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UAE civil procedure reforms 2026

UAE Civil Procedure Reforms 2026, What International Litigants & Arbitration Parties Need to Know

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

Last reviewed: May 2, 2026

The UAE civil procedure reforms 2026 represent the most consequential overhaul of the country’s dispute-resolution framework in over a decade, reshaping how international litigants commence claims, serve process, secure interim relief, and enforce judgments and arbitral awards. Federal Decree-Law No. 22/2025, which amended the Civil Procedures Code and took effect on 1 January 2026, introduced front-loaded evidence requirements, expanded case-management powers, and tightened interim-relief procedures. A companion statute, Federal Decree-Law No. 25/2025, effective 1 June 2026, replaces key provisions of the Civil Transactions Law governing contractual obligations, limitation periods, and remedies.

Together, these reforms create both opportunities and compliance risks for cross-border litigation in the UAE, and every in-house counsel or arbitration practitioner with exposure to the Emirates needs to understand the new landscape before filing, or defending, a claim.

  • Front-loaded evidence. Parties must now disclose core documentary evidence at an earlier stage, compressing preparation timelines.
  • Service of process modernised. Electronic service channels are formally recognised, reducing delays for foreign claimants.
  • Interim relief strengthened. Courts have broader powers to grant freezing orders, provisional attachments, and disclosure orders, including on an ex parte basis.
  • Enforcement streamlined. New procedures accelerate the recognition and enforcement of both foreign judgments and arbitral awards.
  • Arbitration-friendly posture clarified. Early indications suggest that cassation-level decisions are narrowing the grounds on which courts may intervene in or stay arbitration proceedings.

Background: Key Legislative Changes and Timeline Under the UAE Civil Procedure Reforms 2026

Two federal decree-laws form the backbone of the 2026 reform package. Understanding which statute governs which issue, and when each entered into force, is essential for international litigants planning their procedural strategy.

What Changed (Summary)

Federal Decree-Law No. 22/2025 amends the Federal Civil Procedures Code (originally issued as Federal Law No. 11 of 1992, as subsequently amended). The amendments target pre-trial and trial procedure: they mandate earlier disclosure of evidence, expand the case-management judge’s powers to set enforceable procedural timetables, formalise electronic service of process, and widen the scope of provisional and protective measures available to litigants, including foreign claimants. Federal Decree-Law No. 25/2025, meanwhile, revises the Civil Transactions Law (historically Federal Law No. 5 of 1985). Its provisions recalibrate the rules on contractual remedies, most notably the balance between damages and specific performance, and adjust limitation periods for certain commercial claims.

Effective Dates and Transitional Rules

Practitioners must track two distinct go-live dates. The procedural amendments under Federal Decree-Law No. 22/2025 became operative on 1 January 2026, meaning all cases filed from that date onward are governed by the new procedural rules. The substantive Civil Transactions Law changes under Federal Decree-Law No. 25/2025 come into force on 1 June 2026; claims arising from contracts concluded before that date may still be governed by the prior regime, although transitional provisions require careful case-by-case analysis. Industry observers expect the Federal Supreme Court to issue interpretive guidance during the second half of 2026 that will clarify any residual ambiguities in the transitional framework.

How Courts Are Interpreting the Changes (Early Decisions)

Early indications suggest that UAE courts, at both the Court of Appeal and cassation levels, are embracing the reforms’ arbitration-friendly posture. Select cassation decisions handed down in the first quarter of 2026 have narrowed the circumstances in which a court will intervene in pending arbitration, reinforcing the primacy of valid arbitration clauses. The likely practical effect will be greater certainty for international arbitration parties who seat proceedings in the UAE or who need to enforce awards through UAE courts.

