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	<title>Alpha Data &#8211; Tax and VAT consultant in Dubai</title>
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		<title>VAT in the UAE: The process, calculations and exemptions explained</title>
		<link>https://alphadata.me/vat-in-the-uae-the-process-calculations-and-exemptions-explained/</link>
					<comments>https://alphadata.me/vat-in-the-uae-the-process-calculations-and-exemptions-explained/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Alpha Data]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 05 Sep 2020 10:00:38 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://alphadata.mathew.ch/?p=2870</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Dubai: Value Added Tax (VAT) was introduced in the UAE from January 1, 2018. If you are new to the UAE and unaware about the type of tax it is, how you would get affected by it and whether you can receive a refund on VAT, read on to find out all you need to know. What is VAT? VAT is a tax on the transactions of goods and services, applied at each stage of the supply chain and is&#8230;]]></description>
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					<div class="elementor-text-editor elementor-clearfix"><div class="body-wrapper body-wrapper1"><div id="main"><div id="sub-main" class="container_12"><div class="post-wrap"><div class="post-content"><p>Dubai: Value Added Tax (VAT) was introduced in the UAE from January 1, 2018. If you are new to the UAE and unaware about the type of tax it is, how you would get affected by it and whether you can receive a refund on VAT, read on to find out all you need to know.</p><p><strong>What is VAT?</strong></p><p>VAT is a tax on the transactions of goods and services, applied at each stage of the supply chain and is based on the value added at each stage.</p><p>The rate at which VAT is charged is five per cent</p><p>5% of the transaction cost is taxable under VAT</p><p>This tax is not due on businesses, which can reclaim the VAT they may have incurred during the transactions from producer to end user. End consumers generally bear the VAT cost while registered businesses collect and account for the tax, in a way acting as a tax collector on behalf of the Federal Tax Authority (FTA).</p><p>The FTA is responsible for implementing VAT. The authority provides guidance, collects VAT and conducts audits.</p><p><strong>VAT services in UAE and exemption</strong></p><p>Under VAT there are three categories:</p><p><strong>VAT registration</strong></p><p>Companies that have an annual turnover above Dh375,000 have to register for VAT. Companies that have a turnover under Dh375,000 but above Dh187,500 can voluntarily register for VAT.</p><p>VAT applies equally on tax-registered businesses managed on the UAE mainland and in the free zones. However, if the UAE Cabinet defines a certain free zone as a ‘designated zone’, it must be treated as outside the UAE for tax purposes. The transfer of goods between designated zones are tax-free.</p><p>Visit this page on the official FTA website for all the necessary registration links.</p><p><strong>VAT return filing</strong></p><p>At the end of each tax period, VAT registered businesses or the ‘taxable persons’ must submit a ‘VAT return’ to FTA.</p><p>A VAT return summarises the value of the supplies and purchases a taxable person has made during the tax period, and shows the taxable person’s VAT liability.</p><p>VAT returns can be filed on a monthly or quarterly basis through the FTA website – https://www.tax.gov.ae/</p><p>Although tax returns must be submitted electronically, accounting records and documents relating to business activities must be kept, including the balance sheet, profit and loss account, payroll records, wages, fixed assets, records, and inventory statements.</p><p>Taxable businesses must file VAT returns with FTA on a regular basis and usually within 28 days of the end of the ‘tax period’ as defined for each type of business. A ‘tax period’ is a specific period of time for which the payable tax shall be calculated and paid. The standard tax period is:</p><p>• quarterly for businesses with an annual turnover below Dh150 million</p><p>• monthly for businesses with an annual turnover of Dh150 million or more.</p><p><strong>Liability of VAT</strong></p><p>The liability of VAT is the difference between the output tax payable (VAT charged on supplies of goods and services) for a given tax period and the input tax (VAT incurred on purchases) recoverable for the same tax period.</p><p>Where the output tax exceeds the input tax amount, the difference must be paid to FTA. Where the input tax exceeds the output tax, a taxable person will have the excess input tax recovered; he will be entitled to set this off against subsequent payment due to FTA.</p><p><strong>VAT refund for tourists</strong></p><p>Tourists to the UAE can also get the VAT they have paid back when they leave the country. However, they are required to pay a 15 per cent administrative fee as well as a 4.8 per cent tag fee for every individual claim.</p><p>Tourists visiting the UAE who are at least 18 years old are eligible for the refund. The visitor must also intend to exit the UAE along with the purchased goods within 90 days.</p><p>However, the VAT paid cannot be refunded unless the total value of tax-inclusive purchases is at least Dh250.</p><p>Tourists can get their money back at the airports in Abu Dhabi, Dubai and Sharjah. Tourists will receive their refunds through a special device placed at the departure port &#8211; airport, seaport, or border port &#8211; by submitting the tax invoices for their purchases from the outlets registered in the Scheme, along with copies of their passport and credit card.</p><p>Once these documents are submitted, tourists can either recover the VAT in cash in UAE dirhams, or have it transferred to their credit card. Until October 2018, 4,000 retail outlets across the UAE were connected electronically to the system.</p><p>These eligible outlets can be identified with posters displayed on their storefronts and visible to visitors.</p><p><strong>VAT verification</strong></p><p>If you want to verify that a company that has charged you VAT is eligible to do so, you can verify the Tax Registration Number (TRN) here. </p><p><strong>Contact FTA</strong></p><p>For all VAT-related inquiries about tax registration and/or application, you may contact Federal Tax Authority through the enquiry form or send an email to info@tax.gov.ae. You can also call on 600 599 994 or 04-7775777.</p></div></div></div></div></div><div class="body-wrapper body-wrapper1"><div id="main"><div id="sub-main" class="container_12"><div class="post-wrap"> </div></div></div></div></div>
