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Dubai Payroll and WPS 2026: Rules, Deadlines, Penalties

Dubai Payroll and WPS 2026: Rules, Deadlines, Penalties

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Business setup expert10 min read
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Luca Rubino

Business setup expert

Luca Rubino is the founder of Incorpify and a company setup expert specializing in the GCC and the United States.

How Dubai Payroll Actually Works: WPS, Salary Deadlines, and 2026 Rules

If you employ anyone in the Dubai mainland, you are legally required to pay their salary through the Wage Protection System (WPS). Salaries must reach the employee's account within 15 days of the due date, or your company gets flagged by the Ministry of Human Resources and Emiratisation (MOHRE). On day 17, new work permits are suspended. On day 30, for companies with 50+ employees, Public Prosecution is notified.

In December 2025, MOHRE upgraded WPS to near real-time monitoring with Aani instant payments and Jaywan card integration. Late salaries now surface on MOHRE dashboards within days instead of weeks. Fines start at AED 5,000 per affected employee, capped at AED 50,000 per incident. This guide covers exactly how WPS works, what gratuity you owe, the differences between mainland and DIFC, and the 2026 rule changes that will cost you money if you ignore them.

What WPS Actually Is

WPS is an electronic salary transfer system run by MOHRE in partnership with the Central Bank of the UAE. It was introduced in 2009 under Ministerial Decree No. 788 and is currently governed by Ministerial Resolution No. 598 of 2022. It covers more than 99% of private sector employees in the UAE.

The system requires employers to route every salary payment through an approved bank or exchange house using a standardized Salary Information File (SIF). MOHRE monitors the data in real time. If wages don't arrive, the system flags it automatically. No employee complaint is needed for penalties to trigger.

⚠ Warning
WPS applies to all private sector employers registered with MOHRE, regardless of company size. There is no exemption for small businesses, startups, or owner-only companies with employees. If you have a work permit issued through MOHRE, you must use WPS.

Salary Payment Deadlines: The 15-Day Rule

The wage is officially due on the first day of the month following the pay period stated in the employment contract. If your contract specifies a monthly salary, that means salaries for January are due on February 1. From that date, you have 15 days to transfer through WPS before MOHRE considers you late.

The salary must reach the employee's account by the deadline, not just be submitted to the bank. File rejections count as non-payment from MOHRE's perspective. Most payroll teams submit the SIF at least three business days before the deadline to allow time for corrections if the bank rejects the file.

Escalation Timeline

What happens if you miss the 15-day window:

Day 15: Salary is officially late. Fines begin accruing.

Day 17: MOHRE automatically suspends new work permits for your establishment. You cannot hire, renew, or transfer employees until the issue is resolved.

Day 30: For companies with 50+ employees, Public Prosecution is notified. This is a criminal referral, not just an administrative matter.

Month 4: Persistent non-compliance leads to bans across all companies owned by the same partner group.

⚠ Warning
WPS fines are AED 5,000 per affected employee, capped at AED 50,000 per incident. False wage data costs AED 1,000 per employee. A mid-sized company missing one payroll cycle can accumulate six-figure penalties when combined with work permit suspensions and category downgrades.

What Goes Into a SIF File

The Salary Information File is the core document for WPS compliance. Every SIF must contain:

Employer details (establishment card number, employer EID). Employee data (labor card number, Emirates ID, name). Banking details (IBAN or wage card number). Salary breakdown (basic salary, allowances, deductions, net pay). Payment period and due date.

The format is standardized by the Central Bank of the UAE. Manual SIF generation using spreadsheets is the most common failure point. Small formatting errors cause bank rejections, and rejected SIFs still count as non-payment. Most accounting service providers use automated software that generates compliant SIFs directly from payroll.

The 80% Rule Most Employers Miss

MOHRE applies an 80% compliance threshold based on the total wage value, not just the number of employees paid. If you have 10 employees and pay 9 on time but miss your highest-earning employee, you may still fall below 80% of total payroll value. That drops you into non-compliance even though most employees received their salaries.

This rule catches employers who prioritize lower-salary staff and defer payments to executives during cash-flow problems. The fix is to pay by total salary value, not headcount. If you can only make 80% of payroll, prioritize high-earners first to stay above the threshold, then catch up within the 15-day window.

WPS on Mainland vs DIFC vs ADGM

WPS only applies to employees with MOHRE-issued work permits. Companies operating exclusively under DIFC or ADGM employment regulations follow different rules.

Feature
Mainland (MOHRE)
DIFC / ADGM
Governing Law
Federal Decree-Law No. 33 of 2021
DIFC Employment Law No. 2 of 2019 / ADGM Regulations
WPS Required
Yes
No
Salary Transfer
Through approved bank or exchange
Direct transfer, no WPS
End of Service
Lump sum gratuity (Article 51)
DEWS (DIFC) or GCEN (ADGM) funded schemes
Payment Deadline
15 days after due date
Per employment contract
Penalty for Late Pay
AED 5,000 per employee
Employment tribunal, contractual damages
Who This Applies To
Mainland + most free zones
DIFC-licensed + ADGM-licensed only

If you operate a free zone company in DMCC, IFZA, JAFZA, or most other free zones, you still fall under MOHRE rules and must use WPS. Only DIFC and ADGM companies are exempt because they operate their own separate employment frameworks.

End of Service Gratuity: What You Actually Owe

End-of-service gratuity is a lump sum payment due to every foreign employee who completes at least one year of continuous service. The rules are set in Article 51 of Federal Decree-Law No. 33 of 2021 (effective February 2, 2022).

