FATCA
Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act
Definition
US tax-information regime that UAE banks apply to detect US persons. Captured at corporate-account onboarding through a FATCA/CRS self-certification alongside other KYC documents.
Also known as
- Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act
Attributes
| Enacted | 2010 |
|---|---|
| Jurisdiction | United States |
| UAE application | UAE banks apply to US-person identification at account onboarding |
| Related framework | CRS |
| Implementation | FATCA/CRS self-certification alongside KYC documents |
What it is
FATCA — the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act — is a US tax-information regime requiring foreign financial institutions to identify US persons holding accounts and report them to the IRS. The UAE signed a Model 1 IGA (Intergovernmental Agreement) with the US, meaning UAE banks report to the UAE Ministry of Finance, which forwards the data to the IRS.
UAE banks request a FATCA self-certification (often combined with CRS) at corporate-account onboarding. Account holders identified as US persons (US citizens, green-card holders, or US-tax-resident entities) face additional reporting and may be subject to W-9 / W-8BEN-E documentation.
Key characteristics
- Origin
- US — Hiring Incentives to Restore Employment (HIRE) Act 2010
- UAE framework
- Model 1 IGA with US (signed 2015)
- Channel
- UAE banks → UAE Ministry of Finance → IRS
- Documents
- Self-certification, W-8BEN-E (entities), W-9 (US persons)
How it works
- A business applies to open a corporate bank account with a UAE bank.
- The bank requests standard KYC documents plus a combined FATCA/CRS self-certification form.
- The company declares its tax residency and identifies any US persons among its beneficial owners or controlling persons.
- The bank reviews the self-certification and may request additional documentation if US indicia are present.
- If the account is reportable under FATCA, the bank submits the required information to the UAE Ministry of Finance annually.
- The UAE Ministry of Finance exchanges this information with the US Internal Revenue Service under the bilateral agreement.
Examples
A Dubai mainland LLC with a US citizen as a 25% shareholder completes FATCA self-certification at Emirates NBD. The bank flags the account as reportable and includes it in its annual FATCA submission to the Ministry of Finance. A DMCC free zone company with no US links submits a negative self-certification and is not reported under FATCA, though it may still be reported under CRS if it has tax residency elsewhere.
Why it matters
Misclassifying FATCA status leads to bank-account freezes and 30% US withholding penalties on certain US-source payments. Get the entity classification right at onboarding.
Common misconceptions
Misconception
FATCA and CRS are the same thing
Reality
FATCA targets US taxpayers specifically; CRS is a separate OECD framework covering multiple jurisdictions' tax residencies. UAE banks collect both on one form but report to different authorities.
Misconception
Only US companies need to complete FATCA
Reality
Any entity with US persons among beneficial owners, controllers, or signatories must declare this status, regardless of the company's own nationality.
Misconception
FATCA only applies to banks
Reality
While banks are the primary reporters, other financial institutions including insurance companies and investment entities in the UAE also have FATCA obligations.
FAQs
- Does FATCA apply to non-US owners of UAE companies?
- Yes if any UBO is a US person (citizen, green-card holder, or US tax resident). UAE banks identify US-person UBOs through self-certifications and report the account holder. Non-US UBOs are reported under CRS to their respective tax-residency country instead.
See also
- CRS(Common Reporting Standard)
- KYC(Know Your Customer)
- Corporate Bank Account















