can resolve things that a defensive or delayed one turns into a formal audit.
Is a benchmarking study part of Strategic Advisory, or is that separate?

Strategic Advisory typically includes an indicative benchmarking range to inform the structuring decision — enough to confirm the proposed pricing is directionally defensible — but a full, formally screened benchmarking study with a documented comparable set and rejection matrix is usually run as part of the subsequent documentation engagement, once the structure is finalised and ready to be evidenced to the FTA. PNPC scopes the two separately so clients are not paying for full benchmarking rigour on options that may not ultimately be selected.

Practitioner noteRunning full benchmarking on every option under consideration before a decision is made is usually not proportionate — the indicative range is enough to choose between options, and the full study is reserved for the one that is actually implemented.
How does Strategic Advisory interact with a Mutual Agreement Procedure (MAP) where double taxation risk exists?

Where a proposed structure or an existing arrangement risks a cross-border adjustment that is not mirrored by a corresponding adjustment in the counterparty jurisdiction, PNPC assesses whether a Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement between the UAE and that jurisdiction provides for a MAP, and advises on whether pursuing it is proportionate given its typically longer timeline, against simply avoiding the adjustment risk through better upfront structuring.

Practitioner noteMAP is a valuable but slow mechanism — the strategic conversation is usually about avoiding the need for it in the first place through defensible design, with MAP as the fallback rather than the plan.
Do we need a Strategic Advisory engagement if our group is small and only has one or two related-party transactions?

It depends on whether a genuine decision is pending. A small group with stable, already-benchmarked pricing and no planned changes has little need for ongoing strategic advisory beyond the annual documentation refresh. A small group about to set up its first intercompany management arrangement, or converting one entity to a Free Zone structure, benefits from the same upfront modelling as a larger group — the scale of the analysis is proportionate to the group's complexity, but the value of getting a new arrangement right from the outset does not disappear because the group is small.

Practitioner noteWe size Strategic Advisory engagements to the actual decision at hand — a single new arrangement for a small group is a materially lighter engagement than a multi-jurisdiction restructuring, but the underlying discipline of modelling before implementing is the same.
How does PNPC price a Strategic Advisory engagement?

PNPC scopes and quotes a fixed fee based on the number of structuring options to be modelled, whether cross-border jurisdictions are involved, and whether the engagement includes formal Board presentation and policy drafting or ends at the recommendation memo stage — agreed in writing before work begins, consistent with how PNPC prices transfer pricing documentation engagements.

Practitioner noteBecause Strategic Advisory often shortens or de-risks the subsequent documentation engagement — the FAR analysis and indicative benchmarking carry forward — clients frequently find the combined cost of Strategic Advisory plus documentation compares favourably to documentation alone built without any prior structuring discipline.
What is the difference between a 'Related Party' under Article 35 and a 'Connected Person' under Article 36 in a structuring context?

Article 35 governs entities — the ownership and control thresholds that make two companies related parties regardless of geography — and every intercompany arrangement Strategic Advisory designs starts from confirming which entities in the proposed structure actually meet that test. Article 36 instead governs individuals — owners, directors, officers and their relatives — and applies specifically to payments or benefits they receive, such as remuneration, rent on personally-owned premises, or loan interest. A single structuring decision, such as converting a founder's personal property lease into a formal intercompany arrangement, can touch both provisions at once.

Practitioner noteWe map both the entity-level and individual-level relationships at the outset of every engagement, because a structuring decision that only tests one of the two definitions can leave the other exposed.
Does Strategic Advisory address Economic Substance Regulations (ESR) alongside transfer pricing?

ESR notification and report filing was discontinued for financial years starting on or after 1 January 2023 under Cabinet Decision No. 98 of 2024, so it is no longer a live annual filing obligation for those later years. Where a Strategic Advisory engagement involves a period still within ESR's historical scope, or historical ESR filings remain relevant to a related question, PNPC flags the distinction — but ESR and transfer pricing have always been assessed under separate legal frameworks, and the live transfer pricing obligation continues independently of ESR's discontinuation.

Practitioner noteClients sometimes assume ESR's discontinuation quietly removed transfer pricing scrutiny too. It did not — the two were never the same regime, and only ESR was wound down.
Does Strategic Advisory consider VAT consequences of a new intercompany arrangement, or only Corporate Tax?

