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Child Relocation From the UAE in 2026, Can I Move Abroad with My Child? Practical Legal Guide for Parents

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Child relocation from the UAE is one of the most legally sensitive decisions a parent can face, and the 2024–2026 wave of family-law reforms has fundamentally changed how these cases are argued and decided. Under UAE law, no parent may unilaterally remove a child from the country; you must hold written consent from every person with parental responsibility or obtain a family-court order authorising the move. The consequences of getting this wrong are severe, ranging from travel bans and contempt proceedings to criminal prosecution under the UAE Penal Code. This guide sets out the practical steps, court procedures, evidence requirements, and risk factors that parents and family lawyers need to navigate in 2026.

Key Takeaways

  • Consent is mandatory. You need written, notarised consent from every person with parental responsibility, or a UAE family-court order, before relocating a child abroad.
  • 2024–2026 reforms favour joint parenting. Courts now apply a default presumption of joint custody and give greater weight to the child’s own views, making relocation applications harder to win without a detailed proposal.
  • Criminal risk is real. Unauthorised removal of a minor can constitute a criminal offence under the UAE Penal Code, carrying imprisonment and fines.
  • Evidence wins cases. Successful relocation applications are built on robust evidence bundles: proposed schooling, contact schedules, financial plans, and independent expert reports.
  • Travel bans can be lifted, but only through a formal court application supported by security measures such as bonds or undertakings.

Quick Answer: Can I Move Abroad with My Child from the UAE?

No, you cannot simply leave. UAE law prohibits any parent from relocating a child outside the country without proper legal authorisation, regardless of whether you hold sole custody, joint custody, or are the child’s primary carer. To move abroad with your child from the UAE, you must satisfy one of two requirements: either obtain the written, notarised consent of every person who holds parental responsibility (including the other parent and, in some cases, a court-appointed guardian), or secure a relocation permission order from the competent UAE family court.

If you attempt to leave without permission, the other parent can immediately apply for a travel ban, which immigration authorities can enforce at the airport in real time. Beyond the civil consequences, unauthorised travel with a minor carries criminal sanctions under UAE law, including potential imprisonment. The 2024–2026 reforms have only heightened scrutiny: courts now expect both parents to be meaningfully involved in a child’s life, and any attempt to circumvent that principle will weigh heavily against the relocating parent.

Industry observers expect that in the post-reform environment, even parents with primary custody will face a higher evidentiary bar when seeking relocation permission in the UAE, because the new joint-parenting framework demands that relocation proposals demonstrate robust arrangements for maintaining the child’s relationship with the non-relocating parent.

What Changed in 2024–2026: UAE Child Relocation Law Reforms and Why They Matter

The UAE’s family-law landscape has undergone its most significant transformation in a generation. A series of legislative amendments to the Civil Personal Status framework between 2024 and 2026 introduced a presumption of joint parenting, raised the profile of children’s voices in court proceedings, and recalibrated the age thresholds that govern custody transitions. For any parent considering child relocation from the UAE, understanding these changes is essential because they reshape both the legal tests courts apply and the practical evidence required to succeed.

The reforms reflect a broader policy shift across the Gulf toward recognising both parents as equal stakeholders in a child’s upbringing, a departure from the traditional model in which mothers held custodial preference during a child’s early years while fathers retained guardianship. Under the new framework, courts are directed to consider joint custody as the starting point, departing from it only where the child’s best interests demand a different arrangement.

For child custody relocation cases specifically, the practical effect is significant: a relocating parent can no longer argue that sole custody alone justifies the move. Courts now assess whether the proposed relocation is compatible with the child maintaining a meaningful relationship with both parents, and they expect a detailed, workable contact plan before granting permission.

