[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
intellectual property lawyers uganda

Intellectual Property Lawyers Uganda 2026: Copyright Act Compliance, Penalties & ADR

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

Uganda’s Parliament passed the Copyright and Neighbouring Rights (Amendment) Act on 19 March 2026, ushering in the most significant overhaul of the country’s intellectual property regime in two decades. For businesses, brands and creative producers operating in Uganda, the amendments expand the scope of neighbouring rights, sharpen criminal and financial penalties for infringement, and tighten enforcement mechanisms administered by the Uganda Registration Services Bureau (URSB). Intellectual property lawyers in Uganda are already advising clients to audit existing licences, update content agreements and register works that were previously left unregistered. The compliance window is narrow, and the consequences of inaction are now materially higher than under the original Copyright and Neighbouring Rights Act, 2006 (Act No. 19 of 2006).

Immediate actions every rights-holder should take:

  • Audit all existing copyright and neighbouring-rights licences against the expanded definitions in the 2026 amendments.
  • Register unregistered works and neighbouring rights with the URSB to secure evidentiary advantage under the new enforcement framework.
  • Update internal content policies, particularly notice-and-takedown procedures, to reflect the higher penalties now in force.
  • Review dispute-resolution clauses in all IP-related contracts to include mediation or arbitration as a first step before litigation.

Key Changes in the Copyright & Neighbouring Rights (Amendment) Act 2026

Overview of the Legislative Timeline

The Copyright and Neighbouring Rights (Amendment) Bill, 2025, was tabled during the second session of Uganda’s 11th Parliament and passed on 19 March 2026. The Act amends the Copyright and Neighbouring Rights Act, 2006 (Cap 222), which had remained largely unchanged since its commencement. The URSB, as the designated registrar, is responsible for publishing updated forms and procedural guidance following the Act’s commencement by presidential assent and gazettal.

Date Event Practical Effect
19 March 2026 Parliament passed the Copyright & Neighbouring Rights (Amendment) Act Expanded neighbouring rights; increased penalties; strengthened enforcement powers
Upon presidential assent and gazettal Commencement of the Act New provisions become binding; URSB enforcement powers activated
Post-commencement URSB publishes updated forms and registration guidance Rights-holders can register neighbouring rights under the new framework

Expanded Neighbouring Rights, Who Is Newly Covered

Under the original 2006 Act, neighbouring rights protection existed but was narrowly applied. The 2026 amendments broaden the categories of beneficiaries and strengthen the economic rights attached to each category. Producers of sound recordings, audio-visual works and broadcasts now enjoy explicit reproduction, distribution and communication-to-the-public rights that are transferable and licensable. Performers, including musicians, actors and dancers, gain clearer rights over the fixation and digital distribution of their live performances. Broadcasters receive protection against unauthorised re-broadcasting and streaming of their signals. For businesses that rely on user-generated or licensed content, this expansion means that a wider pool of rights-holders can now enforce claims, making licence-chain diligence more important than ever.

Notable Clause Highlights

Several provisions in the Amendment Act deserve particular attention from compliance teams and intellectual property lawyers in Uganda. Clause 9, which generated significant public debate, tightens enforcement by increasing penalties for commercial-scale infringement and establishing clearer liability for intermediaries who facilitate access to infringing material. The Act also introduces provisions on the circumvention of technological protection measures (TPMs), making it an offence to manufacture, distribute or use devices designed to bypass digital rights management systems. In addition, the amendments create a transferable property right structure for copyright and neighbouring rights, permitting licences and assignments that can be perpetual and binding on successors in title.

This is a meaningful departure from the more limited assignment provisions of the 2006 Act and aligns Uganda more closely with international frameworks. Industry observers expect these changes to encourage investment in Uganda’s creative economy by providing a more predictable licensing environment, while simultaneously raising the compliance burden on platforms, advertisers and content distributors.

Who Is Liable & What Are the Penalties?

Civil Remedies, Injunctions and Damages

The amended Act preserves and strengthens the civil remedies available to rights-holders. A copyright or neighbouring-rights owner may apply to the High Court for an injunction to prevent ongoing or threatened infringement. The court may also award damages, both compensatory and, where wilful infringement is established, additional damages intended to deter repeat offenders. Importantly, the 2026 amendments clarify that intermediaries, including digital platforms that host or distribute infringing content, may be joined as defendants where they have received notice and failed to act. This shifts the risk calculus for any business that handles third-party content and underscores the need for robust notice-and-takedown procedures.