The Formula

The calculation is based on the employee's last basic salary only. Allowances for housing, transport, utilities, and other benefits are excluded. The daily wage is the monthly basic salary divided by 30.

Years 1 to 5: 21 days of basic salary for each full year of service.

Years 5 and beyond: 30 days of basic salary for each additional year.

Cap: Total gratuity cannot exceed two years of wages, regardless of length of service.

Example

Employee with AED 6,000 basic salary (not total package, just basic), 7 years of service:

Daily wage: AED 6,000 ÷ 30 = AED 200. First 5 years: 5 × 21 days × AED 200 = AED 21,000. Next 2 years: 2 × 30 days × AED 200 = AED 12,000. Total gratuity: AED 33,000.

ℹ Note
Gratuity must be paid within 14 days of contract termination alongside any outstanding wages. Late payment triggers MOHRE complaints and can be referred to the labour court. Deductions are allowed only for advances, fines, or court-ordered amounts documented in the contract.

The Savings Scheme Alternative

Under Cabinet Resolution No. 96 of 2023, employers can opt into the voluntary Alternative End of Service Benefits Scheme. Instead of accruing a lump sum liability, employers contribute monthly to an approved investment fund on behalf of enrolled employees.

Contribution rates are 5.83% of the monthly basic salary for employees with under 5 years of service, and 8.33% for employees with more than 5 years. Payments must be made within 15 days of the start of each calendar month. Once enrolled, the traditional gratuity system stops applying to those employees. Any accrued gratuity prior to enrollment must be calculated and settled separately.

DIFC companies use the Dubai Employee Workplace Savings (DEWS) scheme, which replaced the old lump sum gratuity in 2020. ADGM uses a similar scheme called GCEN. Both are mandatory within their respective jurisdictions, not optional.

Minimum Wage Rules for 2026

The UAE does not have a general minimum wage for private sector employees. However, specific categories have mandatory minimums.

Emirati nationals: As of January 1, 2026, all Emiratis working in the private sector must earn at least AED 6,000 per month. Employers have until June 30, 2026, to update existing contracts. After that date, non-compliant Emiratis are excluded from Emiratisation quota calculations, and companies face work permit suspensions.

Emiratisation quotas: Companies with 50 or more employees must maintain 2% annual Emirati growth in skilled positions, targeting cumulative 10% by December 2026. Missing the quota costs AED 108,000 per missing Emirati position per year.

Who Is Excluded from WPS

The following categories are excluded from WPS requirements:

Employees who filed a wage-related labour complaint are currently in court. Employees reported being absent under a work abandonment report. New employees in their first 30 days from the wage due date. Employees on documented unpaid leave (supporting documents must be submitted to MOHRE). Domestic workers (covered under a separate UAE law, though WPS is expanding to include specialized domestic worker categories).

What Does This Cost You to Run Properly

Running payroll compliant with WPS has three cost components. First, bank or exchange fees for WPS transfers (typically AED 5 to AED 15 per employee per cycle). Second, payroll software or outsourced accounting services to generate compliant SIFs. Third, time spent reconciling payroll with MOHRE records.

Small businesses with under 10 employees often handle this with an approved exchange house and basic payroll software. Companies with more than 20 employees typically outsource the full payroll function to avoid the compliance overhead. If you also need PRO services for work permits and visa renewals, bundling everything with one provider eliminates the coordination gaps that cause WPS errors.

Common Mistakes That Trigger Penalties

MOHRE data shows these are the most frequent WPS violations:

Submitting the SIF the same day as the deadline instead of 3 business days early. Payroll data mismatches with MOHRE contract records (different basic salary on paper vs in the SIF). Missing new hires in the 30-day window. Splitting salary between cash and WPS to reduce employer tax exposure (this is explicitly prohibited and triggers fines). Manually generating SIFs in Excel with formatting errors that cause bank rejections.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What happens if I pay an employee in cash instead of WPS?
Cash payments for MOHRE-registered employees violate WPS requirements regardless of whether the employee consents. If MOHRE detects no WPS transfer for an active work permit, the employer faces AED 5,000 per employee fines. This includes partial cash payments where only some of the salary is routed through WPS.
Do I need WPS if I only have one employee?
Yes. There is no size-based exemption. Every private sector employer registered with MOHRE must use WPS regardless of headcount. The only exemptions are for specific employee categories (unpaid leave, work abandonment, active labour court cases, and new hires in their first 30 days).
How is end of service gratuity calculated if I resign?
Under Federal Decree-Law No. 33 of 2021, gratuity is the same whether you resign or are terminated, provided you completed at least one year of continuous service. The old rules that reduced gratuity for resignation before 5 years no longer apply. You receive 21 days basic salary per year for years 1-5, and 30 days per year thereafter, capped at 2 years total.
What is the difference between basic salary and total salary for gratuity?
Gratuity is calculated on basic salary only, which excludes housing allowance, transport allowance, utility allowance, and any bonuses or commissions. If your total salary is AED 15,000 but only AED 6,000 is listed as basic on your contract, your gratuity calculation uses AED 6,000. This is why the basic-to-allowance split in your contract matters.
Can I run payroll for free zone employees differently?
It depends on the free zone. Most free zones (DMCC, IFZA, JAFZA, RAKEZ) issue MOHRE work permits and follow the same WPS and gratuity rules as mainland. Only DIFC and ADGM have separate employment frameworks with different schemes (DEWS and GCEN respectively). If your employees have MOHRE labor cards, you use WPS.

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