Quick Timeline: Key Legal Reforms Affecting Child Relocation in the UAE

Date Reform / Event Practical Effect on Relocation Cases
2024 Amendments to Civil Personal Status Law, age and custody-transition provisions updated Courts apply updated age thresholds for custody transitions; greater emphasis on the child’s own preference when the child is sufficiently mature to express a view
2025 Judicial guidance and case-law developments, courts begin applying joint-parenting principles; international case law (including welfare-based refusal analyses) cited in UAE judgments Relocation applications assessed under a stricter welfare test; courts emphasise stability and the child’s established ties to both parents
2026 Full rollout of joint-parenting default under the Civil Personal Status reforms Presumption of joint custody means relocating parent must present a comprehensive contact and co-parenting plan; courts more likely to impose conditions (bonds, return visits, digital communication schedules) before permitting international relocation

Regarding the question of at what age a child can choose which parent to live with, the reforms direct courts to give increasing weight to the child’s expressed wishes as the child matures. While there is no single bright-line age at which a child’s preference becomes determinative, industry observers note that UAE courts now routinely hear from children directly or through court-appointed social workers, particularly where the child is approaching adolescence. The likely practical effect is that relocation applications involving older children will increasingly turn on the child’s own stated preference.

Who Must Consent? Parental Responsibility, Guardianship and Custodianship Under UAE Law

Before filing any application to relocate, you must understand precisely who holds rights over your child under UAE law, because every one of those people must either consent or be brought before the court. UAE family law distinguishes between three overlapping concepts: custody (hadana), guardianship (wilaya), and parental responsibility as the broader umbrella now reinforced by the 2024–2026 reforms.

Custody (hadana) refers to the day-to-day physical care of the child. Historically, mothers held automatic custodial preference during a child’s early years, though the new reforms have moved toward shared arrangements. Guardianship (wilaya) covers legal and financial decision-making, including decisions about the child’s residence, travel, education, and medical treatment. Traditionally, guardianship vested in the father. Under the joint-parenting reforms, both parents now share these responsibilities unless a court orders otherwise.

The critical point for relocation permission in the UAE is this: even if you have sole custody, the other parent’s guardianship rights (or shared parental responsibility under the reforms) give them a legal veto over international travel. You cannot bypass that veto without a court order.

Differences for Emirati vs Expatriate / Muslim vs Non-Muslim Families

  • Emirati and Muslim families: Custody and guardianship rules under the Civil Personal Status Law apply directly, shaped by Sharia-informed principles as codified in the statute. The joint-parenting reforms apply, but courts retain discretion to consider religious and cultural factors.
  • Expatriate non-Muslim families: Since 2022, non-Muslim expatriates in Abu Dhabi and Dubai may opt into the civil family-law framework, which applies secular principles. Relocation applications in this track follow the same best-interests analysis but without the Sharia-specific custody-age rules.
  • Notarised consent mechanics: Where both parents agree to relocation, consent must be notarised by a UAE notary public and, if the destination country requires it, attested by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and legalised by the relevant embassy. A simple written letter is not sufficient.

How UAE Courts Decide Child Relocation Cases: Factors, Evidence and Likely Conditions

UAE family courts apply a best interests of the child standard when deciding relocation applications. While this principle is broadly stated in the Civil Personal Status Law, court practice has developed a consistent set of factors that judges weigh in every case. Understanding these factors, and preparing evidence that addresses each one, is the single most important step in building a successful application or defence.

The core judicial factors include:

  • Quality of the child’s relationship with each parent. Courts look at who has been the primary carer, how involved the non-relocating parent is, and whether the move would damage an existing close bond.
  • Proposed contact arrangements. A relocating parent must present a credible, detailed plan for how the child will maintain regular, meaningful contact with the left-behind parent, including holiday schedules, video-call routines, and funded return visits.
  • Educational continuity and opportunity. Evidence of a specific school place, curriculum comparability, and the child’s academic needs will be scrutinised. A vague intention to “find a school” is insufficient.
  • Financial stability. Courts examine whether the relocating parent can afford the proposed life abroad, including housing, schooling, healthcare, and the costs of maintaining cross-border contact.
  • Child’s own views. As reinforced by the 2024–2026 reforms, the child’s expressed preference carries real weight, particularly for older children.
  • Motive for the move. Courts distinguish between genuine relocation (job offer, family support, return to country of origin) and moves that appear designed primarily to frustrate the other parent’s contact.
  • Nationality and residency risks. If relocation could affect the child’s UAE residency status, nationality, or access to future inheritance rights, the court will factor this in.

