UAE Free Zone Employee Visa 2026: Quota, Process & Documents (Complete Guide)

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If you’re ready to hire your first employee in a UAE free zone, the employee visa process is more structured than most founders expect — and more affordable than most agents quote. The real variable isn’t the government fee; it’s your office type, because your visa quota is tied directly to your workspace, not your wallet.
In this guide, I’ll walk you through exactly how UAE free zone employee visas work in 2026 — the quota rules by zone and office type, the step-by-step process from entry permit to Emirates ID, what it actually costs (with real numbers for RAKEZ, ANCFZ, IFZA, and SPC), and how long each stage takes so you can plan your hiring timeline with confidence. UAE free zone employee visas are issued through the free zone authority, not through the Ministry of Human Resources, which changes the process and the documents you’ll need.
⚡ Key Takeaways
- Employee visa quota in most UAE free zones is tied to your office type — flexi-desk typically allows 1–3 visas, shared offices 3–6, private offices based on floor area.
- All-in cost per employee visa: AED 3,000–6,500, depending on zone and whether you use in-house or third-party processing.
- Total timeline: 2–4 weeks from submission to Emirates ID in hand.
- RAKEZ, ANCFZ, and IFZA offer the most competitive employee visa packages for small businesses in 2026.
- Employee visas are zone-specific — your staff can only work within the issuing free zone’s jurisdiction without additional approvals.
Table of Contents
- How Free Zone Employee Visa Quotas Work in 2026
- Visa Quota by Zone and Office Type
- Step-by-Step Employee Visa Process
- Documents You’ll Need
- Real Costs: What to Budget Per Employee
- Realistic Timeline
- Practical Tips to Avoid Delays
- Frequently Asked Questions
How Free Zone Employee Visa Quotas Work in 2026
The first thing most new free zone business owners get wrong: they assume they can simply pay for more visas. In most UAE free zones, visa allocation is tied to your workspace, not your budget. The logic is straightforward — a company that has only rented a flexi-desk has a smaller physical footprint than one with a private office, and the zone authority caps visas accordingly.
Here’s how the logic breaks down in practice:
- Flexi-desk / shared desk: Typically 1–3 employee visas. Some zones allow up to 5 with a flexi-desk add-on.
- Shared office: Usually 3–6 visas, depending on the zone and number of occupants per unit.
- Private office (dedicated): Quota based on floor area — typically 1 visa per 9 sqm (the UAE Labour Law office area standard). A 50 sqm private office could support 5–6 employee visas.
- Warehouse or industrial unit: Higher quotas, often 8–20 visas, proportional to floor area and zone rules.
Important distinction: most zones distinguish between investor/shareholder visas (for company owners — see our UAE Free Zone Investor Visa 2026 guide) and employee visas (for staff you’re hiring). This guide covers employee visas only. The quota rules are largely the same, but the documents and sponsorship chain differ.
Visa Quota by Zone and Office Type
Visa quotas aren’t always published clearly on zone websites, so the table below pulls from current 2026 package information and direct zone confirmations. I’ve prioritised the zones most commonly used by small and medium businesses.
| Free Zone | Flexi-Desk Visa Quota | Shared Office Visa Quota | Private Office Visa Quota | Base Licence Cost (2026) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RAKEZ (Ras Al Khaimah) | Up to 2 visas | Up to 6 visas | 1 per 9 sqm (8+ for standard unit) | From AED 6,000 (0-visa starter); AED 14,000 (1-visa bundle) |
| ANCFZ (Ajman) | Up to 10 visas (flexible policy) | Up to 10 visas | As needed (zone approval) | From AED 4,888/year (inclusive of 10-visa allowance) |
| IFZA (Dubai) | 0–1 visa (package-dependent) | 3–5 visas (office package) | Scaled by floor area | From AED 12,900 (0-visa); AED 15,900 (1-visa) |
| SPC Free Zone (Sharjah) | 3–5 visas | 5–8 visas | Scaled by area | From ~AED 6,500/year |
| Meydan (Dubai) | 1–3 visas | 3–6 visas | Scaled by area | From AED 12,500 (1-visa commercial) |
| HFZA (Hamriyah) | 3–6 visas (shared facility) | 5–10 visas | Scaled by area | From ~AED 7,500/year |
Note: Visa quotas can vary by licence type and activity. Always confirm with your free zone authority before signing an office lease — quota is a deal-breaker for hiring-heavy businesses.
