Income Allocation Framework
The France-United Arab Emirates tax treaty allocates taxing rights for residents of each country and prevents double taxation. For individuals and businesses operating between France and the UAE (particularly Dubai), understanding the treaty's allocation rules is critical to tax planning, residence determination, and compliance strategy.
1. Treaty Framework & Application
The France-UAE tax treaty (signed 19 July 1989, in force 1 July 1990, amended by the avenant of 6 December 1993) applies to residents of both countries. It defines residency status using tie-breaker rules when dual residency arises and allocates primary taxing authority for specific income categories. The treaty serves as the binding instrument for eliminating double taxation on the same income.
Scope: The treaty covers salaries, business profits, dividends, interest, royalties, capital gains, real property, pensions, and independent professional services. Each category has specific allocation rules determining which country taxes the income and at what rate. On the French side, the convention applies to income tax (impôt sur le revenu), corporate tax (impôt sur les sociétés), inheritance tax (droits de succession), and the former wealth tax (impôt sur la fortune — now IFI for real estate). This scope is broader than a typical OECD-model income treaty, extending to transfer taxes and wealth taxation.
2. Residency Tie-Breaker Rules
When an individual is resident in both France and the UAE simultaneously, the treaty's tie-breaker hierarchy applies: (i) permanent home, (ii) centre of vital interests, (iii) habitual abode, (iv) nationality. These criteria are applied in hierarchical order; the mutual agreement procedure is a last-resort mechanism, not a fifth tie-breaker criterion. The tie-breaker allocates treaty residency to one state, resolving the conflict created by divergent domestic law definitions. However, the allocation of taxing rights for different categories of income is subsequently determined article by article within the treaty. Since the Loi de finances 2025, Article 4 B CGI expressly contains a treaty-based limitation: a person who meets a French domestic residence criterion cannot nevertheless be regarded as tax-domiciled in France if the applicable double-tax treaty does not treat that person as a French resident. This provision does not replace the factual analysis; it requires applying domestic law first, then the treaty tie-breaker where a genuine dual-residence conflict exists.
3. Income Allocation Categories
Salaries & employment income: Generally taxed where work is performed. An employee posted to the UAE by a French employer is taxed in the UAE on those earnings. French-source employment remains taxable in France.
Business profits: Taxed where the permanent establishment (business location/office) is situated. A French company with a subsidiary in the UAE is taxed in the UAE on profits attributable to that establishment; profits of the French head office are taxed in France.
Dividends: Under Article 8 of the France-UAE convention, dividends are in principle taxable in the state of residence of the beneficial owner, except where the holding is effectively connected with a permanent establishment or fixed base in the other state. This allocation remains favourable; however, since 1 January 2026, Article 119 bis A, II of the French Tax Code provides that French-source dividends paid to residents of a treaty State which exempts them from withholding tax are nonetheless subject to French withholding at the time of payment. The treaty exemption is then obtained by way of a refund, on production of evidence of treaty residence and beneficial ownership — a cash-flow timing effect, not a loss of the treaty benefit.
Capital gains: Generally taxed where the taxpayer resides. Real property gains are taxed where the property is located. Share dispositions are taxed in the seller's residence jurisdiction unless treaty-specific exceptions apply.
Misconception: The treaty does not eliminate all taxes; it allocates taxing rights and defines relief mechanisms (exemption or foreign tax credit). Strategic tax planning is still possible through treaty benefits, timing of transactions, and income classification.