Date / Source Reform / Provision Practical Effect for International Parties
1 January 2026, Federal Decree-Law No. 22/2025 (Civil Procedures Code amendments) Front-loading of evidence, expanded case-management powers, formalised electronic service, broader interim-relief procedures Faster pre-trial preparation; parties must file evidence earlier; tighter procedural deadlines; streamlined interim relief
1 June 2026, Federal Decree-Law No. 25/2025 (Civil Transactions Law / substantive changes) Revised contractual remedies (damages vs specific performance), updated limitation periods, enhanced party autonomy Directly affects remedies available in enforcement actions; may alter damages calculations in cross-border disputes
2025–2026, Judicial decisions and practice notes (DIAC / DIFC / ADGM) Cassation decisions narrow judicial overreach; arbitral institutions update rules and enforcement guidelines Greater predictability for enforcement of arbitral awards; clearer boundaries on court intervention in arbitration

Service of Process, Jurisdiction and Forum Selection After the 2026 Reforms

The 2026 amendments formally recognise electronic service and streamline consular service channels, removing historic bottlenecks that delayed cross-border litigation in the UAE. For foreign claimants, the practical impact is significant: service that once took months through diplomatic channels may now be effected in weeks, provided the correct procedure is followed from day one.

Service Checklist for Foreign Claimants

  1. Identify the defendant’s domicile or registered address. Under the amended Code, service must first be attempted at the defendant’s known address in the UAE. If the defendant is a foreign entity with no UAE address, electronic service and consular pathways become relevant.
  2. Elect the correct service method. The reforms create a hierarchy: (a) personal service through the court’s process server; (b) electronic service via approved platforms (email, registered messaging systems, or the court’s own electronic portal); (c) consular or embassy service for defendants located abroad.
  3. File proof of service promptly. The case-management judge will require documented proof before proceeding. Delay in filing proof can trigger automatic adjournments and may prejudice interim-relief applications.
  4. Use the 2026 electronic-service protocol. Courts in Dubai and Abu Dhabi now accept service via certified electronic channels. Practitioners should confirm with the relevant court registry which platforms are approved for service in each Emirate.

Practical Tips for Consular and Embassy Service

Where the defendant is domiciled outside the UAE, service through consular channels remains available. The reforms have shortened the maximum period the court will wait for proof of consular service before allowing alternative methods. Industry observers expect courts to be more willing to accept electronic service as a primary method even for foreign-domiciled defendants, provided the claimant can demonstrate that the electronic address is actively used by the defendant.

DIFC, ADGM and Onshore Federal Courts, Forum Considerations

International litigants must still choose between three distinct court systems: the onshore federal courts (governed by the amended Civil Procedures Code), the Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC) Courts, and the Abu Dhabi Global Market (ADGM) Courts. The 2026 procedural amendments apply to the federal (onshore) courts only. DIFC and ADGM Courts operate under their own procedural rules, which are modelled on common-law frameworks. Forum selection clauses remain critical: the reformed federal courts now give greater recognition to exclusive jurisdiction clauses in commercial contracts, reducing the risk of parallel proceedings. A practical decision matrix comparing all three forums is set out in the litigation-versus-arbitration section below.

Interim Measures and Urgent Relief in UAE Courts, What Foreign Parties Can Get Fast

The reformed Civil Procedures Code significantly expands the range and speed of interim measures available from UAE courts, giving international claimants powerful tools to preserve assets and evidence before trial. This is one of the most consequential aspects of the UAE civil procedure reforms 2026 for foreign parties concerned about asset dissipation.

Types of Interim Relief Now Available

  • Freezing orders (attachment of assets). Courts may order the provisional attachment of movable and immovable property, bank accounts, and commercial assets. The reforms lower the evidentiary threshold for ex parte applications where the claimant demonstrates urgency and a prima facie case.
  • Provisional injunctions. The court may prohibit a party from disposing of specific assets, altering the status quo, or taking any action that would render a future judgment unenforceable.
  • Disclosure and preservation orders. Courts can now compel early disclosure of documents and electronic records critical to the dispute, and order the preservation of evidence at risk of destruction.
  • Travel bans (in limited circumstances). Although primarily a criminal-law measure, travel bans may be imposed in civil matters involving debt or fraud allegations. International parties should be aware of the interplay between civil proceedings and immigration enforcement.