ANCFZ’s policy of up to 10 visas even on a flexi-desk setup makes it the most visa-generous option for businesses that need to hire quickly without committing to a large office. RAKEZ offers the strongest combination of competitive pricing, established zone infrastructure, and a workable employee visa framework for teams of 2–8 people.
Step-by-Step Employee Visa Process
UAE free zone employee visas are issued through the zone authority, not MOHRE (Ministry of Human Resources and Emiratisation) — which is one key difference from mainland employment. The zone acts as the intermediary with the ICP (Federal Authority for Identity, Citizenship, Customs and Port Security).
Step 1: Establish Your Company’s Immigration File
Before you can sponsor any employee, your free zone company must have an active Establishment Immigration Card (sometimes called an Establishment Card). This is a one-time setup that costs approximately AED 1,200–1,500 and must be renewed annually. Without it, the zone authority cannot process any work permits or residence visas on your behalf.
Step 2: Apply for the Work Entry Permit
Once your establishment card is active, you apply for the employee’s Work Entry Permit through the zone’s online portal or PRO desk. You’ll need:
- Employee’s passport copy (valid for at least 6 months)
- Passport-size photograph
- Educational qualification certificate (attested, if the role requires it)
- Offer letter or employment contract
Processing time: 2–5 working days. The entry permit is valid for 60 days from issue — the employee must enter the UAE and complete all steps within this window. It’s extendable once for an additional 30 days if needed.
Step 3: Employee Enters the UAE
The employee travels to the UAE on their entry permit. If they’re already inside the UAE and undergoing a status change (e.g., moving from a tourist visa), the entry step is handled internally — but a status change fee applies (approximately AED 1,000–1,500 extra).
Step 4: Medical Fitness Test
All new employees must undergo a medical fitness test at a MOHAP-approved health centre. The standard panel tests for infectious diseases including tuberculosis, HIV, and hepatitis. Cost: approximately AED 250–350. Results are typically returned within 24–48 hours. A fit result triggers the next step automatically in the ICP system.
Step 5: Emirates ID Biometrics
The employee visits an ICP service centre (Amer Centre, or the zone’s own smart government kiosk if available) to submit biometrics — fingerprints and a photograph. Emirates ID fee: AED 100 for 2-year card. The card itself is delivered by courier or available for collection within 5–10 working days.
Step 6: Residence Visa Stamping
The final step is stamping the residence visa onto the employee’s passport. This is done either at an ICP service centre or via the zone’s PRO desk. The residence visa is valid for 2 years and renewable upon continued employment. Cost: AED 200–500 (government fee only).
Step 7: Labour Card / Zone Registration
Most free zones issue an internal zone employment card or register the employment contract in their system. This step varies by zone — RAKEZ and ANCFZ both have clear online portals for this. It’s the last administrative close-out before the employee is fully authorised to work.
