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GCC Work Visas: UAE, Saudi Arabia & Qatar Compared
Summary:
- In all three countries only a locally licensed entity can sponsor a work permit — the sponsorship system descends from kafala, so a foreign company with no local presence cannot hire directly.
- None of the three taxes personal income, and expats sit largely outside social security (UAE: a small ILOE premium; Saudi: a 2% employer occupational-hazard contribution; Qatar: end-of-service gratuity instead of a pension).
- Nationalisation is now a visa-gating compliance risk: UAE Emiratisation reaches 9% by mid-2026 and non-compliance can block MOHRE portals; a Saudi ‘Red’ Nitaqat band stops visas; Qatarisation became legally enforceable in April 2025.
- Saudi Arabia carries the heaviest recurring per-worker cost (the Maktab Amal levy of roughly SAR 700–800/month); Qatar’s flat QAR 100 annual permit is the lightest.
Quick answer: The UAE, Saudi Arabia and Qatar all require a locally licensed entity to sponsor a foreign worker’s permit and residence (Emirates ID, Iqama or Qatar ID), so a company with no Gulf presence cannot hire directly. None tax personal income, and expats are largely outside social security. The big differences are cost and compliance: Saudi adds a monthly expat levy and Saudization (Nitaqat) quotas that can block visas; the UAE enforces Emiratisation targets (9% by mid-2026) that can freeze its portals; Qatar is cheapest and abolished the NOC and exit-permit requirements. An Employer of Record sponsors the hire through its in-region entity, removing the need to incorporate.
The common thread: sponsorship needs a local entity
Across the Gulf, employment is built on sponsorship. The system descends from kafala, and in every case the legal sponsor must be a locally licensed entity — a mainland or free-zone company in the UAE, a holder of a Commercial Registration in Saudi Arabia, or a registered entity in Qatar. A foreign company with no local presence cannot sponsor a work permit or residence visa on its own. That single rule is why most companies placing one or a few people in the region use an Employer of Record, which sponsors through its own in-region entity.
UAE, Saudi Arabia & Qatar at a glance
| Dimension | UAE | Saudi Arabia | Qatar |
|---|---|---|---|
| Local entity to sponsor? | Yes (MOHRE or free zone) | Yes (Commercial Registration) | Yes (registered entity) |
| Work-permit issuer | MOHRE (Tasheel) | MHRSD via Qiwa | Ministry of Labour (ADLSA) |
| Residence / ID | ICP/GDRFA + Emirates ID | MOI — Iqama | MOI — Qatar ID (RP) |
| Typical processing | ~5–14 working days | ~3 weeks–2 months | ~7–14 working days |
| Permit validity | 2 years | 1 year (renewable) | 1–3 years (up to 5) |
| Nationalisation rule | Emiratisation — 9% by mid-2026 | Nitaqat / Saudization quotas | Qatarisation (Law 12/2024) |
| Personal income tax | 0% | 0% | 0% |
| Expat social security | None (ILOE AED 5–10/mo) | 2% occupational hazard (employer) | None (end-of-service gratuity) |
United Arab Emirates
Hiring runs through MOHRE on the mainland (or the relevant free-zone authority). The flow is: quota and job offer via Tasheel, a MOHRE work permit, an entry permit, a medical fitness test, Emirates ID biometrics, then residence-visa stamping. A 2026 “Zero Government Bureaucracy” reform has cut the permit-issuance step dramatically. Government fees are employer-borne and vary by company category — broadly a work permit of AED 250–3,450 plus a two-year residence bundle around AED 4,650–5,750.
Emiratisation is now a visa-gating issue. Firms with 50+ skilled staff must raise their share of UAE nationals by 2 points a year — reaching 9% by mid-2026 and 10% by year-end — or pay AED 10,000/month per unfilled role in 2026, with non-compliance able to block MOHRE portals (freezing new permits). A separate rule now pulls firms with 20–49 employees into the regime. Salaries must run through the Wage Protection System (WPS).
Saudi Arabia
The process is the most involved: a block visa/quota in Qiwa, visa authorisation, consular stamping, and — for regulated professions such as engineering, healthcare and accounting — a Professional Verification Program (PVP) exam taken in the home country before arrival. After entry come the medical, the work permit (Maktab Amal) and the Iqama. The recurring cost is the heaviest in the region: the expat levy runs roughly SAR 700–800 per month, plus Iqama and per-dependant fees.
Saudization (Nitaqat) sets profession-by-profession quotas and bands; a company in the “Red” band cannot issue or renew visas. 2025–26 brought significant tightening — the Yellow band folded into Red (from 16 April 2026), the Saudi-count salary floor rose to SAR 4,000, and several professions moved to high or full Saudization. The Labor Reform Initiative (in force since 2021) lets workers change employer and exit without the sponsor’s veto, though the employer remains the legal sponsor of the Iqama.
Hiring in the Gulf without a local entity?
In all three countries only a locally licensed entity can sponsor a work permit — and nationalisation quotas can freeze your visa issuance if you fall short. TopSource sponsors your hire through our in-region entities, runs WPS-compliant payroll and handles the Iqama, Emirates ID and QID, so you can onboard in weeks instead of standing up a company.
