[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
service of process uae

Service of Process in the UAE After the 2026 Reforms: Electronic Service, E‑filing and Contract Clauses Businesses Must Use

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

The rules governing service of process in the UAE changed significantly when the 2026 amendments to the Federal Civil Procedure Law took effect, embedding electronic service and mandatory e‑filing into everyday court practice. For general counsel, contracts teams and external advisers, the practical consequences are immediate: notice clauses drafted before the reforms may no longer secure valid service, proof‑of‑service requirements have shifted towards digital evidence, and litigators who ignore the new e‑filing channels risk procedural defaults. This guide sets out the legal basis for the changes, walks through each service route step by step, provides four ready‑to‑use contract clauses, and explains exactly what evidence UAE courts now expect when a party claims service has been effected.

Key Takeaways

  • Electronic service is now expressly permitted under the amended Federal Civil Procedure Law (Federal Law No. 42 of 2022, as amended). Courts may direct service via approved electronic channels, including court portals, certified SMS and email where the court authorises it.
  • E‑filing is mandatory for most civil and commercial claims filed in UAE federal courts and Dubai Courts. Paper filing is no longer the default pathway.
  • Contracts signed before the reforms should be reviewed immediately. A notice clause that references only postal addresses or fax numbers may be insufficient to ensure valid service or timely deemed‑receipt under the new framework.
  • Proof of service has moved to digital evidence. Portal receipts, system‑generated timestamps and certified server logs are now the primary evidence accepted; traditional process‑server affidavits remain valid but are supplementary.
  • DIFC and ADGM courts operate separate rules. Free‑zone common‑law courts have their own electronic filing and service regimes, and practitioners must check the applicable rules independently.
  • Cross‑border service still relies on diplomatic or bilateral channels unless the parties have contractually agreed to service on an in‑country agent, a clause that is now more important than ever.
  • Four sample clauses are included below, covering email service, e‑portal service, agent‑based service and an arbitration carve‑out, that businesses can adapt for immediate use.

Why the 2026 Reforms Matter for Businesses

Federal Law No. 42 of 2022, the UAE’s principal civil procedure statute, was amended in line with broader government digitisation policy to give electronic service the same legal standing as personal service under defined conditions. The amendments, which came into force in January 2026, expanded the methods of service available to courts and parties, introduced mandatory e‑filing obligations for claimants, and set out clear rules on when electronic notifications count as “received.”

Under UAE civil procedure, electronic service may now be effected through the court’s own electronic system, through approved government messaging platforms, or, where the court specifically authorises it, through email to an address designated in the contract or previously used by the defendant in the proceedings. The Ministry of Justice has issued accompanying guidance reinforcing that e‑filing is the standard channel for initiating civil and commercial claims in the federal courts. Industry observers expect the practical effect to be a significant reduction in service‑related delays and default‑judgment challenges, provided businesses adapt their contractual frameworks to match the new requirements.

What “Electronic Service” and “E‑Filing” Now Mean in UAE Courts

It is important to distinguish two concepts that the reforms treat separately but which interact in practice.

Electronic service (e‑service) refers to the delivery of court documents, statements of claim, hearing notices, judgments and orders, to a party through a digital channel rather than by personal delivery or post. Under the amended civil procedure framework, the court’s electronic system generates a notification to the party’s registered email or mobile number, and the system records the date and time of delivery and, where available, the date and time the notification was opened.

E‑filing refers to the submission of claims, pleadings and supporting documents by the filing party through the court’s electronic portal. In the federal courts and in Dubai Courts, e‑filing has become the default method for lodging cases. The system assigns a case number, generates filing receipts and timestamps every submission.

The DIFC Courts and the ADGM Courts each maintain their own electronic filing platforms. For service of process in Dubai via the DIFC Courts, practitioners must comply with Part 9 of the DIFC Court Rules, which permits service by email where the court is satisfied that the method will bring the document to the attention of the party. The ADGM Courts operate a broadly similar regime under their own procedural rules. Parties litigating in those forums should not assume that the federal e‑service rules apply automatically.

When E‑Service and E‑Filing Are Mandatory vs Optional

E‑filing is now mandatory for most civil and commercial claims in the UAE federal courts and in Dubai Courts. A claimant who attempts to file a paper claim without prior court approval will generally have the filing rejected or directed to the electronic portal.

E‑service is not automatic in every case. The court retains discretion over the service method, particularly where the defendant is outside the UAE, where the defendant’s electronic contact details are unknown, or where substituted service may be more appropriate. In practice, however, courts increasingly default to electronic service for defendants whose contact details are on file, and contractual designation of an email or portal address strengthens the likelihood that the court will authorise e‑service.

