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deadlock clause uae

How to Prevent and Resolve Shareholder Deadlocks in UAE Companies, Drafting, Enforcement and Exit Options (2026)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

A well-drafted deadlock clause UAE shareholders rely on is the single most important safeguard against paralysis in a jointly held company. With the 2025 amendments to the Commercial Companies Law (Federal Decree-Law No. 32 of 2021, as amended by Federal Decree-Law No. 20 of 2025) now fully in force, the balance between contractual exit mechanisms, statutory dissolution remedies and arbitration-based enforcement has shifted materially. This guide provides founders, in-house counsel and dispute practitioners with a complete, action-oriented playbook, from model clause language through to enforcement checklists and interim relief tactics, calibrated to the UAE’s updated corporate framework as at June 2026.

Quick-action checklist, what to do right now if you are facing (or want to prevent) a deadlock:

  1. Review your existing shareholders’ agreement and memorandum of association for any deadlock escalation language and confirm whether it references the pre-2025 or post-2025 CCL provisions.
  2. Check whether your dispute resolution clause permits emergency arbitration or preserves the right to seek urgent court relief.
  3. Confirm the share-transfer registration procedure with the relevant commercial register (mainland) or free-zone authority to understand lead times.
  4. If deadlock already exists, issue a formal deadlock notice under your shareholders’ agreement to start contractual escalation timelines running.
  5. Engage specialist UAE corporate counsel to assess whether the 2025 CCL amendments provide you with a statutory exit right that may be faster than your contractual remedies.
  6. Consider interim board-governance fixes, casting votes, independent directors or management committees, to prevent value destruction while the dispute is resolved.

What Is a Deadlock Clause and Why It Matters in the UAE

A deadlock clause is a contractual provision in a shareholders’ agreement (or, less commonly, in company bylaws) that defines what constitutes a decision-making impasse and prescribes a graduated sequence of remedies, from negotiation through to a compulsory sale of shares, when shareholders cannot reach the required voting threshold. In the UAE context, the clause takes on heightened importance because the Commercial Companies Law has historically lacked a standalone statutory deadlock resolution mechanism. Instead, the CCL’s provisions on dissolution and winding-up operated as a blunt, last-resort tool.

Deadlocks most frequently arise in 50/50 limited liability companies (LLCs) and evenly balanced public joint-stock companies (PJSCs), but they can also occur whenever unanimity or a supermajority is required for reserved matters such as capital restructuring, appointment of managers, approval of related-party transactions or changes to the memorandum of association. Common triggers include disagreements over strategic direction, dividend policy, additional capital calls or the admission of new investors.

Before the 2025 amendments, practitioners relied almost entirely on the shareholders’ agreement deadlock provisions themselves, supplemented by the general dissolution grounds in the CCL. The enforceability of shareholder agreements in the UAE, particularly those governed by foreign law, was sometimes uncertain, and court petitions for dissolution could take many months to conclude. The 2025–2026 legislative changes have expanded the statutory toolkit, making it essential for every deadlock clause UAE companies incorporate into their governance documents to be re-evaluated and, where necessary, updated.

Key Legislative Changes (2025–2026) That Affect Deadlock Clause UAE Provisions and Exit Rights

Federal Decree-Law No. 20 of 2025 introduced targeted amendments to the Commercial Companies Law that alter the practical landscape for shareholder deadlocks and exit rights. The amendments became effective upon publication in the Official Gazette, with implementing ministerial resolutions issued through early 2026. Industry observers expect further procedural guidance from the Ministry of Economy later in 2026, particularly on digital registration of share transfers.

