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Restaurant Accounting and Bookkeeping in the UAE: A Complete Operations Guide
Restaurant Accounting and Bookkeeping in the UAE: A Complete Operations Guide

General information only. This article does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice. Consult a qualified UAE accountant or tax advisor for guidance specific to your business.

Why Restaurant Accounting in the UAE Demands Its Own Approach

Running clean restaurant books in the UAE means navigating daily cash-and-card reconciliation, delivery-aggregator settlements, Wages Protection System (WPS) obligations, 5% VAT on almost every sale, and a corporate-tax regime active since June 2023 — all while managing food and labour costs in real time. Generic bookkeeping guides miss the UAE context; this operations guide fills that gap.

For VAT rates and exemptions see our UAE VAT guide for restaurants and F&B; for filing mechanics see our restaurant VAT and corporate tax services. This article focuses on day-to-day accounting operations.

The Restaurant Chart of Accounts for UAE F&B Businesses

A UAE restaurant chart of accounts must separate revenue by channel and costs by category so that VAT, corporate tax, and operational reports all draw from the same clean source. A well-designed chart of accounts acts as the financial blueprint for your UAE restaurant, enabling precise tracking and analysis of every dirham earned and spent.

Revenue Accounts

  • 4001 Dine-in Sales
  • 4002 Takeaway Sales
  • 4003 Delivery Sales (aggregator channels — Talabat, Careem Now, Noon Food)
  • 4004 Catering and Events Revenue
  • 4005 Beverage Sales (sub-split alcoholic / non-alcoholic where licensed)
  • 4006 Other Income (service charges, rental income)

Cost of Goods Sold (COGS)

  • 5001 Food Purchases — sub-accounts by category: Meat, Poultry, Seafood, Produce, Dry Goods
  • 5002 Beverage Purchases
  • 5003 Packaging Materials
  • 5004 Delivery Platform Commissions (Talabat, Deliveroo, Uber Eats)
  • 5005 Wastage and Spoilage

Operating Expenses

  • 6001 Salaries and Wages
  • 6002 Staff Benefits and Meals
  • 6003 Rent and Service Charges
  • 6004 Utilities
  • 6005 Repairs and Maintenance
  • 6006 Marketing and Promotions
  • 6007 Kitchen Supplies and Smallwares
  • 6008 POS and Accounting Software Subscriptions
  • 6009 Credit Card Merchant Fees
  • 6010 Professional Fees (accounting, legal, consultancy)
  • 6011 Depreciation — Equipment and Fit-out
  • 6012 Cleaning and Laundry

Separate delivery-platform commissions (5004) from food purchases (5001) — aggregators net-settle, meaning they remit revenue minus their commission. Mixing the two distorts your true COGS and inflates apparent food costs.

Daily Sales Reconciliation: POS, Aggregators, Cash, and Card

Accurate daily reconciliation closes the gap between what the POS reports and what actually lands in your bank account. Skip it once and errors compound quickly across multiple revenue channels.

POS Reconciliation

At end of shift or end of day, export the POS Z-report and match total net sales to the sum of cash collected, card terminal batches, and any house-account charges. Any variance of more than AED 5–10 should be investigated before closing the shift. Cloud-based POS systems (such as those certified for UAE e-invoicing) can push daily totals directly into accounting software, eliminating manual re-entry errors.

Delivery Aggregator Reconciliation

Platforms like Talabat, Careem Now, and Noon Food settle weekly or bi-weekly and net commissions before remitting. Your bookkeeping workflow should:

  1. Record gross order value as revenue (4003) when the order is placed — not on settlement date.
  2. Book platform commission as an expense (5004) on the same date.
  3. When settlement arrives, match the bank receipt to the aggregator statement line by line.
  4. Retain aggregator statements as supporting documents for VAT input claims and corporate-tax deductions.

Reconciliation gaps are a common FTA audit finding for multi-channel restaurants. Aggregator statements must be filed alongside your VAT returns as evidence of taxable supplies.

Cash and Card Balancing

Count physical cash at shift close, compare to POS expected cash, and deposit the same day. Card settlements typically clear T+1 to T+2 through the payment gateway (Network International, Checkout.com, etc.). Match cleared card amounts in the bank statement to the POS card-sale total for that date — net of merchant-service fees booked separately to account 6009.

Cost of Goods Sold and Food Cost Percentage

Food cost percentage measures what proportion of food revenue is consumed by ingredients — the formula is: (Opening Inventory + Purchases − Closing Inventory) ÷ Food Revenue × 100. UAE industry benchmarks target 28–35% for most restaurant formats; quick-service restaurants typically run slightly higher at around 30–32%, while fine dining may accept up to 38% in exchange for premium produce.

