UAE-South Korea CEPA in Force: What the Landmark Trade Deal Means for Gulf Exporters

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The Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement between the United Arab Emirates and the Republic of Korea entered into force on 1 May 2026, marking a significant expansion of the UAE’s trade architecture and becoming the country’s 17th active CEPA since it launched its global trade partnership programme in 2021.

Signed on 29 May 2024 after roughly two years of negotiations, the UAE-Korea agreement removes or reduces tariffs on 91.2 per cent of traded goods and services between the two countries, with full elimination of tariffs on more than 90 per cent of goods phased in over a period of up to ten years.

First CEPA Between Korea and a MENA Economy

The agreement is the first of its kind between South Korea and any economy in the Middle East and North Africa region, giving UAE businesses a structural first-mover advantage in one of Asia’s most advanced industrial and technology markets. Korea is home to global conglomerates in shipbuilding, semiconductors, electric vehicles, consumer electronics and petrochemicals — all sectors where GCC companies have both strategic interest and growing procurement demand.

Bilateral non-oil trade between the UAE and Korea reached $6.9 billion in 2025, a number the Ministry of Economy projects will more than double within five years as the tariff schedule unfolds. South Korean companies exporting industrial goods and electronics to the UAE will benefit from reduced import duties, while UAE-origin goods — including aluminium, petrochemicals, plastics and refined products — will face lower barriers entering the Korean market.

Key Sectors Covered

Beyond goods trade, the CEPA establishes a structured framework for cross-border investment and regulatory alignment in a range of priority sectors:

  • Renewable Energy: The agreement creates a pathway for Korean green technology companies — particularly in solar, battery storage and hydrogen — to access UAE government procurement opportunities, while UAE project developers gain improved access to Korean financing mechanisms.
  • Healthcare and Life Sciences: Mutual recognition of pharmaceutical standards and streamlined regulatory approvals are included, reflecting both countries’ ambitions to build regional healthcare manufacturing capacity.
  • Advanced Manufacturing: Korea’s expertise in precision manufacturing and automation aligns with the UAE’s “Make it in the Emirates” industrial strategy, and the CEPA creates joint working groups to identify co-production opportunities.
  • Digital Economy and Technology: Data governance, digital trade facilitation and e-commerce rules are included, making this one of the most digitally comprehensive CEPAs the UAE has signed.

Practical Steps for UAE Businesses

Exporters wishing to benefit from preferential tariff rates must obtain a UAE certificate of origin issued by an approved body — the Dubai Chamber of Commerce, Abu Dhabi Chamber or ADAFSA, depending on the product category. Goods must meet the applicable rules of origin requirements, which generally require substantial transformation to take place within the UAE.

The Ministry of Economy has published a dedicated CEPA portal at moet.gov.ae where businesses can access the full tariff schedule, rules of origin annex and information on non-tariff barrier commitments. Early engagement with the Korea Trade-Investment Promotion Agency (KOTRA) office in Dubai is recommended for companies entering the Korean market for the first time.

Context Within the UAE’s Broader CEPA Programme

The Korea agreement follows a rapid sequence of landmark CEPAs the UAE has activated since 2022, including deals with India ($85 billion bilateral trade target), Israel, Turkey, Indonesia, Cambodia, Costa Rica and, most recently, Canada. Each agreement has been structured around the UAE’s core competitive advantages: a central logistics hub, a large re-export economy, and a sovereign wealth and investment ecosystem that can anchor economic co-operation with long-term capital commitments.

Together, the UAE’s active CEPAs now cover economies accounting for more than 35 per cent of global GDP — a coverage ratio that rivals long-established trading nations and reflects a deliberate post-hydrocarbon positioning as a global trade gateway rather than a regional commodity exporter.

For GCC neighbours watching the UAE’s CEPA strategy, the Korea deal provides a template worth studying. Qatar and Saudi Arabia have both initiated exploratory trade negotiations with Asian partners, but neither has yet activated a bilateral CEPA at the scale or pace the UAE has achieved. The competitive advantage for businesses headquartered in the Emirates is likely to compound with each successive agreement that comes into force.

Also Read: UAE and EU Strengthen Trade Ties: A New Era of Gulf-European Partnership | UK-GCC Free Trade Agreement: Progress Report and What It Means for Business

Ahmed Al Farsi
Ahmed Al Farsi
Finance and Markets Reporter

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