Evidence Checklist for Child Custody Relocation Applications

Evidence Type Purpose Example
Proposed contact schedule Demonstrates that the child’s relationship with the non-relocating parent will be preserved Detailed calendar of school holidays, weekly video calls, funded annual return trips
School enrolment confirmation Shows educational continuity and planning Offer letter from a named school in the destination country, curriculum comparison
Employment contract or financial evidence Proves financial viability of the proposed move Signed employment offer, bank statements, budget for housing and schooling
Housing arrangements Shows stability and suitability of the new home Lease agreement or property ownership documentation, proximity to school
Expert report (child psychologist or social worker) Independent assessment of the child’s welfare needs and views Report from a court-approved psychologist in the UAE
Family support network Demonstrates the child will have a wider support system in the new location Letters from grandparents, evidence of extended family in the destination
Travel and communication plan Shows practical arrangements for maintaining cross-border contact Flight booking evidence, communication technology plan, proposed bond or undertaking

Typical Court Orders and Conditions Imposed

Even where a court grants relocation permission, it will almost always attach conditions. The likely practical effect of the joint-parenting reforms is that conditions are becoming more detailed and enforceable. Typical conditions include:

  • A requirement that the relocating parent fund a specified number of annual return visits for the child (or for the non-relocating parent to visit)
  • A financial bond or bank guarantee deposited with the court as security against non-compliance
  • Mandatory registration of the UAE court order in the destination country
  • A structured digital communication schedule (video calls at fixed times)
  • An undertaking not to apply for changes to the child’s nationality without further court permission
  • Periodic reporting obligations, some courts require annual welfare updates from a social worker in the destination country

Step-by-Step Process: How to Apply to Relocate a Child from the UAE

Applying to relocate a child from the UAE involves a structured legal process. Whether you are the parent seeking to move or the parent opposing a relocation application, understanding the procedural roadmap is critical. Below is a practical checklist for parents and their legal advisers.

Stage 1, Pre-application steps

  • Attempt to obtain consent. Before any court application, approach the other parent (ideally through lawyers) to seek written agreement. If consent is given, have it notarised by a UAE notary public and attested as required for the destination country.
  • Attend mediation. UAE courts increasingly expect parents to attempt mediation before filing contested applications. The Family Guidance Committee (or equivalent in each emirate) provides mandatory pre-litigation mediation services. Attend and document your participation.
  • Prepare your evidence bundle. Assemble the evidence listed in the checklist above. Early preparation is critical, courts respond poorly to vague proposals.
  • Instruct a specialist family lawyer. Relocation cases require expertise in both UAE child custody law and international family law. Ensure your lawyer has specific experience with the relevant court (Dubai, Abu Dhabi, or other emirate).

Stage 2, Filing the application

  • Identify the correct court. Jurisdiction depends on the child’s habitual residence and the parents’ personal status. Muslim families typically file in the Personal Status (Sharia) division; non-Muslim expatriates in Abu Dhabi and Dubai may file in the Civil Family Court. Your lawyer will confirm the correct forum.
  • File the relocation claim. The application must set out the legal basis for relocation, the proposed arrangements for the child, and the proposed contact plan for the non-relocating parent. Attach your complete evidence bundle.
  • Serve the other parent. The court will arrange service. If the other parent is outside the UAE, service through diplomatic channels may be required, factor in additional time.
  • Interim measures. If there is any risk of the other parent removing the child or passport before the hearing, your lawyer should apply for interim injunctive relief (including a travel-restriction order) at the time of filing.