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		<title>Millennium launches international operations in Dubai to support $2.5 trillion global Islamic finance sector</title>
		<link>https://alphadata.me/millennium-launches-international-operations-in-dubai-to-support-2-5-trillion-global-islamic-finance-sector/</link>
					<comments>https://alphadata.me/millennium-launches-international-operations-in-dubai-to-support-2-5-trillion-global-islamic-finance-sector/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Alpha Data]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 04 Sep 2020 13:36:33 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Blog]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://alphadata.mathew.ch/?p=2864</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[The move comes as the global Islamic banking sector continues to defy the downward trend and expands its global presence. According Thomson Reuters, Islamic finance assets is expected to reach $3.9 trillion (Dh14 trillion) by 2023, up from US$2.2 trillion (Dh8 trillion) in 2016, despite the Covid-19 pandemic. Islamic banks with strong Shariah compliance and real asset-backed lending, have emerged stronger after every financial crisis that have exposed the weaknesses of the conventional banking systems. That’s why, the number of&#8230;]]></description>
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					<div class="elementor-text-editor elementor-clearfix"><p>The move comes as the global Islamic banking sector continues to defy the downward trend and expands its global presence. According Thomson Reuters, Islamic finance assets is expected to reach $3.9 trillion (Dh14 trillion) by 2023, up from US$2.2 trillion (Dh8 trillion) in 2016, despite the Covid-19 pandemic.</p><p>Islamic banks with strong Shariah compliance and real asset-backed lending, have emerged stronger after every financial crisis that have exposed the weaknesses of the conventional banking systems. That’s why, the number of Islamic banks have been and will continue to grow in the coming years. A solid core banking solution could help Islamic banks perform better.</p><p>The Islamic banks and financial institutions, however, will need to migrate to a more advanced artificial intelligence-powered core banking system that can cope with the financial technology-enabled products and solutions that are disrupting the banking and payment systems globally.</p><p>“With the Fourth Industrial Revolution disrupting the financial sector, the Islamic banks need to migrate to the new-generation core banking solutions that could synchronise with the new fintech solutions without disrupting the overall banking system,” Mahmud Hossain, Chief Executive Officer of Millennium Information Solution FZ-LLC (MISL).</p><p>“That’s why, we have set up our international operations at the Dubai International City to approach majority of the Islamic banks and help them migrate to our state-of-the-art core Islamic banking system – Ababil – a game-changing solution for the Shariah-compliant banking sector.</p><p>“We believe, most of the existing core banking systems will become obsolete with increased fintech disruption and banks will have to migrate to the next-generation systems in the next 3-5 years. Those who fail to do so, will lose the race and lose business in the more competitive financial world.”</p><p>Ababil, which has been implemented in 500 branches of 14 banks and non-banking financial institutions (NBFIs), is an end-to-end advanced core-banking solution for Islamic banking that covers all areas of Shariah-compliant banking. The main engine of Ababil was ground up designed as an Islamic Shariah compliant solution, not a by-product of a conventional banking application. Today, Ababil, which is tested at IBM’s Bangalore Laboratory and backed by Oracle RDBMS and Open platforms, is used by some of the major Islamic banks and Islamic financial institutions.</p><p>Banks aiming for growth in the Islamic banking sector need dedicated Islamic core banking systems with sharia-compliant capabilities, according to Gartner. “Vendor offerings have now matured to the point that they offer true differentiation via adaptation to the sharia board, business functions and Islamic localization,” Gartner said in a report published earlier.</p><p>Ababil, the flagship product of MISL, is one such product that also has upgraded its product suites to cater to the future needs of the Islamic banks using the state-of-the-art technology platforms such as Java micro services and Kafka, a distributed streaming platform.</p><p>The growth of the Islamic banking and finance sector will be driven by Islamic fintech start-ups, according to reports.</p><p>“The large established financial institutions are embracing the change, with 74 percent of financial institutions investing in data analytics, 34 percent in Artificial Intelligence (AI), and with 77 percent expecting to adopt blockchain by 2020,” says the Islamic Fintech Report published by Dubai Islamic Economy Development Centre (DIEDC), said in 2018.</p><p>Islamic fintech has substantial room for growth, however, with largely unaddressed opportunities in several areas, the three most significant of which are: (1) the leveraging of big data and AI in providing Islamic banking services; (2) the use of blockchain in facilitating the growth of Islamic trade finance, which at $186 billion is a fraction of the global $12 trillion trade finance industry; and (3) the use of AI in facilitating investments, in particular addressing institutional investor needs, the report said, identifying the gaps.