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how to enforce a commercial contract uae 2026

Our Expert in United Arab Emirates

How to Enforce a Commercial Contract in the UAE, Step‑by‑step (civil Transactions Law 2026)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 5 hours ago

Understanding how to enforce a commercial contract in the UAE in 2026 is now more important than ever, because the legal framework governing contractual remedies has changed. Federal Decree‑Law No. 25 of 2025, the new Civil Transactions Law, came into force on 1 June 2026, replacing the previous Civil Code and introducing revised rules on limitation periods, compensation and contractual interpretation that directly affect enforcement timing and strategy. This guide sets out the complete contract enforcement procedure in the UAE, covering eligibility checks, the step‑by‑step court and arbitration process, required documents, realistic timelines, indicative costs, and the specific changes that the 2026 law brings.

It is written for general counsel, in‑house legal teams, creditors, founders and foreign companies with assets or counterparties in the United Arab Emirates.

Overview of the Process and Who It Applies To

“Enforcement” of a commercial contract in the UAE encompasses several distinct procedures, depending on how the underlying dispute is resolved and where the debtor’s assets are located. In its broadest sense, the term covers three activities: obtaining a court judgment or arbitral award confirming the claimant’s rights; converting that judgment or award into an executable instrument (an execution order); and using enforcement officers to attach, seize or sell the debtor’s assets to satisfy the claim.

The process applies to any party that holds enforceable contractual rights against a UAE‑domiciled counterparty, or against any counterparty whose assets are situated in the UAE. This includes domestic suppliers, foreign creditors, joint‑venture partners, assignees of contractual rights, and companies seeking to enforce performance guarantees or liquidated‑damages clauses. It is equally relevant whether the claimant is an individual or a corporate entity, provided the party has standing and the claim falls within the applicable limitation period.

Several enforcement routes exist, and the correct path depends on the contract’s dispute‑resolution clause, the location of the debtor’s assets, and the nature of the claim:

  • Onshore UAE courts. Dubai Courts, Abu Dhabi Judicial Department and other emirate‑level courts handle claims governed by UAE federal law. The substantive rules now derive primarily from Federal Decree‑Law No. 25 of 2025 (the Civil Transactions Law 2026).
  • DIFC Courts. The Dubai International Financial Centre Courts operate under a common‑law framework and have their own enforcement rules, including Part 45 of the DIFC Court Rules, which governs recognition and enforcement of judgments and arbitral awards.
  • Arbitration enforcement. Where the contract contains an arbitration clause, the dispute is first resolved by an arbitral tribunal. The resulting award is then ratified and enforced through the competent court, either onshore or via the DIFC Courts’ “conduit jurisdiction.”

Regardless of the route, every enforcement action in the UAE now operates under the substantive provisions of the Civil Transactions Law 2026 for matters of contractual liability, limitation and damages. The procedural rules for execution remain governed by the relevant court’s procedural legislation and practice directions.

Eligibility and Prerequisites for Contract Enforcement in the UAE

Before commencing any enforcement action, a claimant must confirm that both the legal prerequisites and practical preconditions are satisfied. Failing to verify these at the outset is one of the most common reasons enforcement actions stall or fail entirely.

Check the contractual dispute‑resolution clause

The first step is to review the contract’s dispute‑resolution provisions. If the agreement contains a valid arbitration clause, filing a court claim may be procedurally barred, and vice versa, if the contract specifies exclusive court jurisdiction, initiating arbitration is likely to be challenged. Key items to identify include:

  • Arbitration clause. Identify the seat, the administering institution (e.g., DIAC, ICC, LCIA‑DIFC), the number of arbitrators, and the governing procedural rules.
  • Exclusive jurisdiction clause. Confirm whether the contract specifies a particular court (Dubai Courts, Abu Dhabi courts, DIFC Courts) and whether that clause is exclusive or non‑exclusive.
  • Pre‑action requirements. Many commercial contracts require the claimant to engage in good‑faith negotiation or mediation before filing a claim. Non‑compliance may give the respondent grounds to object.
  • Governing law. Where the contract is governed by a law other than UAE law, the dispute‑resolution clause and the applicable substantive rules interact, the claimant should assess how the Civil Transactions Law 2026 applies to enforcement mechanics even where the underlying obligations are governed by foreign law.

