IFZA is often shortlisted by founders who want a Dubai free zone setup that feels practical, proposal-driven, and cost-effective compared with premium free zones.
The key is to understand what IFZA is genuinely great for, where it can be a mismatch, and how IFZA pricing actually works in the real world: it is usually shaped by your licence type, activity scope, visa plan, and workspace choice.
1) What IFZA is and how their setup process works
IFZA positions its formation flow as a consultation-led process. You share requirements, then you receive a tailored proposal that typically covers:
- the right licence type for your model
- business activities
- visa package
- office solution
This proposal-led approach matters because most pricing confusion happens when founders compare two quotes that assume different visa counts, different activity scope, or different office commitments.
IFZA also supports remote setup steps. In the remote setup process, you will typically see:
- consultation and proposal
- document submission (including UBO information in the application form)
- portal processing and e-legal forms
- MOA/AOA e-signatures
- licence issuance and delivery of incorporation documents
Practical takeaway: if your proposal assumptions are correct, IFZA can feel very fast. If your assumptions are wrong, it gets expensive later through upgrades and amendments.
2) Who IFZA is best for (and who should avoid it)
IFZA is commonly a strong fit for these business models
Consulting and professional services
IFZA’s professional licence route and the ability to keep overhead lean can work well for:
- solo consultants
- coaches and experts
- small service firms
- remote-first service businesses
Best-fit setup profile:
- 0 to 1 visa in year one (or 1 to 2 for small teams)
- clear service scope and clean invoicing
- mostly B2B payments by bank transfer
Agencies and marketing services
IFZA can be a good fit for agencies when the business model is clearly defined as either:
- fee-only services (client pays platforms directly), or
- managed spend (you receive and pay third-party spend)
The second model is not “wrong,” but it increases documentation and banking narrative requirements. If you run managed spend, plan for more questions and more supporting documentation.
SaaS and software businesses
IFZA can be a strong fit for:
- software development and SaaS
- subscription revenue models
- cross-border customers
- remote teams starting with a small visa plan
Best-fit setup profile:
- clean licence activity aligned to software and services
- clear payment flow narrative (subscriptions and billing)
- scalable plan if you will hire
Early-stage e-commerce and online selling
IFZA can work for e-commerce when founders do two things right:
- choose the correct e-commerce or trading related activity scope
- document the payment flow (gateway settlements, marketplace payouts, refunds)
Best-fit setup profile:
- 0 to 2 visas early
- clear supplier and fulfilment story
- realistic plan for scaling visas and workspace later
SMEs who want “Dubai free zone” without premium-zone overhead
IFZA is often shortlisted by founders who want Dubai-based incorporation but prefer a cost band that can start lean.
IFZA may not be the best fit for these scenarios
Facilities-heavy operations from day one
If you need warehousing, industrial space, or heavy operational premises immediately, you should shortlist free zones that are built for facilities economics and have clear facility availability.
Premium footprint seekers
If your top priority is premium ecosystem optics, high-end office infrastructure, and a “brand signal” free zone, a premium Dubai zone may fit better even if it costs more.
High visa counts without a workspace plan
If you will need 4, 6, or more visas soon, IFZA can still work, but only if you plan the workspace and visa scaling pathway upfront. If you start with a lean plan and upgrade under pressure, your total cost increases.
Regulated activities that trigger external approvals
IFZA supports many activities, but some activity categories can trigger additional approvals. If your model is regulated, plan for extra steps, more documentation, and potentially longer timelines.
3) IFZA licences and activities: how to choose correctly
IFZA licence options in plain language
IFZA presents three broad options:
- Professional licence (services and consultancy)
- Commercial licence (trade, import, export, and compliant goods and services)
- Branch registration for foreign incorporated companies
A simple rule:
- If you primarily sell expertise and deliverables as services, start with the professional licence logic.
- If you primarily buy and sell products, start with the commercial licence logic.
The most important rule: activity scope must match invoices
Your activity selection is not a formality. It affects:
- what you can legally invoice for
- how you draft contracts and proposals
- how your bank profile reads
- how often you need amendments later
Use the “invoice line item test”:
- Write 10 invoice line items you will actually use in year one.
- If you need vague wording to make the invoices fit the licence, the scope is wrong.
- Narrow the activity scope until invoices become clean and natural.
Multi-activity setups: useful, but easy to misuse
IFZA highlights flexibility to combine multiple activities under one IFZA licence. The strategic way to use that flexibility is:
- choose one primary activity tied to your real revenue
- add only supporting activities you will use in year one
- avoid piling on unrelated activities “just in case”
Every extra activity can increase:
- quote complexity
- approval checks
- banking narrative confusion
- amendment risk later
4) IFZA pricing: package ranges and what drives the range
You asked for prices in ranges only, with online fact checking.
