[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
protection of sovereignty bill uganda

Protection of Sovereignty Bill 2026, What Ugandan Businesses & Foreign Investors Need to Know

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

Uganda’s Protection of Sovereignty Bill 2026 (Bill No. 13 of 2026) has moved from parliamentary committee to plenary stage with amendments that reshape the compliance landscape for every foreign investor, donor-funded entity and domestically incorporated company receiving capital from abroad. For anyone doing business in Uganda 2026, the Bill introduces mandatory government approvals, a foreign funding cap Uganda has never imposed before, new registration obligations, and criminal penalties for non-compliance. This guide provides a clause-by-clause investor summary, practical deal-structuring options, and an immediate compliance checklist, designed for foreign investors, in-house counsel, startup founders and NGO leaders who need to decide now whether to proceed, postpone or restructure transactions already in the pipeline.

TL;DR, three things every investor must know right now:

  • Funding cap. Clause 22 of the Bill imposes a cap on foreign funding of approximately UGX 400 million (~USD 106,000) within any twelve-month period; amounts above this threshold require prior government approval.
  • Broad definition of “foreigner.” The Bill defines a foreigner to include not only non-Ugandan citizens but also Ugandan citizens residing outside Uganda, meaning diaspora investors and returning entrepreneurs may be caught.
  • Criminal liability. Non-compliance with registration, solicitation and funding-approval requirements carries criminal sanctions, including imprisonment, making pre-deal screening essential before closing any round.

What the Protection of Sovereignty Bill 2026 Actually Says, Clause-by-Clause Investor Summary

Legislative status and timeline of key dates

The Protection of Sovereignty Bill 2026 has progressed rapidly through Uganda’s 11th Parliament. Understanding the legislative timeline is critical for transaction planning, because the Bill’s provisions, once enacted and commenced, will apply to funding arrangements already in place, not only future deals.

Date Event Source
March 2026 Bill No. 13 of 2026 introduced as a Private Member’s Bill in Parliament Parliament of Uganda
April 2026 Committee stage review; public hearings and stakeholder submissions received CCGEA memorandum; Parliament Watch Uganda
Late April 2026 Key amendments proposed, redrafting of Clause 4(4) to exempt regulated financial institutions, health facilities and other sectors Parliament Watch Uganda
May 2026 Bill proceeds to plenary with amendments; passage expected in current session Parliament of Uganda

The full text of the Bill is available for download from the Center for Constitutional Governance East Africa (CCGEA) and from the MMAKS Advocates legal alert. Investors and their counsel should work from the primary text rather than media summaries, because several clauses have been redrafted during committee stage.

Key definitions that matter to investors

Three definitions in the Bill have the widest commercial impact. Each one expands the scope of the legislation well beyond what many investors initially expect.

  • “Foreigner.” The Bill defines a foreigner to include not just a non-Ugandan citizen, but also a Ugandan citizen residing outside Uganda. The Bill further permits the Minister to declare additional categories of persons as “foreigners” by statutory instrument. For venture capital funds structured offshore, even those managed by Ugandan nationals, this definition may trigger the Bill’s approval and registration requirements.
  • “Foreign funding.” This covers any financial support, assistance or contribution originating from a foreigner (as defined above), whether in cash, in kind, or through services. Industry observers expect this to capture not only equity investments and grants, but potentially also convertible notes, SAFEs, technical assistance agreements and secondment arrangements where the economic value exceeds the threshold.
  • “Regulated activity.” The Bill identifies a broad range of activities deemed to affect sovereignty or national interests. These include civic engagement, media, governance programmes and, critically, any activity that the Minister may prescribe by regulation. The open-ended nature of this definition is a key risk for investors in sectors that may not consider themselves targets of the legislation.

It is important to note that the scope of implementing regulations has not yet been published. Several of these definitions will be subject to further ministerial instruments, meaning the practical reach of the protection of sovereignty bill Uganda investors must plan around could widen further after enactment.