Verify the limitation period

Under the Civil Transactions Law 2026, limitation rules have been revised. The claimant must run a limitation calculation immediately and confirm that the claim is not time‑barred. Industry observers expect the practical effect of the revised limitation provisions to be an earlier cut‑off for certain categories of commercial claims, particularly those involving tort‑adjacent contractual duties. Where the breach occurred before 1 June 2026 but the claim is filed after that date, transitional provisions may apply, careful analysis of the specific contract and breach date is essential. A detailed discussion of the limitation changes appears in the section on What Changes in 2026 below.

In addition to limitation, the claimant should verify:

  • Standing. The party filing must be a contracting party or a valid assignee of the contractual rights. Corporate claimants need a valid trade licence and, if acting through a representative, a properly executed power of attorney.
  • Jurisdictional nexus. The defendant must be domiciled in the UAE, have assets in the UAE, or the contract must specify UAE performance, at least one of these jurisdictional threads must exist.
  • Capacity. Under the Civil Transactions Law 2026, the age of majority has been adjusted, which may affect the contractual capacity of certain parties. Confirm that all contracting parties had capacity at the time of execution.

Step‑by‑Step Commercial Contract Enforcement Procedure in the UAE

The following numbered steps represent the standard enforcement workflow. Timelines are indicative and vary by emirate, court workload and case complexity. The mandatory timeline table below consolidates the typical duration for each stage.

  1. Conduct a pre‑action audit and issue a formal notice

    Before filing any claim, assemble and preserve all evidence of the breach, contracts, correspondence, invoices, delivery records and payment traces. Issue a formal demand letter (notarised where possible) to the defaulting party, setting out the breach, the amount claimed, the legal basis and a reasonable deadline for compliance. Under many UAE commercial contracts, failure to issue a pre‑action notice may weaken the claim or delay proceedings. The demand letter should reference the applicable provisions of the Civil Transactions Law 2026 where relevant, particularly where the claimant intends to rely on revised compensation rules. Typical duration: immediate preparation, allowing 1–2 weeks for the notice period to expire.

  2. Consider and apply for provisional or interim relief

    If there is a risk that the debtor will dissipate assets, remove them from the jurisdiction or destroy evidence, the claimant should apply for provisional measures at the earliest opportunity. In onshore UAE courts, this typically takes the form of a precautionary attachment order (hajz tahaffuzi), obtained on an urgent basis from the competent judge. In the DIFC Courts, freezing orders and interim injunctions are available under the court’s inherent jurisdiction and Part 25 of the DIFC Court Rules. The evidential threshold is that the claimant must demonstrate a prima facie case and a genuine risk that enforcement would be frustrated without the order. Typical duration: 2–14 days, depending on the urgency and the evidence presented.

  3. File the substantive claim or seek recognition of an arbitral award

    Where the dispute is to be resolved by litigation, the claimant files a statement of claim with the competent court. For onshore UAE courts, this is done through the court’s electronic filing portal. The claim must set out the factual background, the legal basis (citing the relevant provisions of the Civil Transactions Law 2026 and any applicable commercial legislation), the relief sought (specific performance, damages, interest, costs), and supporting evidence. All foreign‑language documents must be accompanied by certified Arabic translations, and foreign documents typically require attestation by the issuing country’s authorities and the UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

    For arbitration enforcement, the claimant files an application for ratification of the arbitral award with the execution court, attaching the original award, the arbitration agreement and certified translations.

  4. Effect service and attend preliminary hearings

    Once the claim is registered, the court issues service on the defendant through the court bailiff or an authorised process server. Service outside the UAE follows the applicable bilateral treaty or, in the absence of a treaty, rogatory letter procedures. After service, onshore courts schedule preliminary hearings at which the parties exchange pleadings, submit evidence and address jurisdictional or procedural objections. In the DIFC Courts, case management conferences serve a similar function. Typical duration: 2–8 weeks from filing to first substantive hearing, though cross‑border service can extend this considerably.