Documents You’ll Need
| Step | Document | Who Submits | Key Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Work Entry Permit | Passport copy (6+ months validity) | Employer / PRO | Employee need not be in UAE at this stage |
| Work Entry Permit | Passport-size photo (white background) | Employer / PRO | Must be recent (within 6 months) |
| Work Entry Permit | Employment contract / offer letter | Employer | Must match zone’s permitted activities |
| Work Entry Permit | Educational certificate (attested) | Employee | Required for professional/technical roles; attestation from Ministry of Education |
| Medical Test | Passport + entry permit | Employee | Original documents required at the health centre |
| Emirates ID | Completed ICA form + biometrics in person | Employee | Cannot be delegated — employee must appear in person |
| Residence Visa | Passport for stamping | Employee / PRO | Passport retained for 3–5 working days during stamping |
Real Costs: What to Budget Per Employee
Government fees are uniform across the UAE; the variation comes from zone admin fees and whether you handle processing in-house or through a PRO service. Here’s a realistic all-in budget for a single employee visa in 2026:
| Cost Item | Typical Fee (AED) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Work entry permit (government) | 300–500 | Paid to ICP via zone portal |
| Medical fitness test | 250–350 | MOHAP-approved centre; varies slightly by emirate |
| Emirates ID (2 years) | 100 | Standard 2-year card fee |
| Residence visa stamping | 200–500 | Government fee; inside-UAE change of status adds ~AED 1,000 |
| Zone admin / PRO handling fee | 600–1,500 | Varies: RAKEZ has in-house PRO; ANCFZ is typically lower cost |
| Establishment card (annual, amortised) | ~300–400 per employee | AED 1,200–1,500/year, shared across all employees |
| Total (inside-country, new employee) | AED 1,750–3,350 | Without status change fee |
| Total (outside-country, entry on permit) | AED 1,450–2,850 | Employee travels in on the entry permit — no status change fee |
The “AED 3,000–6,500” figures you’ll often see from agency quotes include a PRO markup of AED 1,000–3,000 on top of government fees. If you’re using your free zone’s in-house PRO desk (available at RAKEZ, ANCFZ, IFZA, and SPC), you’ll typically pay the lower end. Third-party PRO services are faster for status changes but cost more.
One figure that often surprises new employers: the annual establishment card renewal (~AED 1,200–1,500/year). This is not per-employee — it’s a single annual cost for your company — but it’s mandatory to maintain before any visa can be processed or renewed.
Realistic Timeline
The official timeline from the ICP is 5–10 working days. In practice, here’s what the realistic breakdown looks like:
- Week 1: Entry permit issued (days 1–5, often faster via zone PRO portal). Employee books travel or initiates status change.
- Week 2: Employee arrives (or status change processed). Medical test completed within 1–3 working days. Emirates ID biometrics submitted.
- Weeks 3–4: Emirates ID card delivered (5–10 working days). Residence visa stamped (3–5 days, overlapping with ID processing). Zone employment card issued.
Best case: 10 working days total. Typical case: 15–20 working days (3 to 4 weeks). The main variable is medical test result speed and ICP service centre queue times, both of which are significantly faster in RAK than in Dubai or Abu Dhabi right now.
Plan your onboarding timeline accordingly — don’t schedule an employee’s first day until their Emirates ID is confirmed, because without it, payroll and bank account setup can’t proceed.
Practical Tips to Avoid Delays
Verify Your Visa Quota Before Hiring
Call your free zone PRO desk and confirm your current quota before you extend an offer letter. If you’ve recently renewed your licence, your quota may have been reset or updated. Getting a written quota confirmation from the zone also protects you if there’s a system discrepancy later.
Get Qualifications Attested Early
For professional and technical roles (engineers, doctors, teachers, certain finance roles), educational certificate attestation is required. This is a multi-step process: notarisation in the home country, attestation by the foreign ministry, then UAE embassy attestation. It can take 2–6 weeks and must be done before the entry permit can be issued for that employee. Start this the moment you know you want to hire.
Consider RAKEZ or ANCFZ for Hiring-Heavy Businesses
If your business model requires a team of 4 or more people relatively quickly, RAKEZ and ANCFZ offer the best combination of cost-efficient visas and practical quota allowances. ANCFZ’s 10-visa flexi-desk policy is unusual in the market — most zones cap flexi-desk at 2–3 visas, so if you need to hire fast without upgrading your office, ANCFZ removes that bottleneck. You can read a detailed cost breakdown in our guide to the cheapest UAE free zones in 2026.
Time Medical Tests Strategically
RAK-based medical centres (for RAKEZ employees) are consistently faster than Dubai centres — results in 24 hours rather than the 48–72 hours common in Dubai. If your employee is flexible on travel, entering the UAE via RAK (near RAKEZ zone offices) and getting the medical test done locally can save 2–3 days.
