
The Ministry of Human Resources and Emiratisation (MoHRE) has issued a formal reminder to private sector businesses across the UAE: the deadline to achieve your Emiratisation target for the first half of 2026 is 30 June 2026. From 1 July, financial contributions will be applied to any establishment that has not met the required rate.
If your business employs 50 or more people, this deadline applies to you. Here is everything you need to know — what is required, what is at stake, and how you can achieve compliance before the clock runs out.
Emiratisation is the UAE government's initiative to increase the participation of UAE nationals in the private sector workforce. Overseen by MoHRE and enforced through mandatory hiring targets, it has expanded significantly in recent years to cover a broader range of businesses across specific economic sectors.
The programme operates alongside Nafis — a federal initiative launched in 2021 to incentivise private sector hiring of UAE nationals through wage subsidies and job-matching services. Together, MoHRE enforcement and Nafis support form the two sides of the UAE's Emiratisation framework.
The requirement depends on the size and sector of your workforce:
The financial contributions for missing Emiratisation targets are substantial. For 2026, non-compliant companies face a contribution of AED 9,000 per month for every Emirati position they fall short of their required number — totalling AED 108,000 per year, per unfilled role.
This is not a one-off payment. Contributions accumulate monthly for as long as the shortfall continues, and the rates increase annually. Beyond the financial cost, non-compliance can also restrict your ability to obtain new work permits through the MoHRE system — a significant operational consequence for any growing business in the UAE.
A business with five unfilled Emirati roles could face AED 45,000 in monthly contributions — AED 540,000 annually — until the shortfall is resolved.
Many businesses assume that hiring UAE nationals in the private sector is prohibitively expensive. The Nafis programme changes that calculation significantly.
Nafis provides government salary subsidies paid directly to offset the cost of Emirati hires in the private sector:
The government also contributes 2.5% of the salary toward pension payments for eligible Emirati employees earning below AED 20,000 per month. When factored in, the net cost of hiring through Nafis is substantially lower than facing a monthly contribution of AED 9,000 per shortfall — in many cases, compliance is the more cost-effective option.
Beyond avoiding penalties, businesses that achieve their Emiratisation targets become eligible to join the Emiratisation Partners Club. Membership offers meaningful commercial advantages:
For businesses with existing government contracts or those looking to grow within UAE public sector supply chains, achieving compliance becomes a commercial advantage rather than simply an obligation.
Our PRO Services team works with UAE businesses of all sizes to navigate MoHRE requirements and ensure their compliance documentation is in order. Whether you need to verify your current Emiratisation status, manage registration processes with MoHRE, or understand exactly what your obligations are ahead of the June deadline, we can guide you through it.
If you also need help sourcing UAE national candidates for eligible roles, our sister business Prism 7 Resourcing UAE can connect you with qualified professionals actively seeking private sector opportunities through the Nafis platform and beyond.
The 30 June deadline is approaching. The time to act is now — not in late June.
Don't Leave Compliance Until the Last Week
Our PRO Services team can help you verify your compliance status and manage your MoHRE requirements before the deadline.

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