Our Expert in United Arab Emirates
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Last updated: 21 May 2026, reflects rule clarifications publicised through 2025–2026.
Marriage to a UAE national is one of the few pathways through which a foreign citizen can acquire Emirati nationality, yet it remains one of the most misunderstood. Understanding how to get UAE citizenship by marriage requires close attention to the gendered eligibility rules set out in Federal Law No. 17 of 1972, the nomination bodies that must approve every application, and a document trail that stretches across multiple government agencies. The route is available only to foreign women married to Emirati men, it demands either seven or ten years of continuous marriage depending on whether the couple has children, and every approval is ultimately discretionary.
This guide walks through each stage of the process, from initial eligibility through nomination, documentation and passport issuance, so that applicants and their advisors can plan realistically and avoid the most common pitfalls.
Yes, but only for a narrow category of applicants and under tightly controlled conditions. The marriage pathway is not automatic, and it is not available to all foreign spouses. Before proceeding further, applicants should consider three threshold facts:
Industry observers note that the practical difficulty of obtaining UAE citizenship by marriage remains high, with success depending heavily on the quality of evidence submitted and the applicant’s conduct record throughout the marriage period.
The statutory foundation for the marriage route sits in Federal Law No. 17 of 1972 concerning Nationality and Passports. The law provides that a foreign woman married to a UAE national may be granted nationality by citizenship after either seven years (where the couple has a common child) or ten years (where they do not) from the date of application submission. The marriage must be lawful, valid and subsisting at the time of application. If the Emirati husband dies or divorces the applicant, a foreign wife who already has children with her deceased or divorced husband may still apply, provided she remains resident in the UAE and maintains lawful residency status.
Beyond the statutory minimum, the UAE nationality requirements for marriage-based applicants include several practical conditions that authorities assess during the nomination review:
Under the current statutory framework, foreign men married to Emirati women do not have a codified right to citizenship through marriage. In practice, male foreign spouses typically obtain residency sponsored by their Emirati wife. While the law does not expressly bar all avenues for male applicants, citizenship grants to foreign husbands of Emirati women remain exceptionally rare and are generally processed, if at all, through the exceptional-merit or ministerial-discretion channels rather than the standard marriage pathway. Applicants in this position should seek specialist counsel to assess whether any alternative route applies to their circumstances.
UAE citizenship cannot be obtained by simply filing an application at a government counter. According to the official UAE Government portal, citizenship can be acquired only through the Rulers’ and Crown Princes’ Courts, the Offices of the Executive Councils, or the Cabinet. This means the applicant’s case must be submitted to and endorsed by one of these bodies before it can proceed to a final decision. The Emirati spouse typically initiates the process through the relevant emirate-level authority.
The Emirati husband plays a central role in the UAE nomination process. In most cases, the husband, or his family, submits or sponsors the nomination through the appropriate court or council. To support the nomination, the couple should prepare:
Applications are most commonly refused or deferred for the following reasons:
The likely practical effect of these scrutiny points is that applicants who invest early in building a well-organised evidence file, ideally with legal assistance, stand a meaningfully better chance of success.
Preparing the correct documentation is among the most time-consuming stages of applying for UAE citizenship by marriage. The table below sets out the core documents, the issuing authority and whether attestation is required.
| Document | Who Issues It | Attestation Required? |
|---|---|---|
| Marriage certificate | Country of marriage / UAE court | Yes, embassy + MoFA attestation; Arabic translation required if issued abroad |
| Applicant’s valid passport (copy) | Applicant’s home country | Notarised copy |
| UAE residency visa (copy) | GDRFA / ICP | No, original to be presented |
| Birth certificates of children | Country of birth / UAE civil registry | Yes, embassy + MoFA attestation; Arabic translation |
| Police clearance certificates | Police authorities in every country of residence | Yes, embassy + MoFA attestation; Arabic translation |
| Tenancy contract or title deed (family home) | Landlord / Dubai Land Department | No, but notarised copies recommended |
| Proof of joint financial life | Banks, utility providers | No, but certified statements strengthen the file |
| Husband’s UAE national ID and family book (Khulasa Al Qaid) | ICP / civil registry | No, original to be presented |
| Good-conduct letter or character reference | Community leaders, employers | No, but Arabic translation recommended |
| Passport-size photographs (applicant and family) | Applicant | No |
For documents issued outside the UAE, the standard attestation chain runs as follows: (1) notarisation in the country of issue; (2) attestation by the relevant UAE embassy or consulate abroad; (3) final attestation by the UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MoFA) upon arrival in the country. Documents not in Arabic must be translated by a certified legal translator and the translation itself attested. Incomplete attestation is one of the most frequent causes of delay, and applicants should budget one to three months for this stage alone. For a detailed walkthrough of the attestation procedure, see our guide to marriage attestation in the UAE.
In addition to official certificates, applicants are well-advised to prepare two supporting statements: a declaration of shared residence (signed by both spouses, confirming the family home address, duration of cohabitation and daily family arrangements) and a proof-of-parent-child relationship statement (where children are involved, confirming the child’s relationship to both parents, schooling and healthcare arrangements). While there is no mandatory template, presenting these statements in Arabic with English translations demonstrates thoroughness and can ease the reviewing authority’s task.
