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The regulatory landscape for M&A lawyers United Arab Emirates practitioners advise on has shifted decisively in 2026. Amendments to the UAE Companies Law took effect on 1 January 2026, introducing formal redomiciliation mechanics that allow companies to migrate between mainland and free-zone jurisdictions while preserving legal continuity. Simultaneously, Cabinet Resolution No.3 of 2025 and Federal Decree-Law No.20 of 2025 have operationalised a merger-control notification regime with quantitative thresholds, an AED 300 million turnover test and a 40 per cent market-share alternative, that now directly affect deal timing, structure and closing conditions. This guide provides a practical, transaction-focused playbook for general counsel, private-equity sponsors and corporate-development teams navigating these changes when acquiring or investing in UAE targets.
As of 2026, any transaction that meets either of two merger-control triggers requires prior notification to the UAE Ministry of Economy and Tourism (MoET) before closing or integration can proceed. The practical effect is threefold:
Immediate action: Deal teams with live transactions should map their combined UAE turnover against the AED 300 million threshold, incorporate a suspensory condition precedent into every share purchase agreement UAE transactions involve, and confirm whether any target redomiciliation is planned or in progress before signing.
The reforms arrived in rapid succession. The table below consolidates the key dates and instruments that M&A lawyers United Arab Emirates practitioners must track in 2026.
| Date | Instrument | Practical Effect |
|---|---|---|
| 2025 | Cabinet Resolution No.3 of 2025 | Implements detailed merger-filing mechanics, document requirements and review timelines under the competition framework. |
| 2025 | Federal Decree-Law No.20 of 2025 | Establishes updated legal basis for merger-control obligations, thresholds and enforcement powers, reinforcing MoET’s regulatory mandate. |
| 10 December 2025 | Companies Law amendments announced | Formal publication of redomiciliation provisions, enhanced foreign-ownership flexibility and corporate-governance updates. |
| 1 January 2026 | UAE Companies Law 2026 effective | Redomiciliation mechanisms become operational; new rules on shareholder approvals and creditor-protection timelines apply to all live and prospective transactions. |
Deal teams should verify the following before progressing from term sheet to signing:
The merger control UAE framework now operative under Federal Decree-Law No.20 of 2025, implemented through Cabinet Resolution No.3 of 2025, introduces two alternative notification triggers. A filing obligation arises whenever a proposed transaction, whether a share acquisition, asset purchase, joint venture or any other form of economic concentration, meets either of the following tests.
The first trigger is a turnover test: where the combined turnover of the merging parties within the relevant UAE market reaches or exceeds AED 300 million in the latest completed fiscal year. The second trigger is a market-share test: where the transaction would result in the merged entity holding approximately 40 per cent or more of the relevant market. Either threshold, if met, independently triggers the notification obligation.
Turnover is measured on an aggregated basis. The revenue of each party, including revenue attributable to group companies, subsidiaries and affiliates operating within the UAE, is combined for the latest fiscal year. Revenue must be attributed to the UAE market based on the location of the customer or the point of delivery of goods and services. For example, where a European acquirer has a UAE subsidiary generating AED 150 million in local sales, and the UAE target reports AED 180 million, the combined figure of AED 330 million exceeds the AED 300m threshold and mandates a filing.
Deal teams should note several aggregation nuances. Revenue from intra-group transactions is typically excluded to avoid double counting. Where a party operates through multiple UAE entities, all revenues across those entities must be consolidated. Free-zone revenue attributable to customers outside the UAE may be excluded depending on the regulator’s market-definition approach, but this requires careful legal analysis.
The market-share test requires defining the “relevant market” in both its product and geographic dimensions. Parties should prepare a reasoned market definition supported by public data, industry reports or commissioned studies. If the merged entity would hold roughly 40 per cent or more of any plausible relevant market, a notification is warranted even if the turnover threshold is not met.