The most significant changes for deadlock and exit planning include the following:

  • Expanded statutory exit right for LLC members. The amendments clarify that a member of an LLC may petition the competent court for an order permitting withdrawal from the company where continued participation has become untenable due to a material breach by other members or an irreconcilable dispute that prevents the company from functioning. This statutory exit remedy operates independently of any contractual deadlock clause.
  • Revised dissolution and winding-up thresholds. The court’s discretion to order dissolution on “just and equitable” grounds has been refined, with the amendments specifying factors the court should consider, including the duration of the deadlock, whether the company can still operate, and the availability of alternative remedies such as a compulsory share purchase.
  • Streamlined share-transfer registration. New provisions reduce the procedural friction involved in registering transfers of LLC membership interests with the commercial register, which directly affects the practicality of buy-sell clause enforcement.
  • Recognition of arbitration for corporate disputes. The amendments reinforce the validity of arbitration clauses in shareholders’ agreements for resolving corporate-governance disputes, reducing the risk that UAE courts will decline jurisdiction in favour of, or in competition with, an arbitral tribunal.

The following timeline summarises the key instruments and their practical effects:

Date Instrument Practical Effect on Deadlocks
October 2025 Federal Decree-Law No. 20 of 2025 (CCL amendments), published in Official Gazette Statutory exit right for LLC members in irreconcilable disputes; refined “just and equitable” dissolution criteria; enhanced recognition of arbitration clauses in corporate disputes
Q1 2026 Implementing ministerial resolutions on share-transfer registration procedures Faster registration of LLC membership-interest transfers with the commercial register; digital filing pathway introduced for mainland companies
H1 2026 (ongoing) Expected further Ministry of Economy procedural guidance Anticipated clarification of valuation methodology for court-ordered share purchases and interaction with free-zone company registers

The likely practical effect of these CCL amendments on exit rights is that shareholders now have both a contractual path (through their deadlock clause) and a parallel statutory path. Counsel must draft deadlock clauses that account for both routes and ideally channel disputes toward whichever mechanism is faster and more predictable for the client.

Contractual Deadlock Mechanisms, Escalation Ladder and Model Clauses

A robust shareholders’ agreement deadlock provision follows a modular escalation structure. Each tier should specify a defined trigger event, a mandatory waiting period, and a clear consequence if the parties fail to resolve the impasse at that level. The following escalation ladder represents current best practice for UAE LLCs and PJSCs, adapted to reflect the 2025–2026 legislative environment:

  1. Tier 1, Good-faith negotiation (7–14 days): the shareholders or their nominated representatives meet to attempt resolution.
  2. Tier 2, Senior executive escalation (14–30 days): the matter is referred to the chief executive officers or chairpersons of each shareholder group.
  3. Tier 3, Independent expert determination or mediation (30–60 days): appointment of an agreed independent expert or mediator to propose a non-binding (or, if agreed, binding) resolution.
  4. Tier 4, Arbitration on the merits (if the deadlock involves a legal dispute) or buy-sell / shot-gun mechanism (if the deadlock is commercial and irreconcilable): the final contractual remedy that forces a definitive outcome.

Each tier should expressly state that a party’s failure to participate in good faith constitutes a waiver of the right to object to escalation to the next tier. The timelines above are indicative; the optimal periods depend on the company’s industry, the nature of reserved matters and the parties’ risk appetite.

Model Deadlock Clause, LLC

For a UAE mainland LLC (or a free-zone LLC with similar governance rules), the draft deadlock clause should address the company’s specific transfer restrictions, the requirement for notarisation and registration of membership-interest transfers, and the interaction with any existing pre-emption rights. The following model clause is structured for a 50/50 LLC and can be adapted for other shareholding ratios:

Model Clause, LLC Deadlock (summary structure):