Funding caps, approvals and registration requirements, Clause 22 and related provisions

Clause 22 is the single most commercially significant provision of the Bill. It establishes a foreign funding cap Uganda has not previously applied to private-sector entities:

Threshold Requirement Applicable entities
Up to UGX 400 million (~USD 106,000*) per 12-month period Permitted, subject to registration and reporting All entities and individuals receiving foreign funding
Above UGX 400 million (~USD 106,000*) per 12-month period Prior written government approval required before funds are solicited or received All entities and individuals receiving foreign funding

*USD conversion is approximate based on prevailing exchange rates as of May 2026. Verify the applicable rate at the time of your transaction.

The Bill also requires entities that receive or intend to solicit foreign funding to register with a designated government authority. This registration obligation applies regardless of whether the funding falls below or above the cap. Failure to register is itself an offence under the Bill. The approval process for above-threshold funding is subject to ministerial discretion, and the Bill does not currently specify a fixed timeline within which approval must be granted or refused, an uncertainty that creates significant transaction-timing risk.

Beyond Clause 22, the Bill requires prior government approval to solicit or receive financial support or assistance from a foreigner above the prescribed threshold. This means that even pre-marketing activities, such as investor roadshows, pitch decks distributed to foreign funds, or grant applications sent to international donors, could require prior clearance if they are directed at raising amounts above the cap.

Who and What Is Affected by the Protection of Sovereignty Bill, Entity-by-Entity Breakdown

Companies, domestic companies with foreign shareholders

Any Ugandan-incorporated company that receives equity investment, shareholder loans, convertible instruments or other financial contributions from foreign persons (including diaspora Ugandans) will need to assess whether those contributions exceed the Clause 22 threshold. This includes Series A and later-stage funding rounds for tech startups, foreign investment Uganda 2026 market-entry transactions, and ongoing operational funding from a foreign parent company.

Companies should conduct an immediate review of their existing shareholder register and funding arrangements to identify any foreign-sourced funding that could retrospectively trigger compliance obligations once the Bill commences. Early indications suggest that the mandatory registration requirement applies to all entities regardless of funding amount, so even companies currently operating with modest foreign shareholdings should prepare to register.

NGOs, civil-society and donor-funded entities

The impact on NGOs and civil-society organisations is particularly acute. Most donor-funded entities in Uganda receive the majority of their operational funding from foreign sources, and grant amounts frequently exceed the UGX 400 million threshold. The Bill requires mandatory registration and prior approval for grants above the threshold, and it imposes reporting obligations that may require disclosure of donor identities, project descriptions and budgets. Donors may need to restructure their grant instruments, potentially disbursing in tranches below the cap, or establishing local funding intermediaries, to maintain programme continuity.

Diaspora Ugandans and individuals

The Bill’s definition of “foreigner” captures Ugandan citizens residing outside the country. This means remittances, family investments and diaspora-funded business ventures may fall within the regulatory net. While implementing regulations will determine the precise practical impact on individual transfers, industry observers expect that the legislation’s broad scope will create uncertainty for diaspora entrepreneurs planning to fund startups or acquire property in Uganda.

Entity type Registration / approval requirement Notes and typical timeline
Domestic company receiving foreign funds Mandatory registration with designated authority; government approval required for amounts above UGX 400 million per 12 months Approvals timeline not specified in current Bill text, recommend pre-filing due diligence and early engagement with authorities
NGO / CSO receiving foreign grants Mandatory registration and prior approval for grants above threshold High public scrutiny; donors may need to restructure grant disbursements into sub-threshold tranches
Individual (including diaspora Ugandans) May be defined as “foreigner” under the Bill, could trigger reporting and approval requirements Practical scope depends on implementing regulations yet to be published
Regulated financial institution (post-amendment) Proposed exemption under redrafted Clause 4(4), subject to final enacted text Verify exemption status against the final Act once published

Impact on Foreign Investment, VC Rounds, Fundraising and M&A

How will the Bill affect foreign investment, VC funding and M&A in Uganda? The practical effects will be felt at every stage of the deal lifecycle, from initial diligence through to post-closing compliance. The likely practical effect will be to add a regulatory approval layer to transactions that previously required only Companies Registry filings and sector-specific licences.

