UAE SME cash flow pressure points: VAT — collected from customers but held 28 days before FTA payment; CT — due 9 months after year end (no interim instalments); WPS — payroll must hit the bank 15 days after pay date regardless of whether clients have paid you; free zone audit — auditor fees due before licence renewal. A rolling 13-week cash flow forecast is the single most useful financial tool for UAE SMEs.
UAE cash flow pressure points by month
- Month-end: WPS payroll — Salaries must hit employees’ accounts within 15 days of the agreed pay date. MOHRE checks WPS compliance monthly. If clients are slow to pay, you must still meet payroll — which means maintaining a cash buffer or having a revolving credit facility.
- Quarter-end + 28 days: VAT payment — You have collected 5% VAT on every invoice. That money belongs to the FTA — it is not revenue. The cash sits in your account for up to 3 months (quarterly filer) then leaves in one hit. Many SMEs spend VAT money accidentally and face a cash crisis at filing time.
- 15th of each month: GPSSA remittance — If you employ UAE or GCC nationals, 17.5% of their salary (12.5% employer + 5% employee) leaves your account on the 15th. On top of payroll.
- 9 months after year end: CT payment — UAE CT has no interim instalment regime — the full year’s CT is due with the return, 9 months after year end. For a December 31 year end: full CT liability due September 30. This can be a large lump sum if not budgeted.
Building a 13-week UAE cash flow forecast
1. List all known cash inflows by week
Start with confirmed purchase orders and invoices issued. Apply your actual collection pattern — if 60% of invoices are paid in 30 days and 30% in 60 days, model it that way. Do not assume 100% on-time payment.
2. List all fixed outflows by due date
Rent (post-dated cheques have fixed dates), payroll (WPS date), GPSSA (15th), bank loan repayments, trade licence renewal. These are non-negotiable — they happen regardless of whether clients have paid.
3. List variable outflows
Supplier payments, marketing spend, and professional fees. These can be deferred if cash is tight — mark them as ‘flexible’ in the model.
4. Add VAT and CT provisions
Set aside 5% of every invoice raised into a notional VAT reserve. Calculate your expected CT liability for the year and provision monthly (annual CT / 12).
5. Identify the cash low points
Look for weeks where the balance goes negative or dangerously low. These are the moments to either accelerate collections (early payment discounts, chasing debtors) or delay non-critical payments.
Practical UAE SME cash flow tools
- Separate VAT bank account: The simplest discipline — transfer 5% of every invoice received into a dedicated account labelled ‘VAT’. Never touch it. The balance is the FTA’s money.
- Client payment terms: Move from 60-day to 30-day standard terms where possible. Offer a 2% discount for payment within 7 days on large invoices. The discount cost is less than the bank overdraft cost.
- Revolving overdraft facility: UAE bank overdraft facilities (typically 20–30% of turnover) provide a cash buffer for payroll months when collections are slow. Set this up when the business is healthy — not when cash is already tight.
- Invoice factoring: Several UAE fintech lenders and banks offer invoice discounting — you receive 80–90% of the invoice value immediately, repay when the client pays. Higher cost than a bank facility but no collateral required.
Managing cash flow manually in a spreadsheet?
We prepare monthly management accounts with cash flow forecasts for UAE SMEs. Fixed monthly fee.
Frequently asked questions
Why do UAE B2B companies typically pay on 60–90 day terms?+
UAE B2B payment culture has historically been slow — post-dated cheques (PDCs) are still widely used, and government and large corporate buyers routinely pay 60–90 days after invoice. Some industries (construction, government) stretch to 120+ days. This is the fundamental UAE working capital challenge: you deliver, invoice, then wait 2–3 months for cash while your payroll and rent obligations come monthly.
Can a UAE SME get a bank overdraft?+
Yes — UAE banks offer revolving overdraft facilities (current account overdrafts) typically at 20–30% of the company’s annual turnover, secured by trade receivables or property. Requirements: 12+ months of trading history, audited financials (or management accounts), and a UAE bank account with 6+ months of statements. Interest rate: 7–10% per annum on the drawn amount. Apply before you need it — banks are reluctant to lend to cash-stressed businesses.
What happens if a UAE SME cannot meet WPS payroll?+
If salaries are not submitted through WPS within 15 days of the agreed pay date, MOHRE detects the breach automatically. Fine: AED 5,000 per employee (capped at AED 50,000). Persistent non-compliance leads to new work permit bans, trade licence issues, and potentially a block on future government contracts. There is no grace period — the system is automated.
How should a UAE SME provision for Corporate Tax?+
Divide your estimated annual CT liability by 12 and transfer that amount each month into a dedicated ‘CT reserve’ bank account or sub-account. For a business with AED 1M taxable profit: CT = AED 56,250 per year → provision AED 4,688/month. The reserve grows throughout the year so the September 30 CT payment does not create a cash crisis.