Do I still pay UK tax after moving to Dubai?

In shortUsually not on UK employment income once you're genuinely UK non-resident — but moving doesn't switch it off by itself. Your UK tax liability ends when you break UK tax residency under the Statutory Residence Test (SRT), typically using split-year treatment in your departure year. Some UK-sourced income (rent, certain pensions) can still be taxed here.

The plane ticket isn’t what matters. HMRC doesn’t care that you’ve physically moved — it cares whether you still count as UK tax resident. Get that right and Dubai’s 0% personal income tax works in your favour; get it wrong and you can end up taxed in both places.

When does my UK tax actually stop?

When you stop being UK tax resident under the Statutory Residence Test. The SRT is a day-count and “ties” test that decides your status for each tax year. The most common ways UK movers become non-resident:

  • You spend fewer than 16 days in the UK in the tax year (if you were UK resident in one or more of the previous three years).
  • You spend fewer than 46 days in the UK (if you were not UK resident in the previous three years).
  • You work full-time overseas, with limited UK days and UK working days.

Until you meet one of these, you’re likely still UK resident — and still taxable in the UK on your worldwide income.

What is split-year treatment?

A UK tax year runs 6 April to 5 April. If you leave partway through, split-year treatment can divide that year into a UK-resident part (before you go) and a non-resident part (after). It means you’re not taxed as UK-resident for the whole year just because you left in, say, October.

It isn’t automatic — you have to meet one of the specific split-year “cases” (for example, starting full-time work overseas). This is the single most valuable thing to get right in your departure year, and the easiest to fumble.

Does the UK–UAE double tax treaty help?

Yes — there’s a double taxation agreement between the UK and the UAE, designed so the same income isn’t taxed twice and to help establish where you’re treated as resident. In practice it matters most where income could be caught by both systems. Because the UAE has no personal income tax, the bigger lever for most people is simply breaking UK residency cleanly under the SRT — the treaty is the backstop, not the whole plan.

What can still be taxed in the UK after I leave?

Non-residence doesn’t make everything tax-free. Income with a UK source often still falls into the UK net:

Income typeTaxed in the UK after you leave?
UAE / overseas employment incomeNo (once non-resident)
UK rental incomeYes — UK property income stays UK-taxable
UK pensionsOften yes — depends on the pension and the treaty
UK dividends / savings interestSpecial “disregarded income” rules apply
Gains on UK residential propertyYes — UK CGT can still apply
UAE-source business profitsNo UK personal income tax, but mind UAE corporate tax

Dubai’s side of the ledger: 0% personal income tax, and 0% on most personal investment income. UAE corporate tax applies at 9% on business profits above AED 375,000.

How many days can I spend back in the UK?

Fewer than you’d think — and the limit depends on your “ties” to the UK (family, accommodation, work, days in prior years). Slip over your day count, even on regular trips home to see family, and you can accidentally become UK resident again for the whole year. It’s worth tracking your UK days from day one rather than counting them up in a panic the following March.

The mistakes that cost people

  • Assuming the move date is the cut-off — it’s the SRT, not the calendar.
  • Not claiming split-year correctly in the departure year.
  • Keeping a UK home available and underestimating how that affects the ties test.
  • Forgetting UK rental or pension income is still in scope.
  • Not telling HMRC they’ve left (the P85).
General guidance, not personal tax, legal or financial advice. Rules change and individual circumstances differ — speak to us, or another suitably qualified professional, before acting. See our full disclaimer.
Where this gets personal: the general rule is one thing — where you actually land depends on your own circumstances: your days in the UK, the ties you keep, your income mix, and your family and business set-up. Getting that right for your situation is exactly what a conversation is for.