Tracking requires weekly stocktakes at minimum, with daily counts on high-value proteins. FIFO rotation reduces spoilage and keeps actual costs aligned with recipe-costing models. Every menu item should have a costed recipe card — the standard cost per dish divided by the ex-VAT selling price gives theoretical food cost percentage. Persistent gaps between theoretical and actual food cost signal waste, over-portioning, theft, or supplier short-weight.

For a step-by-step guide to opening a restaurant and controlling costs from day one, see our F&B business setup package.

Prime Cost: The Single Most Important Restaurant Metric

Prime cost combines food cost percentage and total labour cost percentage against total revenue — capturing the two largest, most controllable cost lines in a single number.

Prime Cost = (Total Food and Beverage Cost + Total Labour Cost) ÷ Total Revenue × 100

Healthy UAE benchmarks by concept type:

Restaurant TypeTarget Prime CostFood Cost ComponentLabour Cost Component
Quick-Service / Fast-Casual55–60%30–33%25–27%
Casual Dining60–65%28–32%30–33%
Fine Dining60–68%33–38%28–32%
Cloud Kitchen / Delivery-Only55–62%32–35%23–27%

A prime cost above 65% leaves insufficient margin after occupancy, utilities, and debt service. Monitor it weekly — not just at month-end — to catch rising food prices or overstaffing before they erode profitability.

Payroll, WPS, and Their Bookkeeping Interplay

The UAE Wages Protection System (WPS) is a government-mandated electronic salary transfer system under the Central Bank and MOHRE. All private-sector employers registered with MOHRE must pay wages through WPS-approved channels on time and in full.

The 15-Day Rule

Payment more than 15 days past the contractual due date constitutes a WPS violation and can result in fines, a labour ban, and the business appearing on MOHRE watchlists. For bookkeeping purposes this means payroll must be prepared, approved, and submitted to the bank early enough to clear within the window.

Monthly Payroll Reconciliation Workflow

  1. HR vs attendance — verify headcount, joiners, leavers, leave, and overtime before computing gross pay.
  2. Attendance vs payroll — validate overtime rates (1.25× weekday, 1.5× weekend/public holiday under UAE Labour Law).
  3. Payroll vs bank/WPS — confirm the SIF (Salary Information File) total matches the payroll register and that the bank transfer cleared.

Retain SIF files, bank confirmations, attendance exports, and OT-approval records in a dated folder each month — supporting documents for corporate-tax deductions and FTA audits. Recommended retention: seven years minimum.

Bookkeeping Entries

Post gross salaries to account 6001 and employer gratuity provision to a separate liability account. Never net gratuity accruals against salary expense — doing so understates your labour liability and creates surprises at end-of-service.

VAT and Corporate Tax Record-Keeping Obligations

UAE tax law imposes distinct retention periods: VAT records for at least five years after the relevant tax period; corporate tax records for at least five years from financial year-end. Capital assets and real estate have longer requirements. For VAT rates, exemptions, and filing mechanics see our UAE VAT guide for restaurants.

What Records Must Be Kept

  • All tax invoices issued and received, with sequential numbering and your Tax Registration Number (TRN)
  • Credit and debit notes
  • VAT returns (Form VAT 201) and FTA acknowledgements
  • General ledger, trial balance, and monthly bank reconciliations
  • WPS and payroll registers
  • Aggregator settlement statements
  • Fixed asset register and depreciation schedules
  • Import and customs documentation where applicable

E-Invoicing from July 2026

As of July 2026, all VAT-registered entities must issue e-invoices through FTA-compliant platforms. Restaurants not yet using a compliant POS or accounting solution should act immediately — non-compliance blocks input VAT claims and triggers FTA penalties starting at AED 2,500 per invoice.

FTA Penalty Summary

ViolationPenalty
Poor record-keeping (first offence)AED 3,000
Poor record-keeping (repeat within 24 months)AED 5,000
Failure to issue a tax invoiceAED 2,500 per invoice
Late VAT registrationAED 10,000
Late VAT payment2% immediately + 4% monthly (up to 300% of unpaid tax)

Inventory Accounting for F&B Operations

Inventory is both a balance-sheet asset and the primary driver of food cost. When goods arrive, raise a goods-received note (GRN) matched to the supplier invoice and book the purchase to the correct COGS sub-account (5001–5003) immediately. At period-end, count physical stock, value it at cost using FIFO, and record the closing balance as a current asset. The movement between opening and closing inventory plus purchases equals COGS for the period.

