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Alimony & Family Support in the UAE (2026): Federal Decree‑law No.41/2024, Spousal & Child Support Explained

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

Federal Decree‑Law No. 41 of 2024 has reshaped alimony law UAE practitioners and divorcing spouses must navigate, replacing decades‑old provisions with a modernised family support law UAE courts now apply to every maintenance claim filed since October 2024. The statute clarifies who qualifies for spousal and child support, tightens the factors judges weigh when setting awards, and introduces stronger enforcement tools, from salary attachment to travel bans. With 2025–2026 implementing commentary and judicial practice notes now available, this guide provides the worked calculations, enforcement checklists and expat‑specific guidance that most existing analyses omit.

Whether you are a UAE national, a resident expatriate or a family lawyer advising either, the sections below walk through the statute article by article, illustrate three realistic alimony calculation UAE scenarios, and explain how to enforce an order domestically or abroad.

Executive Summary, What Federal Decree‑Law No.41/2024 Changes for Alimony and Why 2026 Matters

Federal Decree‑Law No.41/2024, issued on 1 October 2024, replaced and updated the earlier Personal Status Law provisions governing maintenance for spouses and children. Industry observers note that 2026 represents the practical recalibration year: courts have had time to apply the new articles, practitioners have published interpretation guidance, and litigants now face a materially different calculation landscape.

The family law reforms 2026 landscape can be distilled into five headline changes:

  • Broadened applicability. The law applies to UAE nationals and to any case where at least one party is Muslim, while non‑Muslim residents may opt into a separate civil personal‑status framework.
  • Refined calculation factors. Courts must now assess maintenance against a codified list: marriage duration, each spouse’s income, standard of living, age, health and conduct during the marriage.
  • Expanded maintenance scope. Maintenance expressly covers accommodation, food, clothing, medical care, education, utilities and transport, reducing ambiguity in prior case law.
  • Stronger enforcement. The statute reinforces domestic enforcement via salary attachment, asset freezing, contempt proceedings and travel bans on defaulting obligors.
  • Transitional provisions. Cases filed before 1 October 2024 continue under the prior law, but any variation or enforcement application filed after that date falls under the new statute.
Issue Quick answer Where to read more
Who is affected? UAE nationals, Muslim residents, and non‑Muslims who have not opted into the civil framework Statutory framework section below
When did it take effect? 1 October 2024 Timeline section below
Does it change how alimony is calculated? Yes, codified multi‑factor test replaces prior judicial discretion Calculation and worked examples below
Can I enforce across borders? Yes, via treaty recognition, judgment domestication or diplomatic channels Enforcement section below
What about child support? Separate rules for child maintenance with expanded scope of covered items Types of maintenance below

The Statutory Framework, Federal Decree‑Law No.41/2024: Scope, Applicability and Key Provisions

Understanding alimony law UAE courts apply begins with the statute itself. Federal Decree‑Law No.41/2024 on Personal Status for Muslims is the primary legislation, published in the Official Gazette and available for download from the UAE Legislation portal. It consolidates and updates the maintenance provisions that were previously scattered across Federal Law No.28 of 2005 and its amendments.

Who Is Covered, Muslim, Non‑Muslim, Nationals and Expatriates

The statute applies automatically to UAE citizens and to any family dispute where at least one party is Muslim, regardless of nationality. This captures a significant proportion of the expatriate population. Non‑Muslim residents who do not wish to litigate under Sharia‑based rules may elect to apply their home‑country law or the UAE’s civil personal‑status regime (Federal Decree‑Law No.41 of 2022 for non‑Muslims). The practical effect is that any Muslim expat divorcing in the UAE will have maintenance assessed under the 2024 law, while a non‑Muslim couple may apply the civil framework, though jurisdictional nuances remain, and early indications suggest courts still default to the 2024 statute where election is unclear.

Key Articles Affecting Maintenance, Guardianship and Enforcement

The statute’s maintenance chapter addresses several critical obligations. The law requires a husband to maintain his wife from the date of the valid marriage contract, provided she has made herself available for marital duties. Maintenance is a legally enforceable debt, meaning arrears accumulate and do not lapse by the passage of time.

