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🩺 Healthcare · VAT Exemptions · UAE Clinics

Healthcare VAT Exemptions in UAE — Zero-Rated Services, Cosmetic Procedures & What Your Clinic Must Know

UAE healthcare VAT has three categories — zero-rated, standard-rated, and exempt — and applying the wrong one to any service creates liability or refund obligations. Here's the complete guide written for UAE clinic owners and practice managers.

📅 Updated June 2026 8–12 min read Written by BookLean CAs 🇦🇪 UAE-specific guidance

📋 What's in This Guide

  1. UAE healthcare VAT — zero-rated vs exempt vs standard
  2. Which medical services are zero-rated
  3. Cosmetic & elective procedures — standard rate
  4. Pharmaceuticals & medical equipment VAT
  5. Insurance billing & VAT treatment
  6. Input VAT recovery for mixed-use clinics
  7. Common healthcare VAT mistakes
  8. How BookLean helps healthcare businesses
Section 01

UAE Healthcare VAT — The Three Categories Every Clinic Must Know

Healthcare VAT in UAE is divided into three distinct categories — and which one applies to a specific service determines whether you charge VAT, claim input VAT, and how you file your return. Getting this wrong is one of the most common (and costly) mistakes we see in UAE healthcare accounting.

Service TypeVAT TreatmentInput VAT Recovery
Preventive & primary healthcareZero-rated (0%)✅ Yes — fully recoverable
Qualifying medical services (diagnosis, treatment)Zero-rated (0%)✅ Yes — fully recoverable
Cosmetic / elective procedures (non-medically necessary)Standard (5%)✅ Yes — fully recoverable
Approved pharmaceuticals & medical equipmentZero-rated (0%)✅ Yes — fully recoverable
Non-approved supplements, general health productsStandard (5%)✅ Yes — fully recoverable
Employee health insurance premiumsExempt — blocked❌ No — input VAT NOT recoverable
Section 02

Zero-Rated Healthcare Services — What Qualifies

UAE VAT law zero-rates healthcare services that are preventive or curative and provided by a licensed healthcare provider. Qualifying services include:

  • General practitioner consultations and specialist appointments
  • Surgical procedures (medically necessary)
  • Diagnostic tests — blood tests, imaging, pathology
  • Dental treatments (restorative and medically necessary — not cosmetic whitening)
  • Mental health consultations and therapy
  • Physiotherapy and rehabilitation
  • Maternity and obstetric care
  • Vaccinations and immunisations
  • Emergency medical services

Key rule: Zero-rating requires the service to be provided by a licensed healthcare provider under UAE DHA, DOH, or equivalent authority. Services provided by unlicensed individuals or facilities do not qualify.

Section 03

Cosmetic & Elective Procedures — Standard 5% VAT

Any procedure that is not medically necessary is subject to standard 5% VAT. This includes:

  • Cosmetic surgery (rhinoplasty, liposuction, breast augmentation)
  • Teeth whitening and cosmetic dentistry
  • Botox and filler treatments for aesthetic purposes
  • Hair transplants
  • Laser hair removal
  • Non-medically necessary dermatology treatments

The line is blurry: A rhinoplasty for a patient with a deviated septum causing breathing difficulties may be medically necessary (zero-rated). The same procedure for cosmetic reasons is 5% VAT. The distinction must be documented in patient records and supported by clinical notes. BookLean helps clinics build the documentation framework to support their VAT treatment across mixed-service practices.

Section 04

Insurance Billing — How VAT Works

When a patient's treatment is covered by health insurance, the flow of VAT depends on the structure of the arrangement:

  • Direct billing to insurer: The healthcare provider invoices the insurance company for the full treatment cost (zero-rated if qualifying service). The insurer pays directly.
  • Co-payment from patient: The portion paid by the patient as a co-pay is treated the same way as the insured amount — zero-rated if the service is qualifying healthcare.
  • Insurance reimbursement: If the patient pays first and claims reimbursement, the original supply (clinic to patient) is still zero-rated. The insurance payment to the patient is not a VAT supply.

Common mistake: Some clinics apply different VAT treatment to insured vs self-pay patients. The VAT treatment follows the nature of the service, not the payment method. A zero-rated medical service is zero-rated whether paid by insurance, cash, or credit card.

Section 05

Input VAT Recovery for Mixed Healthcare Practices

A clinic that provides both zero-rated services (medically necessary) and standard-rated services (cosmetic) has a partial exemption position — meaning some input VAT is fully recoverable and some must be apportioned.

The standard UAE partial exemption method apportions input VAT based on the ratio of taxable turnover (zero-rated + standard-rated) to total turnover. This calculation must be done for every VAT return period and an annual adjustment made at year end.

Why this matters: A large clinic spending AED 2M per year on medical equipment, supplies, and fit-out costs can recover significantly more input VAT if the partial exemption is calculated correctly from the start. We've seen clinics recovering AED 80,000–150,000+ more per year simply by implementing the correct apportionment methodology.

Section 06

The 5 Most Common Healthcare VAT Mistakes in UAE

  • Applying 5% VAT to zero-rated services: Charging patients VAT on medically necessary consultations when none should apply. Creates client complaints, refund obligations, and inflated VAT return figures.
  • Not separating cosmetic from medical revenue: Lumping all clinic revenue under one VAT code makes it impossible to apply the correct rate and calculate partial exemption correctly.
  • Claiming input VAT on employee health insurance: Employee health insurance premiums are specifically blocked from input VAT recovery. Many clinic owners claim this in error.
  • Missing reverse charge on imported medical equipment: Medical equipment sourced from overseas is subject to reverse charge VAT. Many clinics pay import VAT at customs but forget to include it correctly in the VAT return.
  • No documentation for VAT treatment decisions: The FTA expects clinics to have documented policies for how they classify services. Without these, a routine audit becomes a major issue.

"We were charging 5% VAT on everything. We owed patients AED 180,000 in refunds."

A multi-specialty clinic in Dubai Healthcare City came to BookLean after a new practice manager flagged inconsistencies in their billing. The clinic had been applying standard 5% VAT to all services — including zero-rated diagnostic tests, GP consultations, and physiotherapy — for 14 months. BookLean conducted a full VAT review, reclassified all services correctly, filed voluntary disclosures, and built a new billing template with correct VAT codes for each service type. The clinic refunded affected patients through credit notes and avoided an FTA penalty by proactive disclosure.

✅ Correct VAT applied · ✅ Voluntary disclosure filed · ✅ Patient refunds managed · ✅ No FTA penalty
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