When you are considered a French tax resident, you are required to report all of your income to the French tax authorities, regardless of where you earned it. Therefore, if you receive income from abroad, you are required to declare this income to the French tax authorities.
In such a case, you could potentially face double taxation. The double taxation mechanism means that the French tax resident is taxed twice. Income could therefore be taxed in two countries at the same time. This situation arises when the individual or a company is located in two separate countries that have not concluded a tax treaty with each other.
In this case, an agreement between the government of the French Republic and the government of the United Arab Emirates (" WATER "), with a view to avoiding double taxation, was signed on July 19, 1989 and amended by an amendment dated December 6, 1993 (the " France-Emirates Tax Convention ").