Corporate Tax arm's length pricing under Article 34 and VAT's own valuation rules for supplies between related parties are assessed under separate legal provisions and can, in principle, produce different figures for the same transaction. Strategic Advisory's primary lens is the Corporate Tax and transfer pricing consequence of a structuring decision, but PNPC flags where a proposed arrangement also has a material VAT dimension — for example, a management fee structure between a VAT-registered entity and one that cannot fully recover input tax — so the two positions are designed consistently rather than in isolation.

Practitioner noteWe do not treat VAT as an afterthought once the transfer pricing structure is set — a structure that is arm's length for Corporate Tax purposes but creates an unintended VAT cost is not a well-designed structure.
We are converting a mainland entity into a Free Zone entity. What does Strategic Advisory specifically model for that conversion?

A mainland-to-Free-Zone conversion changes the entity's Corporate Tax treatment and potentially its Qualifying Free Zone Person eligibility, but it does not change who its related parties are — the same group entities remain related parties before and after the conversion. Strategic Advisory models how the converted entity's existing related-party dealings will be treated post-conversion, in particular whether they support Qualifying Income and stay within the non-qualifying revenue de minimis threshold, before the licence conversion is applied for.

Practitioner noteGroups sometimes assume a Free Zone conversion is purely a licensing exercise. The transfer pricing consequences of the same related-party dealings looking completely different under QFZP rules is the part that gets missed if this is treated as a licensing-only decision.
We just want a second opinion on our existing transfer pricing policy, with no planned changes. Is that Strategic Advisory or a documentation refresh?

A genuine second opinion — testing whether an existing, unchanged policy still reflects the group's current structure and market conditions — sits closer to Strategic Advisory's periodic policy re-test function than to a routine annual documentation refresh, because it is a judgement exercise about whether the underlying decision still holds, not simply an update of financial figures within an already-accepted framework.

Practitioner noteWe scope these as a lighter-touch Strategic Advisory engagement rather than a full structuring exercise — the questions asked are the same in kind, just applied to a policy already in place rather than one being designed from scratch.
How does Strategic Advisory approach the pricing of an intellectual property licence between related entities?

IP licensing arrangements require identifying who actually developed, enhanced, maintained, and protects the intangible — the DEMPE functions (development, enhancement, maintenance, protection, exploitation) recognised under OECD guidance — because legal ownership of an intangible does not by itself justify the licensing income if another related entity is doing the substantive work. Strategic Advisory models the FAR profile of each party to the proposed licence before recommending a royalty rate or licensing structure.

Practitioner noteA related-party IP licence priced without a genuine DEMPE analysis is one of the more common problem areas we are asked to fix retrospectively — designing it correctly from the outset avoids that entirely.
Can Strategic Advisory help design a shared-services or cost-sharing arrangement across group entities?

Yes. A shared-services model — where one entity centrally performs functions like finance, HR, or IT for several related entities — needs a defensible cost allocation methodology and, typically, a service fee with an appropriate markup reflecting the functions and risks of the entity providing the service. Strategic Advisory models the allocation basis and pricing before the arrangement goes live, distinguishing routine, low value-adding services from more substantive functions that warrant a different pricing approach.

Practitioner noteThe allocation key chosen — headcount, revenue, time spent — matters as much as the markup rate; an arbitrary allocation basis is one of the more easily challenged elements of a shared-services structure.
If management has already decided which structure it wants, will PNPC just document that decision instead of testing it?

PNPC's Strategic Advisory role is to test the arm's length and Corporate Tax consequences of the structure management is leaning toward, and to flag clearly if it is not the most defensible or efficient option available — the engagement is not designed to simply rubber-stamp a predetermined outcome. Where management proceeds with a structure despite a flagged concern, that is a commercial decision management is entitled to make, but PNPC's analysis and any reservations are recorded in the recommendation memo rather than omitted.

Practitioner noteWe would rather tell a client uncomfortable news at the design stage, in writing, than have that same gap surface later as an FTA finding with no record that it was ever raised.
Does Strategic Advisory differ for a purely UAE-domestic group versus one with cross-border related parties?

The underlying analytical steps — related-party mapping, FAR analysis, method selection, indicative benchmarking — are the same either way, since Article 34's arm's length requirement applies to UAE-to-UAE related-party dealings just as it does to cross-border ones. What differs for a multinational group is the added step of checking the counterparty jurisdiction's own transfer pricing rules, and potentially coordinating the recommendation with an advisor in that jurisdiction so both sides file a consistent position.