Track waste and spoilage separately in account 5005. Excessive spoilage signals over-ordering, storage failures, or slow-moving menu items. Reporting it as a distinct line item — rather than folding it into food cost — makes the root cause visible and actionable.

Key Restaurant KPIs Your Books Should Produce Weekly

Structured accounts enable operational KPIs, not just compliance. The following should be extractable from your records every week:

  • Food Cost % — target 28–35%
  • Labour Cost % — target 25–33% by concept
  • Prime Cost — combined target below 65%
  • Gross Profit Margin — Revenue minus COGS as a % of revenue
  • RevPASH — Revenue per available seat hour; total revenue ÷ (seats × operating hours)
  • Table Turnover Rate — Average covers per table per service period
  • Average Spend Per Cover — Total revenue ÷ covers, tracked by meal period
  • Break-Even Point — Fixed costs ÷ (1 − variable cost ratio)

In-House Versus Outsourced Bookkeeping for UAE Restaurants

The decision to keep bookkeeping in-house or to outsource it hinges on volume, budget, and the complexity of your tax and regulatory obligations in the UAE.

In-House Bookkeeping

Suited to larger groups with multiple outlets, dedicated finance teams, or operators who want real-time access to daily numbers. Requires investment in FTA-compliant accounting software, ongoing staff training on VAT and corporate-tax updates, and strong internal controls to prevent fraud. The risk: an in-house bookkeeper who is not current on UAE tax changes can produce technically non-compliant records without either party realising.

Outsourced Bookkeeping

Suited to independent restaurants and small chains that want professional-grade compliance without the overhead of a full-time finance function. A specialist UAE hospitality accounting firm handles daily postings, monthly reconciliations, VAT return preparation, and WPS payroll processing — and takes responsibility for keeping up with FTA regulatory changes, including e-invoicing mandates. Cost is typically a fraction of a full-time hire and scales with transaction volume.

Whichever model you choose, review the monthly P&L, prime cost report, and bank reconciliation personally. Numbers you do not review cannot protect you. Learn more through our restaurant bookkeeping service.

UAE Record-Retention Rules at a Glance

UAE law specifies minimum retention periods across several regulatory frameworks. Satisfy the most demanding requirement that applies to each document type.

Document TypeMinimum RetentionAuthority
VAT invoices, returns, and ledgers5 years after tax periodFTA / UAE VAT Law
Corporate tax records and financials5 years after financial year-endFTA / Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022
Capital asset (equipment, fit-out) records10 yearsFTA guidance
Real estate and property records15 yearsFTA guidance
WPS and payroll recordsMinimum 5 years (7 years recommended)MOHRE / Labour Law
Bank statements5 years (align with VAT retention)Central Bank / FTA
Commercial contracts (leases, supplier)Duration of contract + 5 yearsCommercial Transactions Law

Records must be secure, tamper-proof, and retrievable in a readable format within 48 hours of an FTA audit request. Cloud-based accounting software satisfies this requirement if properly backed up; paper-only records stored off-site often do not. If you are setting up your restaurant banking and need a compliant financial infrastructure, our guide on opening a business bank account in the UAE for restaurants covers the essentials.

FAQ

How long must a UAE restaurant keep its accounting records?

VAT records must be retained for at least five years after the relevant tax period ends. Corporate tax records must be retained for at least five years from the end of the financial year. WPS payroll records should be kept for a minimum of five years, with seven years recommended to cover all potential audit windows. Capital asset records (kitchen equipment, fit-out) should be kept for ten years.

What is the ideal food cost percentage for a UAE restaurant?

Industry benchmarks indicate food cost should sit between 28% and 35% of food revenue for most UAE restaurant formats. Quick-service concepts typically run at 30–33%; casual dining at 28–32%; fine dining may accept up to 38% given premium ingredients. Tracking food cost weekly — rather than monthly — allows operators to react to price movements or wastage before they compound.

How do I reconcile Talabat or Careem Now settlements in my books?

Record gross order value as revenue on the order date; book platform commission as a separate COGS expense on the same date. When the net settlement arrives, match it line-by-line against the aggregator statement. Retain all aggregator statements — the FTA expects VAT output to match declared revenue including aggregator sales.

Is bookkeeping for a UAE restaurant different from other businesses?

Yes. Restaurants face daily multi-channel reconciliation, high COGS volatility, mandatory WPS payroll compliance, and VAT on almost every sale. Tight margins mean delayed or inaccurate books have faster and costlier consequences than in most other sectors.

Related guide: This article is part of our complete restaurant finance and accounting guide.

Make My Restaurant

Make My Restaurant is a UAE-based turnkey restaurant-services company — design, fit-out, MEP, compliance, cleaning and back-office support across all seven emirates.

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