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how to enforce a construction contract in uae

How to Enforce a Construction Contract in the UAE (2026): Notices, Arbitration vs Courts & Preserving Your Claim

By Global Law Experts
– posted 55 minutes ago

Understanding how to enforce a construction contract in UAE projects is now more urgent than at any point in the past four decades. Federal Decree-Law No. 25 of 2025, the new Civil Transactions Law, comes into force on 1 June 2026, replacing the foundational Federal Law No. 5 of 1985 and reshaping the rules that govern contractual obligations, termination, limitation periods and remedies across every emirate. At the same time, Dubai’s Law No. 7 of 2025 introduces a unified contractor registration and classification regime that directly affects who may perform construction work and, critically, how non-compliance can undermine enforcement rights.

This guide delivers the prescriptive, step-by-step playbook that contractors, employers, in-house counsel and claims managers need right now, covering notice requirements, the arbitration-versus-court decision, evidence preservation and specimen templates ready for immediate use.

Immediate action checklist, five things to do before 1 June 2026:

  • Audit every live contract. Confirm that dispute-resolution clauses, notice addresses and governing-law provisions align with the new Civil Transactions Law.
  • Update notice templates. Ensure default, delay and force majeure notices satisfy both contractual and statutory requirements under the 2026 regime.
  • Verify contractor registration. For Dubai projects, confirm registration under Dubai Law No. 7 of 2025 to avoid enforcement complications.
  • Preserve evidence now. Secure site photos, daily logs, payment records and correspondence in a litigation-ready archive.
  • Confirm limitation dates. Map every pending claim against the applicable limitation period to ensure nothing expires during the transition.

Quick Decision Flow: Arbitration vs Courts for UAE Construction Disputes

The first strategic choice when you need to enforce a construction contract in the UAE is selecting the right forum. The decision between arbitration and onshore courts, or a hybrid approach, affects everything from the speed of interim relief to the enforceability of a final award across borders. Industry observers note that the new Civil Transactions Law 2026 construction provisions do not alter the fundamental availability of arbitration, but the updated rules on interim measures and contract interpretation may shift the calculus for certain claims.

When Arbitration Is the Best Route

Arbitration is typically preferred where:

  • The contract includes an arbitration clause nominating a recognised seat (DIFC-LCIA, ADGM, ICC or DIAC).
  • The parties are international and need enforcement in multiple jurisdictions under the New York Convention.
  • Confidentiality matters, arbitration proceedings are private by default.
  • An emergency arbitrator can grant urgent relief (attachment of assets, preservation orders) within days of filing.
  • The subject-matter involves complex technical valuation (quantum experts, delay analysis) best handled by a specialist tribunal.

When Onshore Court Relief Is Necessary

Onshore UAE courts remain essential where:

  • You need a freezing order or injunction and no emergency arbitrator mechanism exists in the chosen rules.
  • The counterparty faces insolvency proceedings, court supervision may be mandatory.
  • Public-law remedies are involved (e.g., municipal enforcement, regulatory penalties under Dubai Law No. 7 of 2025 contractors regime).
  • Enforcement will occur exclusively within the UAE, where a local judgment may execute faster than ratifying a foreign-seated award.

Comparison Table: Forum, Remedies and Enforcement

Forum / Process Typical Remedies Available Enforcement Speed & Indicative Costs
International Arbitration (seat: DIFC, ADGM or ICC) Final monetary award, declarations, emergency-arbitrator interim orders, expert determination 6–18 months to award; enforcement via local courts (typically weeks if no set-aside challenge); higher institutional and counsel fees
Onshore UAE Courts Injunctions, freezing orders, judgment for debt, insolvency remedies, order for specific performance 6–24+ months to judgment; faster track for urgent interim applications (days to weeks); generally lower filing fees than arbitration
Hybrid (court assistance for arbitration) Court-ordered interim measures to preserve assets before or during arbitration, then arbitral award on the merits Freezing orders achievable in days; arbitration proceeds in parallel; combined cost of both tracks

Early indications suggest that parties with FIDIC-based contracts on major UAE infrastructure projects increasingly favour the hybrid approach, securing a court-ordered freeze on assets immediately, then pursuing the substantive claim through arbitration.