Practitioner notePurely domestic UAE groups often assume transfer pricing strategy is only relevant once a foreign entity is involved. The arm's length standard does not distinguish based on whether a border was crossed.
We are preparing for a funding round or investor due diligence. Should transfer pricing structuring be part of that process?

Yes, where the group has any material related-party dealings — investors and their due diligence teams increasingly test whether related-party profits are properly priced and documented, because an unaddressed transfer pricing gap can translate directly into a valuation adjustment or a warranty and indemnity issue in the transaction documents. Strategic Advisory ahead of a funding round gives management a considered position to present, rather than reacting to a due diligence finding under time pressure.

Practitioner noteA clean, well-documented related-party structure is a small but genuine positive signal in an investor due diligence process — the inverse, an unaddressed gap discovered by the investor's own advisors, is a considerably worse position to negotiate from.
Is Strategic Advisory relevant to a group preparing for an eventual IPO?

Yes. Listing readiness typically involves tightening related-party transaction governance and disclosure to standards a public market and its regulator expect, well beyond what a private group's Corporate Tax filing alone requires. Strategic Advisory run ahead of an IPO process identifies related-party arrangements that need to be restructured, formalised, or wound down before the group is under public and regulatory scrutiny, rather than during the listing process itself.

Practitioner noteIPO due diligence tends to surface every informal intercompany arrangement a group has accumulated over the years — addressing these proactively, on the group's own timeline, is considerably more comfortable than doing so under a listing deadline.
How confidential is a Strategic Advisory engagement, particularly during a live deal or restructuring that has not been announced?

Strategic Advisory engagements are governed by the same professional confidentiality obligations as any other PNPC engagement, and PNPC routinely works under non-disclosure arrangements during live, unannounced transactions — modelling the transfer pricing consequences of a deal is frequently one of several confidential advisory workstreams running in parallel ahead of signing.

Practitioner noteWe scope the engagement team deliberately narrowly for deal-sensitive work, consistent with how the rest of the deal's advisory team is typically structured during a live, unannounced transaction.
What is the actual relationship between Strategic Advisory and Transfer Pricing Policy Design as separate PNPC service pages?

Transfer Pricing Policy Design is, in practice, the formalisation output of a Strategic Advisory engagement — once a structuring decision has been modelled and a recommendation accepted, that recommendation is converted into a standing, Board-approved policy document for ongoing operational use. PNPC lists them as separate service pages because a group can also come to PNPC needing only the policy formalisation step, where the underlying structuring decision was already made independently.

Practitioner noteMost clients experience these as a single continuous engagement rather than two separate purchases — we mention the distinction mainly for groups who arrive already having decided the structure and only need the formal policy document written up.
Does Strategic Advisory quantify the actual Corporate Tax liability difference between structuring options, or just the arm's length range?

Both. For each viable structuring option, PNPC models the indicative arm's length pricing range and its resulting Corporate Tax consequence — including, where relevant, the QFZP impact — so the Board can see not just which option is defensible, but the approximate scale of the tax difference between options before choosing.

Practitioner noteThe tax quantification is often what actually moves a Board decision — two equally defensible structures can have a materially different Corporate Tax outcome, and that comparison is the point of running the numbers side by side rather than just describing the options qualitatively.
We want to convert an existing interest-free intercompany loan to an interest-bearing one. What does Strategic Advisory consider?

Beyond setting an arm's length interest rate, PNPC considers the sequencing of the change — for example, whether it should be documented as a new loan agreement or a formal amendment to the existing one, and how the change is explained if a reviewer later compares the pre- and post-change periods — as well as any related Corporate Tax and, where relevant, withholding considerations arising from the shift.

Practitioner noteA rate change introduced without a documented rationale can itself look like a red flag on review — we make sure the reason for the change, not just the new rate, is on record.
Can Strategic Advisory address a cross-border royalty or interest payment's Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA) treatment, or only the arm's length pricing?

Where a proposed cross-border arrangement — a royalty, interest, or service fee flow to a related party in another jurisdiction — is affected by a DTAA between the UAE and that jurisdiction, PNPC considers the DTAA implications, such as any withholding tax relief or reduced-rate provisions, alongside the arm's length pricing question, since both affect the arrangement's actual after-tax economics.

