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UAE LLC share transfer rules 2026

UAE Commercial Companies Law 2026, Practical Guide to LLC Share Classes, Transfers and Exits

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

Last reviewed: 1 May 2026

The UAE LLC share transfer rules 2026 represent the most significant overhaul of limited-liability-company governance since the original Commercial Companies Law was enacted. Federal Decree‑Law No.20 of 2025, published on 10 December 2025, introduced new provisions on share classes, transfer restrictions, in‑kind capital contributions and company re‑domiciliation, while a wave of 2026 ministerial decisions, including Ministerial Decision No.83/2026, has fleshed out the registry-level mechanics that founders, investors and general counsel must now follow. This guide delivers the step‑by‑step checklists, sample clause language and compliance timelines that deal teams need to execute share transfers, fundraising rounds and exit transactions under the reformed regime.

Executive Summary, What Founders, GCs and Investors Must Know

Before diving into the detail, three actions require immediate attention from every LLC stakeholder in the UAE.

  • Audit existing memoranda of association (MOAs). The 2026 CCL permits, and in some cases mandates, provisions on share classes, pre‑emption windows and transfer-restriction periods that may conflict with legacy MOA drafting. Review and amend MOAs before the next share‑transfer event.
  • Map your transfer-restriction calendar. Ministerial Decision No.83/2026, published in April 2026, adjusts the restriction period within which existing shareholders must exercise pre‑emption rights. Ensure compliance calendars reflect the updated timeline.
  • Confirm emirate-specific registry requirements. The Ministry of Economy and Tourism (MoET) sets the federal framework, but each emirate’s Department of Economy (DED/DET) and each free‑zone authority apply supplementary procedural steps. Verify notarisation, DLD clearance (in Dubai) and any local fees before scheduling a closing.
Legislative / Administrative Item Effective / Publication Date Practical Impact
Federal Decree‑Law No.20 of 2025 10 December 2025 New rules on share transfers, in‑kind contributions, share classes; baseline for 2026 compliance
Ministerial Decision No.83/2026 April 2026 Revised restriction period for share transfers; updated registry procedural guidance for LLCs
MoET guidance on company registration transfers Late 2025, early 2026 Practical steps for re‑domiciliation and free‑zone transfers to mainland

Background, Federal Decree‑Law No.20 of 2025 and the UAE Commercial Companies Law 2026 Ministerial Decisions

Key Statutory Changes

Federal Decree‑Law No.20 of 2025 amends the UAE Commercial Companies Law (Federal Decree‑Law No.32 of 2021) across several critical areas for LLCs. The principal changes that affect share transfers, capital structure and exits include the following provisions:

  • Share-class flexibility. The amended law expressly permits LLCs to create multiple classes of shares, including preference shares, redeemable shares, convertible shares and non-voting shares, subject to the conditions prescribed in the company’s MOA and any implementing ministerial decisions.
  • Transfer-restriction mechanics. The decree tightens the procedural framework for pre‑emption rights and introduces clearer timelines within which existing shareholders, and then the company itself, may exercise a right to acquire offered shares before they are transferred to a third party.
  • In‑kind capital contributions. New provisions require an independent valuation for non-cash contributions at the time of subscription or transfer, closing a gap that previously allowed founders to assign subjective values to intellectual property, equipment and receivables.
  • Re‑domiciliation and transfer of registration. The decree establishes a federal framework that allows companies, including, for the first time in a unified statutory pathway, certain free‑zone entities, to transfer their registration between jurisdictions within the UAE.

Ministerial Decisions of 2026, Practical Implications

Ministerial Decision No.83/2026, reported by Lexis Middle East in April 2026, provides the implementing detail for several of the decree’s share‑transfer provisions. The decision adjusts the statutory restriction period during which existing shareholders hold their pre‑emption right and prescribes updated documentation requirements for the commercial registries. Industry observers expect further ministerial decisions throughout 2026 as MoET completes the implementation cycle for the re‑domiciliation and free‑zone provisions.

Practitioners should monitor the MoET portal and Lexis Middle East for additional ministerial decisions that may affect notarisation requirements and registry-filing templates on an emirate‑by‑emirate basis.

