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Uae golden visa and residency services

Graphic about UAE residency presence rules for work and investor visa holders
Summary of how often UAE work and investor visa holders must enter the country to keep residency active.

What this page covers

Uae golden visa and residency services

Secure your long-term plans in the UAE with structured residency support tailored to investors, professionals, families, and business owners. We focus on a clear strategy so your Golden Visa or other residency choice fits your wider personal, family, and business goals.

Our team helps you look beyond the application form and understand how residency, presence rules, tax and reporting, and business structure interact, so you can protect assets, keep flexibility, and avoid costly mistakes when planning a UAE Golden Visa or other residence options.

In brief

  • Support with UAE Golden Visa and other residency options, aligned with your business, investment, or family plans and long-term objectives in the country.
  • Guidance on how visa rules and presence requirements can affect your flexibility, travel patterns, tax position, and ability to maintain UAE residency status over time.
  • A strategic view on residency, business structure, and documentation, so you make informed decisions instead of treating the visa as a stand-alone, one-off step.

What to do

Residency in the UAE is not only about obtaining a visa; it is about building a coherent plan that connects your business activity, investments, family situation, and lifestyle. We help you look at the Golden Visa and other residency routes through the lens of a business and wealth plan, where objectives, risk, and flexibility are clearly defined before you act.

When you are choosing between options, the type of company you hold, the activities it is licensed for, and whether you are in mainland or a free zone all influence your residency profile. Mainland structures can cover thousands of activities, while free zones are focused on specific industries and clusters, which may suit some investors, professionals, or Web3 projects and not others.

We also pay attention to practical rules that are easy to overlook, such as how long you can stay outside the UAE without affecting your status. For example, work visa holders are generally expected not to remain outside the country for more than 180 consecutive days, while investor or partner visa holders may have a longer allowed absence. Understanding these differences early helps you choose a residency path that fits how often you plan to be physically present in the UAE.

What to keep in mind

Golden Visa and residency decisions are highly individual, and what works for one investor, family, or professional may not work for another. The right option depends on your business model, asset base, preferred jurisdiction, and how actively you plan to operate in or from the UAE. Treating residency as part of a broader structure and tax strategy, rather than a quick document exercise, reduces the risk of misalignment later.

Different corporate setups come with different scopes of permitted activities and expectations. Mainland companies can engage in a wide range of activities, while free zones are designed around specific sectors and clusters, including technology and digital assets. This can influence which residency route is practical for you, and whether your chosen structure supports your long-term objectives in the UAE.

Presence rules are a critical reality check. Work visa holders typically must avoid being outside the UAE for more than 180 consecutive days, and investor or partner visa holders may be allowed longer periods abroad, subject to current regulations. If your travel schedule, remote work pattern, or lifestyle does not match these patterns, you may need to reconsider which residency option is sustainable for you over time.