One of the most common questions surrounding UAE citizenship by marriage is how long the entire process takes in practice. The statutory waiting period, seven or ten years of marriage, is only the threshold. The actual UAE naturalization timeline from document gathering through to passport issuance involves several distinct stages.
| Stage | Typical Duration | What to Prepare |
|---|---|---|
| Document gathering and attestation | 1–3 months | All certificates, translations, police clearances, attestation chain |
| Nomination submission (via Ruler’s Court / Executive Council) | 1–3 months | Formal request letter, supporting evidence file, husband’s family-book details |
| Background checks and review | 6–18 months (variable) | Cooperate with interviews; ensure no outstanding legal issues |
| Discretionary decision (approval or refusal) | Variable, can extend to 24 months in complex cases | Respond to any supplementary document requests promptly |
| Passport issuance and civil registration | 1–3 months after approval | Biometric enrolment, new Emirates ID, family-book update |
In total, applicants should plan for a realistic end-to-end timeline of approximately one to three years from the point at which they first begin assembling documents, on top of the seven or ten years of qualifying marriage. The process is not accelerated by fees; there is no published government fee schedule for citizenship by marriage, as the route is processed through nomination channels rather than a standard paid-application window.
The question of whether an applicant can retain her original nationality after acquiring Emirati citizenship is critical and frequently misunderstood. UAE law generally expects naturalised citizens to renounce their previous nationality. In January 2021, the UAE Government approved amendments permitting certain categories of exceptional individuals to retain dual nationality, but these amendments were directed at investors, scientists and talented professionals nominated under a separate pathway, not at marriage-based applicants. For those applying through marriage, the practical expectation remains that renunciation of the previous nationality will be required. Applicants should also check whether their home country permits the loss or renunciation of its citizenship; some countries prohibit voluntary renunciation or impose penalties.
Children born to an Emirati father are UAE nationals by descent, regardless of the mother’s nationality. If citizenship is granted to the mother, the children’s status does not change, they are already Emirati. However, children who hold dual nationality by virtue of their mother’s original citizenship may face complications if the mother is required to renounce. Legal advice on child custody under UAE law and the interaction between nationality and custody rights is strongly recommended.
The UAE does not impose personal income tax, but acquiring Emirati citizenship may trigger tax-residency consequences in the applicant’s country of origin. Several jurisdictions, including the United States, tax their citizens on worldwide income regardless of residence. Renouncing a previous nationality can also have implications for inheritance rights and asset disposal in the home country. Applicants should consult both an immigration lawyer and a cross-border tax advisor before proceeding.
Not every foreign spouse needs or wants full citizenship. The UAE Golden Visa, a long-term residency programme, offers many of the practical benefits of living and working in the Emirates without the requirement to renounce a previous nationality. The comparison below helps applicants weigh the golden visa vs citizenship decision.
| Route | Typical Timeline & Eligibility | Key Differences and Implications |
|---|---|---|
| Golden Visa (residency) | 5–10 year visa; categories include investors, professionals, outstanding students and entrepreneurs; no marriage requirement | Long-term residency and business access; no political rights; no renunciation required; easier to maintain original nationality |
| Citizenship by marriage (naturalisation) | 7 years (with child) or 10 years (without) of marriage before application; discretionary approval via nomination | Full nationality rights including UAE passport; generally requires renouncing previous nationality; nomination and approval are discretionary |
| When to choose each | Choose citizenship if full political rights and an Emirati passport are essential and you meet the marriage criteria; choose Golden Visa if speed, simplicity and retaining your original passport matter more | Specialist counsel is needed to weigh family, tax and mobility consequences before committing to either route |
It is worth noting that some applicants ask whether you can get UAE citizenship by investment. While the 2021 amendments introduced a framework for granting citizenship to investors and talented professionals, this is a separate nomination track with its own criteria and is not connected to the marriage pathway discussed in this guide.
Once citizenship is granted, several administrative steps remain before the new citizen can fully exercise her rights. Understanding how to get a UAE passport after naturalisation involves the following sequence:
During the first twelve months after naturalisation, new citizens should ensure that all identification documents, driving licence, bank accounts, property registrations, are updated to reflect Emirati nationality.
Rejections are not uncommon, and the discretionary nature of the process means that applicants have limited formal appeal rights. The most frequent grounds for refusal include insufficient evidence of a genuine and subsisting family life in the UAE, undisclosed or discovered criminal records, submission of falsified or fraudulently obtained documents, and failure to meet the continuous-residency requirement. Where an application is refused, the applicant is generally not barred from reapplying once the deficiency has been corrected, but there is no statutory timetable for re-submission. In cases involving criminal-record findings, rehabilitation evidence and a significant lapse of time since the offence will be needed before a fresh application can succeed.
Given the discretionary nature of every decision, the complexity of the document trail and the irreversibility of renouncing a previous nationality, engaging specialist counsel early in the process is strongly advisable. A qualified immigration lawyer can audit the applicant’s eligibility, identify and resolve potential obstacles before submission, manage the attestation and translation chain, liaise with the Emirati spouse’s family and the nominating authority, and advise on dual-nationality, tax and inheritance consequences. Early legal involvement significantly reduces the risk of rejection on procedural or documentary grounds.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jem Felicilda at Knightsbridge Group, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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