When to Seek Injunctive Relief vs Emergency Arbitration

For disputes governed by an arbitration clause, the question is whether to seek interim relief from a UAE court or from the arbitral institution’s emergency arbitrator. Under the reforms, UAE courts will generally grant interim measures in support of arbitration where the seat is in the UAE or where the assets to be preserved are located within the country. The DIAC Rules and the ADGM Arbitration Regulations both provide for emergency arbitrators who can issue interim orders within days. The practical advantage of a court-ordered freezing order, however, is that it is immediately enforceable through the court’s execution department, whereas an emergency arbitrator’s order may still require court recognition for enforcement against recalcitrant parties.

Drafting Tips for Preservation Applications

Front-loading requirements now apply to interim-relief applications as well. Practitioners should prepare a detailed evidence bundle at the outset, including certified financial records, contract documents, and any correspondence evidencing asset dissipation risk. Applications that comply with the new evidence-disclosure standards from day one are more likely to receive expedited treatment from the case-management judge.

Enforcement of Foreign Judgments and Arbitral Awards, Step-by-Step Practical Guide

The 2026 reforms streamline the enforcement of both foreign judgments and arbitral awards in the UAE, reducing procedural friction and, in many cases, compressing timelines. This section provides a detailed walkthrough for each enforcement pathway.

Enforcement of Foreign Judgments (UAE 2026)

Foreign judgments are enforceable in the UAE through the exequatur procedure set out in the Civil Procedures Code, as amended. Reciprocal recognition remains the threshold requirement: the UAE will recognise and enforce judgments from countries that extend the same treatment to UAE judgments or that are parties to a bilateral or multilateral enforcement treaty with the UAE. Where no reciprocity exists, the foreign judgment may still be submitted as persuasive evidence in fresh UAE proceedings.

  1. Verify reciprocity. Confirm whether the issuing country has a bilateral treaty with the UAE (e.g., the Riyadh Convention for Arab states) or offers de facto reciprocal enforcement.
  2. Prepare the enforcement application. File a petition with the execution court, attaching the foreign judgment (legalised, apostilled, and officially translated into Arabic), proof of service in the original proceedings, and evidence that the judgment is final and enforceable.
  3. Serve the judgment debtor. The reformed rules allow electronic service of the enforcement petition, significantly reducing delays where the debtor is already in the UAE.
  4. Court review. The execution judge reviews the application for compliance with public policy, proper service in the original proceedings, and finality. Under the 2026 amendments, procedural hearings are tighter and interim decisions may issue faster.
  5. Execution. Once the court issues an enforcement order, execution proceeds through the court’s execution department, including seizure of assets, bank-account attachment, and travel-ban imposition where appropriate.

Enforcement of Arbitral Awards in the UAE

Arbitral awards, whether issued under DIAC, ICC, LCIA, ADGM, or ad hoc rules, are enforced through a distinct procedure under the UAE Arbitration Law (Federal Law No. 6 of 2018) as supplemented by the reformed Civil Procedures Code. The New York Convention (to which the UAE is a party) provides the primary framework for foreign-seated awards.

  1. File the ratification application. Submit the arbitral award, the underlying arbitration agreement, and proof of proper notification to the opposing party to the competent court (typically the Court of Appeal for domestic awards; the Court of First Instance for foreign-seated awards under the New York Convention).
  2. Respond to challenges. The respondent may resist enforcement on limited grounds, including invalidity of the arbitration agreement, procedural irregularity, lack of due process, or public-policy violation. The 2026 reforms further narrow the public-policy defence, and early indications suggest that courts are applying this ground more restrictively.
  3. Obtain the enforcement order. If no valid ground for refusal is established, the court issues an enforcement (exequatur) order and transfers the file to the execution department.
  4. Execute the award. Execution follows the same asset-seizure, bank-attachment, and compulsory-disclosure procedures available for judgment enforcement.

