Our Expert in Uganda
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Last reviewed: 8 May 2026. This analysis will be updated promptly following Presidential action on the Bill.
Uganda’s Protection of Sovereignty Bill 2026 (Bill No. 13 of 2026) has passed through Parliament and now awaits Presidential assent, introducing sweeping new registration obligations, funding-approval thresholds and criminal sanctions that directly affect foreign investors, M&A deal teams and cross-border lenders operating in the country. For corporate lawyers in Uganda and their international counterparts advising on Ugandan transactions, the Bill represents the most significant shift in the regulatory treatment of foreign capital participation in more than a decade.
This pillar briefing provides a practitioner-led analysis of the Bill’s transactional implications, a detailed due diligence checklist, a contract-drafting playbook, lender-protection strategies and a 30–90 day action plan designed for general counsel, private equity sponsors and credit committees that need to act now.
Deal teams and in-house counsel should focus on the following headline risks created by the Bill:
The likely practical effect for deal participants is that every foreign-linked transaction touching Uganda will now require an additional layer of regulatory risk assessment before signing or closing.
The Protection of Sovereignty Bill 2026 was introduced as a government bill to regulate foreign influence in Uganda’s domestic affairs. According to a press release by the Parliament of Uganda, the Bill has been passed by Parliament and now awaits the President’s signature to become law. Lawful financial flows, including diaspora remittances, foreign direct investment, trade finance and humanitarian assistance, are stated to be explicitly protected under the Bill. Nevertheless, the registration and approval mechanisms introduce significant compliance obligations that did not previously exist.
| Date / Period | Parliamentary Step | Practical Effect for Deal Teams |
|---|---|---|
| April 2026 | Bill No. 13 of 2026 tabled and debated | Market awareness begins; initial investor concerns raised |
| Early May 2026 | Parliament passes the Bill | Immediate risk crystallises for pending transactions; deal counsel begins re-evaluating closing conditions |
| Pending (as of 8 May 2026) | Presidential assent awaited | Enactment could occur at any time; implementing regulations not yet published |
| Post-assent (expected) | Gazetting and commencement notice | Registration obligations and approval thresholds become enforceable; deals signed but not closed face immediate compliance burden |
The Bill introduces a mandatory registration regime for any person acting as an “agent of a foreigner.” According to the MMAKS Advocates legal alert on the Bill, this requirement captures a wide range of intermediaries and could extend to professional advisers, local directors of foreign-owned subsidiaries and NGO staff receiving cross-border funding. Persons who fail to register face both civil restrictions on their operations and potential criminal prosecution.
The Bill proposes both civil and criminal sanctions for non-compliance. Civil penalties may include restrictions on operations and suspension of funding channels. Criminal prohibitions target a broad range of conduct connected to unregistered or unapproved foreign influence. As the ICNL analysis notes, the Bill requires government approval to solicit or receive financial support or assistance from a foreigner above a specified threshold, a provision that could enable wide-reaching enforcement against corporate actors.
For in-house counsel evaluating foreign investment in Uganda in 2026, the critical question is how the Bill alters the existing regulatory framework for capital flows, ownership structures and operational approvals. The table below compares the pre-2026 position with the changes the Bill introduces and the direct impact on deal structuring.
| Item | Current Practice (Pre-2026) | Protection of Sovereignty Bill 2026 (Proposed Effect) |
|---|---|---|
| Registration of foreign agents / funding intermediaries | Limited or sector-specific registration; ad hoc approvals under sectoral regulators | Mandatory registration for all persons acting as “agents of a foreigner”; broad definition capturing advisers, JV partners and local directors |
| Approval for foreign funding above threshold | Sectoral approvals only (e.g., telecoms, financial services, energy) | Government approval required before soliciting or receiving foreign financial support above prescribed thresholds, potentially capturing equity injections and shareholder loans |
| Penalties for breach | Administrative fines and sector-specific penalties | Civil penalties (operational restrictions, funding suspension) and criminal sanctions (personal liability for officers and advisers) |
| Repatriation of profits and dividends | Generally unrestricted under the Foreign Exchange Act and bilateral investment treaties | The Bill states that lawful financial flows including FDI are explicitly protected; however, industry observers expect that the approval mechanism could create a de facto delay or restriction on repatriation where the source of funding is challenged |
| Ownership structures | 100% foreign ownership permitted in most sectors outside the negative list | No express ownership cap in the Bill; however, the “agent of a foreigner” registration obligation may require local JV partners and nominee directors to register, adding compliance costs and disclosure requirements |
The practical structuring implications are significant. Holding companies domiciled in jurisdictions with bilateral investment treaties (such as Mauritius and the Netherlands) may need to reassess treaty protection in light of the Bill’s broad definitions. Local joint-venture partners who previously operated without regulatory registration may now be caught by the mandatory registration regime. Early indications suggest that deal teams should budget for additional regulatory engagement timelines of 30 to 60 days on top of existing approval processes.
