Sam Reid ยท Senior Financial Markets Analyst
Staff Writer
To open a corporate bank account, UAE requirements in 2026 come down to three things: a valid trade licence, a complete and consistent set of company and shareholder documents, and a business profile the bank’s compliance team can verify. Get those right and most compliant businesses are approved within one to six weeks.
The account itself is non-negotiable. Every UAE-registered company needs one to receive payments, pay suppliers, run payroll through the Wage Protection System, and meet tax reporting obligations. You cannot legally route company money through a personal account.
Banks apply strict Know Your Customer (KYC) and Anti-Money Laundering (AML) checks to every applicant, no matter how small the company. Incomplete or inconsistent paperwork is the single most common reason applications stall. This guide covers exactly what you need, the step-by-step process, and how the main banks compare, so you can walk in prepared.
A corporate bank account, also called a business or commercial account, is a bank account held in your company’s name rather than your own. It’s the operational heart of the business: it receives client payments, pays vendors and salaries, and creates the clean transaction trail that tax filing depends on.
In the UAE, it isn’t optional. Companies can’t receive payments into personal accounts, salaries must run through the Wage Protection System, and VAT and corporate tax records rely on bank-verified transactions. The Federal Tax Authority expects business activity to flow through a dedicated corporate account, and operating without one creates real compliance and audit problems.
The process follows a predictable sequence at every bank. Timelines vary, but the steps don’t.
You need a valid UAE trade licence before you approach any bank, whether you’re a mainland or free zone company. No bank will open an account without it. This is the output of your company formation, handled through an authority such as the Dubai Department of Economy and Tourism for mainland firms, or a free zone authority like DMCC.
Banks have different risk appetites, documentation preferences, and onboarding speeds. A digital bank may suit a low-volume startup, while an established SME or trade-finance business may need a traditional bank. Picking the wrong fit is a common cause of rejection, so match the bank to your activity, shareholder nationalities, and expected transaction volume before you apply. The comparison table further down helps with this.
Gather every company, shareholder, and financial document in clean, legible, consistent form. Submit them as clear PDF scans, because banks routinely reject blurry or incomplete uploads. Consistency across documents matters as much as completeness: a name or address that doesn’t match across files can trigger delays.
Once you apply, the bank runs its compliance review: background checks on shareholders, a look at your business model, and source-of-funds verification. This is where most of the waiting happens. Traditional banks may take several weeks; digital banks can be far quicker.
Most traditional UAE banks require the authorised signatory to be physically present at least once to sign the original forms in front of a bank representative. Some digital banks replace this with biometric or video verification through their app if you hold a valid Emirates ID.
After approval, you deposit any required minimum balance, set up online banking, and receive your cheque book and debit card. The account is then live and ready to use.
The exact list varies by bank and company structure, but the checklist below covers what most UAE banks ask for in 2026. Preparing the full set upfront is the best thing you can do to avoid delays.
This is the layer that trips people up. Banks increasingly want evidence that your business is real and active, not just registered:
If a shareholder is another company, or your ownership runs through several layers, expect the bank to ask for the parent company’s documents and to trace ownership up to the Ultimate Beneficial Owners (UBOs). Documents issued outside the UAE usually need legal translation and attestation, so budget time and money for that. Non-residents can open accounts, but approval odds improve significantly when at least one authorised signatory holds a UAE residence visa and Emirates ID.
The real cost of a UAE corporate account is rarely the opening fee. It’s the minimum balance you have to keep parked in the account.
Requirements vary widely by bank and your risk profile:
One point worth understanding: the minimum balance is usually a monthly average, not a one-time deposit. If your average balance drops below the threshold, the bank charges a fall-below penalty. For a startup with lumpy cash flow, a zero-balance digital account avoids that risk entirely.