Enforcement Timelines, What to Expect

Enforcement Step Foreign Judgments (estimated duration) Arbitral Awards (estimated duration)
Application filing and service 2–4 weeks 1–3 weeks
Court review and hearings 2–4 months 1–3 months
Enforcement order issued 3–6 months (total from filing) 2–4 months (total from filing)
Execution (asset seizure, bank attachment) 1–3 months post-order 1–3 months post-order

Note: Timelines are indicative and may vary by Emirate, complexity of the dispute, and whether the judgment debtor contests enforcement. DIAC arbitration enforcement through onshore courts has historically been faster than foreign-seated awards, and industry observers expect this advantage to widen under the 2026 reforms.

Arbitration Interplay, Stays, Court Intervention and How to Navigate Arbitration Clauses

The 2026 amendments clarify and tighten the circumstances under which UAE courts will intervene in, or stay, arbitration proceedings, marking a decisive shift toward a more arbitration-friendly judicial environment. This section addresses the stay of arbitration in the UAE under the 2026 framework and explains what cross-border parties should do to protect their arbitration agreements.

When Courts Will Stay Litigation vs Allow Intervention

Under the reformed Civil Procedures Code, where a valid arbitration agreement exists, the federal courts are directed to decline jurisdiction and refer the parties to arbitration, provided the respondent raises the objection before filing a defence on the merits. The 2026 amendments remove certain ambiguities that previously allowed courts to retain jurisdiction in borderline cases. Early cassation decisions have reinforced this approach, holding that courts should apply a pro-arbitration presumption when interpreting arbitration clauses.

Limited exceptions remain. Courts may intervene where:

  • The arbitration agreement is manifestly void, inoperative, or incapable of being performed.
  • Interim measures are needed to preserve assets or evidence that the arbitral tribunal cannot effectively protect.
  • A party challenges the arbitral award on one of the narrow grounds set out in the UAE Arbitration Law (e.g., lack of jurisdiction, procedural irregularity, or public-policy violation).

Drafting Arbitration Agreements to Avoid 2026 Pitfalls

The reforms reward well-drafted arbitration clauses and penalise vague or defective ones. Practitioners should ensure that every arbitration agreement specifies:

  1. The institutional rules (DIAC, ICC, LCIA, ADGM, etc.).
  2. The seat (juridical place) of arbitration, preferably a UAE-based seat such as Dubai, Abu Dhabi, or the ADGM.
  3. The number of arbitrators and the appointment mechanism.
  4. The governing law of the substantive dispute and the governing law of the arbitration agreement itself (which may differ).
  5. A carve-out expressly permitting either party to seek interim or conservatory measures from UAE courts in support of the arbitration.

Case-Law Highlights (2025–2026)

Industry observers have noted a consistent trend in recent cassation decisions: the Federal Supreme Court and the Dubai Court of Cassation are upholding arbitration clauses more rigorously and scrutinising attempts to circumvent them through parallel litigation. While individual case outcomes depend on their facts, the likely practical effect of this judicial posture is that international parties can rely on their arbitration agreements with greater confidence when doing business in the UAE.

Litigation vs Arbitration After the UAE Civil Procedure Reforms 2026, A Decision Matrix

Choosing between litigation and arbitration in the UAE now requires a fresh analysis in light of the 2026 reforms. The following decision matrix summarises the key factors that international parties should weigh.

Factor Federal Court Litigation (post-reform) Institutional Arbitration (DIAC / ICC / ADGM)
Speed to hearing Faster under front-loading rules; 6–12 months to first-instance judgment in straightforward cases 6–18 months depending on institution and complexity
Interim relief Strong court powers; freezing orders enforceable immediately Emergency arbitrator available; court-ordered interim relief also accessible in support of arbitration
Enforceability abroad Dependent on reciprocity or bilateral treaties New York Convention provides near-universal enforceability for foreign-seated awards
Confidentiality Court proceedings generally public Proceedings typically confidential under institutional rules
Language Arabic (translation required for all foreign-language documents) English or Arabic (parties’ choice under most institutional rules)
Appeal rights Full appeal on law and fact to Court of Appeal and cassation Limited recourse (annulment/set-aside on narrow grounds only)
Cost Court fees proportional to claim value; generally lower than arbitration fees Institutional fees, arbitrator fees, and administrative costs; can be substantial for high-value disputes

For most cross-border commercial disputes involving significant sums and international enforcement needs, industry observers expect arbitration to remain the preferred route, particularly given the New York Convention advantage. However, the 2026 reforms have made federal court litigation a more attractive option for claimants who need rapid interim relief, who are pursuing enforcement solely within the UAE, or whose disputes involve parties without a valid arbitration agreement.