Pre-deal diligence and representations to include

Investors conducting diligence on Ugandan targets should now add a “Sovereignty Bill compliance” workstream to their standard checklist. This should cover:

  • Confirmation of whether the target entity has registered (or applied to register) under the Bill
  • A schedule of all foreign-sourced funding received in the preceding twelve months, with amounts and sources
  • Disclosure of any pending or anticipated government approval applications
  • Representations from founders and directors that no “regulated activity” (as defined in the Bill) is being conducted without required approvals

Term sheet and SPA adjustments investors should request

Foreign investors participating in fundraising Uganda 2026 rounds, whether seed, Series A or later-stage, should negotiate specific protections into their transaction documents:

  • Condition precedent. Make closing conditional on receipt of all required government approvals under the Bill. This prevents funds from being deployed before the regulatory framework is satisfied.
  • Regulatory compliance warranty. Require the company to warrant that it has complied with all registration and approval requirements, and that no enforcement action is pending or threatened.
  • Material adverse change clause. Include a specific MAC trigger tied to the enactment or amendment of the Bill (or implementing regulations) in a form that materially increases the cost or burden of the proposed investment.
  • Escrow mechanism. Structure the investment so that subscription monies are held in escrow pending government approval, with automatic return to the investor if approval is not received within a specified longstop date.
  • Indemnity. Negotiate an indemnity from founders or the company covering any losses, penalties or costs arising from non-compliance with the Bill that predates the investment.

Deal structuring options

Where the approval timeline creates unacceptable delay, investors and companies may consider alternative structures, subject to careful legal analysis:

  • Local joint venture. Partner with a Ugandan-citizen co-investor who can lead the funding round domestically, reducing the proportion of “foreign funding” that exceeds the threshold.
  • Phased disbursement. Structure the investment in tranches, each below the twelve-month cap, with subsequent tranches conditional on regulatory clearance.
  • Convertible instruments with delayed conversion. Issue convertible notes or SAFEs where conversion into equity occurs only after government approval is obtained, preserving the economic arrangement while deferring the trigger event.

Each of these structures carries its own risks, and the Bill’s anti-avoidance intent means that arrangements designed solely to circumvent the funding cap may attract regulatory scrutiny. Structuring decisions should always be made with qualified Ugandan legal counsel.

Lender and escrow considerations

Foreign lenders providing debt facilities to Ugandan borrowers should assess whether their loan disbursements constitute “foreign funding” under the Bill. If so, lenders may need to build government-approval timelines into drawdown conditions. Escrow agents and correspondent banks should also be briefed on the new regulatory requirements to ensure that fund flows are not delayed or blocked at the point of transfer.

Immediate Compliance Checklist and Practical Next Steps for Investors and Businesses

What immediate steps should businesses and investors take to remain compliant? The following checklists provide a starting framework for compliance for investors Uganda and for Ugandan companies receiving foreign capital. These steps should be initiated now, before the Bill receives presidential assent, to avoid disruption to live transactions.

For Ugandan companies and boards:

  1. Conduct a comprehensive audit of all foreign-sourced funding received in the last twelve months, equity, debt, grants, in-kind contributions and technical assistance.
  2. Map each funding source against the Bill’s definition of “foreigner” to determine which arrangements are caught.
  3. Calculate whether aggregate foreign funding exceeds, or is likely to exceed, the UGX 400 million threshold in the current or upcoming twelve-month period.
  4. Prepare and submit a registration application to the designated government authority as soon as the registration mechanism is published.
  5. Identify any activities that may fall within the Bill’s definition of “regulated activity” and assess whether additional sector-specific approvals are needed.
  6. Update board resolutions and corporate governance policies to include a Sovereignty Bill compliance protocol, assign a compliance officer or designate external counsel.
  7. Notify existing foreign shareholders and lenders of the new requirements, and obtain their cooperation for any required disclosures.
  8. Engage qualified Ugandan legal counsel to advise on the company’s specific exposure and to prepare any required approval applications.

For foreign investors and VC funds:

  1. Screen all current and pipeline investments in Uganda against the Bill’s definitions and thresholds before committing further capital.
  2. Pause any inbound transfers above the UGX 400 million threshold until the approval process is clarified or approval is obtained.
  3. Review and amend term sheets and transaction documents to include the protective clauses described above (conditions precedent, escrow, MAC, indemnity).
  4. Assess whether your fund’s structure, particularly if it includes Ugandan nationals in the diaspora as limited partners, creates additional exposure under the Bill’s expanded definition of “foreigner.”
  5. Coordinate with portfolio companies in Uganda to ensure they are initiating their own registration and compliance processes.
  6. Consider the reputational and operational risks flagged by civic-space organisations, including the potential for increased government oversight of funded programmes.
  7. Build realistic government-approval timelines (industry observers suggest allowing a minimum of 60–90 days as a planning assumption) into deal timetables and longstop dates.
  8. Find a Ugandan business lawyer through the Global Law Experts directory for jurisdiction-specific advice on your transaction.