How to Enforce a Construction Contract in UAE: Notices You Must Issue, Templates & Deadlines

Proper notice discipline is the backbone of any enforcement strategy. A failure to serve the right notice, to the right party, within the contractually stipulated window can defeat an otherwise valid claim. Under UAE construction practice, including UAE construction contracts based on FIDIC forms, notice periods of 14 to 28 days are standard, though bespoke contracts may impose shorter or longer windows. The new Civil Transactions Law reinforces the principle that parties must act in good faith and give adequate notice before exercising remedial rights.

Notice of Default / Breach

A notice of default in the UAE must clearly identify the contractual obligation breached, the evidence supporting the breach and the remedy period afforded to the defaulting party. Essential contents include:

  1. Full contract reference (number, date, parties).
  2. Specific clause(s) breached, with a factual summary of the default.
  3. The remedy period (typically 14 days, unless the contract specifies otherwise).
  4. A statement that failure to cure will trigger further remedies (termination, damages claim, call on security).
  5. Delivery method: registered post, courier with proof of receipt and email confirmation, retain all tracking records.

Specimen, Notice of Default (summary):

“We refer to Contract [No.] dated [date]. You are in breach of Clause [X] by reason of [describe default]. You are required to remedy this breach within [14] days of receipt of this notice, failing which we reserve all rights including termination under Clause [Y] and a claim for damages.”

Notice of Extension of Time / Delay Claims

Delay claims under FIDIC and most UAE bespoke contracts require prompt contemporaneous notification, typically within 28 days of the event giving rise to the delay. Failure to serve within the contractual window is one of the most common reasons claims are rejected. For a detailed treatment of delay in construction projects in the UAE, see our dedicated guide.

  1. Identify the delaying event and the date it first occurred.
  2. Reference the specific contract clause entitling you to an extension of time (EOT).
  3. Provide a preliminary estimate of the delay impact (days) and any cost consequences.
  4. Confirm that a detailed substantiation will follow within the contractual timeframe (often 42 days under FIDIC).

Specimen, Notice of Delay / EOT (summary):

“Pursuant to Clause [X], we notify you that [describe event] occurring on [date] has caused / is likely to cause delay to the Works. We claim an extension of time and reserve our right to additional cost. Detailed particulars will follow within [42] days.”

Force Majeure Notice, Contents and Timing

A force majeure notice in UAE construction must be served immediately upon the occurrence of the qualifying event. Under the Civil Transactions Law 2026, force majeure remains a ground for excusing non-performance where the event is unforeseeable, unavoidable and renders performance impossible, not merely more expensive. The notice should include:

  • A description of the force majeure event and the date of onset.
  • The specific contractual obligations affected.
  • Steps being taken to mitigate the impact.
  • An estimate of the duration and likely effect on the programme.

Specimen, Force Majeure Notice (summary):

“We hereby notify you under Clause [X] that a force majeure event, [describe event], occurred on [date], preventing performance of [specific obligations]. We are taking all reasonable steps to mitigate. We reserve all rights to extension of time and relief from liability.”

Notice of Termination, When It Is Safe to Terminate

Termination is a last resort. Wrongful termination exposes the terminating party to counterclaims that can exceed the value of the original dispute. Before issuing a termination notice, confirm:

  1. A valid notice of default was served and the cure period has expired without remedy.
  2. The contractual termination clause has been followed to the letter (including any requirement for a second or “final” notice).
  3. Force majeure or suspension provisions do not excuse the other party’s non-performance.
  4. Legal advice has been obtained, particularly where suspension to termination dynamics apply.

For practical guidance on termination in a property context, see our guide to how to terminate a property contract in Dubai.

Preserve Your Construction Claim in the UAE: Evidence, Security and Interim Measures

Winning a dispute is only half the battle, you must preserve the evidence that proves your case and secure assets against which an award or judgment can be enforced. The steps below should begin the moment a dispute crystallises, and ideally well before formal proceedings commence. This is essential to preserve a construction claim in UAE proceedings.

