American Tax in the UAE and Dubai: A Practical Guide for U.S. Expats

A neutral, factual guide explaining how U.S. tax rules apply to Americans living in the UAE and Dubai, including FEIE, FTC, reporting requirements, and investment considerations.

Last Updated On:
December 11, 2025
About 5 min. read
Written By
Tom Pewtress
Head of USA and Private Wealth Partner
Written By
Tom Pewtress
Head of USA and Private Wealth Partner
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This article explains how U.S. tax rules apply to Americans living in the UAE, including FEIE, the Foreign Tax Credit, reporting requirements, and investment considerations in a zero-tax jurisdiction.

What This Guide Helps You Understand

This guide explains how U.S. tax rules apply to Americans living in the UAE, a jurisdiction with no personal income tax. After reading, you will understand:

  • Why U.S. tax filing still applies even when living in a 0 percent tax country
  • How the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) works for UAE-sourced employment income
  • When the Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) may or may not be available in a no-tax jurisdiction
  • How investment income, dividends, rental income, and capital gains are taxed under U.S. rules
  • Whether self-employed individuals owe U.S. self-employment tax while living in the UAE
  • Why PFIC rules may apply to foreign-domiciled funds offered by UAE platforms
  • What forms U.S. expats must file when holding foreign accounts
  • How U.S. retirement accounts behave while residing in Dubai or Abu Dhabi
  • What the absence of a U.S.–UAE tax treaty means for pension income and withholding
  • Why multi-country investments and global income may require separate U.S. reporting

This guide is educational in nature and does not constitute personalised financial, tax, or legal advice.

Introduction - Why U.S. Tax Filing Still Applies When Living in a No-Tax Country

Many Americans move to the United Arab Emirates (UAE) or Dubai for its attractive employment market, lifestyle, and 0% personal income tax environment. While the absence of local taxation simplifies certain aspects of financial life, U.S. citizens remain subject to U.S. tax rules on worldwide income, regardless of where they reside.

This creates unique interactions for individuals living in a country that:

  • does not impose tax on employment income,
  • does not tax investment income at the individual level,
  • does not apply capital gains tax, and
  • does not impose wealth or inheritance tax in the manner some countries do.

As a result, U.S. expats in the UAE often have questions such as:

  • Do I still need to file a U.S. tax return?
  • How does the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) apply?
  • What if I receive income from multiple countries?
  • Does living in a no-tax jurisdiction change my U.S. tax obligations?
  • Are there any double-tax treaties between the U.S. and UAE?
  • How do I manage international investments while avoiding U.S. tax complications?

This guide provides a neutral, factual overview of U.S. tax considerations for Americans living in the UAE. It is not tax advice, and tax outcomes vary based on personal circumstances, income sources, and residency status.

U.S. Tax Filing Obligations for Americans Living in the UAE

Regardless of where you live, U.S. citizens and U.S. tax residents must:

  • File an annual U.S. tax return
  • Report worldwide income
  • Report foreign financial accounts (FBAR) if thresholds apply
  • Report foreign assets on Form 8938 if thresholds apply
  • Follow U.S. rules for investment reporting
  • Report foreign pension participation (when applicable)
  • Continue to follow U.S. retirement account rules

The UAE has no personal income tax, but this does not alter U.S. reporting obligations.

Key points:

  • Living in Dubai or Abu Dhabi does not eliminate U.S. tax filing
  • Income earned in the UAE is still reportable on a U.S. return
  • Additional reporting may be required depending on your accounts and holdings

Tax owed depends on whether exclusions or credits apply.Many individuals living in the UAE use FEIE, FTC, or a combination of both for their U.S. return.

The Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) for Individuals in the UAE

FEIE allows qualifying individuals to exclude a portion of foreign earned income from U.S. taxation.

