How to Start a Business in Dubai

The Practical Field Guide to 35 Industries — by Islam Inamdar. Launching soon on Amazon.

Dubai rewards the founder who arrives prepared.

Most business books sell the dream. This one hands you the map. How to Start a Business in Dubai is a practical, step-by-step field guide for entrepreneurs, professionals and investors who want to build and scale in one of the world's most dynamic business hubs — from choosing the right licence and jurisdiction to opening bank accounts, hiring, marketing and staying compliant.

Read Sample Chapters

ISBN 978-93-5914-623-2 · 380 pages · Book 2 in The Dubai Syndicate Way series · Launching on Amazon

What You Will Find

From restaurant to real estate, salon to SaaS — every chapter follows the same eight-section template: what the business actually is in Dubai, the capital required, the licence and jurisdiction, the first three customers, the profit margins and cash cycle, the top three mistakes, who is already winning, and an honest verdict. You can read the categories that interest you and use the rest as a reference.

The featured chapters below are free to read online. The complete book — all 35 industries, all four sections of foundations, and the resource directory — launches on Amazon soon. the moment it goes live.

All 40 Chapters

Featured chapters are published as free online articles. The complete book is launching on Amazon.

Part One
Foundations
Part Two
The Field Guide — 35 Industries

Food & Beverage

Five chapters · CH 6–10

06

Restaurant & Casual Dining

The dream everyone arrives with — and the economics that decide it.

Read article →
07

Café & Coffee Shop

Simple from the pavement. Unforgiving once you are behind the counter.

In the book
08

Cloud Kitchen (Delivery-Only)

The lowest barrier to entry in Dubai's food sector — and the aggregator economics.

Read article →
09

Catering & Private Chef

F&B without a dining room to fill every night.

In the book
10

Bakery & Dessert Shop

Built on gifting, seasonal peaks and an Instagram discovery cycle.

In the book

Personal & Lifestyle Services

Five chapters · CH 11–15

11

Salon & Barbershop

A neighbourhood business built on chairs, regulars and a chair-licence economy.

In the book
12

Spa & Wellness Centre

Add a massage table and a second regulator walks through the door.

In the book
13

Fitness Studio & Gym

The membership math, the equipment cap-ex, the trainer-retention problem.

In the book
14

Tutoring & Training Centre

KHDA approval, programme design and the seasonal calendar.

In the book
15

Pet Care & Grooming

A small, loyal market with a clear regulator and rising demand.

In the book

Home & Property Services

Five chapters · CH 16–20

16

Real Estate Brokerage

RERA, the broker card and the commission cycle.

In the book
17

Cleaning Services

The scheduling problem and the staffing economics.

In the book
18

Handyman & Maintenance

Annual contracts, on-call work and the trade-licence basics.

In the book
19

Interior Design & Fit-Out

The permit chain, the deposit cycle and the project-margin math.

In the book
20

Landscaping & Pool Maintenance

Recurring contracts, hot-weather operations and water economics.

In the book

Mobility & Transport

Four chapters · CH 21–24

21

Car Rental

Fleet economics, RTA registration and the insurance reality.

In the book
22

Chauffeur & Limousine Service

RTA limo permit, hotel partnerships and the per-hour math.

In the book
23

Car Wash & Detailing

Premises, water consumption and add-on service margins.

In the book
24

Delivery & Last-Mile Logistics

Rider economics, aggregator contracts and the urban routing problem.

In the book

Trade & Commerce

Four chapters · CH 25–28

25

General Trading (Import & Export)

The activity codes, the customs flow and the bank-handling reality.

In the book
26

E-commerce Store

Payment gateways, fulfilment options and ad economics.

In the book
27

Retail Shop & Boutique

Rent, footfall, and the inventory-turnover number that decides everything.

In the book
28

Building Materials Trading

Project cycles, payment terms and showroom economics.

In the book

Tourism & Events

Four chapters · CH 29–32

29

Tour Operator & Desert Safari

DTCM licensing, fleet partnerships and seasonal pricing.

In the book
30

Travel Agency

IATA, the trust-deposit cycle and the corporate-account play.

In the book
31

Event Management & Wedding Planning

Vendor margins, deposit terms and the wedding-season math.

In the book
32

Holiday Homes Management

DTCM permits, OTA economics and the cleaning-and-key handover system.

In the book

Professional Services

Four chapters · CH 33–36

33

Business Setup & Corporate Services

Selling setup itself — and the operating model that actually scales.

In the book
34

Accounting & Bookkeeping

Corporate tax, VAT, and the recurring-fee model.

In the book
35

Marketing & Advertising Agency

Retainers, project work and the talent-cost margin.

In the book
36

Recruitment & HR Services

MOHRE, fee structures and the candidate-pipeline economics.

In the book

Tech & Specialised

Four chapters · CH 37–40

37

SaaS & Software Company

Free-zone fit, ARR economics and the regional GTM play.

In the book
38

IT Services & Managed Support

SLA contracts, SME pricing and tech-stack partnerships.

In the book
39

Web & Mobile App Development

Project margins, retainer conversion and the offshore-team math.

In the book
40

Digital Media & Content Production

Production rates, brand contracts and the gear-vs-output question.

In the book
Part Three
Resources

The 90-day launch plan

In the book

Free zone vs mainland — comparison

In the book

Authority & regulator directory

In the book

The cost ready-reckoner

In the book

Glossary of Dubai business terms

In the book

About Islam Inamdar

Islam Inamdar is an entrepreneur, business strategist and the founder of Dubai Syndicate. With deep experience across company formation, licensing and cross-border business structures, he has guided hundreds of founders across 35+ industries to launch with clarity and confidence.

His mission is simple: make business setup in Dubai practical, predictable and profitable. How to Start a Business in Dubai is the practical companion to his first book, The Dubai Syndicate Way — the philosophy book that shaped this field guide.

Also by Islam Inamdar

The Dubai Syndicate Way

The Dubai Syndicate Way

The 19-chapter playbook for building, scaling and dominating a business in Dubai. The philosophy book that shaped this field guide.

 Read Book 1

Frequently Asked About Book 2

When does the book launch on Amazon?

The book is in production and launches on Amazon soon. Tap the Notify Me button above to be alerted the moment it goes live.

What does the book cover?

Five foundation chapters (why Dubai, the jurisdiction decision, licensing and visas, the money, the operating mindset), 35 industry chapters on a single comparable template, and a resource section with a 90-day launch plan, mainland vs free zone comparison, regulator directory and cost reckoner.

How is Book 2 different from The Dubai Syndicate Way?

Book 1 is the philosophy and mindset book — how to think like a Dubai entrepreneur. Book 2 is the practical field guide — exact numbers, licences, customers and margins for 35 specific industries. Both are part of The Dubai Syndicate Way series.

Which industries does the field guide cover?

Eight categories — Food & Beverage, Personal & Lifestyle Services, Home & Property Services, Mobility & Transport, Trade & Commerce, Tourism & Events, Professional Services, and Tech & Specialised — for 35 industry chapters in total. See the full contents list above.

Can I read parts of the book free?

Yes. Six sample chapters are published free on this site: Why Dubai, Mainland vs Free Zone, Licensing & Setup, Banking & Cashflow, How to Open a Restaurant in Dubai, and How to Start a Cloud Kitchen in Dubai.

Read the book. Then join the room.

The book gives you the playbook. Dubai Syndicate gives you the network, the meetups and the referrals to put it into action.