VAT, Customs & Indirect Tax
VAT, customs, and indirect tax advisory manages the transaction taxes that apply to goods and services across Gulf jurisdictions. The Gulf states’ introduction of VAT (5% standard rate implemented in UAE January 2018, Saudi Arabia January 2018 subsequently increased to 15%, Bahrain January 2019; under consideration in Oman, Qatar, Kuwait) created compliance obligations that did not exist before 2018 — requiring every business to register, collect, report, and remit VAT on qualifying transactions.
Indirect Tax Advisory
Kaelo advises on: VAT registration (determining whether registration is required or optional, across multiple Gulf jurisdictions), compliance (return preparation, filing, payment — typically quarterly), input tax recovery (claiming back VAT paid on business purchases — the mechanism that prevents tax cascading), customs duty planning (tariff classification, origin determination, preferential treatment under FTAs, temporary import provisions), excise tax management (the 50-100% excise duty on tobacco, sugary drinks, and energy drinks across Gulf states), and the cross-border indirect tax structuring that trade across multiple Gulf jurisdictions requires. Our tax practice covers the indirect tax landscape across all GCC states.
Cross-Border Complexity
Cross-border VAT complexity arises from: different implementation across Gulf states (UAE 5%, Saudi Arabia 15%, Bahrain 10%, others not yet implemented), the GCC VAT Framework Agreement provisions for intra-GCC supply, the interaction between VAT and customs duty at GCC entry points, and the specific rules for free zone entities (free zones designated as VAT-free zones have different treatment from non-designated zones). For businesses operating across multiple Gulf jurisdictions — which describes most significant Gulf enterprises — the indirect tax compliance burden is substantial and requires specialist advisory that understands the interaction between different GCC VAT systems.
Indirect tax in the Gulf transformed from non-existent to mandatory in 2018 — and the compliance complexity has grown with every subsequent rate change, exemption modification, and cross-border provision that Gulf tax authorities have introduced.