Practitioner noteTreating the arm's length price and the DTAA treatment as two separate questions, addressed by two disconnected advisors, is how groups end up with a technically arm's length price that still triggers an avoidable withholding cost.
Does Strategic Advisory ever conclude that no change is needed — that the existing structure is fine?

Yes, and this is a legitimate and fairly common outcome, particularly for the periodic policy re-test scenario. Where the analysis confirms the existing structure and pricing remain defensible under current conditions, the recommendation memo documents that conclusion and the basis for it — a written confirmation that the status quo was actually tested is itself a useful record if the position is later questioned.

Practitioner noteA 'no change needed' conclusion, properly documented, is not a wasted engagement — it converts an assumption the group was previously operating on into a tested, evidenced position.
Two related entities in our group, managed by different people, disagree on how a new arrangement should be priced. How is that resolved?

This is ultimately a governance question for the group to resolve, but PNPC's role is to present the arm's length range and the Corporate Tax consequences of each side's preferred position objectively, so the decision is made with full visibility of the trade-offs rather than as an unresolved internal negotiation that neither side's finance team can independently validate.

Practitioner noteWe deliberately frame these situations around what the arm's length standard actually permits, rather than mediating what is often a broader commercial disagreement between the two sides — the pricing question and the underlying commercial disagreement are usually separable.
Our group has entities across multiple Free Zones — DMCC, JAFZA, and IFZA, for example. Does Strategic Advisory treat each one differently?

Each Free Zone authority governs its own licensing and, where relevant, its own free zone-specific rules, but Qualifying Free Zone Person status and the arm's length requirement for related-party dealings apply under the same federal Corporate Tax Law and Ministerial Decision regardless of which Free Zone authority issued the licence. Strategic Advisory models each entity's related-party exposure individually, since their transaction profiles typically differ, but the underlying legal framework being tested against is the same across DMCC, JAFZA, IFZA, or any other UAE Free Zone.

Practitioner noteWe verify each entity's specific Free Zone authority and licence type as part of the structural mapping step precisely because assuming one Free Zone's operational practicalities apply identically to another is an easy but avoidable error.
Does the recommendation memo ever need to be shared with the FTA, or does it stay purely internal?

The recommendation memo is prepared for internal Board and management decision-making and is not, by default, a document filed with or submitted to the FTA. However, its underlying FAR analysis and rationale typically feed into the Local File that is produced to the FTA if requested, and the memo itself can serve as useful supporting evidence of contemporaneous, considered decision-making if a structuring decision is later questioned.

Practitioner noteWe draft the memo assuming it could eventually be read by a reviewer, even though that is not its primary purpose — a document that would embarrass the group if it surfaced later is not one we would want on file in the first place.
If the FTA later reviews a structure that Strategic Advisory helped design, does the earlier recommendation memo actually help?

Yes, generally. A written, dated recommendation memo showing the options considered, the FAR analysis performed, and the basis for the structure ultimately chosen is meaningfully stronger evidence of a genuinely arm's length, contemporaneously-reasoned decision than a structure with no documented rationale at all, even where the memo itself is not the primary document produced to the FTA.

Practitioner noteThe value of the memo in an FTA review is less about its specific conclusions and more about demonstrating that a considered process happened before the arrangement was implemented, not after.
Should Strategic Advisory wait until the audited financial statements for the year are finalised?

Not necessarily. Because Strategic Advisory is forward-looking and often tied to a transaction or arrangement timeline, PNPC frequently works from management accounts or projected financials to keep pace with the decision being made, while flagging where the final recommendation should be sanity-checked against the audited figures once available, particularly for the Corporate Tax quantification.

Practitioner noteWaiting for audited financials to even start the conversation can mean the structuring window has closed by the time the numbers are final — we would rather start with the best available data and refine later.
How does a change in ultimate beneficial ownership relate to a Strategic Advisory engagement?

A change in ultimate beneficial ownership — through a share sale, family succession, or new investor coming in — can change who is a Related Party under Article 35 even where the operating entities and their day-to-day dealings look unchanged, because the control chain above the entities has shifted. Strategic Advisory re-runs the related-party map whenever such an ownership change is planned, rather than assuming the existing map still holds.

Practitioner noteA change in ultimate beneficial ownership is a genuine, easily-missed trigger for a related-party map refresh — the operating business can look identical while its ownership chain, and therefore its related-party relationships, has quietly changed.
What does PNPC need from us to start a Strategic Advisory engagement quickly?