New Permitted LLC Share Classes and Capital Structures Under the 2026 CCL

Types of LLC Share Classes Now Available in the UAE

Prior to the 2026 amendments, the concept of multiple share classes in a UAE LLC was poorly defined and rarely implemented in practice. The amended law now provides an explicit statutory basis for structuring LLC capital into distinct classes, each carrying different economic and governance rights. The table below summarises the principal categories and the rights that may attach to each.

Share Class Key Rights / Features Mandatory MOA Provisions
Ordinary shares Standard voting and dividend rights; pro‑rata distribution on winding‑up Default class, no special MOA provisions required
Preference shares Priority dividend; potential liquidation preference; may carry limited or no voting rights MOA must specify dividend priority, voting entitlement and conversion/redemption terms
Redeemable shares Company may repurchase on defined terms (price, window, trigger events) MOA must set redemption price formula, notice period and funding source
Convertible shares Convert from one class to another on trigger (e.g., IPO, qualifying round) MOA must specify conversion ratio, trigger events and anti‑dilution mechanics
Non‑voting shares Economic rights only; no vote at general assembly MOA must confirm absence of voting rights and any protective provisions
Founder shares Enhanced voting (e.g., weighted vote), vesting schedules, lock-up restrictions MOA must define vesting triggers, weighted-vote ratio and transfer lock‑up period

Mandatory Provisions and Permitted Restrictions

For any share class other than ordinary shares, the MOA must contain express provisions setting out: (a) the rights attaching to the class, (b) the circumstances in which those rights may be varied, and (c) any transfer restrictions specific to that class. The likely practical effect is that founders seeking venture‑capital or private‑equity investment will need to engage corporate counsel to draft bespoke MOA amendments before executing a subscription or share‑transfer agreement, rather than relying on side letters or shareholders’ agreements alone.

Key Changes to UAE LLC Share Transfer Rules 2026, Mechanics, Restrictions and Required Approvals

Default Statutory Transfer Route

Under the amended law, a share transfer in a mainland LLC follows a prescribed sequence. The selling shareholder must first offer the shares to existing shareholders in proportion to their holdings. If no existing shareholder exercises the pre‑emption right within the statutory restriction period, now clarified by Ministerial Decision No.83/2026, the seller may proceed to transfer to a third party, subject to any additional restrictions in the MOA.

The transfer is not effective against the company or third parties until it has been notarised and recorded in the relevant commercial register. This two‑step requirement, notarisation plus registration, remains the cornerstone of the UAE LLC share transfer rules 2026 framework.

Permitted Restrictions on Transfer

The 2026 regime permits, but does not require, the MOA to include additional restrictions beyond the statutory pre‑emption right. Commonly adopted provisions include:

  • Board or manager consent. A requirement that the company’s manager or board of managers must approve the transferee before registration.
  • Lock‑up periods. A prohibition on transfer for a defined period after incorporation or after a new shareholder’s subscription (often 12–24 months for founder shares).
  • Right of first refusal (ROFR) with pricing mechanics. A contractual pre‑emption right that supplements the statutory right and specifies valuation methodology (see Valuation section below).
  • Tag‑along and drag‑along rights. Provisions that protect minority or majority shareholders on a change‑of‑control event (see Buy‑outs and Exit Mechanisms below).

Notary, MoET / Local DED and Free‑Zone Registry Steps

The documentary requirements for completing a share transfer differ depending on whether the LLC is registered on the mainland, in a free zone, or operates as a branch. The following table summarises the core requirements by entity type.

