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Moving from Canada to UAE — Tax-Free Move

The Canada-to-UAE move offers significant tax savings for high earners — but Canada's "deemed resident" rules and departure tax make it more complex than simply buying a plane ticket. This guide ex...

March 2026 3 min read
Moving from Canada to UAE — Tax-Free Move

Target keyword: Canada to UAE relocation tax Category: Relocation Crossover TLDR: The Canada-to-UAE move offers significant tax savings for high earners — but Canada's "deemed resident" rules and departure tax make it more complex than simply buying a plane ticket. This guide explains the full picture.

The Canada-UAE Tax Differential

TaxCanadaUAE
Federal income tax15–33%0%
Provincial income tax4–25.75% (varies by province)0%
Combined top rateOntario: 53.53%; Quebec: 53.31%; BC: 53.50%0%
Corporate tax26.5% (combined federal + provincial)0–9%
Capital gains50% inclusion rate (effective ~26%)0%
Dividend tax (eligible)~38% effective (gross-up + dividend credit)0%

For a Canadian business owner earning CAD 500,000/year, moving to the UAE saves approximately CAD 200,000–$250,000 in annual tax.

Breaking Canadian Tax Residency — The Hard Part

The CRA (Canada Revenue Agency) uses a residential ties approach to determine tax residency. You are a Canadian tax resident if you have significant residential ties to Canada:

  • Primary ties (most important):
  • A home in Canada (owned or leased) available for your use
  • A spouse or common-law partner who remains in Canada
  • Dependants (children) remaining in Canada
  • Secondary ties:
  • Canadian bank accounts
  • Canadian driver's licence
  • Canadian vehicle registration
  • Canadian health insurance card
  • Club memberships
  • Professional licences in Canada

To break Canadian residency: Cut all primary ties. Secondary ties alone are less significant, but the more you cut, the clearer your non-residency.

Critical: The CRA sends questionnaires to departing residents (NR73 or NR74). Complete these accurately. The CRA actively audits claimed non-residents who return to Canada frequently.

Departure Tax (Canadian Exit Tax)

On the day you become a non-resident, Canada deems you to have disposed of all your property at fair market value. This triggers capital gains on unrealised appreciation of:

  • Shares (public and private company)
  • Mutual funds and ETFs
  • Real property outside Canada
  • Partnership interests
  • Not subject to deemed disposition:
  • Canadian real estate (remains taxable as Taxable Canadian Property even after departure)
  • Registered accounts (RRSP, RRIF, TFSA) — no deemed disposition but different rules

Planning: Get a professional valuation of your shareholdings before departure. Consider whether to trigger gains (and pay at current Canadian rates) vs emigrating with potentially lower US/UAE rates in future.

Setting Up in the UAE

  • Once Canadian residency is broken, the UAE setup follows the standard process:
  • Choose free zone (IFZA, DMCC, RAKEZ based on business type)
  • Form company
  • Get residence visa
  • Open UAE bank account (Canadian passport is well-received by UAE banks)
  • Emirates NBD and FAB are accessible for Canadians

The TFSA Problem

Your Tax-Free Savings Account (TFSA) loses its tax-free status the moment you become a non-resident. Contributions as a non-resident attract a 1% monthly penalty tax. Withdraw or stop contributing to your TFSA before leaving.

Your RRSP remains tax-sheltered, but withdrawals while non-resident attract 25% non-resident withholding tax (potentially reduced by treaty to 15% for periodic payments).

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This content is educational and does not constitute legal or tax advice. Always consult a qualified professional for your specific situation. Data last verified March 2026.