The following table summarises reporting obligations by entity type:
| Entity Type | Filing Trigger & Coverage | Practical Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Mainland (onshore) company | Sales in UAE included for AED 300m threshold; local market share considered | Most likely to trigger filings; redomiciliation mechanics may change domicile classification mid-deal |
| Free-zone company (DIFC / ADGM) | Depends on whether sales are considered within the UAE market; financial free zones have distinct rules | Check whether sales to UAE-based customers are attributable to the onshore market for threshold calculation |
| Offshore / foreign holding company | Sales in UAE via subsidiary counted if attributed; direct foreign-to-foreign sales may be excluded | Often requires granular revenue apportionment and legal analysis specific to the group structure |
This is the single most consequential question for deal teams. The suspensory filing rules under the current framework indicate that parties should not implement or close a notifiable transaction, nor take any steps that alter the competitive dynamics of the market, before obtaining clearance from MoET. Early indications suggest that the regulator is treating the regime as effectively suspensory, and practitioner guidance from leading firms uniformly advises structuring deals on the assumption that closing before clearance is impermissible.
The practical effect of a suspensory regime is significant. From the moment a filing is submitted, and until clearance is granted, the parties must maintain their businesses as separate, independent operations. No transfer of shares, assets or control should occur. No integration planning that exchanges competitively sensitive information should proceed without appropriate clean-team or firewall arrangements.
The review timeline begins once MoET confirms the filing is complete. Industry observers expect completeness checks to take several working days, after which the substantive review clock starts. Practitioners report that straightforward, non-problematic transactions may be cleared within approximately 90 working days, though complex cases, particularly those raising horizontal-overlap or vertical-foreclosure concerns, may take longer.
In limited circumstances, parties may seek interim measures or accelerated treatment from MoET. Where a target is in financial distress and delay risks the destruction of value, a “failing firm” argument may support expedited consideration. However, no formal fast-track procedure has been published, and deal teams should factor in full review timelines when setting long-stop dates.
The UAE Companies Law 2026 amendments introduce a formal redomiciliation framework permitting companies to transfer their legal seat between mainland UAE and designated free zones, or from foreign jurisdictions into the UAE, while preserving corporate continuity. This is a material development for cross-border M&A because it means a target company can change its regulatory domicile without the need for dissolution and re-incorporation, preserving existing contracts, licences and shareholder structures.
For acquirers, redomiciliation UAE mechanics create both opportunity and complexity. A European buyer may, for instance, encourage a DIFC-registered target to redomicile to mainland UAE to access broader market licensing, or vice versa. However, the redomiciliation process involves several mandatory steps: a special resolution of shareholders (typically requiring a supermajority), compliance with creditor-protection notice periods, submission of a redomiciliation application to the relevant registrar, and formal deregistration from the outgoing jurisdiction concurrent with registration in the incoming one.
Redomiciliation may alter the target’s eligibility under bilateral investment treaties and double-taxation agreements. A company moving from DIFC (which may benefit from specific treaty access as a financial-centre entity) to mainland UAE could experience a change in its treaty position. Cross-border investors should obtain independent tax and treaty advice before any redomiciliation is effected, this is an area where early engagement with specialist counsel is essential.
Choosing between a share purchase agreement UAE practitioners typically draft and an asset purchase depends on multiple factors in the 2026 environment: the merger-control implications, redomiciliation mechanics, tax efficiency and risk allocation preferences of both parties.
A share purchase transfers the entire corporate wrapper, including all contracts, employees, licences and liabilities, and is generally the preferred route for acquiring a going-concern business in the UAE. It is simpler to execute when the target holds sector-specific licences that are non-transferable. However, the buyer inherits all historical liabilities and must perform comprehensive due diligence.
An asset purchase offers selectivity, the buyer can cherry-pick assets and leave behind unwanted liabilities, but requires individual transfers of each asset class (real property, intellectual property, contracts, employees), which is more complex and may trigger separate regulatory consents. In a market where merger control UAE rules now impose mandatory notification, an asset purchase does not exempt the transaction from filing if the thresholds are met on the buyer-side basis.
Suspensory condition precedent (annotated):
“Completion shall be conditional upon the Ministry of Economy and Tourism having issued unconditional clearance of the Transaction (or the applicable statutory review period having expired without the Ministry issuing a prohibition decision), provided that neither Party shall be obliged to accept conditions or remedies that are materially adverse to the commercial rationale of the Transaction.”