A current group ownership chart, a description of the specific decision or arrangement under consideration, the most recent financial statements for the entities involved, and access to whoever in management actually understands the commercial rationale for the proposed arrangement — with those in hand, PNPC can begin the framing and related-party mapping steps immediately rather than spending the early stage gathering basics.

Practitioner noteThe single most useful thing a client can bring to the first conversation is a plain-language description of what they are actually trying to achieve commercially — the tax and transfer pricing analysis is built around that, not the other way round.
Why PNPC Global

PNPC Strategic Advisory vs. treating transfer pricing purely as a compliance exercise

DimensionPNPC Strategic AdvisoryCompliance-Only Approach
TimingEngaged before a new arrangement or structural change is implementedEngaged only when documentation or an FTA query is due
Options presentedTwo or three structuring alternatives modelled side by side for the Board to choose betweenA single pricing outcome documented after the arrangement is already operating
QFZP exposureModelled proactively before a Free Zone entity's related-party mix could threaten 0% statusReviewed, if at all, only during the annual documentation cycle after the year has closed
Cross-border consistencyUAE and counterparty jurisdiction positions modelled together from the outsetEach jurisdiction's filing produced independently, with mismatches surfacing later
Board decision recordWritten recommendation memo and Board-approved policy created at the point of decisionNo contemporaneous record of why a given pricing approach was chosen
M&A and restructuring readinessTransfer pricing exposure assessed during due diligence, ahead of deal closeExposure surfaces post-completion, inherited without negotiating leverage
Dispute strategyTechnical merit weighed against commercial risk appetite before choosing to accept, contest, or escalateEvery FTA query treated the same way, without a considered settle-versus-escalate strategy
Link to documentationRecommendation and FAR analysis handed directly to the documentation workstream for consistencyDocumentation built independently, occasionally reconstructing a different rationale than what was actually decided
Documentation reuseFAR analysis and indicative benchmarking from the Strategic Advisory phase are structured to carry forward directly into the next annual Local FileEach year's documentation is built independently, with no strategic input feeding into it
Proportionality by group sizeEngagement scope and depth are sized to the actual decision at hand, from a single new arrangement to a multi-jurisdiction restructuringA single heaviest-tier approach applied regardless of the group's actual complexity, or a lightest-tier approach applied regardless of genuine risk
Internal rolloutApproved policy is actively communicated to the finance and operational teams who apply it day to dayA signed-off policy document that may never reach the people actually pricing transactions
India-UAE and GCC coordinationStructuring decisions for cross-border arrangements are modelled jointly with PNPC's India transfer pricing practice where relevantEach jurisdiction's advisor works independently, with consistency checked only after both sides have already filed

What the PNPC package includes

  1. 01

    Framing session to identify the actual structuring or policy decision at hand

  2. 02

    Related-party and Connected Person mapping reflecting the proposed or post-transaction structure

  3. 03

    Functional, Asset and Risk (FAR) analysis for each structuring option under consideration

  4. 04

    Side-by-side modelling of viable structuring alternatives with method, indicative arm's length range, and Corporate Tax consequence

  5. 05

    Qualifying Free Zone Person exposure assessment for Free Zone entities in the group

  6. 06

    Cross-border consistency review for groups spanning the UAE, GCC, India, or other jurisdictions

  7. 07

    Written recommendation memo prepared for Board or senior management decision-making

  8. 08

    Board-approved transfer pricing policy drafting for the selected structure

  9. 09

    Structured handover pack to the annual Local File / Master File documentation workstream

  10. 10

    First-cycle implementation variance check against the modelled arm's length range

  11. 11

    Strategic input on informal FTA queries before they escalate to a formal information request

  12. 12

    Assessment of settlement, reconsideration, or Mutual Agreement Procedure options where an adjustment is proposed

  13. 13

    M&A and restructuring transfer pricing due diligence support ahead of deal close

  14. 14

    Coordination with PNPC's India transfer pricing practice for India-UAE structuring decisions

Bring PNPC into the structuring conversation before the arrangement goes live — the pricing decided at the design stage is far cheaper to get right than the same pricing defended after the fact.

Jurisdiction

🇦🇪
United Arab Emirates

Free zone, mainland & offshore

Ready to get started?

Tell us about your requirement — a UAE specialist responds within 24 hours.

← Back to Transfer Pricing