Criminal Offences and Fines

The criminal provisions of the Copyright and Neighbouring Rights Act 2026 carry significantly higher penalties than their predecessors. Commercial-scale copyright infringement, defined broadly to include reproduction, distribution and communication to the public for financial gain, now attracts fines and potential imprisonment. The circumvention of technological protection measures and the removal or alteration of rights-management information are also criminalised. Enforcement responsibility falls on the Uganda Police Force, the Directorate of Public Prosecutions and the URSB, which has been given broader investigative powers including the authority to inspect premises and seize infringing copies.

Business Exposure Scenarios

The practical effect of the enhanced penalty regime is substantial. A media company that streams unlicensed music could face both criminal prosecution and civil claims from multiple rights-holders. An advertising agency that uses copyrighted images without proper clearance risks injunctive relief that halts a campaign mid-launch, plus financial penalties. The early indications suggest that the URSB and enforcement agencies intend to prioritise commercial infringers, particularly in the digital distribution space, making proactive compliance the most cost-effective strategy.

Offence Possible Penalty Enforcement Agency
Commercial-scale copyright infringement Fine and/or imprisonment (amounts set by the Act and gazetted regulations) Uganda Police / DPP / URSB
Circumvention of technological protection measures Fine and/or imprisonment Uganda Police / Courts
Removal or alteration of rights-management information Fine and/or imprisonment Uganda Police / DPP
Failure to comply with URSB inspection or seizure orders Fine and/or imprisonment for obstruction URSB / Police

Registration and the URSB Process, Do You Need to Register?

When Registration Matters

Copyright in Uganda is governed by the Copyright and Neighbouring Rights Act, and protection arises automatically upon the creation of an original work. No registration is legally required for copyright to exist. However, registration with the URSB provides official recognition and proof of ownership, an evidentiary advantage that can be decisive in enforcement proceedings. Under the 2026 amendments, the expanded scope of neighbouring rights makes registration even more strategically important: producers, performers and broadcasters who register their rights create a public record that simplifies licensing, deters infringers and strengthens any subsequent claim for damages.

Step-by-Step URSB Registration

The URSB administers copyright registration at its offices in Kampala. The process involves the following steps:

  • Step 1, Prepare the application. Complete the prescribed URSB copyright registration form, available at the Bureau’s offices or online portal.
  • Step 2, Compile supporting documents. Attach copies of the work, proof of authorship or ownership (contracts, employment agreements, assignment deeds), and identification documents.
  • Step 3, Pay the prescribed fees. Registration fees are payable at the URSB cashier or via designated bank channels.
  • Step 4, Submit and await examination. The URSB reviews the application for completeness and compliance. Deficient applications are returned with a request for additional information.
  • Step 5, Receive the certificate. Upon approval, the URSB issues a certificate of registration, which serves as prima facie evidence of ownership.

Costs, Processing Times & Common Mistakes

Processing times vary but typically range from several weeks to a few months depending on the URSB’s workload and the completeness of the application. The most common mistakes include submitting incomplete ownership chains for works created under employment, failing to attach the correct version of the work and omitting proof of assignment where the applicant is not the original author. Engaging experienced intellectual property counsel at the application stage avoids costly delays and ensures the registration accurately reflects the rights claimed.

Compliance Checklist for Businesses, Brands & Creatives

Corporate & Brand Owners: Monitoring, Licensing and Takedowns

Brand protection in Uganda now demands a more structured approach. Corporate compliance teams should begin by conducting a full IP audit, cataloguing every copyright and neighbouring-rights asset the business owns, licences or uses. Licence agreements should be reviewed to confirm that the scope of permitted use aligns with the expanded rights created by the 2026 amendments; a licence granted under the old framework may not cover new exploitation rights such as on-demand streaming or digital distribution. Monitoring should be continuous: automated tools and periodic manual sweeps of online marketplaces, social media platforms and streaming services can detect unauthorised use before it escalates.

Every business should maintain a documented notice-and-takedown procedure, including template letters and a designated compliance officer, to respond swiftly to infringement and to demonstrate good faith if the business is itself accused of hosting infringing content. For guidance on embedding intellectual property clauses in employment contracts, organisations should ensure that all employment and contractor agreements contain clear IP assignment provisions.

Producers, Performers & Creators: Contracts and Neighbouring Rights

IP compliance for creatives starts with the contract. Performers and producers should never assign or licence rights without written agreements that specify the territory, duration, medium and consideration. Under the 2026 amendments, neighbouring rights are now explicitly transferable property rights, which means that a poorly drafted assignment could permanently strip a creator of valuable economic rights. Creators should maintain a personal register of all works and performances, retain copies of all agreements, and consider URSB registration for their most commercially significant outputs. Collective management organisations (CMOs) operating in Uganda can also assist with royalty collection and rights administration.

