UAE businesses need records that explain every material sale, purchase, payment, asset, liability and owner transaction. Bookkeeping captures those entries; accounting turns them into financial statem
UAE businesses need records that explain every material sale, purchase, payment, asset, liability and owner transaction. Bookkeeping captures those entries; accounting turns them into financial statements; tax records support Corporate Tax and VAT positions; management reporting helps decisions. The same evidence can also help a bank understand the company's business model and transaction activity.
Important: Retention periods and document requirements differ by tax and transaction. Preserve original support and obtain professional review where classification is uncertain.
Corporate Tax uses financial statements as the starting point for taxable income. VAT returns depend on correctly classified supplies, imports and recoverable input tax. Banks also compare account activity with the stated business profile.
These concepts are related but distinct:
Records should be detailed enough to move from a return or financial-statement line back to the underlying transaction.
Maintain sales invoices, VAT tax invoices, credit notes, contracts, quotations, purchase orders, delivery evidence, customer statements and revenue-recognition support.
For cross-border trade, retain customs declarations, shipping documents, proof of export and Incoterms or delivery terms. Zero-rating requires evidence; describing a customer as foreign is not enough.
Keep supplier invoices, VAT invoices, receipts, contracts, approvals, delivery evidence and proof of business purpose. Record credit notes and link them to the original invoice.
Check supplier names and TRNs where relevant, invoice dates, tax amounts, expense category, payment status and the connection to business activity. An accounting entry without supporting evidence may not establish a tax deduction or input-tax recovery.
Reconcile each bank account to the ledger every month. Also reconcile payment gateways, merchant processors, digital wallets and cash balances.
Explain transfers between company accounts, owner funding, loans, refunds and unusual receipts. Do not post unexplained amounts permanently to generic suspense accounts.
This evidence also supports corporate bank-account KYC by showing how actual transactions match the operating model.
Maintain payroll summaries, employment records, expense claims and payment evidence. For assets, keep purchase records, asset registers, depreciation policies, disposal evidence and impairment support.
Track loans, interest, dividends, drawings, capital contributions and shareholder-current accounts separately. Related-party transactions need clear counterparties, agreements and commercial terms.
Inventory businesses should reconcile purchases, sales, stock movements, write-offs and physical counts.
| Record | Accounting use | Corporate Tax use | VAT use | Bank KYC use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sales invoice | Revenue entry | Income support | Output VAT and supply classification | Customer and flow evidence |
| Supplier invoice | Expense or asset | Deduction support | Input-tax review | Supplier evidence |
| Bank statement | Cash balance | Payment and receipt trace | Payment support | Transaction history |
| Contract | Revenue or commitment | Business purpose and related-party terms | Place and nature of supply | Operating model |
| Asset register | Depreciation | Tax adjustments | Capital-asset review | Substance evidence |
| Payroll | Staff cost | Deduction and connected-person review | Limited VAT relevance | Employee substance |
| VAT working | Tax control | Indirect-tax reconciliation | Return support | Compliance evidence |
| CT reconciliation | Tax provision | Taxable-income support | Not a VAT calculation | Financial governance |
Corporate Tax records generally require seven-year retention after the relevant tax period. The Tax Procedures Executive Regulation generally provides a five-year baseline for Taxable Person records unless another Tax Law states otherwise, with extensions for disputes, audits or late voluntary disclosures (Cabinet Decision No. 74 of 2023).
The records feed Corporate Tax registration, the first Corporate Tax return, VAT threshold monitoring and the VAT filing checklist.
A bank may request statements, financial statements, invoices, contracts, customer and supplier information, source-of-funds records and expected transaction details. Bookkeeping does not guarantee onboarding, but clean records make the business easier to explain.
Banking and tax classifications are not identical. A transaction can be commercially understandable to a bank yet require a separate tax adjustment, or be correctly taxed while still triggering bank questions.
No. It proves cash movement but usually not the transaction's nature, VAT treatment or business purpose.
No. The core principles are shared, but the detailed evidence depends on activity, tax status, legal form and transactions.
Sometimes, but delayed reconstruction increases missing-document, classification and reconciliation risks.
Capitals28 Accounting and Bookkeeping can support monthly transaction recording, reconciliations and evidence organisation for tax and operational reporting. Tax positions and bank decisions remain separately reviewable.
| Destination | Suggested anchor | Placement | Linking purpose |
|---|---|---|---|
| CT-01 | Corporate Tax registration | Tax records | Support registration |
| CT-02 | first Corporate Tax return | Tax records | Support filing |
| CT-03 | VAT threshold monitoring | Tax records | Monitor registration |
| CT-05 | VAT filing checklist | Tax records | Support VAT close |
| BK-01 | corporate bank-account KYC | Reconciliations | Connect banking evidence |
| Service | Capitals28 Accounting and Bookkeeping | Closing | Service bridge |