Corporate lawyers in Uganda advising foreign sponsors should also consider whether shareholder-loan agreements, management-fee arrangements and technical-services contracts could be reclassified as foreign “financial support” requiring prior government approval.
The Protection of Sovereignty Bill demands an expanded approach to M&A due diligence in Uganda. Traditional commercial, legal and financial diligence must now incorporate a dedicated sovereignty-risk workstream. The checklist below is designed for both buy-side and sell-side counsel.
Counsel conducting M&A due diligence in Uganda should add the following to standard document-request lists:
Red flags include the absence of any internal policy addressing the Bill, unexplained payments to or from foreign entities without approval documentation, and nominee-director arrangements designed to obscure foreign beneficial ownership.
The Protection of Sovereignty Bill requires corporate lawyers in Uganda and international deal counsel to rethink standard transaction documentation. The following drafting playbook addresses purchase agreements, warranties, escrow structures and indemnities.
Seller representations should be expanded to include sovereignty-compliance warranties covering registration status, funding-approval compliance and the absence of pending or threatened enforcement action under the Bill. Buyer counsel should insist on:
Every purchase agreement involving a foreign buyer or foreign-funded consideration should now include a dedicated condition precedent requiring receipt of all approvals (if any) mandated by the Bill prior to closing. Drafting considerations include:
Industry observers expect escrow requirements to increase on Ugandan transactions. Recommended structures include:
Top 5 Contract Clauses to Add Now
Standard MAC clauses typically carve out changes in law from the definition of a material adverse effect. In the current Ugandan environment, this creates an asymmetric risk for buyers. Counsel should negotiate a specific carve-out to the carve-out: if the Protection of Sovereignty Bill (once enacted) results in a targeted enforcement action against the target company, rather than a general change in the regulatory environment, the buyer should retain the right to terminate.
The Bill introduces distinct risks for lenders with exposure to Ugandan borrowers or security. Credit committees and lender counsel should focus on the following areas.
Security registration. If the Bill’s registration requirements extend to security interests held by foreign lenders, existing security packages may need to be re-registered or supplemented with additional filings. Lender counsel should confirm with Ugandan counsel whether a mortgage, debenture or share pledge held by a foreign-incorporated lender triggers agent-registration obligations.
Enforcement complications. Enforcing security against assets of a borrower that is subject to operational restrictions under the Bill could prove procedurally complex. If the borrower’s operations are suspended as a civil penalty, the realisable value of secured assets may decline materially.
Cross-border arbitration. Arbitration clauses selecting London, Singapore or other foreign seats remain enforceable in principle under Uganda’s Arbitration and Conciliation Act. However, the practical enforcement of a foreign arbitral award against a borrower whose assets are subject to sovereignty-related restrictions may be delayed or contested. Lender counsel should consider supplementary enforcement routes, including recognition proceedings in third-party jurisdictions where the borrower holds assets.
Cashflow and repatriation risk. Although the Bill explicitly protects lawful FDI and trade finance, the approval mechanism for foreign funding above prescribed thresholds could create delays in debt-service payments. Lenders should consider adding sovereignty-compliance covenants to new facility agreements, requiring the borrower to maintain registration and approvals at all times and to notify the lender immediately of any enforcement action.
Inter-creditor considerations. Where multiple lenders participate in a syndicated facility, a sovereignty-related enforcement action against one lender (for example, a lender whose fund structure triggers agent-registration requirements) could contaminate the entire facility. Inter-creditor agreements should address this risk with provisions for substitution or assignment to a compliant lender.
For a deeper analysis of how the Bill’s core provisions interact with international commercial law principles, readers may wish to consult our cross-border contract guide.
The corporate governance changes introduced by the Bill are not limited to foreign-owned companies. Any Ugandan company that receives foreign funding, engages foreign consultants or has foreign directors on its board may be affected. Board-level compliance steps should include:
Companies navigating both the Sovereignty Bill and the broader wave of Uganda employment law changes in 2026 should ensure that compliance frameworks address both workstreams in an integrated manner. Similarly, the Uganda tax changes for 2026 may compound the structuring considerations for foreign-owned entities.
First 30 days:
Days 31–60:
Days 61–90:
For our detailed analysis of the Protection of Sovereignty Bill’s full provisions, including clause-by-clause commentary, visit our dedicated briefing.
The Protection of Sovereignty Bill 2026 is the defining piece of legislation for corporate lawyers in Uganda this year. Whether it is signed into law in its current form, amended, or returned to Parliament, its passage has already changed the risk calculus for every foreign-linked transaction in the country. Investors, lenders and M&A deal teams that act now, by expanding due diligence, strengthening transaction documentation and engaging proactively with regulators, will be best positioned to protect their investments and maintain deal momentum. Those who wait for implementing regulations risk being caught without the contractual protections or compliance infrastructure needed to operate under the new regime.
Global Law Experts connects businesses and counsel with leading corporate lawyers in Uganda who can provide tailored guidance on sovereignty-risk structuring, M&A documentation and regulatory engagement.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Frederick Muwema at Muwema & Co Advocates & Solicitors, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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