Entity Type Notarisation Required? Registry / Filing Authority
Mainland LLC (Dubai) Yes, Dubai Notary Public DET (formerly DED); Dubai Land Department clearance if real‑estate assets held
Mainland LLC (Abu Dhabi) Yes, Abu Dhabi Judicial Department notary Abu Dhabi DED
Free‑zone LLC (e.g., DIFC, ADGM, DMCC) Varies, DIFC/ADGM follow common‑law procedures; DMCC requires notarisation Relevant free‑zone authority registrar
Branch of foreign company Transfer of head‑office ownership not registered locally; update of branch licence details required Relevant DED or free‑zone authority

Valuation, Consideration and Statutory Approvals, Practical Valuation Triggers

When Independent Valuation Is Required

Federal Decree‑Law No.20 of 2025 introduces a mandatory independent-valuation requirement in two primary scenarios: (a) where a shareholder makes an in‑kind capital contribution (whether at incorporation or on a subsequent capital increase), and (b) where the MOA or a ministerial decision requires fair‑value determination as a condition of exercising a pre‑emption or buyback right. Early indications suggest that MoET will publish further guidance on approved valuation methodologies and the qualifications required of the independent valuer.

Valuation Methodology and Disputes

The decree does not prescribe a single valuation standard. In practice, parties typically adopt one or more of the following approaches: discounted cash flow (DCF), comparable‑company multiples, or net asset value (NAV). The MOA should specify the methodology, and, critically, a dispute‑resolution mechanism (expert determination or arbitration) in the event the parties disagree on valuation.

Deposit and Escrow Recommendations

Given the two‑step nature of UAE share transfers (notarisation followed by registration), industry observers expect a growing use of escrow arrangements to hold the purchase price between signing and completion. Practitioners should consider requiring the buyer to deposit funds into an escrow account before attending the notary, with release conditional upon confirmation of registration by the relevant commercial register.

Buy‑Outs, Deadlocks and Shareholder Exit Rights UAE, Drafting and Templates

Drag‑Along, Tag‑Along, Put and Call Mechanics Under the 2026 Regime

The expanded share‑class framework and explicit statutory recognition of transfer restrictions give founders and investors considerably more flexibility to embed exit mechanics directly in the MOA. The following sample clauses illustrate the core protections that can now be anchored in the constitutional document rather than relegated to a side shareholders’ agreement.

Sample drag‑along clause (editable):

“If one or more Shareholders holding in aggregate not less than [●]% of the issued Shares (the ‘Dragging Shareholders’) receive or negotiate a bona fide offer from a Third Party Purchaser for the acquisition of all issued Shares, the Dragging Shareholders may, by written notice to the remaining Shareholders, require each remaining Shareholder to transfer its Shares to the Third Party Purchaser on the same terms and at the same price per Share as the Dragging Shareholders, subject to completion of the pre‑emption procedure prescribed by the Law and this MOA.”

Sample tag‑along clause (editable):

“If any Shareholder (the ‘Selling Shareholder’) proposes to transfer Shares representing [●]% or more of the issued Shares to a Third Party Purchaser, each other Shareholder shall have the right, exercisable within [●] Business Days of receipt of the Transfer Notice, to require the Selling Shareholder to procure that the Third Party Purchaser acquires such proportion of the other Shareholder’s Shares on the same terms.”

Share Buyback and Capital Reduction Mechanics

The introduction of redeemable shares under the 2026 CCL gives companies a direct statutory route to fund shareholder exits through buyback. A buyback must be funded from distributable reserves or, where the MOA permits, from the proceeds of a fresh issuance. Capital reduction remains subject to MoET approval and creditor-protection requirements. Practitioners should draft the redemption provision to specify: (a) the trigger event (e.g., passage of time, failure to achieve milestones), (b) the redemption price formula, (c) the funding waterfall, and (d) a fallback if insufficient reserves exist.

Insolvency and Post‑Transfer Liabilities

A seller who transfers shares in a UAE LLC does not automatically shed liability for pre‑transfer obligations, particularly guarantees, undisclosed liabilities or regulatory exposures. Buyers should insist on comprehensive seller warranties, indemnity caps and a retention or escrow holdback to cover post‑completion claims. The 2026 amendments do not alter the general position that a shareholder’s liability in an LLC is limited to the value of its shares, but any personal guarantees given to banks, landlords or trade creditors survive a share transfer unless expressly released.