Important context first:
- IFZA pricing is commonly presented through partner proposals and package options.
- Packages can change due to promotions, inclusions, and visa allocations.
- The right way to plan is to understand pricing layers and then request a like-for-like proposal.
4.1 The biggest pricing drivers
IFZA package pricing typically moves based on:
- Licence type (professional vs commercial)
- Number of visas in your package
- Office or workspace commitment (if included)
- Number of activities and whether any are special approval categories
- Whether you choose multi-year licensing (when available)
4.2 Common 1-year package bands (ranges only)
Based on commonly published market package figures from IFZA-focused advisors and price lists, founders frequently see ranges like:
- 0 visa package: about AED 12,000 to AED 14,000
- 1 visa package: about AED 14,000 to AED 16,500
- 2 visa package: about AED 16,000 to AED 19,000
- 3 visa package: about AED 18,000 to AED 22,000
- 4 visa package: about AED 20,000 to AED 24,000
- 6 visa package: about AED 23,000 to AED 28,000
These are planning ranges, not guarantees. Your final proposal depends on the exact inclusions, office solution, and activity set.
4.3 Office and workspace cost bands (often separate)
Many proposals separate licensing from workspace, or include a minimal workspace option and then charge for upgrades.
Practical planning rule:
- If you need 0 to 1 visa, you can often plan for lean workspace.
- If you need 3+ visas, plan for a larger workspace commitment and a higher cost band.
4.4 Visa processing costs are usually a separate layer
Even when a package includes visa eligibility, the visa processing steps often introduce an additional per-person cost layer such as:
- establishment card or immigration file related items
- entry permit, status change (if applicable), medical, Emirates ID, stamping
- mandatory insurance or protections depending on the structure and term
Plan for per-visa processing costs as a separate band and confirm exactly what is included in your proposal.
4.5 Renewals: plan the second year before you commit
Many founders compare first-year numbers and ignore renewals. Do not.
Your renewal cost is typically driven by:
- licence renewal
- office or workspace renewal
- establishment card renewal (where applicable)
- visa renewals for each person (if you have visas)
Ask for a renewal estimate range at the proposal stage. If a provider cannot explain renewals clearly, treat that as a risk signal.
5) What is usually included vs what is extra
Because IFZA packages vary by partner and by promotion, the safest approach is to separate “what a package often covers” from “what commonly becomes extra.”
Often included in a basic licence package
- company incorporation and licence issuance
- a defined visa quota (0, 1, 2, 3, etc), meaning eligibility rather than full visa processing
- standard incorporation documentation and e-licence issuance
Common extras to confirm before you pay
- visa processing per person (medical and Emirates ID steps included or separate)
- establishment card or immigration file items (and renewals)
- additional activities or activity-related approvals
- office solution upgrades beyond the minimum included option
- amendments later (adding activities, changing shareholders, changing licence type)
The “surprise fee” prevention checklist
Before you pay, request a line-by-line breakdown for:
- first-year total range for your finish line (licence only vs licence plus visas)
- renewal range for year two
- cost and timeline implications if you change activities later
- cost and timeline implications if you add visas later
6) Office and visa planning: how to avoid forced upgrades
If you want predictable costs, do this in order.
Step 1: Lock your year-one visa plan
Pick one:
- 0 to 1 visa
- 1 to 2 visas
- 3 to 5 visas
- 6+ visas
Step 2: Choose the workspace strategy that matches the visa plan
- Lean start: works when visa plan is small and remote-first
- Scalable later: works when you have a realistic upgrade path and budget buffer
- Private office now: best if you know you will hire and need stability
Step 3: Then select activities and licence type
Do not do activities first if you do not know your visa and workspace plan. Many “cheap quotes” are cheap because they quietly assume a minimal workspace and minimal visa plan.
Step 4: Request a like-for-like proposal
A good proposal should state:
- licence type
- activities
- visa quota
- office solution
- inclusions and exclusions
- renewal expectations
7) Timelines: what “fast setup” really means
Timelines are easiest to understand by finish line.
Finish line A: Licence issued
The licence issuance timeline depends on:
- how clean your documents are
- how clear your activity selection is
- whether your shareholder structure is simple or complex
IFZA’s remote setup flow shows the sequence: proposal, documentation, portal processing, e-legal forms, MOA/AOA e-signatures, then licence issuance.
Finish line B: Visas completed
Visa timelines depend on:
- number of visas
- whether applicants are inside or outside the UAE
- scheduling steps (medical and biometrics)
Finish line C: Bank account operational
No free zone can guarantee a bank account outcome.
Bank readiness depends on:
- consistent story across licence activity, website, contracts, invoices, and transaction narrative
- ownership transparency and UBO clarity
- supporting documentation for customers, suppliers, and payment flows
IFZA can be fast on formation, but the speed of becoming fully operational depends on your readiness.