FEIE applies to earned income only, such as:

  • salaries
  • wages
  • certain self-employment income (with considerations)

FEIE does NOT apply to:

  • dividends
  • interest
  • capital gains
  • rental income
  • pension income
  • investment income
  • business profits without earned income components

FEIE has two primary qualification methods:

  1. Physical Presence Test
  2. Bona Fide Residence Test

Many U.S. expats in the UAE qualify under the Physical Presence Test, which requires a certain number of days spent outside the U.S. over a 12-month period.

FEIE reduces U.S. taxable income but does not eliminate:

  • self-employment tax (for self-employed individuals)
  • reporting obligations
  • tax on passive income

Because the UAE imposes no tax on personal income, UAE-based Americans may rely heavily on FEIE.

However, FEIE may affect eligibility for retirement account contributions.FEIE-excluded income is generally not considered eligible compensation for IRA or Roth IRA contributions.

Using the Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) in a No-Tax Jurisdiction

FTC allows individuals to offset U.S. taxes with foreign tax paid.

However:

  • The UAE has no personal income tax
  • Therefore, many individuals do not pay foreign income tax that could generate FTC
  • FTC may still apply for individuals with income taxed in another country

For example:

  • U.S. dividends may be subject to foreign withholding tax in certain cases
  • Rental properties in foreign countries may produce foreign tax
  • Employment income taxed under a different country’s system may create FTC opportunities

Many expatriates in the UAE use FEIE for employment income and FTC for passive income taxed in other jurisdictions.

Are There Any U.S.–UAE Tax Treaties?

There is no bilateral income tax treaty between the U.S. and the UAE.

This means:

  • No treaty-based reduction of U.S. withholding on certain income
  • No treaty provisions allocating pension taxation rights
  • No tie-breaker residency rules
  • No special provisions for capital gains
  • No treaty relief for double taxation on employment income

However:

  • A U.S.–UAE bilateral information exchange agreement exists (FATCA-related)
  • The absence of a treaty means standard U.S. rules generally apply

Because the UAE imposes no income tax, the absence of an income tax treaty does not typically create double-taxation issues on UAE-sourced wages.

U.S. Reporting Requirements for Expats Living in the UAE

Individuals living in the UAE may have multiple reporting obligations depending on accounts and assets.

1. Form 1040 - U.S. Tax Return

Required annually regardless of residency.

2. FinCEN Form 114 (FBAR)

Required if foreign financial accounts exceed $10,000 aggregate at any point during the year.

May include:

  • UAE bank accounts
  • foreign brokerage accounts
  • company accounts where the individual has signing authority

3. FATCA Form 8938

Required if foreign assets exceed certain thresholds (varies based on filing status and residency).

4. Form 8621 (PFIC reporting)

Required if the individual holds foreign-domiciled pooled investments that meet PFIC criteria.

This may apply to:

  • foreign mutual funds
  • UCITS ETFs
  • certain insurance-linked investment products

5. Form 3520 / 3520-A (if applicable)

May apply in certain situations involving foreign trusts or specific investment vehicles.

Individuals often focus on UAE accounts, but accounts in other countries (UK, Singapore, Hong Kong, Europe, Australia) may also trigger reporting obligations.

Investment Considerations for U.S. Expats in the UAE

Because the UAE does not impose investment tax at the personal level, individuals often evaluate how foreign investment structures interact with U.S. rules.

1. U.S.-Domiciled Investments

U.S.-domiciled investments:

  • follow U.S. tax rules
  • avoid PFIC classification
  • integrate with IRAs and Roth IRAs
  • are often preferred for U.S. reporting simplicity

2. Foreign-Domiciled Funds May Require PFIC Evaluation

Many UAE-based investment platforms offer global funds that may be foreign-domiciled.

PFIC rules may apply, depending on the structure.

Individuals often review:

  • fund domicile
  • underlying investment structure
  • reporting capabilities
  • tax obligations under U.S. rules

3. Multi-Currency Considerations

Even when using U.S.-domiciled investments, individuals may incorporate:

  • USD
  • AED (pegged to USD)
  • EUR
  • GBP
  • CAD
  • AUD

Currency planning may matter for long-term goals, even in a currency-stable environment like the UAE.