Stage 3, Court hearings and determination

  • First directions hearing: The court will review filings, set a timetable, and may order mediation if it has not already taken place. Early indications suggest that post-reform courts are scheduling welfare assessments more frequently at this stage.
  • Evidence hearings: Both sides present evidence. The court may appoint an independent social worker or child psychologist to report on the child’s welfare and views. If the child is old enough, the court may hear from the child directly.
  • Judgment: The court issues a reasoned decision granting or refusing relocation, typically with detailed conditions. Contested applications in Dubai generally take three to six months from filing to first-instance judgment, though complex cases may take longer.

Stage 4, Post-order compliance

  • Register the court order with the destination country’s courts or relevant authority where possible.
  • Comply strictly with every condition attached to the order. Non-compliance can trigger enforcement proceedings, reversal of the relocation, or criminal sanctions.
  • Maintain records of all contact between the child and the non-relocating parent.

Sample Consent Wording (for Notarisation)

“I, [Full Name], holder of [passport/Emirates ID number], being the [father/mother/guardian] of [Child’s Full Name], date of birth [DOB], hereby give my full and irrevocable consent for the child to relocate permanently to [Country] with [Relocating Parent’s Name], effective from [Date]. I confirm that I have been independently advised of the legal consequences of this consent. I agree to the following contact arrangements: [set out schedule]. This consent is given freely and without duress.”

Note: This wording is illustrative. All consent documents must be reviewed by a qualified UAE family lawyer and notarised before use.

If You Have a Travel Ban, Lifting It

Travel bans are a common feature of contested child relocation cases in the UAE. A ban may be placed on the child, on the relocating parent, or on both. To understand whether travel bans are automatically lifted once proceedings conclude, this depends on the basis of the ban and the court’s specific order.

To lift a travel ban, you must file a formal application with the court that imposed it (or the family court if the ban arose from a custody dispute). You will typically need to demonstrate that the ban is no longer necessary, for example, by posting a financial bond, providing an undertaking to return the child, or showing that the underlying dispute has been resolved. The court may require evidence that the child’s passport will be held by a neutral third party (such as the court itself or a lawyer) as an additional safeguard.

If the Other Parent Refuses, Immediate Steps and Emergency Relief

Where the non-relocating parent refuses consent and there is an immediate need to travel (for example, a medical emergency or a pre-booked employment start date), the relocating parent can apply for emergency or urgent relief from the family court. These applications are heard on an expedited basis, but the court will still require a minimum evidentiary basis. Have your evidence bundle ready in advance and instruct your lawyer to prepare an urgent motion as soon as refusal becomes clear.

International Child Relocation from the UAE: Passports, Travel Bans, Criminal Sanctions and Cross-Border Enforcement

International child relocation from the UAE carries consequences that extend well beyond the family court. Parents who act without proper authorisation face a convergence of civil, criminal, and immigration-law risks that can be devastating.

Criminal sanctions: Removing a child from the UAE without the consent of all persons with parental responsibility, or in breach of a court order, can constitute a criminal offence. The UAE Penal Code provides for imprisonment and fines for the unauthorised removal of a minor. Separately, the family-law framework imposes its own criminal sanctions for violations of custody and guardianship rights.

Passport seizure: Courts can order the surrender of a child’s passport (and sometimes the parent’s passport) to prevent unauthorised travel. Immigration authorities maintain watchlists, and alerts can be placed at all UAE exit points. Dual nationals face particular risk because the court may order the surrender of all passports.

Travel bans: As discussed above, travel bans can be imposed by family courts, criminal courts, or even by a public prosecutor as part of a criminal investigation. Bans are enforced in real time at airports and land borders.

When the Hague Convention Applies vs Bilateral Enforcement

The UAE acceded to the 1980 Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction. This means that if a child is wrongfully removed from the UAE to another Hague signatory state, or vice versa, the left-behind parent can invoke the Convention’s return mechanism. However, Hague proceedings are not automatic: the applicant must establish that the removal breached “rights of custody” and that the child was habitually resident in the UAE immediately before the removal.