  • Clause [X].1, Definition of Deadlock: “A Deadlock shall be deemed to have occurred if, following a duly convened Members’ Meeting or a written resolution circulated in accordance with the Memorandum of Association, the Members are unable to pass a resolution on a Reserved Matter by the required majority on two consecutive occasions, with at least [14] calendar days between each attempt.”
  • Clause [X].2, Negotiation and Escalation: “Upon the occurrence of a Deadlock, either Member may serve a Deadlock Notice on the other. Within [7] days of service of the Deadlock Notice, the Members shall meet in person (or by video conference) to attempt to resolve the Deadlock in good faith. If the Deadlock remains unresolved after [14] days from the date of the Deadlock Notice, the matter shall be escalated to the respective Chief Executive Officers (or equivalent senior officers) of each Member, who shall meet within a further [14] days to seek resolution.”
  • Clause [X].3, Mediation: “If the Deadlock is not resolved within [30] days of the Deadlock Notice, the Members shall refer the dispute to mediation administered by [specify institution, e.g., the Abu Dhabi Commercial Conciliation and Arbitration Centre or the Dubai International Arbitration Centre]. The mediation shall be conducted in [English/Arabic] and shall conclude within [30] days of the appointment of the mediator.”
  • Clause [X].4, Buy-Sell (Shot-Gun) Mechanism: “If the Deadlock is not resolved within [90] days of the Deadlock Notice (the ‘Trigger Date’), either Member (the ‘Offeror’) may serve an Offer Notice on the other Member (the ‘Offeree’) specifying a price per membership unit at which the Offeror is willing to purchase all of the Offeree’s membership interest. The Offeree shall, within [30] days of receipt of the Offer Notice, either (a) accept the offer and sell its entire membership interest at the stated price; or (b) elect to purchase the Offeror’s entire membership interest at the same price per unit. If the Offeree fails to respond within the [30]-day period, it shall be deemed to have accepted the offer.”
  • Clause [X].5, Completion and Registration: “Completion of any transfer pursuant to this Clause [X] shall take place within [30] days of acceptance (or deemed acceptance) and shall include all steps necessary to register the transfer with the [relevant commercial register / free-zone authority]. Each Member irrevocably undertakes to execute such documents and take such steps as may be necessary to give effect to the transfer, including the execution of a notarised transfer deed where required by law.”
  • Clause [X].6, Fallback Dissolution: “If neither Member serves an Offer Notice within [30] days of the Trigger Date, either Member may petition the competent court for dissolution of the Company in accordance with the Commercial Companies Law, as amended.”

This model clause addresses a common drafting gap in many UAE shareholders’ agreements: the failure to link the buy-sell mechanism to mandatory registration steps. Without a clear obligation to cooperate on notarisation and registry filings, an unwilling seller can delay enforcement for months.

Model Deadlock Clause, PJSC

For a PJSC, the deadlock clause must account for the stricter governance requirements of the CCL and the Securities and Commodities Authority (SCA) regulations. Board-level deadlocks are more common than shareholder-level deadlocks in PJSCs, because share transfers are typically unrestricted (subject to lock-up periods and insider-trading rules). A PJSC deadlock clause in a shareholders’ agreement between major shareholders should therefore focus on board-composition disputes and reserved-matter vetoes:

  • Trigger: Define deadlock by reference to board votes on Reserved Matters (not general shareholder meetings).
  • Escalation: Follow the same tiered negotiation → mediation → final remedy structure as for LLCs.
  • Final remedy: Because PJSC shares trade (or can trade) on a recognised exchange, a shot-gun buy-sell is less practical. Instead, consider a put/call option exercisable at fair market value determined by an independent expert, or a drag-along/tag-along mechanism requiring the deadlocked parties to cooperate on a sale to a third party.
  • Regulatory compliance: Any transfer triggered by the deadlock clause must comply with SCA disclosure, mandatory tender offer and insider-dealing rules. Build compliance steps and regulatory lead times into the clause’s completion timeline.

Valuation and Buy-Sell Formulas

The choice of valuation methodology in a buy-sell clause UAE companies adopt is critical, because an unworkable formula can render the entire deadlock mechanism unenforceable. Three common approaches are used in UAE practice:

  • Fixed multiple of EBITDA or net asset value (NAV): Simple and certain, but can produce unfair outcomes in volatile markets. Best suited to stable, asset-heavy businesses.
  • Independent expert valuation: An agreed independent valuer (or one appointed by a specified institution) determines fair market value. Provides flexibility but introduces delay and cost.
  • Agreed formula with a floor and cap: Combines a formulaic approach (e.g., a trailing-twelve-month revenue multiple) with minimum and maximum price bounds, offering predictability while limiting extreme outcomes.