Document Preservation, the First 14 Days

Within the first 14 days of a dispute or anticipated dispute, secure the following:

  • Daily site logs and progress reports, these are the most powerful contemporaneous evidence in any construction claim.
  • Photographs and drone surveys, time-stamped images of defective work, delay conditions or force majeure damage.
  • Correspondence, all emails, letters and meeting minutes between the parties, subcontractors and consultants.
  • Financial records, payment certificates, interim valuations, invoices and bank statements evidencing cashflow impact.
  • Subcontractor records, subcontract agreements, variation orders and any back-to-back claims received.

Issue a formal document-preservation notice to all relevant subcontractors and suppliers instructing them to retain records. See the specimen preservation notice in the Practical Annex below.

Freezing Orders and Emergency Injunctions

Where there is a real risk that the counterparty will dissipate assets, seek urgent relief:

  1. Onshore UAE courts, apply for a precautionary attachment (freezing order) under UAE civil procedure rules. These can be obtained ex parte in urgent cases.
  2. DIFC or ADGM courts, if the arbitration is seated in a free zone, either court can grant freezing orders that are enforceable onshore through the established conduit jurisdiction mechanism.
  3. Emergency arbitrator, under DIAC, ICC, LCIA and other institutional rules, an emergency arbitrator can be appointed within days to order interim preservation measures.

First 90 Days, Interim Security Checklist

  • Confirm whether performance bonds or advance-payment guarantees are still live and callable.
  • If the employer holds retention, serve formal notice preserving your right to release.
  • Identify all assets of the counterparty within the UAE (real property, bank accounts, equipment on site).
  • Engage forensic-accounting support early to quantify the claim and support any interim-payment application.
  • Brief counsel on the optimal forum for interim relief, court or emergency arbitrator, based on speed and enforceability.

Enforcing Awards and Judgments in the UAE, Practical Execution Steps

Obtaining a favourable award or judgment is only the beginning. Converting it into actual recovery requires navigating the UAE’s enforcement framework, which, since the ratification of the New York Convention and the creation of the DIFC and ADGM conduit jurisdictions, offers multiple pathways depending on where the award was issued and where the debtor’s assets sit.

Enforcing an Arbitral Award

  1. Domestic awards (UAE-seated arbitration). File a ratification application before the competent UAE court. The court will verify that the award does not violate UAE public policy and that due process was observed.
  2. DIFC/ADGM-seated awards. Register the award with the DIFC or ADGM court, then use the conduit mechanism to enforce it onshore through the Dubai or Abu Dhabi execution courts.
  3. Foreign-seated awards. Apply for recognition and enforcement under the New York Convention (to which the UAE is a signatory) through the competent UAE court. Grounds for refusal are limited to those set out in Article V of the Convention.

Enforcement of Onshore Judgments

Once a UAE court judgment becomes final (after exhaustion of appeals or expiry of appeal periods), the judgment creditor may apply to the execution court for enforcement. Steps include:

  1. Obtain an execution-stamped copy of the judgment.
  2. File an execution application identifying the debtor’s assets.
  3. The execution judge may order seizure of bank accounts, attachment of real property or auction of movable assets.
  4. If assets are located in a different emirate, the execution order can be transmitted to the relevant local court.

Typical Enforcement Timeline and Costs

Industry observers expect that straightforward domestic-award enforcement takes approximately four to eight weeks where uncontested. Contested ratification proceedings can extend to six months or longer. Court fees for execution are typically a percentage of the award value, subject to caps that vary by emirate. Engaging execution specialists familiar with the local court procedures is critical to avoiding delays.

Timing and Limitation Periods for Construction Claims in the UAE

Missing a limitation deadline is fatal to any claim, regardless of its merits. The limitation period for construction claims in the UAE depends on both the statutory framework and the specific contractual provisions. Under the Civil Transactions Law 2026 (Federal Decree-Law No. 25 of 2025), which replaces Federal Law No. 5 of 1985, the general principles governing limitation remain rooted in the concept of prescription, but parties should review their contracts and pending claims against the new text to confirm that no transitional rules alter accrual dates.