  5. Obtain judgment or award and secure an execution order

    Following the merits hearing, the court issues its judgment. In onshore courts, the judgment becomes enforceable once the appeal period expires (typically 30 days for appeal to the Court of Appeal) or once any appeal is resolved. For arbitral awards, the claimant applies to the execution judge for ratification of the award under Federal Decree‑Law No. 6 of 2018 (the UAE Arbitration Law). The DIFC Courts may also serve as a “conduit jurisdiction”, recognising a foreign or DIFC‑seated arbitral award and then enforcing it against onshore assets through a reciprocal enforcement mechanism. Typical duration: 1–6 months from filing to judgment, depending on case complexity and the court’s docket.

  6. Execute the judgment, attachment, seizure and sale of assets

    With an executable judgment or ratified award in hand, the claimant applies to the execution judge for enforcement. Dubai Courts’ execution department processes these applications and appoints enforcement officers to carry out the necessary measures, bank‑account freezes, salary attachments, seizure of movable property, or orders for the sale of immovable property. The claimant must submit the original judgment, an enforcement request, proof of the judgment becoming final, a certified Arabic translation of any foreign‑language judgment, and identification documents. Typical duration: 2–12 weeks, with asset‑tracing and third‑party compliance being the main variables.

  7. Monitor post‑enforcement recovery and consider cross‑border enforcement

    Enforcement does not always conclude with a single execution order. The claimant may need to pursue garnishee proceedings against third‑party debtors, apply for travel bans in respect of individual guarantors, or initiate parallel enforcement actions in other jurisdictions where the debtor holds assets. Where the debtor is insolvent, the claimant may need to file a claim in insolvency proceedings under Federal Decree‑Law No. 9 of 2016 (the Bankruptcy Law). Cross‑border enforcement of UAE judgments is facilitated by bilateral treaties (e.g., the Riyadh Convention for GCC states) and, for arbitral awards, the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards.

Step Who does it Typical duration
1. Pre‑action notice and evidence preservation Claimant counsel / in‑house counsel Immediate → 1–2 weeks
2. Apply for provisional measures (freezing order / urgent relief) Claimant + judge (onshore / DIFC) 2–14 days (urgent)
3. File substantive claim or seek recognition of award Claimant counsel / court registry 1–4 weeks (preparation and filing)
4. Service and preliminary hearings Court bailiff / process server 2–8 weeks (varies with location of defendant)
5. Judgment or award Court / arbitral tribunal 1–6 months (varies by case complexity)
6. Execution, attachment, seizure and sale Execution judge / enforcement officers 2–12 weeks (asset location affects timeline)
7. Cross‑border enforcement and follow‑up Counsel / foreign enforcement agents 4 weeks → several months (jurisdiction‑dependent)

Required Documents for Contract Enforcement in the UAE

Both court proceedings and arbitration enforcement require a comprehensive set of supporting documents. Missing or improperly formatted documents are one of the most common reasons for delays at the filing and execution stages. The table below consolidates the documents needed for a typical commercial enforcement action. Dubai Courts require certified Arabic translations for all foreign‑language documents and standard foreign‑document certification through the UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA).