The shareholders’ agreement should specify the identity (or appointment mechanism) of the valuer, the valuation methodology, the binding or non-binding nature of the valuation, and a fallback if the parties cannot agree on a valuer. Failure to include these details is one of the most common reasons buy-sell clauses become the subject of secondary disputes rather than resolving the original deadlock.

Enforcing Deadlock Clauses, Arbitration, Mediation and Courts

Even the most carefully drafted deadlock clause is only as effective as the enforcement mechanism behind it. The enforceability of shareholder agreements in the UAE has improved significantly in recent years, but practitioners must still navigate the interaction between contractual remedies, arbitral proceedings and UAE court jurisdiction. The following subsections provide a practical enforcement roadmap for deadlock resolution in the UAE.

Deadlock Enforcement via Arbitration: Drafting the Clause and Obtaining Emergency Relief

Arbitration is generally the preferred forum for deadlock enforcement arbitration in cross-border and high-value UAE ventures. The UAE’s Federal Arbitration Law (Federal Law No. 6 of 2018) and the DIFC Arbitration Law (DIFC Law No. 1 of 2008, as amended) both provide a modern, UNCITRAL-aligned framework. Key drafting points for the arbitration clause within the shareholders’ agreement include:

  • Seat of arbitration: Choose a seat with effective emergency-relief procedures, the DIFC and ADGM are both recognised arbitration-friendly jurisdictions with their own courts capable of enforcing emergency arbitrator orders.
  • Institutional rules: Specify rules that include emergency arbitrator provisions (e.g., DIAC Rules, LCIA Rules, ICC Rules, or ADGM Arbitration Centre Rules).
  • Carve-out for urgent court relief: Expressly preserve the right of either party to apply to a court of competent jurisdiction for urgent injunctive or freezing relief without waiving the arbitration agreement. This is essential, without it, a party seeking a freezing order to prevent asset dissipation during a deadlock may face jurisdictional objections.
  • Expedited procedure: Consider incorporating an expedited-procedure option for disputes below a specified value threshold or where the relief sought is limited to enforcing the buy-sell mechanism.

Once an arbitral award is obtained, enforcement in the UAE onshore courts follows the procedures set out in Federal Law No. 6 of 2018. Arbitral awards rendered in DIFC-seated arbitrations can be enforced through the DIFC Courts and then “passported” to Dubai onshore courts under the established Judicial Authority Protocol. The UAE is a signatory to the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, which facilitates cross-border enforcement.

UAE Courts: When to Litigate and What Relief to Expect

Court proceedings remain the appropriate forum for deadlock resolution in the UAE in several scenarios: where no valid arbitration agreement exists, where the dispute concerns the validity of a corporate resolution (which some courts consider a matter of public policy not arbitrable), or where a party needs to invoke the statutory exit or dissolution remedies introduced by the 2025 CCL amendments. Key practical points include:

  • Jurisdiction: File in the commercial court of the emirate where the company is registered (or in the relevant free-zone court for DIFC/ADGM entities).
  • Interim measures: UAE courts can grant precautionary attachment orders, freezing injunctions and orders appointing temporary administrators. Applications for urgent relief are typically heard within days.
  • Dissolution petitions: Under the amended CCL, dissolution on “just and equitable” grounds requires demonstrating that the company is unable to function, that the deadlock is irreconcilable, and that no adequate alternative remedy exists. Courts will consider the duration of the impasse and whether the petitioning shareholder acted in good faith.
  • Enforcement of share transfers: Where a court orders a compulsory share purchase, the judgment must be registered with the commercial register. The 2026 implementing resolutions have streamlined this process, but counsel should budget for administrative lead times.

