The **Arm’s Length Principle (ALP)** is the statutory mandate ensuring that financial interactions between **Related Parties** or **Connected Persons** mirror the economic reality of the open market. In the 2026 audit cycle, ALP is the primary lens through which the FTA detects "Profit Shifting."
The Article 34 Compliance Framework
Under **Article 34 of Decree-Law No. 47**, the FTA has the power to adjust a taxpayer's taxable income if their transactions do not comply with the ALP. By 2026, the UAE has fully integrated the **OECD Transfer Pricing Guidelines**, requiring five forensic comparability factors:
Functional Analysis (FAR)
Comparing the Functions, Assets, and Risks assumed by each party in the transaction.
Contractual Terms
Verifying if written agreements match the actual economic conduct of the entities.
Economic Conditions
Benchmarking prices against current UAE market volatility and geographic demand.
The 'Transfer Pricing Drift' Warning
For Free Zone entities, ALP is the "Substance Gatekeeper." If you provide services to a Mainland sister company at an inflated price to reduce their 9% tax exposure, the FTA will view this as **Transfer Pricing Drift**. This breach can lead to the retroactive stripping of your **Qualifying Free Zone Person (QFZP)** status, as the entity no longer meets the 'adequate substance' or 'arm's length' requirements of Article 18.
Forensic Benchmarking with Arakan
The Arakan Protocol utilizes **Real-Time Benchmarking**. Instead of waiting for an end-of-year TP study, our engine analyzes inter-company invoices against a sovereign database of independent market rates. If a transaction falls outside the **Interquartile Range**, a forensic alert is generated immediately.
"In 2026, 'Arm’s Length' isn't just about the price—it's about the proof. If you cannot produce a **Local File** and **Master File** that justifies your internal margins, the auditor will choose the benchmark for you. And they rarely choose the one that favors the taxpayer."
— Arakan Statutory Intelligence Brief