Enforcement, Penalties and Likely Administrative Practice

Criminal penalties and administrative sanctions

The protection of sovereignty bill Uganda imposes criminal liability for non-compliance with its core requirements. According to the Bill text and the MMAKS legal alert, offences include:

  • Failure to register. Operating as an entity that receives foreign funding without completing the required registration is a criminal offence.
  • Soliciting or receiving above-threshold foreign funding without approval. Both the entity and its responsible officers may face prosecution.
  • Providing false or misleading information in registration applications or approval requests.
  • Penalties. The Bill provides for imprisonment and/or fines. The specific penalty ranges are set out in the Bill text and may be subject to amendment during plenary debate, practitioners should verify the final enacted penalties against the published Act.

The criminal nature of these sanctions, rather than purely administrative fines, significantly raises the stakes for non-compliance. Directors, company secretaries and responsible NGO officers face personal criminal exposure, not merely institutional penalties.

Expected regulatory enforcement and practical risks

As of May 2026, no implementing regulations, guidelines or designated enforcement authority have been formally published. This creates a period of regulatory uncertainty in which entities must prepare for compliance without full clarity on the administrative process. Early indications suggest that enforcement may initially focus on high-profile sectors, particularly NGOs, media organisations, and entities operating in governance and civic-engagement programmes, where the Bill’s sovereignty-protection objectives are most directly engaged. However, the open-ended definition of “regulated activity” means that commercial enterprises, including technology companies and private-equity-backed businesses, cannot assume they fall outside the enforcement scope. Companies operating in sectors adjacent to those previously flagged in our background coverage of the Protection of Sovereignty Bill should pay particular attention.

How to Structure Fundraising and Compliance Processes Under the Protection of Sovereignty Bill

Sample clause: pre-approval condition precedent

Investors may consider including a clause substantially in the following form in their transaction documents:

“Completion of the Subscription shall be conditional upon the Company having received written confirmation from [the designated government authority] that the investment contemplated by this Agreement has been approved, or is exempt from approval, under the Protection of Sovereignty Act [year], provided that if such confirmation has not been received by the Longstop Date, either party may terminate this Agreement by written notice and any funds held in escrow shall be returned to the Investor.”

This language should be adapted by counsel to reflect the final enacted provisions and any published approval procedures.

Sample investor covenant and escrow trigger

To manage the risk of funds being deployed before regulatory clearance, investors may negotiate the following covenant:

“The Company covenants that it shall not draw down, utilise or deploy any Investment Proceeds from the Escrow Account until (i) it has obtained all required approvals under the Protection of Sovereignty Act [year] and all implementing regulations, and (ii) it has delivered to the Investor certified copies of such approvals. In the event that approval is refused or not obtained within [90/120] days of the Completion Date, the Escrow Agent shall release all Investment Proceeds to the Investor.”

These sample provisions are illustrative only and should not be used without jurisdiction-specific legal advice. VC in Uganda transactions increasingly require bespoke regulatory-risk allocation, and cookie-cutter templates are unlikely to address the full range of issues raised by the Bill.

When to use local nominee or trustee arrangements, and the risks

Some market participants have explored the possibility of routing foreign investment through a Ugandan-citizen nominee or a locally incorporated trust structure to avoid triggering the Bill’s foreign-funding provisions. This approach carries significant legal and commercial risks:

  • Anti-avoidance risk. The Bill’s broad definitions and the Minister’s power to prescribe additional categories of “foreign funding” create a substantial risk that nominee arrangements will be deemed non-compliant, or will be specifically targeted in implementing regulations.
  • Beneficial ownership transparency. Uganda’s existing anti-money laundering framework requires disclosure of beneficial ownership. Using nominees to obscure the foreign origin of funds may create exposure under both the Sovereignty Bill and the Anti-Money Laundering Act.
  • Enforcement discretion. Even if a nominee structure is technically compliant on the date of execution, subsequent regulatory guidance or ministerial instruments could retrospectively capture such arrangements.

