The thing most business setup consultancies do not tell you is this: getting the licence is the easy part. The hard part is making the whole structure work — banking, visas, operations, compliance — after the licence is in your hand.
I started my career inside UAE banks in 2007. For the first nine years of my working life, I was on the other side of the table from every entrepreneur who walked through a bank's door asking to open a corporate account. I reviewed applications. I saw the documentation. I understood what compliance teams looked for, and — more importantly — I understood what made them hesitate, delay, or decline.
What I saw consistently was this: businesses that had been set up quickly and cheaply, without anyone thinking about how the company would look to a UAE bank, were the ones who struggled most. A vague activity description, an unclear shareholder structure, a company address that does not match the business profile — these things do not seem important on licence day, but they cause real problems six months later when you are trying to open an account or process a large transaction.
In 2014 I moved into the business setup industry specifically because I wanted to solve that problem. I brought with me a practical, inside understanding of what UAE banks expect — and I started helping clients prepare not just for licensing, but for the banking, visa and compliance stages that come after. Over the years I supported mainland DED formations, free zone licences across DMCC, IFZA, RAKEZ, Meydan and 40+ other authorities, offshore structures, Golden Visa applications, family visa sponsorships, PRO services and KSA market entry.
The most common expensive mistake I see in UAE business setup: founders choose the cheapest licence that gets them a trade licence number, without checking whether that structure will pass a UAE bank's compliance review. When the bank says no — which happens regularly with poorly prepared files — the client then has to either migrate the company, restructure, or spend months building the banking profile from scratch. That cost is always far higher than doing it right at the start.
In 2026 I founded XILLION Group UAE at Meydan Grandstand, Dubai — the same building where Meydan Free Zone operates. The reason I chose Meydan is practical: it is a prestigious central Dubai address, I understand the free zone better than any other consultancy because I work in the same building, and the address carries weight with UAE banks in a way that more remote or ambiguous addresses sometimes do not.
Every consultation at XILLION is with me. Not a junior agent following a script. Not a franchise operation with standardised packages. Me, directly, giving you the same assessment I would give a close friend or family member who was asking how to set up in the UAE. If the right answer is to wait, I will say wait. If the right answer is free zone not mainland, I will explain exactly why. That is the only way I know how to do this work properly.