This guide is built for fund managers, family offices, asset managers, fintech founders, crypto teams and in-house counsel who need a practical, practitioner-level roadmap to ADGM company formation. If you are evaluating Abu Dhabi Global Market as the domicile for a regulated fund vehicle, a private investment company, or a digital-asset venture, the pages that follow deliver what most commercial guides leave out: granular step-by-step incorporation procedures, a clear explanation of FSRA versus commercial licence tracks, realistic sample budgets across three common scenarios, visa-sponsorship mechanics, and an ADGM-versus-DIFC comparison grounded in official sources.
ADGM occupies a distinctive position among UAE free zones. It operates under its own common-law framework, supervised by the Financial Services Regulatory Authority (FSRA), and offers institutional investors and regulators a governance model they recognise. For teams considering company formation in ADGM, the current environment characterised by refined digital-asset rules, competitive first-year pricing, and deeper ecosystem integration through initiatives such as Hub71 makes 2025–2026 an especially compelling window.
Throughout this page you will find numbered steps, checklists, cost tables, a compact timeline and a downloadable business-plan template designed for FSRA-regulated applicants. Every fee figure and regulatory reference is tied to official ADGM, FSRA, MOHRE or GDRFA sources; where figures may change, date-stamps are noted so you can verify against the latest published schedule.
ADGM is the only jurisdiction in the Gulf region that applies a fully independent common-law framework enacted under Abu Dhabi federal decree. The Companies Regulations 2020 codify incorporation rules, directors’ duties, shareholder protections and winding-up procedures in language familiar to practitioners trained in English-law jurisdictions. ADGM Courts, staffed by internationally recruited judges, offer binding dispute resolution under common-law principles a feature that gives institutional investors and counterparties confidence in the enforceability of shareholder agreements, fund documents and service contracts.
The FSRA is ADGM’s independent financial-services regulator, modelled on best-in-class principles from IOSCO, the Basel framework and FATF recommendations. Its rulebooks including the Fund Rules, Conduct of Business Rules (COBS) and Anti-Money Laundering and Sanctions Rules provide a comprehensive regulatory architecture for fund managers, custodians, arrangers and digital-asset service providers. The FSRA Getting Started Guide outlines licence categories, application expectations and supervisory approach. Recent 2024–2026 amendments to the FSRA’s digital-asset framework and fund rules have clarified token classifications, custody standards and capital requirements reinforcing ADGM’s positioning as a jurisdiction that regulates, rather than restricts, innovation.
ADGM sits within Abu Dhabi’s sovereign-wealth and institutional ecosystem. Fund managers benefit from proximity to major allocators and an active venture/technology hub (Hub71). Key practical advantages include:
The private company limited by shares is the most commonly used vehicle for fund managers, advisory firms and family offices incorporating in ADGM. Under the Companies Regulations 2020, a private company may have a single shareholder and a single director, offers limited liability and operates under model or bespoke articles of association.
Public companies are available for entities that intend to offer securities to the public or list on a recognised exchange. This structure is less common among the primary audience for this guide but may be relevant for larger asset-management groups or holding companies with capital-markets ambitions.
RSCs and SPVs are designed for holding assets, ring-fencing liabilities or serving as feeder or co-investment vehicles within a fund structure. They benefit from streamlined reporting obligations and lower ongoing fees making them efficient for family offices structuring multi-layered investment portfolios.
ADGM foundations (modelled on civil-law concepts within a common-law wrapper) serve succession-planning and philanthropic purposes for family offices. Limited liability partnerships are used by professional-service firms and certain fund structures. Both are governed by dedicated ADGM regulations and provide flexible governance frameworks.
Selecting the right entity type requires aligning regulatory obligations, investor expectations, substance requirements and UAE corporate-tax registration duties. Entities should evaluate the interaction between ADGM’s zero-income-tax position on qualifying activities and UAE federal corporate tax. Readers seeking deeper analysis of corporate tax and structuring for UAE should consult the linked resource.