Free‑Zone Companies, Re‑Domiciliation and Transferring Company Registration in the UAE 2026

Free‑Zone to Mainland, Step‑by‑Step Process

Federal Decree‑Law No.20 of 2025 and MoET guidance published in late 2025 create, for the first time, a unified statutory pathway for certain free‑zone companies to transfer their registration to a mainland jurisdiction. The process involves the following principal steps:

  1. Obtain a no‑objection certificate (NOC) from the free‑zone authority confirming that the company has no outstanding obligations, penalties or active disputes.
  2. Submit a re‑domiciliation application to the target emirate’s DED/DET, together with the company’s audited financial statements, current MOA, shareholder and manager details, and the free‑zone NOC.
  3. Amend the MOA to comply with the mainland LLC requirements under the amended CCL, including any required share‑class adjustments and appointment of a licensed auditor.
  4. Complete notarisation of the amended MOA and obtain a new mainland trade licence.
  5. De‑register from the free‑zone authority and surrender the free‑zone licence.

For a detailed procedural checklist on how to transfer company registration in the UAE (2026), refer to the companion guide.

Re‑Domiciliation Forms and Regulatory Fees

Fees vary by emirate and by the direction of the company re‑domiciliation. In Dubai, the DET charges a re‑registration fee in addition to the standard trade-licence issuance fee. In Abu Dhabi, a separate application to the Abu Dhabi DED is required. Free‑zone companies operating onshore under dual‑licence arrangements introduced in 2026 should confirm whether any additional regulatory approvals (for example, from the Securities and Commodities Authority for regulated activities) are needed before filing.

Dubai Land Department Considerations

Where a company holds real‑estate assets in Dubai, any change in the company’s shareholders, whether by share transfer on the mainland or as a consequence of re‑domiciliation from a free zone, may trigger a DLD reporting obligation or transfer fee. Practitioners should obtain DLD clearance before completing the transfer to avoid delays at the notary stage.

Practical Timeline and Step‑by‑Step Procedural Checklist

The following checklist maps the typical share‑transfer workflow for a mainland LLC under the UAE LLC share transfer rules 2026, from offer through registration.

Step Responsible Party Typical Timeline
1. Seller issues Transfer Notice to existing shareholders (pre‑emption offer) Seller Day 1
2. Pre‑emption period expires (per Ministerial Decision No.83/2026 restriction period) Existing shareholders Day 1 – Day 30 (indicative)
3. If no pre‑emption exercised, seller and buyer negotiate and sign Share Purchase Agreement (SPA) Seller / Buyer Day 31 – Day 45
4. Independent valuation obtained (if required) Company / Buyer Day 31 – Day 50
5. Attend notary, notarise SPA and amended MOA Seller / Buyer / Company Day 50 – Day 55
6. File amended MOA and transfer documents with commercial register (DED/DET) Company Day 55 – Day 60
7. Obtain updated trade licence reflecting new shareholding Company Day 60 – Day 70
8. Release escrow funds (if applicable) Escrow agent Day 70 – Day 75

Key documents checklist:

  • Original MOA and any amendments
  • Transfer Notice and evidence of service on all existing shareholders
  • Waiver letters from non‑exercising shareholders (or expiry evidence)
  • Share Purchase Agreement (executed)
  • Independent valuation report (if in‑kind or MOA trigger)
  • Passport / Emirates ID copies of seller, buyer and managers
  • Board / manager resolution approving the transfer (if MOA requires consent)
  • NOC from DLD (if real‑estate assets held in Dubai)
  • Notarised amended MOA reflecting new shareholding
  • Payment of DED/DET registration fee and notary fee

Common Pitfalls, Risk Allocation and Negotiating Playbook

Even experienced deal teams encounter recurring risks when executing share transfers and exits under a newly amended regime. The following red flags deserve particular attention under the 2026 framework.

  • Failure to serve a valid Transfer Notice. If the pre‑emption procedure is not followed precisely, including use of the correct notice form and delivery method, the transfer may be voidable at the instance of any aggrieved shareholder.
  • Relying on a shareholders’ agreement without amending the MOA. Under the 2026 CCL, share‑class rights and transfer restrictions derive their statutory force from the MOA. A side shareholders’ agreement may be unenforceable against the company or a bona fide third‑party transferee if not reflected in the registered MOA.
  • Overlooking DLD clearance. In Dubai, failing to obtain DLD clearance before notarisation can stall the entire closing. This is especially common in transactions involving holding companies that own real property.
  • Ignoring post‑transfer regulatory notifications. Certain regulated entities (financial services, insurance, healthcare) must notify their sector regulator of a change in shareholding. Missing these notifications can trigger fines or licence suspension.
  • Underestimating emirate‑level variations. A process that takes five business days at the Dubai DET may take longer at another emirate’s DED. Build buffer time into the transaction timeline.