Key provisions cover the following areas:

  • Obligation to maintain during marriage. The husband is obligated to provide maintenance (nafaqah) comprising accommodation, food, clothing, medical treatment, education for children, and other necessities proportionate to the family’s standard of living.
  • Post‑divorce maintenance (iddah period). A divorced wife is entitled to maintenance during the iddah waiting period (typically three menstrual cycles or three months). The amount should reflect her standard of living during the marriage.
  • Mut’ah (consolatory payment). The court may order a lump‑sum consolatory payment to the wife following divorce, considering the marriage’s duration, the husband’s financial position and the circumstances of the divorce.
  • Child maintenance. The father is the primary obligor for children’s expenses, including education, medical care and housing, until a daughter marries or a son reaches the age of financial independence.
  • Enforcement mechanisms. The statute empowers courts to order salary deductions, freeze bank accounts, impose travel bans and contempt sanctions against defaulting obligors.

The interaction with the earlier law is governed by transitional articles: proceedings commenced before October 2024 remain under the prior statute, but any new claim, variation application or enforcement request filed after that date is assessed under the 2024 framework.

Types of Maintenance Under UAE Law and When Courts Will Order Them

The family support law UAE courts enforce distinguishes between spousal maintenance and child maintenance, each with its own triggers, duration and itemised scope.

Spousal Support UAE, Periodical Allowance and Lump Sums

Spousal support UAE courts order falls into three categories. First, maintenance during marriage: a continuing obligation that arises from the marriage contract itself. Second, iddah maintenance: payable for the waiting period following divorce. Third, mut’ah: a discretionary consolatory lump sum. The court determines the amount and form, monthly periodical payments, a single lump sum, or a combination, based on the husband’s means and the wife’s needs. In practice, monthly awards remain the norm, although settlements increasingly include capitalised lump‑sum agreements, especially in high‑net‑worth expatriate cases.

Child Support UAE, Scope and Obligations

Child support UAE obligations fall on the father as the primary financial provider. The statute requires the father to cover accommodation suitable for the children and their custodial parent, school and university fees, medical and dental expenses, clothing, food and transportation. Where the custodial mother incurs housing costs, the father must either provide alternative accommodation or pay the equivalent rental allowance. Child maintenance continues until a son becomes financially self‑sufficient or a daughter marries, although courts retain discretion to extend support for children with special needs or those pursuing higher education. In custody disputes, the maintenance quantum often becomes the most contested item.

Ancillary Items, Housing, Education, Medical

The codified list of maintenance items now expressly includes utilities, domestic help (where the marital standard of living included domestic workers), transport costs and insurance premiums. This specificity reduces litigation over whether a particular expense qualifies as “maintenance”, a common point of contention under the prior statute.

How Courts Calculate Alimony, Factors, Formulae and Worked Examples

This is the section most litigants and practitioners need. Alimony calculation UAE courts apply is not formula‑driven in the way that some Western jurisdictions use fixed percentages. Instead, judges conduct a multi‑factor assessment, weighting each element against the specific circumstances of the case.

Court Factors, Length of Marriage, Income, Standard of Living, Age, Health, Conduct

The statute directs courts to consider the following factors when determining both the quantum and the duration of spousal support UAE awards:

  • Duration of the marriage. Longer marriages generate higher and longer‑lasting awards.
  • Each party’s income and financial resources. Courts examine salary certificates, bank statements, property holdings and business interests.
  • The family’s standard of living during the marriage. The objective is to maintain the dependent spouse and children at a comparable level where possible.
  • Age and health of each party. A younger, healthier spouse with employment prospects may receive a lower or time‑limited award.
  • Conduct during the marriage. Fault‑based elements, such as whether the divorce was initiated due to harm (darar), can influence the mut’ah component.
  • Childcare responsibilities. A custodial parent’s inability to work full‑time due to childcare duties is a recognised ground for increasing the award.

Calculation Methodology, Muslim vs Non‑Muslim Cases

For Muslim cases under Federal Decree‑Law No.41/2024, the court applies the statutory factor test above, cross‑referenced with Sharia principles on nafaqah. There is no statutory percentage or formula; the judge exercises discretion within the codified framework. For non‑Muslim cases under the civil personal‑status framework, courts apply the chosen applicable law, which may include formula‑based calculations from the parties’ home jurisdiction. In practice, UAE courts hearing non‑Muslim cases often apply similar factor‑based reasoning, particularly where neither party’s home law prescribes a clear formula.