Every ADGM entity is registered through the Registration Authority (RA). The licence question then splits into two tracks: (1) entities that carry on financial services as defined by FSRA these must obtain an FSRA Financial Services Permission; and (2) entities that conduct non-financial commercial activities these operate under a standard RA commercial licence.
Non-financial activities including management consulting, technology development, holding-company functions and general trading are licensed directly by the RA without FSRA supervision. A commercial licence is sufficient where the entity does not manage third-party capital, provide regulated financial advice or deal in securities or digital assets.
The following numbered steps outline the practical procedure for ADGM company formation, covering both RA (commercial) and FSRA (regulated) tracks.
Practical tip: Fund managers should package founder and key-person CVs with relevant AUM history, compliance credentials and reference letters before the pre-application meeting. Crypto/VASP applicants should prepare a technology-architecture document, cybersecurity-incident-response plan and wallet-management procedures early these are frequently requested by the FSRA during the initial review.
ADGM accepts electronically certified documents in many cases; however, director consents and certain shareholder resolutions may require notarisation and apostille for non-UAE-resident signatories. Arabic translations are not required for ADGM filings (English is the official language), but translations may be needed for downstream UAE government processes such as visa applications. Plan 5–10 business days for apostille processing from common jurisdictions.
A downloadable ADGM incorporation checklist is available as a companion resource.
Every ADGM entity must maintain a registered address within the ADGM jurisdiction (Al Maryah Island, Abu Dhabi). FSRA-regulated firms are expected to demonstrate substantive operational presence typically a physical office with key personnel on-site. Virtual-office arrangements are generally limited to SPVs and certain holding vehicles that appoint a licensed CSP.
SPVs that do not employ staff or conduct client-facing activities may satisfy office and governance requirements through an ADGM-licensed CSP. CSP appointment is mandatory for entities that do not maintain their own physical office. The CSP provides a registered address, company-secretary services and assists with annual filings.
Yes. ADGM-registered entities can sponsor UAE residence visas for employees and their dependants. The process follows the standard UAE employer-sponsored visa route:
Documents needed to sponsor employees:
Visa processing typically takes 3–8 weeks after incorporation is complete and the establishment card is issued. The lease and company registration must be finalised before visa applications can proceed. Industry observers note that bank-account opening which often runs in parallel can be the longer critical path, particularly for crypto-related entities subject to enhanced bank KYC.
The ADGM Schedule of Fees sets out registration, data-protection and annual renewal fees in USD. Key headline fees (as at July 2026 verify against the current schedule before filing) include company registration fees, annual commercial-licence renewal fees and data-protection registration fees. Fee levels vary by entity type (private company, SPV, foundation) and licence category.
FSRA application fees and annual supervision levies are separate from RA registration fees and vary by regulated-activity category and AUM tier. Estimated base-capital requirements range from USD 10,000 for certain advisory permissions to significantly higher levels for fund managers and custodians. Refer to the FSRA Getting Started Guide and fee schedule for current figures.
| Cost Category | Scenario A: Small Advisory Fund Manager | Scenario B: Family Office / Private Investment Co. | Scenario C: Fintech / VASP (FSRA Authorised) |
|---|---|---|---|
| RA registration & first-year licence | USD 2,000–6,000 | USD 2,000–6,000 | USD 2,000–6,000 |
| FSRA application fee | USD 1,000–5,000 | N/A (commercial licence) | USD 1,000–10,000+ |
| Legal / advisory (incorporation + compliance) | USD 15,000–30,000 | USD 10,000–20,000 | USD 25,000–60,000 |
| Compliance framework setup | USD 5,000–15,000 | USD 3,000–8,000 | USD 15,000–40,000 |
| Office / registered address (Year 1) | USD 8,000–20,000 | USD 8,000–25,000 | USD 15,000–35,000 |
| Visa processing (2–3 employees) | USD 3,000–6,000 | USD 5,000–10,000 | USD 5,000–10,000 |
| Estimated Year 1 total | USD 34,000–82,000 | USD 28,000–69,000 | USD 63,000–161,000+ |
Note: These ranges are indicative and reflect typical market pricing observed in 2025–2026. FSRA capital requirements (not included above) are an additional commitment that varies by licence category and AUM. All government fee figures should be verified against the ADGM Schedule of Fees at time of application.