  • General contractual claims. Subject to a limitation period that accrues from the date the claimant becomes aware (or ought to have become aware) of the breach and the resulting damage.
  • Decennial (structural) liability. Architects and contractors face a ten-year liability period for structural defects from the date of handover, a principle carried forward under the new law.
  • Contractual notice periods vs statutory limitation. A missed contractual notice deadline (e.g., the 28-day FIDIC bar) does not necessarily extinguish a statutory right, but it may severely limit the recoverable quantum and available contractual remedies. For key terms and definitions, consult the construction law glossary.

What to do if you miss a contractual timeline: Serve the notice immediately, even if late, with an explanation. Courts and tribunals have occasionally accepted late notices where the employer suffered no prejudice, but this is not guaranteed. Seek legal advice without delay.

Dubai-Specific Rules: Law No. 7 of 2025, Compliance and Enforcement Implications

Dubai Law No. 7 of 2025 establishes a unified contractor registration and classification system administered by Dubai Municipality. Its impact on how parties enforce construction contracts in Dubai-based projects should not be underestimated. The law requires all contractors operating in Dubai to register, obtain classification approval based on their financial and technical capacity, and maintain compliance throughout the project lifecycle.

Key compliance obligations under Dubai Law No. 7 of 2025 contractors must observe:

  • Mandatory registration. Contractors must register with the Dubai Municipality contractor registry and obtain the appropriate classification grade before commencing work.
  • Classification grades. Contractors are classified based on financial capacity, technical expertise and track record. Contracts awarded beyond a contractor’s classification limit may be challenged.
  • Ongoing compliance. Registration is not a one-time event, contractors must maintain insurance, renew licences and report material changes.
  • Impact on enforcement. A contractor that is not properly registered or classified may face difficulties enforcing its contractual rights. Industry observers expect that employers may raise non-registration as a defence to payment claims, arguing that the contract is tainted by regulatory non-compliance.
  • Subcontractor chain. The law extends compliance obligations through the subcontractor chain, main contractors should verify subcontractor registration status to avoid disruption.

The practical effect is that enforcement strategy in Dubai now requires a regulatory compliance check as a preliminary step. Before initiating any claim, confirm that your registration, classification and insurance are current and that no Dubai Municipality violations are outstanding.

Practical Annex: Specimen Notices, Checklist and Templates

The four specimen notices below are designed as starting points for adaptation to your specific contract. Each should be reviewed by legal counsel before issue, printed on company letterhead, and delivered by a tracked method with proof of receipt retained.

1. Notice of Default

“Dear [Party], we refer to Contract No. [X] dated [date] between [Employer] and [Contractor]. You are in material breach of Clause [X] by reason of [concise description of default]. Pursuant to Clause [Y], you are required to remedy this default within [14] days of receipt hereof. Failure to do so will entitle us to exercise all remedies available under the Contract and at law, including termination. All rights reserved.”

2. Notice of Delay / Extension of Time

“Dear [Party], pursuant to Clause [X] of the Contract, we hereby give notice that [describe delaying event] first occurring on [date] has caused delay to the Works. We claim an extension of time of [estimated] days and reserve our entitlement to additional cost. A fully particularised claim will follow within [42] days in accordance with the Contract.”

3. Force Majeure Notice

“Dear [Party], we notify you under Clause [X] that a force majeure event, namely [describe event], commenced on [date] and has rendered performance of [specific obligations] impossible. We are taking all reasonable measures to mitigate. We claim relief from liability and an extension of time for the duration of the event and its consequences. All rights reserved.”

4. Document Preservation Notice to Subcontractors

“Dear [Subcontractor], a dispute has arisen or is anticipated in connection with the Project. You are hereby instructed to preserve and retain all documents, records, correspondence, photographs, daily logs and financial records relating to your works under Subcontract No. [X]. No documents are to be destroyed or deleted without our prior written consent. Please confirm receipt and compliance within [7] days.”

