In 2025, Estonia taxes only distributed profits (22/78) and requires real economic substance. Dubai offers a 0% corporate tax rate for free zones, but under strict conditions and ESR compliance. Let’s compare both jurisdictions to help you grow your business legitimately and efficiently.
1) The Common Mistake: Confusing “Paying Less” With “Paying Smart”

The key question is not where you pay 0%, but where your structure can withstand audits from banks, tax authorities, and regulators (OECD/BEPS, EU AML directives). In 2025, international compliance revolves around two words: economic substance and traceability.
Smart tax optimization is about building structures that work — not just look good on paper.
2) Estonia: Fiscal Efficiency With European Legitimacy

When do you pay?
Only when profits are distributed. As of 2025, the Corporate Income Tax (CIT) rate is 22%, technically calculated as 22/78 of the net amount distributed.
In simple terms, that means reinvested profits remain tax-free, and you only pay 22% when you take dividends. This model has positioned Estonia among the world’s most efficient jurisdictions for corporate reinvestment and business scaling.
What does Estonia require?
A real management presence, local accounting, and genuine operations — the e-Residency alone is not enough.
Practical advantages:
- Full EU reputation, digital end-to-end management, and seamless access to the European market — perfect for startups, entrepreneurs, and tech-driven companies.
Estonia allows you to defer taxation while reinvesting profits, preserving liquidity and growth, without risking being classified as a “shell company.”
3) Dubai: 0% — If You Do Everything Right

The UAE corporate tax rate is 9%, but there’s an exception for companies registered in free zones that meet strict criteria. These are called Qualifying Free Zone Persons (QFZPs), eligible for the 0% rate, provided they:
- Conduct qualifying activities within the zone,
- Maintain economic substance (office, employees, and management presence), and
- Avoid doing business directly with the UAE mainland.
Fail to meet these requirements, and your rate immediately jumps to 9%.
Economic Substance (ESR)
Every free zone company must prove real substance (a physical office, hired staff, and management presence within the UAE) as required by the Economic Substance Regulations.
Compliance and Reputation (AML)
Although the UAE was removed from the FATF Grey List in February 2024 and from the EU High-Risk AML list in July 2025, banks still apply strict due diligence procedures. Even with an improved reputation, opening or maintaining bank accounts remains challenging without proper documentation.
Dubai’s famous “0% tax” is neither automatic nor free — it requires a real structure, ongoing compliance, and fixed annual costs to maintain the benefit.
4) Colombian Residents: Important Considerations

If you are a Colombian tax resident, the DIAN may apply Controlled Foreign Company (CFC) rules or assess economic substance if you operate a foreign company without real activity.
Choosing a foreign jurisdiction does not exempt you from Colombian tax obligations when there is control or a local beneficial owner. That’s why structuring properly from the start is essential to avoid double taxation and penalties.