Document Notes (issuer, format, validity requirements)
Original contract (signed copy) Certified true copy if the original is held by the counterparty. If the contract originates abroad, it must be certified, legalised (apostilled or consularised) and accompanied by a certified Arabic translation.
Formal notice / demand letter Issued by claimant or counsel. Include date‑stamped proof of delivery or service (courier receipt, notarised acknowledgement, or registered‑mail tracking).
Invoices, delivery notes, acceptance certificates, payment records Commercial documents evidencing performance and breach. Originals preferred; certified copies acceptable. PDF versions should be supported by originals where the court requests them.
Corporate authorisation (board resolution / power of attorney) Board resolution authorising the filing of the claim and appointing the representative. Power of attorney must be notarised and, if executed abroad, legalised through MOFA.
Identification documents for parties and signatories Passport copies for individuals. Trade licence, certificate of incorporation and commercial register extract for corporate parties.
Arbitration award (if applicable) Original signed award plus an authenticated copy. For onshore enforcement, a certified Arabic translation and attestation are mandatory.
Court judgment (if enforcing a prior judgment) Certified copy of the judgment, proof it has become final (certificate of non‑appeal or appellate decision), and Arabic translation if the judgment was issued in another language.
Evidence of pre‑action dispute resolution attempts Emails, meeting minutes, mediation records or settlement correspondence demonstrating the claimant’s efforts to resolve the dispute before litigation.
Witness statements / expert reports As required for technical or quantum disputes. Expert reports should be prepared in accordance with the court’s practice directions.
Proof of asset traces Bank records, company filings, property‑register extracts and vehicle registrations identifying the debtor’s assets for execution purposes.
Power of attorney for enforcement agent If instructing a local process agent or enforcement officer, a separate power of attorney may be required.

A practical document‑handling checklist should accompany every filing:

  • Translation. All documents in a language other than Arabic must be translated by a certified legal translator registered with the UAE Ministry of Justice.
  • Attestation. Foreign documents require legalisation, typically notarisation in the country of origin, authentication by the relevant embassy or consulate, and final attestation by MOFA.
  • Certified copies. Courts accept certified copies but may request originals for inspection. Keep originals securely and bring them to hearings.
  • Electronic filing. Dubai Courts and certain other emirate courts accept electronic submissions via their online portals. Ensure scanned documents meet the portal’s resolution and format requirements.

Timeline and Key Deadlines for Enforcement

Timing is critical at every stage of the contract enforcement procedure in the UAE. Missing a limitation deadline bars the claim entirely; missing an appeal window renders a judgment final against the claimant; and delaying execution gives the debtor time to dissipate assets. The table below maps the key milestones and their realistic time ranges.

Milestone Earliest realistic timeframe Latest realistic timeframe
Limitation check and pre‑action demand Immediate (before any other step) Must be completed before limitation expires
Provisional measures application Same day as demand (if urgent) Within 2 weeks of identifying asset‑dissipation risk
Filing of substantive claim 2–4 weeks after failed settlement 2–6 months (practical window; subject to limitation)
Service on defendant 1–2 weeks (within UAE) 4–8 weeks (cross‑border / treaty‑based service)
First‑instance judgment 2–3 months (straightforward claims) 6–12 months (complex, multi‑party disputes)
Appeal window 30 days from judgment (onshore UAE courts) Varies by court; DIFC has its own appeal rules
Execution / enforcement 2–4 weeks (liquid assets, bank accounts) 12+ weeks (immovable property, contested assets)

Several key points deserve emphasis in relation to the 2026 timeline for enforcement:

  • Limitation under the Civil Transactions Law 2026. The claimant should recalculate limitation immediately upon identifying a potential claim. The likely practical effect of the revised limitation provisions is that certain claims which might previously have been considered timely may now require faster action. A detailed analysis appears below.
  • Appeal deadlines. Onshore UAE courts generally allow 30 days for appeal. Failure to appeal within the prescribed window renders the first‑instance judgment final and executable. DIFC Courts apply their own appellate timetable.
  • Execution urgency. Once a judgment becomes final, the claimant should file for execution promptly. Delays provide the debtor with an opportunity to move assets out of reach.

Costs, Fees and Tax Considerations

The total cost of enforcing a commercial contract in the UAE depends on the forum (onshore courts, DIFC Courts or arbitration), the complexity of the claim and whether cross‑border steps are required. The table below provides an indicative breakdown. Exact figures should be verified against the current court fee schedule at the time of filing, as fees are periodically adjusted by judicial resolution.