Where the destination country is not a Hague signatory, enforcement becomes more complex. The left-behind parent may need to pursue local court proceedings in the destination country, seek diplomatic assistance, or rely on bilateral agreements (where they exist). Early legal advice is essential in these situations to determine the most effective route.

Practical Scenarios and Sample Case Summaries

The following anonymised vignettes illustrate how UAE courts have approached relocation disputes in practice. These are composites drawn from published case-law commentary and should not be relied upon as legal precedent.

Scenario A, Relocation granted with conditions. A mother with primary custody sought to return to her home country in Europe following a divorce, citing a confirmed job offer, enrolled schooling for the child, and proximity to extended family. The father opposed, arguing loss of contact. The court granted relocation after the mother presented a detailed contact schedule (six weeks per year in the UAE, weekly video calls) and posted a financial bond. The court’s reasoning emphasised that the child’s welfare was served by the mother’s improved financial stability and support network, provided contact was robustly maintained.

Scenario B, Relocation refused. A father sought to relocate with two children to a country where he had no established employment or family support. His proposal for the children’s schooling was vague, and no contact plan was offered. The court refused the application, noting that the move appeared motivated primarily by a desire to distance the children from their mother. The absence of a concrete proposal weighed decisively against him.

Scenario C, Travel ban lifted after security bond. A mother applied to lift a travel ban imposed during divorce proceedings. She demonstrated that the underlying custody dispute had been resolved by consent order and offered a bank guarantee equivalent to six months’ return-travel costs. The court lifted the ban on condition that the child’s passport be held by the mother’s lawyer, released only for approved travel dates.

If the Child Objects: Older Child Autonomy in Practice

Under the 2024–2026 reforms, courts are directed to consider the views of older children. In practice, early indications suggest that where a child aged approximately 12 or older clearly and consistently expresses a preference, whether to relocate or to stay, courts treat that preference as a significant factor, though not as determinative on its own. Courts remain alert to the possibility that a child’s stated preference may have been influenced by one parent, and they may appoint an independent expert to assess the child’s views in a neutral setting.

What Parents Should Prepare: Documents, Evidence and Sample Templates

Preparation is the single greatest determinant of success in UAE relocation cases. The table below provides a comprehensive document checklist for parents preparing either to apply for relocation or to oppose an application.

Document Why It Helps Where to Get It
Child’s birth certificate (attested) Establishes parentage and jurisdiction Issuing country’s civil registry; attest via Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Current custody/guardianship order (if any) Defines existing parental rights and any restrictions UAE family court records
Proposed contact schedule Core evidence for maintaining the other parent’s relationship Prepare with your lawyer; include calendar, costs, communication plan
School enrolment letter Proves educational continuity Destination school admissions office
Employment contract or income evidence Demonstrates financial viability Employer, bank statements, tax returns
Housing evidence Shows suitable accommodation is arranged Lease agreement, property deed, or booking confirmation
Expert welfare report Independent assessment of child’s needs and views Court-approved psychologist or social worker in the UAE
Notarised consent (if agreed) Avoids the need for contested proceedings UAE notary public; attested and legalised as required
Financial bond or guarantee evidence Provides security for compliance with contact conditions UAE bank; lawyer’s escrow account

For parents opposing a relocation application, the key documents include evidence of your active involvement in the child’s daily life (school pick-ups, medical appointments, extracurricular activities), evidence that the relocating parent’s proposal is inadequate or vague, and, where appropriate, an independent expert report supporting the child’s wish to remain.

Costs, Timeline and Next Steps for Parents and Lawyers

Contested relocation proceedings in the UAE typically take between three and six months at first instance, though appeals can extend the process significantly. Court filing fees vary by emirate but are generally modest compared to overall legal costs. Legal fees for specialist family-law representation in a contested relocation case range widely, early indications suggest AED 50,000 to AED 200,000 or more, depending on complexity, the need for expert evidence, and whether the case involves international enforcement.