The safer approach, endorsed by most practitioners advising on foreign investment Uganda 2026, is to engage transparently with the approvals process, build approval timelines into transaction documents, and use escrow mechanisms to protect capital during the clearance period. For broader context on Uganda’s evolving regulatory environment, see our guides on Uganda tax changes 2026 and Uganda employment law changes 2026.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dennis Otatiina at Dentons Advocates (Global Dentons Network), a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Resources and Primary Sources

Practitioners and investors should work from primary source documents rather than media summaries. The following resources are recommended:

Conclusion

The protection of sovereignty bill Uganda is not merely a regulatory inconvenience, it represents a structural shift in how foreign capital enters the country. For investors, founders and NGO leaders, the window between now and presidential assent is the critical period to audit existing arrangements, restructure pending transactions and build compliance infrastructure. The practical cost of inaction, criminal exposure, deal delays and potential capital lockup, far exceeds the cost of early preparation. Parties considering ongoing developments around the Sovereignty Bill 2026 should monitor the legislation closely and engage Ugandan legal counsel without delay.

Sources

  1. Parliament of Uganda, Sovereignty Bill takes softer outlook after public outcry
  2. CCGEA, The Protection of Sovereignty Bill 2026 (Editable PDF)
  3. MMAKS Advocates, Legal Alert: Protection of Sovereignty Bill 2026
  4. ICNL, Eight Things to Know About Uganda’s Protection of Sovereignty Bill 2026
  5. Afriwise, Uganda’s Protection of Sovereignty Bill 2026: What It Means for Business, Investors and Lenders
  6. Article 19, Uganda: Protection of Sovereignty Bill 2026 Threatens Civic Space
  7. ENS Africa, Uganda’s Protection of Sovereignty Bill 2026
  8. The Observer, Protection of Sovereignty Bill, 2026: A Law That Could Cost Uganda Its Investors and Its Rights

FAQs

What is the Protection of Sovereignty Bill 2026 and who does it affect?
The Protection of Sovereignty Bill 2026 (Bill No. 13 of 2026) is a proposed Ugandan law that regulates foreign funding and foreign influence in domestic affairs. It affects companies receiving foreign investment, NGOs funded by international donors, diaspora Ugandans and individuals who solicit or receive financial support from foreign sources.
Yes. Clause 22 imposes a cap on foreign funding of approximately UGX 400 million (~USD 106,000) within any twelve-month period. Funding above this threshold requires prior written government approval. This cap applies to companies, NGOs and individuals alike. Verify the exact threshold and exchange rate against the current Bill text.
The Bill adds a government-approval requirement to any transaction involving foreign capital above the threshold. VC rounds, M&A deals and debt facilities will need to build approval timelines into closing schedules, include conditions precedent in transaction documents, and potentially use escrow mechanisms to protect investor capital during the clearance period.
Audit all foreign-sourced funding received in the past twelve months. Map funding against the Bill’s definitions. Pause above-threshold inbound transfers until approvals are obtained. Prepare registration applications. Amend transaction documents to include regulatory conditions precedent. Engage qualified Ugandan legal counsel.
The full Bill text is available from the CCGEA website (editable PDF) and from the MMAKS Advocates legal alert (PDF with practitioner commentary).
Amendments proposed during committee stage include a redrafting of Clause 4(4) that would exempt regulated financial institutions, health facilities and certain other sectors. These exemptions are subject to final approval during plenary debate, confirm the enacted text before relying on any exemption.
The Bill imposes criminal liability for failure to register, for soliciting or receiving above-threshold foreign funding without approval, and for providing false information. Penalties include imprisonment and fines. Both entities and their responsible officers face personal criminal exposure. Verify specific penalty ranges against the final enacted Act.
Yes. The Bill defines “foreigner” to include Ugandan citizens residing outside Uganda. This means diaspora investors, returning entrepreneurs and family remittance arrangements may trigger registration and approval requirements, subject to implementing regulations that have not yet been published.

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

Protection of Sovereignty Bill 2026, What Ugandan Businesses & Foreign Investors Need to Know

Send welcome message

Custom Message