An extended notice and preservation checklist for UAE construction claims 2026, including downloadable Word and PDF templates, is available as a companion resource.

Conclusion: How to Enforce a Construction Contract in UAE, Act Now

The convergence of the new Civil Transactions Law (Federal Decree-Law No. 25 of 2025, effective 1 June 2026) and Dubai Law No. 7 of 2025 creates a narrow but critical window for action. Every party to a live construction contract in the UAE should audit their notice procedures, update templates, verify contractor registration, preserve evidence and map limitation deadlines, today, not after the new law takes effect. Whether you choose arbitration, onshore courts or a hybrid enforcement strategy, success depends on disciplined contract administration from day one. Understanding precisely how to enforce a construction contract in UAE under the 2026 rules is no longer optional, it is the baseline standard for every project participant operating in this jurisdiction.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dr. Bini Saroj at Khalifa Bin Huwaidan Alketbi Advocates & Legal Consultants, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. UAE Legislation Portal, Civil Transactions Law
  2. Eastlaws, Federal Decree-Law No. 25/2025
  3. Lexis Middle East, Decree-Law 25/2025
  4. Global Arbitration Review, UAE Construction Arbitration
  5. ICLG, Construction & Engineering Laws: UAE
  6. Kennedys, Dubai Law No. 7 of 2025
  7. DLA Piper, Dubai Tightens the Bolts
  8. Dentons, UAE Construction Law Guide

FAQs

How do you administer a construction contract in the UAE?
Effective contract administration requires maintaining contemporaneous records (daily logs, photographs, correspondence), issuing notices strictly within contractual timeframes (typically 14–28 days for FIDIC-based contracts), documenting all variations and delays as they occur, and serving formal default notices before exercising any termination right. Preserve evidence continuously and consider interim relief options early.
Most UAE construction contracts require written notice of a claim within 14 to 28 days of the event giving rise to the claim, followed by detailed substantiation within 42 days. Notices should be served by tracked delivery (registered post, courier with signature confirmation) and copied to all relevant parties. Under the Civil Transactions Law 2026, good-faith notice remains a prerequisite to the exercise of contractual remedies.
Dubai Law No. 7 of 2025 establishes a unified contractor registration and classification regime administered by Dubai Municipality. All contractors must register and obtain classification approval. Non-compliance can undermine a contractor’s ability to enforce its contractual rights, employers may argue that contracts performed without proper registration are tainted by regulatory breach.
Terminate only after exhausting all contractual prerequisites: serve a formal notice of default, allow the specified cure period to expire, document the continuing default, confirm that force majeure or suspension provisions do not excuse performance, and obtain legal advice. Wrongful termination exposes the terminating party to significant counterclaims for loss of profit, demobilisation costs and reputational damage.
Arbitration is widely preferred for international construction disputes in the UAE because of confidentiality, enforceability under the New York Convention and access to specialist tribunals. However, onshore courts remain faster for urgent interim relief (freezing orders, injunctions) and may be preferable where enforcement will occur exclusively within the UAE. Many practitioners adopt a hybrid approach, obtaining court-ordered interim relief while pursuing the merits through arbitration.
Limitation periods depend on the type of claim. General contractual claims are subject to a prescription period that begins when the claimant becomes aware of the breach and resulting damage. Structural-defect claims against architects and contractors are subject to a ten-year decennial liability period from handover. Contractual notice deadlines (e.g., 28 days under FIDIC) operate separately and can bar specific remedies even where the statutory limitation has not expired.
A force majeure notice does not automatically toll or suspend a statutory limitation period. However, depending on the contract terms and the applicable provisions of the Civil Transactions Law, force majeure may excuse late performance or extend contractual deadlines. The safest approach is to serve the force majeure notice immediately, continue to mitigate losses, and seek legal advice on whether statutory limitation is affected by the specific circumstances.

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How to Enforce a Construction Contract in the UAE (2026): Notices, Arbitration vs Courts & Preserving Your Claim

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