
Let’s be honest — if you’re freelancing in Dubai, there’s a good chance some part of you is quietly panicking about money. Not because you’re not talented. Not because you’re not working hard. But because no one ever taught you how to handle this part of the business: the taxes, the forms, the rules, the endless “am I doing this right?” moments.
So here’s a brutally honest list of what many freelancers are going through:
If you’ve nodded at even one of these, please know — you are not alone. I’ve been there. Thousands of freelancers in Dubai are right there with you. And the good news? There’s a way through this that doesn’t involve stress, shame, or scrambling at tax time.
Because nobody tells you the rules clearly. Because the laws changed — first with VAT in 2018, then with Corporate Tax in 2023 — and you didn’t get a memo. Because you’re running a business on your own, often without support.
You’re expected to:
It’s too much. And it’s okay to feel overwhelmed.
But the real reason it feels so hard is this: you’ve been trying to guess your way through something that needs structure.
Once you stop guessing — and set up even a very simple system — everything gets easier.
I’m not going to throw jargon at you. Here’s what I’ve seen work, again and again, for freelancers just like you:
Please, for the love of sanity — stop mixing business and personal expenses. You don’t need a business account at first. Just:
This single change will make tax prep 10x easier.
You don’t need fancy software. A spreadsheet works. Just track:
Update it weekly. Not quarterly. Not “when you remember.” Put 30 minutes on your Friday calendar.
Let’s keep this crystal clear:
Track your revenue every month so you’re not caught off guard.
Your invoice must include:
Using a template or free invoicing tool saves tons of time and mistakes.
The FTA can ask for records from up to 5–7 years ago. That means:
A simple folder system by month/year is enough.
Let’s keep this doable. Here’s how to dig out of the mess and build a system you can actually stick to:
Open a new account for freelance business. Even if you’ve been freelancing a while — start from now. This resets the chaos.
No need to build one from scratch. Use Google Sheets. Create columns for date, description, income, expense, VAT, and notes.
Block 30 minutes each Friday. Log payments and receipts. Reconcile with your bank. Make it a ritual.
Each month, review:
This gives you power. Decisions become clearer.
Use your phone or calendar to track deadlines:
Don’t rely on memory. Set alerts.
Hiring an accountant for 2 hours a year may cost less than one tax fine. Don’t let pride or fear of cost hold you back.
This isn’t just about rules. It’s about how you think about money and your business.
Shift 1: You are not “bad with money.” You just haven’t been taught this yet. That’s different.
Shift 2: Bookkeeping is self-care. Knowing your numbers = less anxiety. Peace of mind is worth 30 minutes a week.
Shift 3: You deserve to feel in control. Even if you’re not making six figures (yet), you still deserve clarity, confidence, and freedom from tax fear.
Here’s what changes once your books are in order:
And when you grow? You’ll already have the structure to support it.
You’re not just avoiding fines. You’re building something solid.