Qatar
Qatar is the lightest on cost and, since its post-kafala reforms, the simplest on mobility. The flow is a work-permit/quota approval (ADLSA), an employment entry visa, then biometrics, medical and contract — often completed at a Qatar Visa Center in the worker’s home country — followed by the work permit and a residence permit / Qatar ID. The annual work-permit fee is a flat QAR 100, with total new-visa costs roughly QAR 800–1,800.
Two landmark reforms matter for employers: the NOC requirement for changing jobs was abolished in September 2020, and the exit-permit requirement was removed for most workers. Qatar also introduced a non-discriminatory minimum wage of QAR 1,800 (QAR 1,000 basic + 500 food + 300 housing) in March 2021. Qatarisation became legally enforceable under Law No. 12 of 2024 (from April 2025), with quotas concentrated in banking, insurance, energy and government.
Nationalisation: the compliance risk that gates visas
The headline differences in 2026 are less about the visa mechanics and more about whether quota rules will let you sponsor at all:
- UAE: miss Emiratisation targets and MOHRE can block your portal access — no new permits until you comply.
- Saudi Arabia: a Red Nitaqat band stops visa issuance and renewals outright.
- Qatar: falling short of sector Qatarisation can cut your visa quota.
For a foreign employer placing a small team, meeting these quotas independently is difficult — another reason the EOR route is common.
Tax and social security
The Gulf’s tax appeal is real: no personal income tax in any of the three. Expats are essentially outside the social-security systems — in the UAE only the small employee-funded ILOE unemployment premium applies; in Saudi Arabia expats attract just a 2% employer-paid occupational-hazard contribution; in Qatar there is no pension but the employer owes end-of-service gratuity of at least three weeks’ basic pay per year of service. Social-security contributions (GPSSA, GOSI, GRSIA) apply to nationals, not expats.
Hiring across the GCC without an entity
Because sponsorship requires a local licence, the practical choice is to set up an entity in each country — months of licensing and capital — or to use an Employer of Record that already holds entities in the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Qatar. The EOR becomes the legal sponsor, secures the work permit and residence ID, runs WPS-compliant payroll, and absorbs the Emiratisation/Nitaqat/Qatarisation exposure — onboarding in weeks. Talk to our GCC team to map the right route per country.
Frequently asked questions
Do you need a local entity to sponsor a work visa in the UAE, Saudi Arabia or Qatar?
Yes, in all three. The legal sponsor of a work permit and residence visa must be a locally licensed entity — a mainland or free-zone company in the UAE, a holder of a Commercial Registration in Saudi Arabia, or a registered entity in Qatar. A foreign company with no local presence cannot sponsor directly, which is why many use an Employer of Record that sponsors through its own in-region entity.
Is there income tax on salaries in the Gulf?
No. The UAE, Saudi Arabia and Qatar all levy 0% personal income tax on employment income for both nationals and expatriates. Expats are also largely outside the social-security systems: the UAE applies only a small employee-funded unemployment premium (ILOE), Saudi Arabia a 2% employer-paid occupational-hazard contribution, and Qatar requires end-of-service gratuity instead of a pension.
How long does it take to get a work visa in the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Qatar?
Roughly 5–14 working days in the UAE (recent reforms have cut the permit step sharply), about 3 weeks to 2 months in Saudi Arabia (which adds a professional verification exam for regulated roles), and around 7–14 working days in Qatar after the medical. Actual timing depends on company category, quota status and the worker’s profession.
What are Emiratisation, Nitaqat and Qatarisation, and can they block my visas?
They are the three countries’ workforce-nationalisation rules, and yes — they can gate visa issuance. UAE Emiratisation requires firms with 50+ skilled staff to reach 9% Emirati employees by mid-2026, and non-compliance can block MOHRE portals. A Saudi ‘Red’ Nitaqat band stops visa issuance and renewals. Qatarisation, legally enforceable since April 2025, can cut a non-compliant company’s visa quota.
Which Gulf country is cheapest for work visas?
Qatar is generally the lightest on recurring government cost, with a flat QAR 100 annual work permit and total new-visa costs of roughly QAR 800–1,800. Saudi Arabia is the most expensive on an ongoing basis because of the monthly expat levy (Maktab Amal) of about SAR 700–800 per worker plus per-dependant fees. UAE costs sit in between and vary by company category.
Does Qatar still require a No-Objection Certificate to change jobs?
No. Qatar abolished the No-Objection Certificate (NOC) requirement for changing employers in September 2020, and removed the exit-permit requirement for most workers. These reforms, together with a non-discriminatory minimum wage introduced in March 2021, significantly loosened the former kafala restrictions, though the employer remains the legal sponsor.
Can an Employer of Record hire staff in the GCC without setting up a company?
Yes. An Employer of Record that already holds licensed entities in the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Qatar can act as the legal sponsor, obtain the work permit and residence ID, run WPS-compliant payroll, and manage nationalisation-quota exposure — letting a foreign company onboard staff in weeks without incorporating locally.