Shareholder Exit Mechanisms UAE, How to Force or Negotiate an Exit in Practice

The practical mechanics of forcing or negotiating an exit from a deadlocked UAE company depend on the company type, the terms of the shareholders’ agreement, and the applicable statutory remedies. The 2025 CCL amendments have broadened the exit toolkit, but each path has distinct timing, cost and risk profiles.

Worked example, 50/50 LLC deadlock, 90-day exit path:

  1. Day 0: Shareholder A identifies that a Reserved Matter has failed to pass at two consecutive Members’ Meetings. A serves a Deadlock Notice on Shareholder B.
  2. Days 1–14: Negotiation period. A and B meet but cannot resolve the impasse.
  3. Days 15–28: Senior executive escalation. CEOs of A and B meet, no resolution.
  4. Days 29–60: Mediation. An independent mediator is appointed but the parties cannot reach agreement.
  5. Day 61: The contractual Trigger Date is reached. A serves an Offer Notice on B under the shot-gun mechanism, offering to buy B’s 50% interest at a price of AED 10 million.
  6. Days 61–90: B has 30 days to accept A’s offer (and sell) or to reverse the offer and purchase A’s 50% interest at the same price. B elects to sell.
  7. Days 91–120: Completion. The parties execute a notarised transfer deed, register the transfer with the commercial register and update the memorandum of association. Under the 2026 streamlined registration procedures, administrative processing typically takes 5–10 business days.

If B refuses to cooperate at the completion stage, A can seek enforcement through arbitration (if an arbitration clause exists) or through the UAE courts, including an application for specific performance and, if necessary, an order directing the commercial register to give effect to the transfer.

Additional exit tactics to consider:

  • Drag-along / tag-along rights: If the shareholders’ agreement includes drag-along provisions, a majority shareholder can force a minority to participate in a sale to a third party. Tag-along rights protect the minority by allowing them to exit on the same terms.
  • Put and call options: Pre-agreed options that allow one party to compel the other to buy or sell at a formula price upon a specified trigger event (including deadlock). These are particularly useful in JV structures where the shot-gun mechanism may be commercially impractical.
  • Statutory petition for withdrawal: Under the amended CCL, an LLC member can petition the court for an order permitting withdrawal. The court may order the remaining members to purchase the petitioner’s interest at a price determined by an independent expert. This statutory remedy can be pursued in parallel with, or as an alternative to, contractual mechanisms.
  • Negotiated buy-out with earn-out: Where valuation is disputed, a structured buy-out with deferred consideration (earn-out based on future performance) can bridge the gap between the parties’ respective valuations.

Interim Relief and Emergency Tactics During a Deadlock

Value destruction during a deadlock can be rapid. Companies may miss commercial opportunities, fail to renew licences or lose key employees while shareholders argue. The following interim measures should be built into both the shareholders’ agreement and the crisis-response playbook:

  • Emergency arbitration: File an application for emergency relief under the applicable institutional rules (e.g., DIAC, ICC, LCIA) to obtain a binding order within days, typically preserving the status quo, preventing asset disposals or requiring cooperation on essential business operations.
  • Court freezing orders: Apply to the competent UAE court for a precautionary attachment or freezing injunction over company assets to prevent dissipation. This remedy is available even where an arbitration clause exists, provided the court is satisfied that urgent relief is required.
  • Appointment of an independent director or administrator: Where the shareholders’ agreement provides for it, appoint an independent director with a casting vote on operational matters (not Reserved Matters) to break the impasse on day-to-day business decisions.
  • Escrow of dividends and management fees: Agree (or obtain an order) to escrow all distributions pending resolution, reducing the incentive for either party to prolong the dispute.
  • Board-governance workarounds: If the deadlock is at board level, consider whether the memorandum of association permits delegation of specific operational decisions to a management committee below board level, or whether a casting-vote mechanism can be activated.