Worked Example A, UAE National, Muslim, Long Marriage

Factor Detail Court assessment
Marriage duration 18 years Long marriage, supports substantial award
Husband’s monthly income AED 45,000 Verified via salary certificate and bank statements
Wife’s monthly income AED 0 (homemaker) Full financial dependency, increases quantum
Children 3 (ages 8, 12, 15) Education and housing costs included
Standard of living Villa rental AED 12,000/month; school fees AED 8,000/month per child Maintenance must approximate this level
Indicative monthly award Spousal maintenance: AED 5,000–7,000; child maintenance: AED 28,000–32,000 (housing + education + living costs); mut’ah: AED 100,000–150,000 lump sum

Worked Example B, Non‑Muslim Expat Couple

Factor Detail Court assessment
Marriage duration 6 years Medium‑length marriage, moderate award
Husband’s monthly income AED 35,000 (plus housing allowance AED 10,000) Total package AED 45,000 assessed
Wife’s monthly income AED 12,000 (part‑time employment) Partial dependency, reduces quantum
Children 1 (age 4) Childcare and nursery costs included
Applicable law elected UK law (parties’ home jurisdiction) Court may apply needs‑based UK approach
Indicative monthly award Spousal maintenance: AED 3,000–5,000 (time‑limited, 2–3 years); child maintenance: AED 8,000–10,000; no mut’ah (non‑Muslim framework)

Worked Example C, Expatriate With Foreign Income and Assets

Where an expat alimony UAE case involves a spouse earning income abroad, for example, rental income from properties in the UK or India, courts require full financial disclosure. The likely practical effect is that foreign income is treated as part of the obligor’s total means. Courts may order the disclosure of overseas bank statements, tax returns and property valuations. Enforcing the resulting order against foreign assets requires a separate cross‑border enforcement strategy (see enforcement section below).

Special Issues for Expatriates, Residence, Foreign Income and Joint Assets

Expat alimony UAE cases raise jurisdictional and practical complexities that nationals rarely face. Understanding these issues early prevents costly missteps.

When UAE Courts Assume Jurisdiction

UAE family courts assert jurisdiction where either spouse is resident in the UAE, where the marriage was contracted in the UAE, or where the last shared marital home was in the UAE. In practice, if either party holds a valid UAE residence visa at the time of filing, the court will accept the case. Expatriates who have left the UAE may still face proceedings if the other spouse remains resident and files locally. Those navigating UAE spouse visa requirements should note that visa cancellation can affect jurisdictional arguments.

How Foreign Income and Employment Is Treated

The court treats all income, whether earned in the UAE or abroad, as part of the obligor’s financial capacity. Salary earned through a foreign employer, dividends from overseas investments, and rental income from properties outside the UAE are all assessable. The court may appoint a financial expert to verify foreign‑source income where disclosure is contested. Practitioners advise gathering certified bank statements, employer letters and tax filings from all jurisdictions well before the hearing.

Options for Settlement vs Court Order for Expats

Many expatriate couples prefer negotiated settlements, formalised as consent orders registered with the court, to avoid the uncertainty and duration of contested litigation. Mediation through the Family Guidance Department is mandatory before litigation in most emirates. A well‑drafted consent order, covering spousal maintenance, child support, housing and school fees, can be enforced domestically and, in many cases, recognised abroad more readily than a contested judgment.

Enforcement of Alimony and Child Support in the UAE

A maintenance order is only as useful as its enforcement. Federal Decree‑Law No.41/2024 strengthens the tools available to enforce alimony UAE courts order, while cross‑border enforcement remains a structured but achievable process.