Practical Toolkit and Checklists for International Litigants and Arbitration Parties

The following checklists distil the key procedural requirements under the reformed framework into actionable steps. Use these as a starting point for any cross-border litigation or arbitration enforcement in the UAE.

What to Do in the First 72 Hours

  1. Assess the forum. Determine whether the dispute falls under onshore federal courts, DIFC Courts, ADGM Courts, or an arbitral institution. Review any forum-selection or arbitration clause.
  2. Secure interim relief. If asset dissipation is a risk, prepare an urgent freezing-order application for the competent court (or an emergency-arbitrator application under the relevant institutional rules).
  3. Identify service requirements. Establish the defendant’s address and elect the correct service method (personal, electronic, or consular).
  4. Compile front-loaded evidence. Under the 2026 rules, gather and certify all core documentary evidence immediately, contracts, correspondence, financial records, and corporate filings.
  5. Engage UAE-qualified counsel. Ensure that counsel is licensed to practise before the relevant court or is registered as an arbitration representative. Use the GLE lawyer directory to identify specialists in UAE international litigation.

Enforcement Checklist, Foreign Judgments

  • Confirm reciprocity (bilateral treaty or de facto recognition).
  • Legalise, apostille, and translate the judgment into Arabic.
  • File the enforcement petition with the execution court.
  • Serve the judgment debtor (electronic service now permitted).
  • Attend the procedural hearing and respond to any public-policy objections.
  • Obtain the enforcement order and instruct the execution department.

Enforcement Checklist, Arbitral Awards

  • Confirm the seat of arbitration and the applicable enforcement convention (New York Convention for foreign-seated awards; UAE Arbitration Law for domestic awards).
  • Prepare the ratification application with the award, arbitration agreement, and notification proof.
  • File with the competent court (Court of Appeal for domestic awards; Court of First Instance for foreign awards).
  • Anticipate and rebut any annulment or refusal grounds raised by the award debtor.
  • Obtain the enforcement order and proceed to execution.

Sample Service Workflow

Service Method Responsible Authority Estimated Timeline
Personal service (UAE-domiciled defendant) Court process server 1–2 weeks
Electronic service (approved platforms) Court registry / certified electronic channel 1–5 business days
Consular / embassy service (foreign-domiciled defendant) Ministry of Justice / UAE embassy in defendant’s country 4–12 weeks
Service by publication (last resort) Court order; published in designated newspapers 30 days from publication date

Conclusion, Navigating the UAE Civil Procedure Reforms 2026 with Confidence

The UAE civil procedure reforms 2026 mark a watershed moment for cross-border litigation and arbitration enforcement in the Emirates. The combined effect of Federal Decree-Law No. 22/2025 and Federal Decree-Law No. 25/2025 is a faster, more predictable, and more enforcement-friendly judicial system, but one that demands rigorous procedural compliance from the outset.

International litigants and arbitration parties should keep three risks firmly in mind:

  1. Front-loading penalties. Failure to disclose evidence early can result in procedural sanctions, delayed hearings, or adverse inferences.
  2. Defective arbitration clauses. Vague or incomplete arbitration agreements may allow a counterparty to litigate in court despite the parties’ intention to arbitrate.
  3. Transitional uncertainty. Claims straddling the 1 June 2026 effective date of the Civil Transactions Law changes require careful analysis of which substantive regime applies.