Most banks don’t charge a separate opening fee, though some premium packages or intermediaries do (commonly AED 1,000 to AED 5,000). Beyond that, watch for monthly maintenance fees when you fall below the minimum balance, international transfer charges, foreign-exchange spreads on multi-currency payments, and cheque book and debit card issuance costs.
Digital banks can approve in as little as one to three business days for a clean, low-risk application. Traditional banks typically take one to six weeks, depending on your structure and how complete your documents are. High-risk activities trigger Enhanced Due Diligence, which adds time and paperwork.
There’s no single best bank, only the best fit for your business type. Broadly, you’re choosing between traditional banks (credibility, full services, trade finance, but stricter and slower) and digital banks (fast, low or no minimum balance, but sometimes limited on trade finance and bulk payments).
| Bank type | Best for | Typical minimum balance | Onboarding speed | Trade-offs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Digital / fintech (e.g. app-first business banks) | Startups, freelancers, e-commerce, low-volume international | AED 0 to low thousands | Days | Limited trade finance and bulk payments |
| SME-friendly local banks | Mainland SMEs wanting lower balances plus a branch network | ~AED 10,000 to 25,000 | 1 to 3 weeks | More documentation scrutiny than digital |
| Traditional full-service banks | Established SMEs needing credibility, payroll, trade finance | ~AED 25,000 to 50,000+ | 2 to 6 weeks | Higher balances, slower approval |
| International banks | Cross-border businesses and global trade | Higher tiers | Several weeks | Strictest compliance, higher thresholds |
Work backwards from your business, not the brand name. Ask yourself:
There’s no rule limiting you to one account. Many businesses run two or three, separating operating cash from savings or keeping a backup banking relationship. Each account needs its own KYC.
Opening the account is often harder than forming the company. Knowing why banks say no is the best way to get a yes.
This is the number-one cause of delays and rejections. A missing signature, a blurry scan, or an address that doesn’t match across files is enough to stall the file. Fix: prepare the full set, double-check consistency, and submit clean PDFs.
Compliance teams reject applications where they can’t understand where the money comes from or what the business actually does. Fix: write a clear business summary and back it with real invoices or contracts.
Activities like crypto, general trading, and high-volume e-commerce, or dealings with high-risk countries, attract Enhanced Due Diligence and higher rejection rates. Fix: expect deeper scrutiny, over-prepare your documentation, and target a bank with an appetite for your sector.
Banks are wary of companies with no real local footprint. Fix: having at least one signatory with UAE residency and Emirates ID, and demonstrating genuine local activity, both help considerably.
You need a valid UAE trade licence, incorporation documents, the MOA/AOA, passport and Emirates ID copies for shareholders and signatories, proof of address, and evidence of genuine business activity such as a business plan, source-of-funds declaration, and sample invoices or contracts. Banks then run KYC and AML checks before approving.
Yes, provided the company is registered in the UAE. Requirements are stricter for non-residents, often including higher minimum balances and home-country bank statements. Approval is smoother when at least one signatory holds a UAE residence visa and Emirates ID.
Digital banks can approve in one to three business days for clean, low-risk applications. Traditional banks generally take one to six weeks, depending on the company structure, business activity, and how complete the documents are.
It ranges from AED 0 at some digital banks to roughly AED 10,000 to 50,000 for SME accounts at traditional banks, and higher for corporate or non-resident tiers. It’s usually a monthly average, and dropping below it triggers a fall-below penalty.
Licensed freelancers with a valid trade licence can usually open an SME business account, though requirements differ slightly by bank. If you’re invoicing clients under a licence, a dedicated business account keeps you compliant and your records clean.
Practically, yes. VAT-registered businesses must keep clear, auditable records, and corporate tax returns filed with the Federal Tax Authority rely on traceable banking documentation. Running business transactions through a personal account creates serious compliance and audit risk.
This guide is for general information and reflects the UAE banking landscape as of 2026. Requirements, fees, and minimum balances vary by bank, company structure, and nationality, and change over time. Always confirm current details directly with your chosen bank before applying.