Domestic Enforcement Mechanisms, What Courts Can Do

When an obligor defaults, the recipient spouse may apply to the Execution Court for enforcement. Available mechanisms include:

  • Salary attachment. The court issues an order to the employer to deduct the maintenance amount directly from the obligor’s salary and remit it to the recipient. This is the most common and effective domestic tool.
  • Bank account attachment. Courts can freeze and attach funds in the obligor’s UAE bank accounts, including end‑of‑service gratuity held by the employer.
  • Travel ban. A travel ban may be imposed on a defaulting obligor, preventing departure from the UAE until arrears are settled or a payment arrangement is approved.
  • Contempt of court. Persistent non‑compliance may result in imprisonment of the obligor for contempt, typically for periods of one to three months, renewable until payment is made.
  • Asset seizure. Movable and immovable property within the UAE may be seized and sold at auction to satisfy maintenance arrears.

International Enforcement, Recognition, Reciprocity and Practical Steps

Enforcing a UAE alimony order abroad requires navigating the recognition framework of the target jurisdiction. The UAE is party to bilateral judicial cooperation treaties with several countries, and GCC member states have a reciprocal enforcement agreement. Where no treaty exists, the recipient must apply to the foreign court for “domestication”, essentially asking the court to recognise the UAE order as a local judgment. Key practical steps include:

  • Obtain a certified, translated copy of the UAE judgment and the underlying maintenance order.
  • Verify whether a bilateral treaty or reciprocal arrangement exists between the UAE and the target country.
  • Engage local counsel in the enforcement jurisdiction to file the recognition application.
  • Provide evidence that the obligor was properly served and had an opportunity to defend, this is often the main ground for refusing recognition.

What to Do If an Ex‑Spouse Claims Insolvency

An obligor claiming inability to pay does not automatically discharge the maintenance obligation. Courts require documentary evidence of insolvency and may order the obligor to disclose all assets, including those held by family members or related entities. Where the court finds the claim credible, it may reduce, but rarely eliminate, the maintenance obligation. The recipient should gather counter‑evidence: social media showing a lifestyle inconsistent with claimed poverty, property records, and vehicle registration data.

Scenario Enforcement tool Practical tip
Obligor employed in UAE Salary attachment via Execution Court File immediately upon default; employer must comply within 7 days of receiving the order
Obligor has departed the UAE Cross‑border recognition / domestication Engage local counsel in the obligor’s country of residence; prepare certified translations early
Obligor is self‑employed in UAE Bank account attachment + asset seizure Request financial disclosure order before applying for attachment; identify trade licence accounts
Employer holds end‑of‑service gratuity Garnishee order against employer Apply before the obligor’s employment terminates; gratuity is a preferred enforcement target

Practical Drafting, Pleadings and Sample Court Language

Below are six template clauses commonly used by practitioners in UAE maintenance proceedings. Each should be adapted to the specific facts and reviewed by qualified counsel before filing.

  • Maintenance claim clause. “The Claimant requests that the Court order the Respondent to pay monthly maintenance in the amount of AED [amount], comprising accommodation (AED [X]), food and clothing (AED [X]), medical expenses (AED [X]), education fees (AED [X]) and transport (AED [X]), with effect from [date].”
  • Temporary (pendente lite) order request. “The Claimant requests an interim maintenance order pursuant to [applicable article] pending final determination of the case, in the amount of AED [amount] per month, to preserve the family’s standard of living during proceedings.”
  • Enforcement order request. “The Judgment Creditor requests execution of Judgment No. [X] dated [date], including salary attachment against the Judgment Debtor’s employer [name], a travel ban, and attachment of bank accounts held at [bank name].”
  • Financial disclosure checklist. “The Claimant requests that the Respondent disclose: (a) salary certificates for the past 24 months; (b) bank statements for all UAE and foreign accounts; (c) property title deeds; (d) vehicle registration certificates; (e) business ownership documents; (f) tax returns from all jurisdictions.”
  • Consent settlement clause. “The parties agree that the Respondent shall pay the Claimant monthly spousal maintenance of AED [X] for a period of [X] months, and monthly child maintenance of AED [X] per child, inclusive of housing, education and medical expenses, such agreement to be registered as a consent order.”
  • Cross‑border recognition request. “The Applicant requests recognition and enforcement of the attached UAE Court Judgment No. [X], certified and translated, pursuant to [applicable bilateral treaty / reciprocal arrangement / local recognition statute], and submits evidence of proper service and the Respondent’s opportunity to defend.”