Practical Checklist for Counsel and Founders, Prevention and Crisis Playbook

Checklist A, Pre-transaction (what to include before the dispute arises):

  1. Include a defined list of Reserved Matters with specified voting thresholds in both the shareholders’ agreement and the memorandum of association.
  2. Draft a multi-tiered deadlock clause with clear timelines, escalation triggers and an enforceable final remedy (buy-sell, put/call or dissolution).
  3. Specify the valuation methodology, identity or appointment mechanism of the independent valuer and the binding nature of the valuation.
  4. Include a well-drafted arbitration clause with emergency-relief provisions and a carve-out for urgent court relief.
  5. Align the shareholders’ agreement with the memorandum of association, ensure there is no conflict between the two documents on deadlock remedies, transfer restrictions or pre-emption rights.
  6. Address completion mechanics: notarisation, registry filings and cooperation obligations with specified deadlines and consequences for non-compliance.
  7. Review the deadlock clause against the 2025 CCL amendments to ensure it complements (rather than conflicts with) the statutory exit remedies now available.

Checklist B, When deadlock occurs (24-hour / 48-hour / 90-day tactical playbook):

  1. Within 24 hours: Serve a formal Deadlock Notice. Instruct specialist UAE corporate counsel. Identify and secure critical company documents and records.
  2. Within 48 hours: Assess whether urgent interim relief is needed (emergency arbitration, court freezing order). Begin preparing evidence of the deadlock (board minutes, failed resolutions, correspondence).
  3. Days 1–30: Engage in good-faith negotiation and escalation as required by the shareholders’ agreement. Conduct a parallel assessment of the statutory exit and dissolution options under the amended CCL.
  4. Days 30–60: If negotiation fails, commence mediation or refer to independent expert determination as specified in the clause.
  5. Days 60–90: If the deadlock remains unresolved, trigger the final contractual remedy (buy-sell, put/call, arbitration on the merits) and/or file a statutory exit petition with the competent court.
  6. Days 90+: Pursue enforcement, arbitral award or court judgment, and complete the share transfer or dissolution process.

Comparison, Arbitration vs UAE Courts vs Statutory Dissolution for Deadlock Resolution UAE

Aspect Arbitration UAE Courts Statutory Dissolution
Speed Often fastest for a final determination; emergency relief available within days; expedited procedures can conclude within 3–6 months Variable, commercial courts may take 6–18 months; urgent interim applications heard within days Typically the slowest route; dissolution petitions can take 12–24 months and require proof of irreconcilability
Enforceability Arbitral awards enforceable domestically under Federal Law No. 6 of 2018 and internationally under the New York Convention; UAE courts generally enforce unless a public-policy objection succeeds Court orders enforceable domestically; cross-border enforcement may be slower and subject to bilateral treaties Court-ordered dissolution is final; winding-up process can be protracted and value-destructive
Interim relief Emergency arbitrators can issue binding interim orders; parties can also apply to courts for urgent relief in parallel Courts can grant precautionary attachments, freezing orders and injunctions; typically effective for preserving value Limited, dissolution proceedings do not inherently include interim-relief mechanisms; separate application required
Confidentiality Proceedings are private and confidential by default Court proceedings are generally public (unless a confidentiality order is obtained) Dissolution is a public process; registration of winding-up is reflected in the commercial register
Cost Moderate to high (institutional fees, arbitrator fees, legal costs); cost-effective for high-value disputes Lower filing fees; overall cost depends on duration and complexity Can be the most expensive route when factoring in value destruction during protracted winding-up
Best suited for Cross-border ventures, high-value disputes, parties seeking confidentiality and a commercially sophisticated tribunal Purely domestic disputes, challenges to corporate resolutions, statutory exit petitions under amended CCL Last resort when the company is genuinely unable to function and no buy-out is achievable

Conclusion, Key Actions for Every Deadlock Clause UAE Companies Should Adopt

The 2025–2026 amendments to the Commercial Companies Law have given UAE shareholders a broader set of tools for resolving deadlocks, but those tools only work when the shareholders’ agreement is drafted to integrate contractual and statutory remedies into a single, enforceable framework. Every deadlock clause UAE companies rely on should now include: a clear definition of deadlock tied to specific reserved matters; a staged escalation with firm timelines; a final-remedy mechanism (buy-sell, put/call or arbitration) with workable valuation and completion mechanics; an arbitration clause with emergency-relief provisions; and express cooperation obligations for registry filings and notarisation.