| Milestone | Estimated Duration |
|---|---|
| Name reservation & RA incorporation | 5–15 working days |
| RA commercial licence issuance | 1–4 weeks (from complete application) |
| FSRA pre-application meeting & feedback | 2–4 weeks |
| FSRA full authorisation (in-principle to final licence) | 8–16+ weeks (complexity-dependent) |
| Bank account opening | 2–8 weeks (bank KYC-dependent) |
| Visa sponsorship & Emirates ID | 3–8 weeks (post-incorporation) |
Variables that commonly extend timelines include FSRA licence complexity (VASP applications typically take longer than advisory permissions), completeness and quality of the business plan, background-check turnaround for key personnel, office-lease readiness, and third-party bank KYC requirements.
Both ADGM and DIFC are common-law financial free zones with independent regulators, English-language legal systems and international-standard courts. The right choice depends on geography, activity type, fee structures and ecosystem fit. Industry observers generally note that ADGM is increasingly favoured for funds, certain digital-asset strategies and Abu Dhabi ecosystem integration, while DIFC remains strong for Dubai-centric capital-markets access and certain innovation-licence offers.
| Topic | ADGM | DIFC |
|---|---|---|
| Financial regulator | FSRA | DFSA |
| Legal framework | Common law (own Companies Regulations 2020) | Common law (own Companies Law) |
| Fund licence categories | Qualified investor, exempt, professional under FSRA Fund Rules | Qualified investor, exempt, domestic under DFSA CIR |
| Digital-asset / crypto regulation | Comprehensive FSRA VASP framework (dedicated guidance since 2018, updated 2024–2026) | DFSA Investment Token Regime; evolving crypto framework |
| First-year fee policies | Competitive RA registration fees; various FSRA incentive programmes | DIFC Innovation Licence and startup incentive offers |
| Banking ecosystem | Abu Dhabi-based banks; strong sovereign-wealth links | Dubai-based banks; broad international bank presence |
| Ecosystem / tech hubs | Hub71, Abu Dhabi investment initiatives | DIFC Innovation Hub, FinTech Hive |
| Courts & dispute resolution | ADGM Courts (common law); ADGM Arbitration Centre | DIFC Courts (common law); DIFC-LCIA Arbitration Centre |
| Recommended for | Fund managers, family offices, VASP/crypto, Abu Dhabi–anchored businesses | Regional HQs, Dubai-centric operations, certain innovation-stage startups |
A comprehensive ADGM business-plan template is available as a downloadable PDF, designed specifically for FSRA-regulated applicants across fund management, family-office advisory and fintech/crypto verticals. The template includes sections covering executive summary, regulatory and compliance plan, FSRA-specific requirements for funds and digital-asset businesses, three-year financial forecasts, key-personnel and governance structure, and risk-management framework. Using a structured template aligned with FSRA expectations can materially improve application quality and reduce review timelines.
ADGM offers fund managers, family offices and fintech teams a rare combination: common-law certainty, a mature and responsive financial-services regulator in the FSRA, institutional-grade infrastructure and a growing Abu Dhabi innovation ecosystem. The practical steps outlined in this ADGM company formation guide from structure selection and licence-track decision through incorporation, FSRA authorisation and visa sponsorship provide the operational roadmap. Use the checklist, cost tables and downloadable business-plan template to build a complete application pack, and verify all fee figures against the current ADGM Schedule of Fees before filing.
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