Use the Zone’s PRO Service for First-Time Hires
The first employee visa is always the most complicated because you’re setting up the establishment card and learning the zone’s PRO portal simultaneously. Using your zone’s in-house PRO service for the first hire — even if it costs slightly more — gives you a clear template for all future hires. The second and third employee are much faster once the establishment card is active and you know the system.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a UAE free zone employee work anywhere in the UAE?
A free zone employment visa restricts the holder to working within the issuing free zone’s jurisdiction. Working outside the zone — for a mainland company or a different free zone — without additional approvals constitutes a visa violation. There are exceptions for free zones with dual licensing arrangements or specific Emirate-wide work permits, but these are granted case-by-case.
How many employee visas can I get on a flexi-desk?
It depends on the zone. ANCFZ allows up to 10 visas on a flexi-desk, making it the most flexible option. RAKEZ allows up to 2, IFZA up to 1 on the base package, and SPC typically 3–5. If visa quota is a priority, check zone-specific rules before choosing your setup.
What’s the difference between an employee visa and an investor visa in a UAE free zone?
An investor or partner visa is issued to company owners or shareholders — it’s tied to your equity stake in the company. An employee visa is for individuals you hire as staff. The documents, sponsorship chain, and some fees differ. Our investor visa guide covers the owner route in detail.
Can I hire someone who is already in the UAE on a tourist visa?
Yes, through a status change process. The employee doesn’t leave the UAE — instead, their immigration status is converted from visitor to employment via the zone’s PRO desk. This adds approximately AED 1,000–1,500 in status change fees and typically takes 5–7 additional working days compared to processing from outside the UAE.
Does the employee visa require a minimum salary?
Free zones don’t impose a minimum salary for employee visa eligibility (unlike some mainland labour categories). However, the employment contract must reflect a salary consistent with the role’s job category, and the zone authority reviews contracts for obvious anomalies. As a practical matter, budget salaries below AED 3,000/month for professional roles can sometimes attract additional scrutiny.
What happens when the employee’s visa expires?
Employment residence visas are valid for 2 years and must be renewed before expiry. Renewal requires re-medical (in some cases), updated Emirates ID, and a fresh visa stamp — essentially the same process as the initial application but shorter, as the establishment card is already in place. Renewal cost is typically AED 1,500–3,000 all-in depending on zone and whether a new medical test is required.
Which free zone is best for hiring employees in 2026?
RAKEZ leads for the combination of low-cost licences, workable visa quotas, and a well-run in-house PRO service. ANCFZ is the best choice if you need to hire more than 3 people on a tight budget without upgrading to a private office. IFZA and SPC are strong options if you’re based in Dubai or Sharjah respectively and want zone prestige alongside the visa infrastructure. See our full free zone comparison for 2026 for a side-by-side breakdown.
Ready to Hire Your First Free Zone Employee?
Setting up your employee visa for the first time is a 2–4 week process that’s entirely manageable once you know the sequence. The two things that trip up most new free zone employers are checking visa quota before hiring (not after) and starting qualification attestation early enough for professional roles.
If you want a straightforward recommendation: RAKEZ for established teams needing a full-service zone with solid PRO infrastructure; ANCFZ for high headcount on a lean budget. Both deliver reliable employee visa processing without the delays common in higher-volume Dubai zones.
Need help working out which free zone gives you the best combination of licence cost and visa capacity for your specific team size? WhatsApp us at +971 50 786 4823 — we’ll match you to the right zone in under 10 minutes.
About the Author: Kareem is a UAE business setup and licensing specialist with over 8 years of experience helping entrepreneurs navigate free zone visa processes. He has assisted companies across RAKEZ, ANCFZ, IFZA, SPC, and Meydan in setting up employment sponsorship structures for teams of 1 to 50+. Reviewed by a human editor before publishing.
Disclaimer: This guide is for informational purposes only and reflects the best available information as of June 2026. Free zone policies, visa quotas, and government fees change regularly. Always confirm current requirements directly with your free zone authority or a licensed UAE business setup advisor before making decisions.