4. Access to U.S. Brokers

Some U.S. custodians:

  • allow accounts with UAE addresses
  • restrict certain trading activities based on local licensing rules
  • may request periodic documentation updates
  • may limit access to certain securities

Policies vary by custodian and may change over time.

Tax Considerations for U.S. Expats Earning Income in the UAE

Because the UAE does not impose income tax on wages, many individuals rely primarily on FEIE to manage U.S. tax liability.

Important considerations:

Self-employment tax may still apply

Even when FEIE excludes income from U.S. taxation, self-employment tax is separate.

Retirement contributions depend on U.S.-taxable income

Individuals using FEIE may have reduced eligibility to contribute to:

Roth IRAs

Traditional IRAs

Certain employer benefits may be treated differently

Housing allowances, cost-of-living benefits, and travel allowances may be subject to U.S. rules.

U.S. tax still applies to:

  • investment income
  • dividends
  • capital gains
  • interest
  • rental income
  • passive income
  • certain pension distributions

Considerations for Individuals With Investments or Income From Other Countries

U.S. expats in the UAE often:

  • own property abroad
  • hold investments in additional countries
  • receive income from previous employers
  • maintain retirement accounts across jurisdictions
  • have multi-currency income streams

This can trigger:

  • multiple reporting obligations,
  • eligibility for FTC if foreign tax is paid elsewhere,
  • FX considerations for long-term financial planning.

For example:

  • UK dividends may be taxed in the UK
  • Singapore rental income may trigger local tax
  • EU employment may create foreign tax credits
  • Australian Superannuation may interact differently with U.S. rules

Understanding these interactions is important.

No U.S.–UAE Tax Treaty: Key Implications

Without an income tax treaty:

U.S. statutory withholding rules apply

(e.g., certain pension withdrawals)

No treaty mechanism exists for allocating pension taxation rights

U.S. rules govern U.S.-source income.

No treaty guidance for double taxation

This is mostly relevant when individuals receive income taxed in third countries.

Capital gains are taxed under standard U.S. rules

U.S. capital gains tax applies regardless of UAE residency.

IRS residency tie-breakers do not apply

The UAE does not have a treaty article for this purpose.

401(k), IRA, Roth IRA Considerations While Living in the UAE

Individuals may keep their 401(k) after relocating

Servicing limitations depend on provider policies.

Rollovers to IRAs follow standard U.S. rules

Suitability depends on fees and long-term planning.

Roth contributions require U.S.-taxable earned income

FEIE-excluded income does not count.

Roth conversions do not require earned income

Conversions create U.S.-taxable income; local tax treatment varies.

PFIC considerations do not apply inside U.S. retirement accounts

401(k)s, Traditional IRAs, Roth IRAs hold U.S.-domiciled assets.

Hypothetical Case Studies (Illustrative Only)

These examples are educational and do not represent actual clients or outcomes.

Example 1 - U.S. Employee Living in Dubai

Profile:

  • Earns salary in AED
  • Receives no foreign tax documents
  • Holds a U.S.-domiciled portfolio

Considerations:

  • FEIE may reduce U.S.-taxable earned income
  • Cannot rely on FTC for income earned in UAE
  • U.S. investment income remains taxable
  • Multi-currency planning depends on future residency

Example 2 - U.S. Citizen With Global Investments

Profile:

  • Lives in the UAE
  • Owns property in Europe
  • Receives dividends from UK investments

Considerations:

  • FTC may apply to foreign tax paid in the UK
  • FEIE may apply to UAE-sourced wages
  • PFIC evaluation may be required for some non-U.S. pooled funds

Example 3 - Self-Employed Consultant in Abu Dhabi

Profile:

  • Earns consulting income
  • Uses FEIE
  • Has no U.S.-taxable earned income

Considerations:

  • self-employment tax may still apply
  • Roth contributions may not be possible
  • Roth conversions remain available

Example 4 - Globally Mobile Family

Profile:

  • Lives in UAE today
  • May relocate to Europe later

Considerations:

