
UAE Issues a Ministerial Decision for the OECD Side-by-Side Tax Package
On June 22, 2026, the UAE issued Ministerial Decision No. 96 of 2026 to implement the OECD Side-by-Side Tax Package.
Article 4.2 of the OECD Model Rules includes a number of provisions that focus on the underlying character of the tax, irrespective of what it is called and the time it is levied.
A covered tax is defined as:
1. Any tax recorded in the financial accounts of a constituent entity that is levied on its income or profits. This is the standard treatment that will apply to catch most standard taxes on income such as corporate income taxes but also applies to taxes levied on a subsequent distribution of profits.
This is extended to also include taxes in the financial accounts that relate to a share of income or profits in which it has an ownership interest. This will include taxes under a Controlled Foreign Company regime, as well as taxes levied on undistributed profits of a transparent entity such as a partnership or LLP.
Note that CFC taxes are ‘pushed down’ to the CFC company. For more information, see Allocation of Taxes.
A tax on gross income (such as a digital service tax) would not meet this definition.
Note that, any tax under Pillar 1 of the OECD proposals would also be treated as a covered tax under this definition.
2. Taxes on distributed profits imposed under an Eligible Distribution Tax System.
This includes tax regimes that don’t levy a tax on income but rather tax distributions when made, or deemed to be made, by a company. It also includes taxes on non-business expenses levied on these companies.
Specific rules are required for these tax systems, as otherwise there would be very little tax reflected in years when there is no taxable distribution (and therefore the Pillar Two GloBE ETR would be likely to be very low leading to substantial top-up tax), and when there is a taxable distribution, the income used in the ETR would bear no resemblance to the actual taxable income used to determine the tax paid.
For more information on eligible distribution systems and investment funds, see investment funds.
3. Taxes that are imposed ‘in lieu’ of a generally applicable corporate income tax.
This is a potentially wide definition and includes withholding taxes (including any taxes levied under the subject-to-tax rule) and certain gross taxes where they are a substitute for a corporate income tax. Note that whilst gross-based taxes wouldn’t be covered taxes under (1) above, they could be under this definition if they are imposed instead of a corporate income tax.
Other taxes that could be covered by the ‘in lieu’ concept includes taxes imposed on a basis other than net income (ie taxes levied on an alternative base), providing they are not imposed in addition to a corporate income tax.
4. Taxes levied by reference to retained earnings and corporate equity.
This includes taxes levied on the net equity of a company. In addition, where a tax is levied partly on income and party on net equity it is treated as a covered tax if the tax is predominantly levied on income and it would be impractical to split the elements out eg Saudi Arabia’s Zakat.
Therefore, the definition of covered taxes is significantly wider than just corporate income taxes.
However, a number of taxes will clearly fall outside the definition. This includes:
• VAT and consumption taxes
• Excise taxes
• Digital service taxes (given they are not imposed on income and are not levied ‘in lieu’ of a corporate income tax)
• Stamp duty
• Property taxes
• Top-up tax levied under the Pillar Two GloBE rules
• A Qualifying Domestic Minimum Top-Up Tax (whether levied under the income inclusion or under-taxed payments rule)
• Disqualified Refundable Imputation Taxes (these are generally taxes that are refundable on the distribution of a dividend or creditable against other taxes)
• Taxes incurred by an insurance company that relate to returns to a policyholder
Note that whilst a Qualifying Domestic Minimum Top-Up Tax would not be a covered tax, a Non-Qualifying Domestic Minimum Top-Up Tax would be.
This can have a substantial impact under the GloBE rules. See our member’s article:

On June 22, 2026, the UAE issued Ministerial Decision No. 96 of 2026 to implement the OECD Side-by-Side Tax Package.

On June 26, 2026, Turkey announced an extension to the filing of its GloBE tax return and payment from June 30, 2026 to July 31, 2026.

On June 16, 2026, the Dutch Ministry of Finance opened an internet consultation on the Draft Safe-Harbour Bill. The consultation closes on 14 July 2026 and provides draft legislation to implement the OECD Side-by-Side package into the Dutch domestic regime.

On June 15, 2026, the Cyprus Tax Department issued two announcements on the domestic implementation of the Pillar Two framework. The first concerned the European Commission’s position on Cyprus’ Income Inclusion Rule (IIR). The second addressed filing deadlines and compliance obligations for Cypriot constituent entities and joint ventures under Law 151(I)/2024.

On June 10, 2026, the EU issued the ‘Manual for MNE Groups on Global Minimum Tax (Pillar Two) Compliance Obligations‘. This provides country level analysis of Pillar Two filings in Austria, Belgium, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Poland, Romania, Slovenia and Sweden.

A practical overview of the Dutch GloBE Information Return (GIR) filing process, including BIA terminology, deadlines, XML format, Digipoort submission, security, validation, notification obligations and governance controls.

Singapore has opened a consultation on the proposed Finance (Income Taxes) Bill 2026, a package that would amend the Income Tax Act 1947 and the Multinational Enterprise (Minimum Tax) Act 2024.

On June 8, 2026, the OECD released the Guidance on the use of the GIR XML Schema for the first GloBE filing and exchange cycle. This provides guidance for the use of the GIR XML Schema for first GloBE filings and exchanges in 2026 including practical fixes, workarounds and the switch-off of certain validation rules.

In June 2026, the Bahamas issued the Domestic Minimum Top-Up Tax (Amendment) Bill, 2026 to provide for administrative and compliance amendments to its QDMTT regime.
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