Digital Platforms & Advertisers: Content Policies and Safe Harbour

Platforms that host or distribute user-generated content face heightened risk under the amended Act. Implementing a robust content policy, with clear terms of service, automated content-identification tools where feasible, and a responsive notice-and-takedown workflow, is now essential. Advertisers should require proof of clearance from media agencies before launching campaigns that use third-party creative assets. The likely practical effect of the 2026 amendments is that platforms without demonstrable compliance procedures will find it harder to defend against intermediary liability claims.

Obligation Who Must Act Recommended Timeframe
Full IP audit of owned and licensed works All businesses using copyrighted content Within 60 days of commencement
Update licence agreements for expanded rights Brand owners, publishers, media companies Within 90 days of commencement
Implement or refresh notice-and-takedown procedures Digital platforms, hosting providers Immediately
Register key works and neighbouring rights with URSB Producers, performers, broadcasters Ongoing, prioritise highest-value assets
Train staff on new penalties and compliance obligations All organisations with IP exposure Within 30 days of commencement

Enforcement & Dispute Resolution, Litigation vs ADR

When to Sue: Evidence Thresholds and Injunctions

Litigation remains the appropriate channel when a rights-holder needs urgent injunctive relief, for example, to halt mass distribution of pirated content or to preserve evidence before it is destroyed. The High Court of Uganda has jurisdiction over IP disputes, and applicants for interim injunctions must typically demonstrate a prima facie case of infringement, the risk of irreparable harm and that the balance of convenience favours the grant of the order. Criminal prosecution, pursued through the DPP, is warranted where the infringement is wilful and commercial in scale. In both civil and criminal proceedings, a URSB registration certificate strengthens the claimant’s evidentiary position.

For a comparative perspective on enforcement strategies, see how other African jurisdictions approach IP enforcement through arbitration and specialised courts.

When to Mediate or Arbitrate: Cost, Speed and Confidentiality

IP mediation in Uganda offers significant advantages for disputes where the parties have an ongoing commercial relationship, such as disagreements between a label and an artist, or between a licensor and a platform. Mediation is typically faster, less expensive and confidential, making it well suited to royalty disputes and contract interpretation issues. Arbitration, conducted under the Arbitration and Conciliation Act (Cap 4), produces a binding and enforceable award and is appropriate where the parties want finality without the delays associated with Uganda’s court system. Industry observers expect ADR to become the preferred first step for IP disputes under the new regime, particularly as commercial parties seek to avoid the reputational exposure of public litigation.

Sample ADR Clause & Mediation Checklist

Sample clause (for guidance, seek legal review before adoption): “Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this agreement, including any question regarding its existence, validity or termination, shall first be referred to mediation in Kampala under the rules of the Centre for Arbitration and Dispute Resolution (CADER). If the dispute is not resolved within 60 days of the appointment of the mediator, either party may refer the dispute to arbitration under the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, Cap 4.”

A practical mediation checklist should include: (1) identify the core commercial interests at stake; (2) assemble all relevant documentation, including registration certificates, licence agreements and correspondence; (3) select a mediator with IP expertise; (4) agree on a confidentiality protocol; and (5) set a realistic timeline, typically four to eight weeks from appointment to resolution.

Criteria Litigation ADR (Mediation / Arbitration)
Speed Months to years (court backlog) Weeks to months
Confidentiality Public court record Private proceedings
Cost Higher (court fees, advocates, discovery) Generally lower and more flexible
Remedies available Injunctions, damages, criminal sanctions Settlements, injunctive undertakings, binding arbitral awards
Enforcement of outcome Court judgment enforceable directly Arbitral awards enforceable under Cap 4; mediated settlements enforceable as contracts
Best suited for Urgent injunctions, criminal prosecution, precedent-setting disputes Commercial disputes, royalty disagreements, ongoing relationships

Practical Templates & Red Flags

Cease-and-Desist Template

The following is a sample template provided for general guidance only. It does not constitute legal advice and should be reviewed by qualified intellectual property lawyers in Uganda before use.

“Dear [Name], We act for [Rights-Holder]. It has come to our client’s attention that you are [describe infringing activity] in respect of [describe the work/performance]. This activity infringes our client’s rights under the Copyright and Neighbouring Rights Act (as amended 2026). We require you to cease the infringing activity immediately and confirm in writing within [14] days that you have done so. Failure to comply may result in legal proceedings without further notice.”