Parents facing a relocation decision, whether applying or opposing, should seek specialist legal advice as early as possible. Delay can result in lost evidence, missed court deadlines, or adverse interim orders. Consult the Global Law Experts lawyer directory to connect with a qualified UAE family-law practitioner.

Conclusion: Practical Checklist for Child Relocation from the UAE

Child relocation from the UAE in 2026 is legally complex, practically demanding, and carries real consequences for parents who get it wrong. The 2024–2026 family-law reforms have raised the bar for relocating parents while strengthening the rights of non-relocating parents and, critically, of children themselves. Whether you are planning a move or defending against one, success depends on early preparation, specialist legal advice, and a robust evidence bundle that addresses every factor the court will consider.

Use the checklists and tables in this guide as your starting framework. Gather your evidence early, instruct a specialist UAE family lawyer, and, above all, do not attempt to leave the country with your child without proper legal authorisation. The risks are too severe and the consequences too lasting to proceed without expert guidance.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Mukhtar Gharib at AlGharib & Partners Advocates and Legal Consultants LLC, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Chambers Practice Guides, Child Relocation 2025 (UAE)
  2. Chambers, UAE Custody Law, Joint Parenting, Child Autonomy & Relocation Rights
  3. <a href="https://www.alrowaad.ae/knowledge/legal-articles/family-law/the-evolving-custody

FAQs

Can I relocate my child from the UAE and what permission do I need?
You cannot relocate a child from the UAE without either the written, notarised consent of every person with parental responsibility or a UAE family-court order authorising the move. Unilateral removal, even by a parent with sole custody, risks civil contempt proceedings, criminal prosecution, and travel bans. The 2024–2026 reforms reinforced the requirement that both parents’ rights be respected in any relocation decision.
There is no single statutory age at which a child’s preference becomes determinative. Under the 2024–2026 Civil Personal Status reforms, courts give increasing weight to the child’s expressed wishes as the child matures. In practice, children approaching adolescence are routinely consulted, either directly by the judge or through a court-appointed social worker, and their views carry significant weight, though the court retains ultimate discretion based on the child’s best interests.
Courts apply a best-interests-of-the-child standard, weighing factors including the quality of each parent-child relationship, the adequacy of the proposed contact plan, educational continuity, financial stability, the child’s own views, the motive for the move, and any nationality or residency risks. A relocating parent must present a detailed, evidence-backed proposal addressing each factor.
Attempt mediation through the Family Guidance Committee, prepare a comprehensive evidence bundle, file an application in the correct family court (Personal Status or Civil division, depending on your family’s status), and attend directions and evidence hearings. If opposed, expect the process to take three to six months at first instance. Emergency or interim applications are available where there is a risk of removal or passport seizure.
Unauthorised removal can trigger immediate travel bans, criminal investigation and prosecution under the UAE Penal Code, contempt-of-court proceedings, and potentially devastating consequences for your custody position. The left-behind parent can also invoke the Hague Convention (in signatory states) to seek the child’s return. Seek legal advice before taking any action.
File an application with the court that imposed the ban (or the competent family court). You will need to show that the ban is no longer necessary, typically by posting a financial bond, providing undertakings, or demonstrating that the underlying dispute has been resolved. The court may require the child’s passport to be held by a neutral party as a condition of lifting the ban.
Yes. The UAE acceded to the 1980 Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction. This means that if a child is wrongfully removed from the UAE to another signatory state, the left-behind parent can apply for the child’s return under the Convention’s summary mechanism. However, the Convention applies only between signatory states, and defences (including the child’s objection and settlement) may apply. Where the destination country is not a signatory, alternative enforcement routes must be pursued.

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Child Relocation From the UAE in 2026, Can I Move Abroad with My Child? Practical Legal Guide for Parents

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