
UAE R&D tax credits now allow construction firms to claim up to 50% of qualifying research and development expenditure under the new federal framework.
The new regime, reported by Arabian Business, creates a formal path for construction companies to recover part of the cost of innovation by claiming tax credits tied to qualifying R&D spending and the number of employees involved in those activities. The framework is built so that larger eligible spend and demonstrable employee involvement increase the level of support a firm can unlock.
For contractors, developers and investors the change matters because it can reduce net development cost and improve project cashflow where genuine R&D activities are recorded. That scope covers design innovation, construction methodology testing, new materials trials and other qualifying technical activities, subject to the regime's eligibility rules and supporting evidence requirements.
Max credit
50%
Support linked to
R&D spend & employee count
Qualifying costs
research and development expenditure
Source
Arabian Business
It lets construction firms claim tax credits on qualifying R&D expenditure, with support levels linked to spending and employee involvement and a maximum credit of 50%.
The regime creates an explicit mechanism for reclaiming part of the cost of research and development work undertaken inside a construction business. The official framework ties the level of support to both the amount of qualifying R&D spending and the number of employees engaged in that R&D, and it sets the headline maximum at 50% of qualifying expenditure as reported in the initial coverage.
That design benefits firms that invest in technical innovation because it lowers the net cost of experimentation, but it also raises compliance needs. Firms should expect to document eligible activities, track related payroll or contractor involvement, and prepare for scrutiny on what counts as qualifying R&D if they pursue the 50% ceiling.

Construction firms can unlock support up to a maximum of 50% of qualifying R&D expenditure under the framework reported in the source coverage.
The headline figure to remember is 50%. The level of support below that ceiling will vary because the framework ties support to two factors the report highlights: the amount a firm spends on qualifying R&D and how many employees are involved in R&D activity. That means a firm with higher documented qualifying spend and clear employee involvement can expect a larger share of support, subject to the regime's assessment rules.
Practically that creates a sliding scale of benefit: not every project or activity will reach the 50% cap, but targeted investment in qualifying design, testing or engineering work can materially reduce net project cost. The precise percentage a given firm receives will depend on its qualifying spend profile and employee participation as set out by the regulators.
| Eligibility factor | What it influences | Practical note |
|---|---|---|
| R&D spending | Level of support | Higher qualifying spend increases available credit |
| Number of employees | Level of support | Employee involvement strengthens claims |
"The regime links financial support directly to documented R&D spend and employee involvement, so good record keeping is as important as the technical work itself."
, Binayah Research Team
Companies qualify by proving expenditure is for qualifying R&D activities and by documenting employee involvement, with support levels linked to those elements and a maximum credit of 50%.
Qualification hinges on two practical tests reported in the framework: the nature of the activity and the evidence trail. Activities that test new methods, materials, or engineering solutions are typical examples that could qualify, provided the firm records costs clearly and demonstrates which employees or contractors took part. The number of staff engaged in the activity is part of the formula that influences support, so payroll records, project timesheets and contracts will be key pieces of evidence.
That means companies should align internal systems now to capture qualifying spend and employee time against R&D tasks. Firms that treat R&D as discrete projects with defined budgets and personnel will be better placed to submit claims and to target higher percentages of support up to the 50% ceiling.
Prepare documentation that links costs and personnel directly to the technical objectives of each R&D activity. Without clear records, access to the 50% maximum becomes unlikely.
The practical impact is lower net development cost for projects with qualifying R&D, potentially improving project cashflow and investor returns where firms claim up to 50% on eligible spend.
When a construction company successfully claims credits against qualifying R&D expenditure, its effective cost of innovation falls, which can translate into stronger margins on innovation-led elements of a project. For investors this can mean better risk-adjusted returns on projects that include validated technical development, especially where firms document spend and employee involvement to unlock larger support. The maximum 50% figure is the headline benefit, but most firms will see support scale with the documented R&D intensity of specific projects.
Investors and project sponsors should therefore evaluate development budgets for R&D opportunities that are likely to qualify and insist on proper record keeping. That strategy can shift some project-level economics and make technically ambitious schemes more financially viable, provided compliance and evidence standards are met.

The new UAE R&D tax credit framework offers construction firms a path to reclaim up to 50% of qualifying R&D expenditure, with support explicitly linked to the level of qualifying spend and employee involvement. Firms and investors that identify genuine R&D work and tighten documentation will be best placed to capture the potential cost savings and improve project economics.
Binayah Editorial
Property Market Analyst
Our editorial team researches Dubai's real estate market, tracking DLD data, developer launches, and investment trends to keep buyers and investors informed.
Speak with our analysts about the best opportunities in today's market, free consultation.