Sample indemnity language (editable):

“The Seller shall indemnify and hold harmless the Buyer and the Company from and against any and all Losses arising out of or in connection with any breach of the Seller’s warranties or any undisclosed liabilities of the Company that relate to the period prior to Completion, subject to an aggregate cap of [●]% of the Purchase Price and a claim-notification period of [●] months from Completion.”

Conclusion and Recommended Next Steps

The UAE LLC share transfer rules 2026 mark a decisive shift toward international best practice in LLC governance, introducing genuine share‑class flexibility, clearer pre‑emption mechanics and a statutory re‑domiciliation pathway that together expand the options available to founders, investors and acquirers. To stay compliant and transaction‑ready, every LLC stakeholder should take the following steps now:

  1. Commission a gap analysis of existing MOAs against the amended CCL and Ministerial Decision No.83/2026.
  2. Update template SPAs, shareholders’ agreements and board resolutions to reflect the new pre‑emption timeline and share‑class provisions.
  3. Engage qualified corporate counsel to advise on emirate‑specific registry and notary requirements before scheduling any closing.

Disclaimer: This article is published for general informational purposes and does not constitute formal legal advice. Readers should seek independent professional counsel before acting on any of the matters discussed.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Mohammed Haitham A. Salman at Middle East Alliance Legal Consultancy (ME-Alliance), a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Ministry of Economy and Tourism (UAE), Federal Decree‑Law No.20 of 2025
  2. Lexis Middle East, Ministerial Decision No.83/2026
  3. Reed Smith LLP, UAE Commercial Companies Law: Key Changes and What They Mean for Business
  4. Greenberg Traurig, UAE Commercial Companies Law Amendments: Practical Corporate Structuring and M&A Considerations
  5. Global Law Experts, Transfer Company Registration UAE 2026
  6. Practical Law (Thomson Reuters), Transfer of Shares in a Limited Liability Company (UAE)
  7. Lexis Middle East, Ministerial Decisions and Regulatory Updates

FAQs

What are the key changes to the UAE Commercial Companies Law in 2026?
Federal Decree‑Law No.20 of 2025, effective from 10 December 2025, introduces new LLC share classes, revised pre‑emption and transfer‑restriction periods, mandatory independent valuation for in‑kind contributions, and a statutory re‑domiciliation pathway. Ministerial Decision No.83/2026 provides implementing detail for the transfer-restriction period.
Transfers must follow a tighter pre‑emption sequence with updated timelines. Shareholders’ exit rights, including drag‑along, tag‑along, put and call options, can now be embedded in the MOA with statutory backing, replacing reliance on side agreements.
Yes. The amended law and MoET guidance establish a unified re‑domiciliation pathway. The company must obtain a free‑zone NOC, amend its MOA for mainland compliance and file with the target emirate’s DED/DET. See the companion transfer of company registration guide for a full checklist.
An independent valuation is mandatory when a shareholder makes an in‑kind capital contribution and when the MOA or a ministerial decision requires fair‑value determination for a pre‑emption or buyback exercise.
A straightforward mainland LLC share transfer typically takes 60–75 days from the date the Transfer Notice is issued, including the pre‑emption period, SPA negotiation, notarisation and registry filing.
Transfer restrictions in the MOA must comply with the framework set by the amended CCL and Ministerial Decision No.83/2026. MoET does not approve individual restrictions, but the commercial registry will verify compliance at the time of filing the amended MOA.
These protections should be included in the MOA, not only in a side shareholders’ agreement, to benefit from statutory enforceability. The drag‑along clause should specify the triggering shareholding threshold, and both clauses must be consistent with the statutory pre‑emption procedure.
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UAE Commercial Companies Law 2026, Practical Guide to LLC Share Classes, Transfers and Exits

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