Notice-and-Takedown Procedural Template

Sample notice (for platforms, adapt with legal counsel):

“To: [Platform Compliance Officer]. I, [name], am the owner / authorised agent of [rights-holder]. The following content hosted on your platform infringes our copyright / neighbouring rights: [URL / description]. I request immediate removal or disabling of access. I make this notification in good faith and under penalty of perjury. Contact: [details].”

Red Flags That Require Urgent Legal Action

  • Mass distribution of your content on piracy-oriented websites or social media channels.
  • Receipt of a cease-and-desist letter alleging your business is infringing, respond within the stipulated deadline.
  • Evidence of TPM circumvention targeting your digital products or streaming services.
  • Unlicensed commercial use of your brand, music or audio-visual content in advertising campaigns.

How Intellectual Property Lawyers in Uganda Can Help

Typical Scope of Work and Fee Structures

IP counsel in Uganda typically offer services across the full lifecycle: registration (copyright, trademarks, patents), licensing and transactional support, enforcement (cease-and-desist, litigation, ADR) and regulatory compliance advisory. Fee structures vary, URSB registration assistance is often charged as a flat fee, while litigation and ADR work is billed on an hourly or retainer basis. For an overview of how IPR protection supports broader business strategy, clients should consider engaging counsel early in the product development or content creation cycle.

What to Request from Counsel, Deliverables & Timelines

When engaging intellectual property lawyers in Uganda, request a clear scope-of-work letter that specifies: (1) the deliverables (e.g., IP audit report, registration certificates, updated licence templates, enforcement strategy memo); (2) the timeline for each deliverable; (3) the fee structure and payment schedule; and (4) the reporting cadence. A well-defined engagement ensures accountability and allows in-house teams to integrate legal advice into their operational compliance timelines. For guidance on structuring cross-border IP protection, see the international intellectual property guide.

Conclusion

The Copyright and Neighbouring Rights (Amendment) Act 2026 represents a watershed moment for intellectual property protection in Uganda. Rights-holders, businesses and digital platforms that act now, auditing licences, registering key works, updating compliance procedures and embedding ADR into their contracts, will be best positioned to both protect their assets and avoid the substantially higher penalties introduced by the amendments. Intellectual property lawyers in Uganda are essential partners in this compliance effort, providing the registration expertise, enforcement strategies and dispute-resolution guidance that the new regime demands. For organisations seeking a comprehensive compliance review, engaging qualified IP counsel should be the immediate next step.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Racheal Kyomuhangi at Jade Advocates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Uganda Registration Services Bureau (URSB), Copyright Registration Guidance
  2. Parliament of Uganda
  3. Uganda Printing & Publishing Corporation (UPPC)
  4. Lawzana, Intellectual Property Lawyers in Uganda
  5. Global Law Experts, Copyright in the Digital Age

FAQs

What does the Copyright and Neighbouring Rights (Amendment) Act 2026 change?
The Act expands the scope of neighbouring rights for producers, performers and broadcasters, increases criminal and financial penalties for infringement, criminalises the circumvention of technological protection measures and strengthens the URSB’s enforcement powers. It was passed by Parliament on 19 March 2026.
Both individuals and corporate entities can face criminal liability. Directors or senior officers who authorise, permit or fail to prevent commercial-scale infringement may be personally liable. Intermediaries that facilitate access to infringing content after receiving notice may also face prosecution.
Copyright protection in Uganda is automatic upon creation of an original work and does not require registration. However, URSB registration provides official recognition and prima facie proof of ownership, which is valuable in enforcement proceedings. The 2026 amendments make registration particularly advisable for neighbouring-rights holders.
Preserve all relevant evidence immediately. Review the allegation against your licence records and internal content policies. If the claim is valid, remove or disable access to the content and document your response. If you believe the claim is unfounded, prepare a counter-notice with supporting evidence and seek legal advice promptly.
Mediation is preferable when the parties have an ongoing commercial relationship, when confidentiality is important and when speed and cost-efficiency are priorities. Litigation is more appropriate when urgent injunctive relief is needed, when criminal prosecution is warranted or when the dispute requires a binding public precedent.
The URSB serves as the registrar for copyright and neighbouring rights and has been granted broader investigative and enforcement powers under the 2026 amendments, including the authority to inspect premises and seize infringing copies. It works alongside the Uganda Police Force and the DPP.
Yes. The 2026 amendments explicitly create transferable property rights for copyright and neighbouring rights, permitting licences and assignments that can be perpetual, exclusive and binding on successors in title. All transfers should be documented in writing and registered with the URSB.

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

Newsletter Sign Up
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

Intellectual Property Lawyers Uganda 2026: Copyright Act Compliance, Penalties & ADR

Send welcome message

Custom Message