- Excess recoverable input VAT must be claimed or refunded within five years; unclaimed balances expire with no extensions.
- The change impacts cash flow, balance sheet accuracy, and tax risk, especially for businesses registered since 2018 or with complex supply chains.
- Businesses should review historical VAT periods, quantify unclaimed VAT, assess anti-evasion risk, prioritize claims by expiry, and ensure proper documentation.
- Common mistakes include assuming indefinite claim periods, poor reconciliation, ignoring supplier risk, and delaying action.
- Professional VAT advisory is crucial for efficient recovery, audit risk reduction, and compliance under stricter rules; the final deadline for 2018-2020 VAT is 31 December 2026, and expired VAT cannot be reinstated.
Source: acme-group.me
Note that this post was (partially) written with the help of AI. It is always useful to review the original source material, and where needed to obtain (local) advice from a specialist.
Latest Posts in "United Arab Emirates"
- UAE’s New 5-Year VAT Refund Rule: Why Delayed Claims Threaten Business Cash Flow
- Six Essential Steps for UAE Businesses to Comply with the New VAT ‘Should Have Known’ Rule
- Comarch Featured on EmaraTax: UAE e-Invoicing Integration and Compliance for July 2026 Deadline
- UAE Cabinet Decision on Violations and Penalties for Electronic Invoicing System Compliance
- UAE e-Invoicing: Comarch Featured on the EmaraTax Portal