8) Step-by-step IFZA setup (high level)
Here is the high-level flow aligned to IFZA’s published remote setup process.
- Consultation and proposal
- Submit documentation (application form including UBO, passport copy, digital photo, Emirates ID and visa copy for UAE residents)
- Processing and e-legal forms
- MOA/AOA e-signatures
- Licence issuance and incorporation documents
- Establishment card or immigration file steps (if you will apply for visas)
- Visa processing per person (as applicable)
- Operational readiness: contracts, invoice template, website alignment, banking readiness pack
9) Documents checklist: individual vs corporate shareholder
The required documents can vary by case, but IFZA’s remote setup process references core items such as:
- licence application form including UBO
- passport copy
- digital passport photo
- Emirates ID and visa copy for UAE residents
Use this practical readiness checklist.
Individual shareholder
- passport copy
- digital photo
- proof of address (if requested for your case)
- short activity paragraph and business model description
- UBO details and declarations as required
Multiple shareholders
Everything above, plus:
- shareholding split
- signing authority plan
- simple description of roles and responsibilities
Corporate shareholder
Expect more documentation and sometimes longer processing:
- corporate documents for the shareholder entity
- signing authority documents
- ownership chain and UBO information
- jurisdiction-specific attestation or verification, if required
The best practice is to prepare the corporate pack first, then start the setup, not the other way around.
10) Banking readiness for IFZA companies (no guarantees)
Most banking delays come from mismatch, not from the free zone.
Mismatch examples:
- licence activity suggests consulting, but payments look like trading
- website claims broad services outside the licensed scope
- e-commerce refunds and chargebacks are not explained
- supplier and customer geography is unclear
Build a simple bank readiness pack:
- one-page company profile
- contract or proposal template aligned to licence scope
- invoice template aligned to licence scope
- transaction narrative using ranges (monthly volume range, ticket size range)
- customer geography summary and payment flow explanation
- supplier or fulfilment summary where relevant
This is not about trying to look bigger. It is about being consistent, coherent, and defensible.
11) IFZA vs DMCC vs other free zones: when IFZA wins
IFZA often wins when you want:
- Dubai free zone incorporation
- a practical, partner-led proposal experience
- a cost band that can start lean and scale with a plan
- flexibility to combine multiple activities, when used strategically
DMCC or another premium Dubai free zone can win when you want:
- premium footprint optics
- structured office ecosystem
- you already know you will scale headcount and office presence
Other emirate free zones can win when:
- facilities economics matter most (warehousing and industrial needs)
- you want the lowest long-term overhead and do not need Dubai footprint as the primary signal
Also, keep onshore plans realistic. Dubai’s official business portal notes that free zone companies cannot trade directly in the UAE mainland without the relevant licence or a mainland branch pathway.
Why Consultycs ?
IFZA can be a smart move when you set it up to match real operations.
Here is how we make that happen:
1) Business model first, package second
We start with your business model, deliverables, customer geography, and payment flow, then choose the licence scope that actually matches your invoices.
2) Activity scope that reduces future friction
We apply the invoice line item test so your licence scope, contracts, and invoices stay consistent.
3) Visa and workspace planning before you commit
We map your hiring plan to a workspace strategy so you do not pay for rushed upgrades later.
4) Quote breakdowns that prevent surprises
We standardize your inputs and compare proposals like-for-like, including renewal expectations.
5) Banking readiness in parallel
No guarantees, but we help you prepare a clean narrative and documentation pack that reduces avoidable delays.
FAQs
1) How much does IFZA company formation cost?
IFZA proposals vary by licence type, activities, visa plan, and workspace. Commonly published market package ranges often start around AED 12,000 to AED 14,000 for a 0 visa package, and rise as visa quota and office commitments increase.
2) What does an IFZA package usually include?
Most packages are built around the licence and a visa quota. Visa processing steps and government-related processing items can be separate. Always confirm inclusions in writing.
3) Is IFZA good for consulting businesses?
Often yes, especially for solo consultants and small service firms who want a Dubai free zone setup with a lean start and clear service scope.
4) Is IFZA good for agencies?
Yes, if you keep the model clear. Fee-only agencies usually have an easier documentation story than agencies that manage client ad spend and pay third parties.
5) Is IFZA good for e-commerce?
It can be, if your activity scope matches e-commerce operations and you can clearly explain payment flows, settlements, and refunds.
6) Is IFZA good for trading?
IFZA can work for trading when product scope is clean and your supplier documentation is ready. Facilities-heavy trading may fit better in a facilities-oriented free zone.
7) Can I set up an IFZA company remotely?
IFZA’s remote setup process is designed to support remote incorporation steps, subject to case requirements. If you need visas, you should plan for physical presence for medical and biometrics steps.