Negotiation note: Sellers will seek to narrow the “materially adverse” carve-out so that the buyer cannot walk away for minor conditions. Buyers should insist that the definition captures any remedy requiring divestiture of more than a specified percentage of target revenues.
Interim governance clause (annotated):
“Between Signing and Completion, the Seller shall procure that the Target conducts business in the ordinary course and shall not, without the prior written consent of the Buyer, (a) enter into any contract with an annualised value exceeding AED [amount]; (b) hire or terminate senior management; or (c) declare or pay any dividend or distribution.”
Negotiation note: This clause protects the buyer during the suspensory period while respecting antitrust gun-jumping rules. The consent mechanism must be structured so that the buyer does not inadvertently exercise “control” pre-clearance.
Where clearance timelines are uncertain, the following tools mitigate risk:
The merger filing is submitted to MoET’s Competition Regulation Department. The filing responsibility typically falls on the parties jointly, though in practice the acquirer (or its UAE counsel) takes the lead in preparing and submitting the notification package. The following table outlines the core documents required.
| Document | Who Provides It | Typical Preparation Time |
|---|---|---|
| Notification form (prescribed format) | Parties / UAE counsel | 1–2 weeks |
| Certified audited financial statements (latest 2 fiscal years) | Target and acquirer | Available from auditors; allow 1 week for certification |
| Ownership and group-structure charts | Both parties | 1 week |
| List of material contracts and key customers/suppliers | Target | 1–2 weeks (coordinated with due diligence) |
| Market-share data and relevant-market analysis | Parties / economic advisers | 2–4 weeks (may require third-party research) |
| Transaction documents (SPA or asset purchase agreement, executed or in agreed form) | Both parties | Available at signing |
| Legal opinion on filing obligation and jurisdictional nexus | UAE counsel | 1 week |
| Board resolutions authorising the transaction and filing | Both parties | Available at or before signing |
A more detailed step-by-step breakdown is provided in the companion article UAE merger filing checklist 2026: required documents, timeline and fees.
Non-compliance with the merger control UAE notification regime carries significant consequences. The table below maps the primary risks, their likely outcomes and recommended mitigations.
| Risk | Likely Consequence | Mitigation |
|---|---|---|
| Failure to file (gun-jumping) | Administrative fines; potential injunction preventing closing; reputational damage | Pre-signing threshold analysis; mandatory filing condition precedent in SPA |
| Closing before clearance | Transaction may be declared void or subject to unwinding order; fines on both parties | Suspensory clause; escrow mechanism; no integration until clearance confirmed |
| Incomplete or inaccurate filing | Review clock does not start; repeated requests for information; delays | Engage experienced UAE counsel early; prepare documents concurrently with due diligence |
| Post-clearance breach of conditions | Remedial orders; fines; potential revocation of clearance | Compliance programme; regular monitoring; integration plan reviewed by counsel |
The following two scenarios illustrate how M&A lawyers United Arab Emirates deal teams work with structure timing around the new rules.
Scenario A, Pre-sign assessment and pre-emptive filing planning:
Scenario B, Signing subject to merger clearance with escrow and staged closing:
“The obligations of the Parties to complete the Transaction are subject to and conditional upon the receipt of unconditional merger clearance from the UAE Ministry of Economy and Tourism pursuant to Federal Decree-Law No.20 of 2025 and Cabinet Resolution No.3 of 2025 (the ‘Regulatory Clearance’), or the expiry of the statutory review period without the issuance of a prohibition or conditional clearance decision. If Regulatory Clearance has not been obtained by the Long-Stop Date, either Party may terminate this Agreement by written notice.”
Drafting note: Define “Long-Stop Date” with sufficient buffer, typically 6–9 months from signing, to accommodate completeness checks, the substantive review clock and any requests for further information. Include an automatic extension mechanism (e.g., 60 additional days) if the regulator issues a formal information request.
Deal teams are encouraged to request bespoke clause review and transaction-specific advice from experienced M&A lawyers United Arab Emirates counsel to ensure full compliance with the 2026 framework.
Last reviewed: 7 May 2026. This article will be updated when further MoET guidance, implementing regulations or material enforcement decisions are published.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jakob Kisser at Kisser Legal, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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