  • Understanding future residency helps plan investment structure
  • Long-term tax treatment depends on eventual location
  • Currency planning may evolve over time

Checklist for U.S. Expats Filing From the UAE

  • File annual U.S. tax return
  • Understand FEIE eligibility
  • Review passive income for U.S. tax treatment
  • Confirm reporting obligations (FBAR, FATCA)
  • Review whether FTC applies for foreign tax paid elsewhere
  • Review investment structures for PFIC considerations
  • Understand IRA and Roth IRA eligibility
  • Plan based on long-term residency goals
  • Maintain U.S.-compliant records for financial accounts

How Skybound Wealth Management USA Supports U.S. Expats

Skybound USA provides educational guidance and support with:

  • evaluating U.S. retirement account options
  • analysing FEIE and FTC considerations in coordination with tax professionals
  • PFIC-aware investment structuring
  • identifying U.S.-domiciled investment options
  • multi-currency and long-term planning
  • global asset allocation considerations
  • retirement modelling using MoneyMap

Conflict Disclosure:

Skybound USA may receive compensation for assets managed under advisory programs. Individuals should review all available options before engaging any strategy.

Next Steps

If you wish to understand how U.S. tax rules apply to your financial situation while living in the UAE or Dubai, you may schedule a discussion with Skybound Wealth Management USA to review your circumstances.

Key Points To Remember

  • The UAE does not tax personal income, but U.S. citizens must still file U.S. tax returns and report worldwide income.
  • FEIE is commonly used by U.S. expats in the UAE because no foreign tax is paid to support FTC.
  • FTC may apply to income from other countries, but not typically to UAE wages.
  • FEIE applies only to earned income and does not cover dividends, interest, capital gains, or rental income.
  • FEIE-excluded income generally cannot be used for Roth or Traditional IRA contribution eligibility.
  • Self-employed individuals may still owe U.S. self-employment tax even when using FEIE.
  • Foreign-domiciled pooled funds may trigger PFIC reporting for U.S. taxpayers.
  • U.S. retirement accounts such as 401(k)s, IRAs, and Roth IRAs remain governed by U.S. rules while living abroad.
  • There is no U.S.–UAE income tax treaty, so standard U.S. statutory rules apply.
  • Reporting obligations such as FBAR or FATCA may apply depending on foreign account values.

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Written By
Tom Pewtress
Head of USA and Private Wealth Partner

Tom Pewtress is a fee-based fiduciary adviser and Head of USA at Skybound Wealth USA. He helps U.S. citizens, dual-nationals and internationally mobile families manage their financial lives across borders. Tom specialises in U.S. retirement accounts, 401(k) and IRA decisions, Roth strategies, tax-aware investing and long-term planning for globally mobile households.

Disclosure

This material is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute personalised financial, tax, or legal advice.

Tax rules vary by jurisdiction and may change.

Hypothetical examples do not represent actual clients or outcomes.

Past performance is not indicative of future results.

Skybound Wealth Management USA, LLC is an SEC-registered investment adviser; registration does not imply a certain level of skill or training.

Please refer to Form ADV Part 2A, Part 2B, and Form CRS for complete disclosures.

Discuss Your U.S. Tax and Financial Planning While Living in the UAE

If you are living in Dubai or Abu Dhabi, understanding how U.S. tax rules apply is an important part of managing your global finances. A complimentary session with Skybound Wealth USA can help you understand the high-level considerations.

During this session, we can:

  • Explain how FEIE works for UAE-sourced employment income
  • Review why FTC is often limited in a zero-tax jurisdiction
  • Outline reporting requirements such as FBAR, Form 8938, or PFIC reporting
  • Discuss how rental, investment, or multi-country income is treated by the IRS
  • Review IRA, Roth IRA, and 401(k) considerations for U.S. expats in the UAE
  • Highlight how future relocation plans may influence long-term planning
  • Explore investment options that remain compliant with U.S. rules
  • Coordinate with tax professionals where detailed tax analysis is required

This session is obligation-free and focused on helping you make informed decisions. Book your complimentary discussion today.

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