Cost item Indicative range Notes
Court filing fee (onshore UAE courts) Percentage of claim value, subject to a cap Dubai Courts charge a percentage‑based fee with minimum and maximum thresholds. Verify the current schedule with the court registry.
Court filing fee (DIFC Courts) Fixed fee plus percentage of claim value DIFC Courts publish their fee schedule on the court’s website. Fees are generally higher than onshore courts for large claims.
Provisional measures application Separate filing fee (varies by court) Paid at the time of filing the urgent application. May include a hearing fee.
Certified Arabic translation AED 200–1,200 per document Varies by document length and translator. Court‑approved translators are required for filings.
Document attestation / legalisation AED 150–500 per document (plus consular fees for foreign documents) Foreign documents require notarisation, consular authentication and MOFA attestation.
Enforcement / execution officer fees Fixed fee plus percentage of recovered amount Varies by emirate and scope of execution (movable vs immovable property).
Legal counsel fees Hourly rate or phased fixed retainer VAT at 5% applies to professional services in the UAE. Fee structures vary by firm and case complexity.

It is worth noting that UAE courts may award costs against the unsuccessful party, but the awarded amount is typically modest relative to the actual legal fees incurred. The claimant should factor this into the overall enforcement budget and consider whether a pre‑action demand or settlement negotiation can reduce total expenditure. For a detailed cost estimate tailored to a specific claim, engaging a UAE commercial lawyer through the Global Law Experts directory is advisable.

What Changes in 2026, Civil Transactions Law and Practical Enforcement Impacts

The Civil Transactions Law (Federal Decree‑Law No. 25 of 2025), which came into force on 1 June 2026, is the most significant reform of UAE civil law in decades. It replaces the previous Civil Code (Federal Law No. 5 of 1985, as amended) and introduces changes that directly affect how commercial contracts are enforced. The following are the key areas of practical impact.

Revised limitation periods

The Civil Transactions Law 2026 recalibrates certain limitation periods and clarifies the point at which time begins to run. For commercial enforcement, the critical question is whether the limitation period starts from the date of the breach, the date the claimant became aware of the breach, or the date the damage crystallised. Early indications suggest that the new law favours an “awareness” trigger in certain contexts, which may shorten the effective window for claims where the claimant had constructive knowledge of the breach. Claimants should recalculate limitation immediately for any claims that arose before 1 June 2026 but have not yet been filed.

Updated compensation and damages framework

The new law revises the test for awarding compensation, placing greater emphasis on foreseeability and the duty to mitigate. The likely practical effect for enforcement is that claimants must now present more detailed evidence of the quantum of loss and the steps taken to mitigate damage. Demand letters and pleadings should be drafted with these requirements in mind, and supporting evidence, such as market data, alternative supplier quotes and financial projections, should be assembled early.

Interpretive presumptions and contractual capacity

The Civil Transactions Law 2026 introduces revised interpretive presumptions for contract construction, including rules on how ambiguous clauses are to be construed and the weight given to commercial custom. It also adjusts the age of majority, which may affect the enforceability of contracts entered into by parties who were minors under the previous law but are now considered to have had capacity. Any enforcement action involving contracts executed before 1 June 2026 should assess whether transitional provisions apply.

Practical steps for claimants

  • Recalculate limitation. Run a fresh limitation analysis against the new provisions immediately.
  • Update demand‑letter templates. Reference the relevant articles of the Civil Transactions Law 2026 in pre‑action correspondence.
  • Strengthen evidence on quantum. Prepare to meet a potentially higher bar for proving damages, including foreseeability and mitigation.
  • Review transitional provisions. For contracts executed or breached before 1 June 2026, confirm which law applies to the substantive dispute and which to the enforcement procedure.

For a comprehensive analysis of how these reforms affect specific contract types, consult the UAE commercial practice area page on Global Law Experts.

Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

Enforcement actions in the UAE fail or stall for a limited number of recurring reasons. Avoiding these pitfalls requires disciplined preparation at the pre‑action stage.