Timeline of Key Legislative and Practice Developments

Date Event Practical impact
2005 Federal Law No.28 of 2005 on Personal Status enacted Established the prior maintenance framework; governed all Muslim family cases for nearly two decades
2022 Federal Decree‑Law No.41 of 2022 on Civil Personal Status for non‑Muslims Created an alternative framework for non‑Muslim residents; allowed opt‑out from Sharia‑based rules
1 October 2024 Federal Decree‑Law No.41/2024 on Personal Status for Muslims issued Modernised maintenance rules; codified calculation factors; strengthened enforcement tools
Q1 2025 First practitioner briefings and commentary published (Legal 500, Lexology, firm blogs) Courts and practitioners began interpreting new provisions; practical calculation approaches started emerging
2025–2026 Implementing judicial practice and guidance develops 2026 is the practical adaptation period, courts now have sufficient case flow to establish patterns on quantum and enforcement

Next Steps

Alimony law UAE cases require early, informed action, from gathering financial disclosure to choosing between settlement and contested litigation. Whether you are filing a maintenance claim, responding to one, or enforcing an existing order, engaging a qualified UAE family lawyer at the earliest stage materially improves outcomes. Use the Global Law Experts lawyer directory to connect with experienced family law practitioners across the UAE who can provide case‑specific guidance on Federal Decree‑Law No.41/2024 and its practical application in 2026.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dr. Hassan Elhais at Amal Alrashdi Lawyers & Legal Consultants L.L.C., a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. UAE Legislation, Federal Decree‑Law No.41/2024 (Personal Status)
  2. Lexis® Middle East, Decree Law 41/2024 Summary
  3. Legal 500, The New UAE Personal Status Law No.41 of 2024
  4. Lexology, Practical Firm Notes on Alimony Calculation
  5. Galadari, New Personal Status Law Enhances Community Rights
  6. HorizLaw, Key Amendments and Legal Implications of Federal Decree‑Law No.41 of 2024
  7. ProfessionalLawyer, Family Law / Divorce Practice Notes

FAQs

What is alimony in the UAE?
Alimony (nafaqah) is the financial maintenance a husband is legally obliged to provide to his wife and children. It covers accommodation, food, clothing, medical care, education, utilities and transport. Under Federal Decree‑Law No.41/2024, maintenance is both a continuing obligation during marriage and a post‑divorce entitlement during the iddah period, with the possibility of an additional consolatory lump sum (mut’ah).
There is no fixed percentage formula. Courts assess the duration of the marriage, each spouse’s income and financial resources, the marital standard of living, the age and health of both parties, and conduct during the marriage. The judge exercises discretion within this codified framework. Non‑Muslim couples who elect a foreign applicable law may have home‑country formulae applied instead.
Courts prioritise the child’s best interests and will not normally restrict a parent’s visitation rights unless there is evidence of abuse, neglect or genuine risk. Remedies in serious cases include supervised visitation and protective orders. Unilateral denial of access without a court order can result in sanctions against the custodial parent.
Polygamy is permitted for Muslim men under the Personal Status law, subject to conditions. The husband must demonstrate the financial capacity to support multiple households equally and must obtain judicial permission. Practical and residency implications exist, including the need to provide separate accommodation for each wife.
The Execution Court can order salary attachment, bank account freezes, travel bans, contempt imprisonment and asset seizure. For obligors who have left the UAE, enforcement requires cross‑border recognition of the judgment, through bilateral treaties, GCC reciprocal arrangements or domestication proceedings in the obligor’s country of residence.
Courts require salary certificates, bank statements, property records, vehicle registrations, business ownership documents and, where applicable, foreign tax returns. Social media evidence, lifestyle indicators and expert financial reports may also be admitted. Full and early disclosure is critical; failure to disclose can result in adverse inferences.
Obtain a certified, translated copy of the judgment and identify whether a bilateral treaty exists with the target country. Engage local counsel in the enforcement jurisdiction to file a recognition application. Provide evidence of proper service and due process. GCC member states have a reciprocal enforcement agreement that simplifies the process within the Gulf region.
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By Faisal A. Siddiqui

posted 28 minutes ago

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Alimony & Family Support in the UAE (2026): Federal Decree‑law No.41/2024, Spousal & Child Support Explained

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