Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

Dubai alcohol tax cut saving swallowed by most venues

MMI's stores have reported double-digital sales growth since Dubai's alcohol tax cut MMI
MMI's stores have reported double-digit sales growth since Dubai's alcohol tax cut
  • Most hotels and restaurants have not passed on tax saving to consumers
  • Dubai’s hospitality companies point to rising business costs
  • Suspension of 30% levy has driven ‘double-digit’ rise in retail sales

Six months after Dubai suspended its 30 percent sales tax on alcohol, most hospitality venues have not passed on savings to consumers – but retailers have, driving up sales.

Mike Glen, managing director at Maritime and Mercantile International (MMI), one of the main alcohol distributors in the emirate, estimates that only around 30 percent of hotels, bars and restaurants have reduced menu prices to reflect the tax cut.

However, MMI, which sells wholesale to the hospitality sector and retail to consumers via 21 outlets, has reported “double-digit” year-on-year growth in retail sales.

Glen said sales had been boosted by another change introduced on January 1: Dubai residents no longer have to pay to obtain a licence to drink alcohol at home.

Legal alcohol home delivery services, introduced during the pandemic in 2020, have also aided sales growth.

Dubai Duty Free, based at the emirate’s airports, said in May its retail revenues to leisure and business travellers had also surged. It is forecasting $2 billion of revenues in 2023, beating its 2019 record.

Dubai alcohol tax cutUnsplash/Crew SZ
Many bars and restaurants in Dubai are not passing on the tax savings as their business costs increase
‘The suppliers’ margins are still high’

Naim Maadad, founder of Gates Hospitality and a board member of UAE Restaurant Group, said many bars and restaurants had not passed on all the tax savings because other business costs had risen sharply.

“The cost of goods has increased drastically, which has principally put the selling price back to where it was.

“The suppliers’ margins are still high, and this should be the next step where some of that pain is shouldered by the duopoly [MMI and fellow distributor African + Eastern],” he added.

The latest S&P Global Dubai Purchasing Managers’ Index, published on Tuesday, said costs for non-oil businesses across the city were “manageable” in June, but average costs rose at the fastest rate in three months. Prices remained stable so margins continue to be squeezed.

The waiving of the alcohol tax is said to be on the basis of a year’s trial, and the business and consumer response is being monitored.

David Golding, a recovery mentor and sober coach based in the UAE, said the policy changes were likely to result in increased alcohol consumption.

He said around three-quarters of those who drink alcohol do so responsibly, but there is a growing number of individuals who struggle to manage their intake and this will have an impact on UAE society in due course.

“Alcoholism is a progressive disease and takes years to have a destructive effect on society,” he said. “But we will witness the negative impact of an abundance of cheap alcohol on society.” 

The CIA’s World Factbook compares global alcohol consumption rates based on 2019 figures.

The highest-ranked countries (the Cook Islands, Latvia and Czechia) consume around 12 litres of pure alcohol per person each year.

The UAE was 130th in the ranking, recording an average of 2.03 litres per person, followed by Bahrain and Turkey with 1.18 litres, Lebanon averaging 1.14 litres and Qatar with 0.96 litres.

“Since these 2019 figures, the UAE has implemented measures to boost its economy with alcohol sales and therefore consumption,” Golding said.

“I predict it will rise in these tables, and we will see the impact on society.”  

Latest articles

Waleed bin Ibrahim Al Ibrahim, CEO of MBC Group, which raised $222 million with its IPO

Saudi Arabia dominates Mena public listings in Q1

Saudi Arabia dominated public listings in the region in the first quarter of the year and maintains a “healthy pipeline” of IPOs for the remainder of 2024. Nine companies were brought to market in Saudi Arabia during the opening three months, according to the latest report from global consultants EY. The kingdom’s largest, and the […]

SWVL CEO Mostafa Kandil Video length: 04:15

Unicorn SWVL survives share slump to turn a profit

Scaling back operations, chasing profitability over investor funding and divesting from acquisitions has resulted in the Middle East’s first unicorn finally turning profitable.  Egypt-born ride hailing app SWVL has survived a turbulent time during which the Nasdaq-listed startup faced the possibility of being delisted.  SWVL was valued at $1.5 billion when it went public in […]

Turkey Facebook

Turkey fines Facebook owner Meta over customer data sharing

The social media giant Meta has been found guilty by Turkey’s competition agency of trying to shut out rivals from the local market and dominate advertising penetration. The $230 billion Californian company operates Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, and Threads. On May 9 the Turkish Competition Authority announced it had levied fines totalling $37.2 million on Meta […]

King Leung of InvestHK says Middle East investors are 'scooping up high quality, positive cash flow generating assets at very, very attractive valuations'

Hong Kong plans fund on Saudi stock exchange

Officials in Hong Kong are planning to set up an exchange-traded fund with Saudi Arabia’s stock exchange, as Middle East investors increasingly go “bargain hunting” in the Asian city state to take advantage of lower valuations. An exchange-traded fund (ETF) is an investment fund traded on regulated stock exchanges, much like individual stocks are bought and […]