Early indications suggest that the UAE judiciary is embracing the reforms’ pro-efficiency and pro-arbitration ethos. For international parties, the practical imperative is clear: engage UAE-qualified counsel immediately, prepare front-loaded evidence bundles before any filing, and choose the right forum, federal court, DIFC, ADGM, or arbitration, based on the specific enforcement, confidentiality, and cost requirements of the dispute. The reforms reward preparation and penalise delay.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Abdelaziz Alhanaee at Abdelaziz Alhanaee Advocates & Legal Consultancy, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. UAE Legislation Portal, Federal Decree-Law Announcement
  2. BSA Law, UAE Civil Procedures: What the 2026 Reforms Mean for You
  3. Al Tamimi & Company, How the New UAE Civil Transactions Law Recalibrates Contract Disputes
  4. Kennedys, The Commercial Revolution: UAE Courts Close Loopholes, What This Means for Arbitration in 2026
  5. Lexis Middle East, Civil Transactions Law Commentary
  6. BDO Legal, UAE Introduces Landmark Reforms to the Civil Procedures Code
  7. Chambers & Partners, Litigation 2026: UAE Practice Guide
  8. Dubai International Arbitration Centre (DIAC)
  9. Abu Dhabi Global Market (ADGM), Arbitration

FAQs

How do the 2026 reforms affect enforcement of foreign judgments and arbitral awards?
The reforms streamline enforcement procedures for both foreign judgments and arbitral awards. Federal Decree-Law No. 22/2025 introduces tighter procedural timelines, permits electronic service of enforcement petitions, and narrows the public-policy defence available to judgment and award debtors. The practical effect is faster enforcement: arbitral awards can typically proceed from filing to enforcement order in two to four months, while foreign judgments (where reciprocity exists) may be enforced within three to six months.
Under the amended Civil Procedures Code, courts are directed to decline jurisdiction and refer parties to arbitration where a valid arbitration agreement exists, provided the objection is raised before a defence on the merits is filed. Courts retain limited power to intervene where the arbitration agreement is manifestly void, where interim relief is needed to protect assets, or where a party challenges an award on narrow statutory grounds. Early cassation decisions have reinforced a pro-arbitration judicial approach.
The reforms formally recognise electronic service through court-approved platforms, including email and registered messaging systems. Personal service remains the primary method for UAE-domiciled defendants, but electronic service can now serve as a valid alternative, particularly useful for foreign claimants seeking to serve defendants quickly. Consular service remains available for defendants abroad, and the maximum waiting period before alternative methods are permitted has been shortened.
International claimants can apply for freezing orders (provisional attachment of assets and bank accounts), injunctions to prevent asset disposal, disclosure and preservation orders, and, in limited debt or fraud cases, travel bans. The 2026 reforms lower the evidentiary threshold for ex parte applications and expand the case-management judge’s power to issue emergency orders. These measures are immediately enforceable through the court’s execution department.
The answer depends on enforcement needs, confidentiality requirements, language preferences, and cost sensitivity. Arbitration remains preferable for most cross-border disputes where international enforceability (via the New York Convention) and confidentiality are priorities. However, the reformed federal courts offer faster interim relief, lower costs, and full appeal rights, making litigation a stronger option for UAE-only enforcement scenarios or claims without a valid arbitration agreement.
Travel bans in civil cases are not automatic. They may be imposed by court order in debt-related disputes or where there is evidence of fraud or intent to abscond. Under the 2026 reforms, travel bans tied to civil proceedings are expected to be lifted once the underlying case is resolved or security is posted. Parties concerned about travel restrictions should seek legal advice before entering the UAE if they are aware of pending civil claims against them.
DIAC arbitration enforcement through onshore UAE courts has historically been among the fastest enforcement pathways in the region. Under the 2026 reforms, the typical timeline from ratification application to enforcement order is estimated at one to three months, with execution (asset seizure and bank attachment) adding a further one to three months. Contested enforcement, where the award debtor raises annulment grounds, may extend the process, but early indications suggest that courts are applying the statutory refusal grounds more restrictively.

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UAE Civil Procedure Reforms 2026, What International Litigants & Arbitration Parties Need to Know

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