What Killed the Middle
Three regulatory changes converged. First, the introduction of corporate tax transformed company formation from a one-time transaction into an ongoing compliance relationship. Clients who previously needed a formation agent for a week now need a tax adviser for years. Second, AML enforcement tightened — DNFBP obligations now require corporate service providers to implement proper compliance programmes, conduct customer due diligence and file suspicious transaction reports. Third, the Companies Law amendments strengthened director-duty standards, making informal nominee arrangements legally riskier.
These changes create a regulatory moat around licensed providers. A TCSP licence requires capital, compliance infrastructure, professional indemnity insurance and ongoing regulatory oversight. Unlicensed providers cannot legally offer fiduciary services, trust administration or nominee appointments — and the gap between what they can offer and what clients need is widening.
What Replaces It
The market is moving toward two models. Large multinationals (TMF Group, Vistra, Trident) offer global infrastructure and institutional processes at institutional pricing — with institutional distance between client and adviser. Licensed boutiques offer principal-led service, regulatory authority and deep jurisdictional expertise — but with limited scale.
For clients, the choice is not about size. It is about what your structure requires. If you need a nominee director, a trustee, a registered agent or ongoing corporate secretarial — you need a licensed provider. If you need someone to fill out a form, a consultant will do. The question is whether you are building a structure that requires regulatory authority behind it.
Related Insights
Mandatory Employee Health Insurance in the UAE: Employer Obligations and ComplianceHealth insurance for employees is mandatory across all UAE emirates. We outline the current regulatory requirements, emp... Choosing the Right Corporate Structure in the UAE: A Legal Framework GuideLLC, free zone company, branch, SPV, holding company — the UAE offers numerous entity types across multiple jurisdiction... UAE Corporate Tax: What Free Zone Companies Need to Know About QFZP StatusWith the UAE corporate tax regime now in its second year of application, free zone companies face a critical compliance ...What the Traditional Model Looks Like — And Why It Doesn't Survive 2026 Regulation
The legacy UAE company-formation model — agents reselling a free-zone licence for AED 12,000, a flexi-desk for AED 4,000, a residence visa for AED 7,000, and disappearing the moment the licence issues — has been an extraordinarily profitable category for two decades. It survives on volume, churn, and an implicit promise that compliance "won't catch up." That premise was tenable when the UAE had no corporate tax, no UBO register, no ESR, no transfer pricing rules and no FATF grey-list pressure. None of those conditions hold in 2026. The traditional CSP is a wasting asset.
What Killed It — Five Specific Changes
| Regulatory change | Impact on traditional CSP | Year |
|---|---|---|
| DNFBP regime under FATF | Mandatory goAML, written risk assessments, sanctions screening | 2018 onwards |
| Economic Substance Regulations | Substance, board meetings, employees required for many entities | 2019 onwards |
| UBO register | Mandatory beneficial-owner disclosure with 15-day update obligation | 2020 onwards |
| Corporate tax (CT) | Tax registration, return, transfer pricing, accounting standards | 2023 onwards |
| TCSP licensing under MoE | Trust and Corporate Service Provider activities require a specific licence | 2020 onwards |
Where the Money Goes Now
The economics have shifted. Setup is a low-margin activity — fees compressed by online comparison, free zones competing aggressively on package price, and the regulatory baseline rising. The margin sits in the ongoing relationship: corporate secretarial, accounting, tax filing, payroll, transfer pricing, UBO maintenance, ESR reporting, banking liaison, visa renewals. A client whose licence costs AED 15,000 to set up consumes AED 25,000–60,000 of compliance services per year — and the firm that captured the initial fee is rarely the firm with the licensing or the substance to deliver the ongoing work. The market is bifurcating between commodity setup and licensed advisory.
Why "Licensed" Now Matters Materially
The Ministry of Economy's TCSP licensing regime requires firms acting as trustees, nominees, registered agents or corporate service providers to hold a specific licence and meet ongoing supervisory standards. As of mid-2026, the population of licensed TCSPs is a small fraction of the population of firms holding themselves out as corporate service providers. Clients with material structures — fiduciary arrangements, foundations, multi-entity holdings — face a real legal risk if their service provider is operating outside the licensing regime. Mis-selling, unauthorised activity and AML breaches are direct liabilities of the client as well as the unauthorised provider.
What the Replacement Model Looks Like
The licensed-advisory model that is replacing the traditional CSP looks structurally different. Principal-led engagement rather than call-centre triage. A documented advisory process before licence issuance — jurisdiction selection, entity-type analysis, banking strategy, tax modelling. A regulated TCSP licence carrying personal liability for the principals. Ongoing services (accounting, tax, secretarial, fiduciary) operated from the same firm rather than handed off to a third party. Transparent recurring fees rather than hidden annual creep. The arithmetic suits the client: a single relationship managing the full lifecycle is cheaper, less risky and far more accountable than a shifting set of unregulated providers.
An Honest Statement of Position
Polaris is a licensed TCSP. We do not compete on setup price with online comparison sites — and we do not pretend the price difference between us and an unregulated formation agent is small. The difference is the licence, the regulatory accountability, the integrated service stack and the principal engagement model. For clients whose structures are small, transactional and short-lived, an unregulated agent may suffice. For clients building structures that need to survive an FTA audit, an ESR inspection, an AML supervisory visit, a bank's annual KYC review and the eventual succession — the licensed-advisory model is not a luxury, it's the cost of doing real business in the modern UAE.
- Traditional formation-agent model survived on volume and a regulatory void that no longer exists.
- Five waves — DNFBP, ESR, UBO, CT, TCSP licensing — have hollowed out the setup-only economics.
- Margin has shifted from setup to ongoing compliance; firms without ongoing capability lose the relationship.
- TCSP licensing matters: clients of unlicensed providers carry their own AML and substance risk.
- The replacement is a licensed-advisory model with principal engagement and integrated services.
Polaris Perspective
Polaris is a licensed TCSP — authorised to perform fiduciary functions that unlicensed providers cannot. Every client works directly with the founding principals.
Arrange a Consultation →