</p><p>Shaikh Abdul Karim, an Islamic banking specialist with more than 35 years’ experience in the banking sector, including 20 years in Islamic banking sector, says, “Core Islamic banking product suites such as Ababil are crucial solutions that could fix these gaps in the industry and ensure that the banks migrate to the next level of digitisation.</p><p>“As we embrace the Fourth Industrial Revolution, fintech will drive the future growth of the banking industry powered by blockchain, big data analytics, artificial intelligence and robotics. In future, banks will become branch-less with face-less transactions becoming the norm – the deployment of advanced core banking solutions will determine efficiency and leadership in the sector. With Ababil suite, Islamic banks could lead the new era of digital banking.</p><p>“With our international operations based in the Dubai Internet City, we are getting ready to expand our suites of core banking solution Ababil, human resources solution Sylvia and risk-based auditing solution Tahqiq – to the banks and businesses in the Middle East, Africa and Central Asian countries,” concludes Sheikh Abdul Karim, Advisor and Senior Consultant to MISL.</p><p>Ababil offers wide range of software solutions to Islamic banks and Islamic financial institutions in order to tackle all their operational requirements. Ababil’s state-of-the-art technology, highly integrated front and back office system comes with a comprehensive solution package along with the ability to provide modular Islamic banking solutions which addresses all business functionalities of the client banks and financial institutions.</p><p>In line with today’s economic growth, Ababil has seen continuous improvements in the way Islamic Finance is implemented and improvised. </p><p>The unique strength of Ababil is the fact that Islamic Shariah based business logic of this product gained maturity with the involvement and input of Shariah Scholars from home and abroad, renowned bankers and field level users since the inception of the product. It also became robust through repeated field tests. </p><p>The solution suite of Ababil includes full support to various functions, some of which includes Corporate and Retail Banking, Investment Banking, Financing Origination System, Customer Information File (CIF), Trade Finance, Treasury Management, Agent Banking, Offshore Banking, Profit Distribution, Accounting &amp; MIS, Payroll, Drilled Down Reporting, etc.</p><p>In addition to Ababil, MISL is also promoting it latest human resources solution Sylvia and risk-based auditing solution Tahqiq – to the banks and businesses in the Middle East, Africa and Central Asian countries.</p></div>
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		<title>Zero VAT for face masks, sanitisers</title>
		<link>https://alphadata.me/zero-vat-for-face-masks-sanitisers/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Alpha Data]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 04 Sep 2020 13:20:47 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Blog]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://alphadata.mathew.ch/?p=2855</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Medical equipment like disposable suits, hand sanitisers, face masks, respirators for air purification and gloves will be subject to zero-rated value-added tax (VAT) in the UAE. A resolution stipulating this was adopted by the UAE Cabinet on Tuesday to mitigate the repercussions of Covid-19 and support the healthcare sector in the country. His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, chaired the meeting at Qasr Al Watan in Abu&#8230;]]></description>
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					<div class="elementor-text-editor elementor-clearfix"><p>Medical equipment like disposable suits, hand sanitisers, face masks, respirators for air purification and gloves will be subject to zero-rated value-added tax (VAT) in the UAE. A resolution stipulating this was adopted by the UAE Cabinet on Tuesday to mitigate the repercussions of Covid-19 and support the healthcare sector in the country.</p><p>His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, chaired the meeting at Qasr Al Watan in Abu Dhabi. He hosted virtually a number of teaching staff and students from different schools in the UAE. In a video and photos posted on his social media handles, he can be seen interacting with the students and teachers while they were in their classrooms.</p><p>Sheikh Mohammed said the UAE&#8217;s achievements are based on education. &#8220;Our accomplishments and progress since the foundation of our beloved country started from schools. With education, we shall continue our journey towards the future.&#8221;</p><p>He stressed that education has always been a top priority. &#8220;The country exerts unwavering efforts to develop the educational system despite all circumstances,&#8221; he said. &#8220;The previous school year is the best example of the strength of our educational system and its ability to continue without interruption in the most difficult circumstances.&#8221;</p><p>He was referring to the fact that education went online as in-person classes were suspended in March as a precautionary measure against the spread of Covid-19. Physical schooling resumed on August 30 after the summer break.</p><p>During the meeting, the cabinet approved a sponsorship policy in the federal government. It identifies the guidelines for accepting sponsorship and donations and ensures that all sponsorships are consistent with the entity&#8217;s strategic direction, core values and brand attributes. The policy aims to unify the procedures and provide all government entities with underlying principles when cooperating with stakeholders.</p><p>The cabinet has also approved a federal law amending some provisions of the law regulating the notary public profession. The new law aims to employ advanced technologies and to conduct all notarisation requests and services remotely.</p><p>The cabinet issued a resolution on the implementing regulations of the federal law concerning Medically-Assisted Reproduction. The resolution underlines the objectives of the law, responsibilities of the licensed fertilisation centres, licensing requirements, genetic testing and requirements for gamete handling and storage.</p></div>
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