The cost of getting this wrong is measured not only in legal fees but in lost commercial opportunities, damaged relationships and, in the worst case, the forced dissolution of a viable business. Practitioners advising on UAE corporate structures should treat the deadlock clause as the most important risk-allocation provision in any shareholders’ agreement, and should review every existing agreement against the updated CCL to confirm it remains fit for purpose.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Mohammed Haitham A. Salman at Middle East Alliance Legal Consultancy (ME-Alliance), a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Practical Law (Thomson Reuters), Joint Ventures: Deadlock and Termination (UAE)
  2. HFW, Navigating a Shareholders Agreement: The Key to Surviving a Deadlock
  3. CMS Legal Updates, Deadlock Clauses
  4. Kayrouz & Associates, UAE LLC Shareholder Deadlock (March 2026)
  5. Handle.ae, Deadlock Mechanisms in JV Agreements
  6. UNCITRAL, New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards
  7. Global Law Experts, Deadlock Provisions in Shareholders Agreements: Understanding the Circumstances and Options

FAQs

What is a deadlock clause in a shareholders' agreement and how does it work in the UAE?
A deadlock clause sets an agreed escalation and ultimate remedy when shareholders cannot reach the required decision threshold. In the UAE, a well-drafted clause must align with the Commercial Companies Law (as amended in 2025), transfer registration rules and enforcement routes, whether arbitration or UAE courts.
After following contractual escalation steps, shareholders can use the statutory exit remedy introduced by Federal Decree-Law No. 20 of 2025 (permitting LLC members to petition the court for withdrawal) or seek enforcement of buy-sell mechanisms via arbitration or UAE courts. Each path has its own timing and remedy profile.
Yes, if clearly drafted and not contrary to public policy. Enforceability depends on the forum, governing law, valuation mechanics and how transfer and registry steps are executed under UAE company rules. The key risk is non-cooperation on notarisation and registration, which the clause must address with specific performance obligations.
Best practice for enforceability: choose UAE law for substantive corporate-governance provisions, particularly those that interact with the CCL (transfer restrictions, dissolution, exit rights). Pair this with an arbitration seat that permits effective interim relief, such as the DIFC or ADGM.
Article 473 of the UAE Civil Code addresses limitation periods for civil claims. It is relevant because the window to enforce certain contractual remedies, including claims arising from a shareholders’ agreement deadlock, is subject to statutory time limits. Counsel should verify the applicable limitation period when calculating exposure and timing enforcement actions.
Use staged timelines: short for initial negotiation (7–14 days), medium for senior-executive escalation (14–30 days), and a fixed final-remedy trigger (60–120 days from the Deadlock Notice). The total duration should be long enough to allow genuine resolution efforts but short enough to prevent prolonged paralysis.
Arbitration agreements can limit recourse to courts for the merits of a dispute, but parties commonly, and should, preserve court access for urgent injunctive or freezing relief. The deadlock clause should include an express carve-out confirming that applications for interim measures do not waive the arbitration agreement.
Emergency arbitration orders (available within days under most institutional rules), urgent court freezing injunctions, appointment of independent directors or administrators with casting votes, and agreed escrow of dividends and management fees pending resolution. These measures should be referenced in the shareholders’ agreement to maximise enforceability.
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How to Prevent and Resolve Shareholder Deadlocks in UAE Companies, Drafting, Enforcement and Exit Options (2026)

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