  • Failing to preserve evidence or issue a formal notice. Courts expect claimants to demonstrate that they attempted to resolve the dispute before litigation. Omitting the demand letter weakens the claim and may result in adverse cost consequences. Mitigation: issue a notarised demand letter and retain proof of delivery before taking any further step.
  • Missing the revised limitation period under the Civil Transactions Law 2026. The new limitation rules may impose an earlier cut‑off than expected, particularly where the claimant had constructive knowledge of the breach. Mitigation: run a limitation audit as the very first task, using the revised provisions as the baseline.
  • Submitting uncertified or improperly translated documents. Dubai Courts and other onshore courts reject filings that include foreign‑language documents without certified Arabic translations or documents that lack MOFA attestation. Mitigation: engage a court‑approved translator and begin the attestation process early, it can take 2–4 weeks for foreign documents.
  • Choosing the wrong forum. Filing a court claim when the contract contains a binding arbitration clause, or initiating arbitration when the clause is inoperative, wastes time and costs. Mitigation: review the dispute‑resolution clause before any filing and obtain a preliminary opinion from UAE counsel on the validity and scope of the clause.
  • Delaying the application for provisional measures. Assets can be moved within days of the debtor becoming aware of a potential claim. Mitigation: if there is any risk of dissipation, apply for a freezing order or precautionary attachment at the same time as, or even before, filing the substantive claim.
  • Underestimating execution complexity. Obtaining a judgment is only half the battle. Locating and attaching the debtor’s assets requires proactive investigation, and uncooperative third parties (banks, registries) can slow the process. Mitigation: conduct asset tracing before or in parallel with the substantive proceedings, and engage enforcement specialists familiar with the execution procedures of the relevant emirate.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Shoeb Saher at Shoeb Saher, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. UAE Legislation Portal, Federal Decree‑Law No. 25 of 2025 (Civil Transactions Law)
  2. UAE Legislation Portal, Civil Transactions Law announcement
  3. DIFC Courts, Enforcement guidance and Part 45 rules
  4. Dubai Courts, Execution of Judgments (official service page)
  5. Legal Affairs Department of Dubai, FAQs
  6. DIFC Courts, Enforcement Guide (PDF)

FAQs

How do I start enforcement of a commercial contract in the UAE?
Begin by reviewing the contract’s dispute‑resolution clause and running a limitation check under the Civil Transactions Law 2026. Then issue a formal demand letter to the defaulting party, preserving all evidence of the breach. If the demand is not met, file a claim with the competent court or commence arbitration, depending on the contractual terms.
At a minimum, you will need the signed contract, the demand letter with proof of delivery, commercial documents evidencing the breach (invoices, delivery records, payment trails), corporate authorisation, identification documents, and certified Arabic translations of all foreign‑language materials. For arbitration enforcement, the original award and arbitration agreement are also required. The full list appears in the required documents table above.
The total timeline depends on the forum and the complexity of the dispute. For a straightforward onshore court claim, expect 3–6 months from filing to first‑instance judgment, plus 2–12 weeks for execution. Complex cases, particularly those involving cross‑border service or appeals, can take 12 months or longer. Arbitration timelines vary by institution and case but typically range from 6–18 months from commencement to award.
Yes. Foreign judgments can be enforced in the UAE subject to reciprocity requirements and bilateral treaties. Foreign arbitral awards are enforceable under the New York Convention, to which the UAE is a signatory. The DIFC Courts also offer a “conduit jurisdiction” route, whereby a foreign award is first recognised by the DIFC Courts and then enforced against onshore assets. The Civil Transactions Law 2026 does not alter these enforcement mechanisms, which are governed by separate procedural legislation.
A foreign creditor does not need a UAE trade licence or physical presence to commence enforcement proceedings, provided the defendant is domiciled in the UAE or has assets within the jurisdiction. However, the foreign creditor will typically need to appoint a local legal representative through a power of attorney and ensure that all documentation meets UAE attestation and translation requirements.
If the limitation period has expired, the claim is generally barred and the court will dismiss it on the defendant’s objection. In limited circumstances, such as continuing breaches or fraud, it may be possible to argue that the limitation period has not begun to run. Engaging qualified UAE counsel immediately upon discovering a potential limitation issue is essential, as the analysis is fact‑specific and the consequences of delay are severe.
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How to Enforce a Commercial Contract in the UAE, Step‑by‑step (civil Transactions Law 2026)

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