Parties cannot opt out of the e‑filing obligation by contract. However, arbitration clauses effectively redirect the dispute away from court procedures altogether. Where a valid arbitration agreement exists, for example, a DIAC or ICC clause, the court filing and e‑service rules apply only to ancillary court proceedings such as applications for interim relief or enforcement of the award, not to the arbitration itself.

Practical Step‑by‑Step: Service of Process in the UAE

Serving an individual resident in the UAE

The primary methods for serving an individual within the UAE are, in order of preference under current practice:

  1. Electronic service via the court portal. The court sends a notification to the individual’s registered email or mobile number. The system records delivery and, where applicable, read confirmation.
  2. Personal service by a court‑appointed process server. The server delivers the documents to the individual at their residence or place of work and files a service report with the court.
  3. Substituted service. Where the individual cannot be located, the court may order service by publication in two daily newspapers (one Arabic), by notice affixed to the last known address, or by any other method the court considers appropriate.

In each case, the party effecting service should retain and file the proof of service, portal receipt, process‑server affidavit or court order for substituted service, before the next procedural step.

Serving a UAE company (onshore)

Serving process on a UAE company follows a hierarchy that the 2026 reforms have supplemented with electronic channels:

  1. Service on the company’s registered agent or at its registered office. A corporate registry extract from the relevant Department of Economy or the Ministry of Economy confirms the registered address. Documents may be delivered by court process server or, increasingly, by electronic notification directed to the company’s registered email address on file with the court.
  2. Service on a director or authorised officer. Where a registered agent is not appointed or cannot be reached, the court may authorise service on a named director or officer. A power‑of‑attorney or board resolution confirming the individual’s authority may be required as supporting evidence.
  3. MOJ‑facilitated electronic notification. The court may direct the MOJ’s electronic system to send service notifications to the company’s registered contact details, with delivery confirmed by system log.

Where a UAE company has no registered agent and no electronic contact details on file, the claimant should apply to the court for an order for substituted service, providing evidence of the steps already taken to locate the company.

Serving abroad, diplomatic channels and contractual agents

The UAE is not a party to the Hague Service Convention. Cross‑border service of UAE court documents therefore relies on diplomatic or consular channels, a process that can take several months, or on bilateral judicial cooperation agreements between the UAE and the relevant foreign state.

The most efficient alternative is contractual: parties may agree in their contract that service of process will be accepted by a designated agent within the UAE. This approach, sometimes called “service via agent under Article 9,” avoids the delay inherent in diplomatic channels and gives the court a clear domestic address for service. The agent‑service clause (see the sample clauses below) should identify the agent by name, address and contact details and state that service on the agent constitutes valid service on the foreign party.

Proof of Service in the UAE: What Courts Will Accept

Digital evidence, portal receipts, timestamps and system logs

Under the reformed framework, proof of service for electronically served documents typically comprises:

  • Court portal receipt. A system‑generated document showing the case number, the document served, the recipient’s registered details, and the date and time of delivery.
  • Delivery and read confirmations. Where the electronic system records whether the notification was opened and when, this log entry is admissible as evidence of receipt.
  • Certified server logs. For service directed by the MOJ’s electronic system, the ministry can produce a certified extract of the delivery log. Courts treat these extracts as presumptive proof of service.

Traditional evidence, affidavits and process‑server reports

Personal service remains valid, and the traditional process‑server affidavit, recording the date, time, location, identity of the person served, and the documents delivered, continues to be accepted. Where a combination of electronic and personal service methods has been used, best practice is to file both the portal receipt and the server affidavit to remove any doubt.

What to do when service fails

If the electronic notification bounces or the system records no delivery confirmation, the serving party should not treat service as complete. The recommended steps are:

  1. Preserve all system logs showing the attempted delivery and any error messages.
  2. Attempt service by an alternative permitted method (personal service or registered post to the last known address).
  3. If all methods fail, apply to the court for an order for substituted service, attaching the evidence of failed attempts.
  4. Do not proceed to the next hearing date until the court confirms that service has been validly effected, a default judgment obtained without valid service is vulnerable to being set aside.

Update Your Contracts Now, How to Draft Enforceable Notice and Service Clauses

Drafting principles for notice clauses in UAE contracts

The 2026 reforms make it essential that every notice clause in a UAE‑governed contract addresses electronic service explicitly. The following principles should guide drafting:

  • Designate multiple channels. Specify a physical address, an email address and, where available, a court‑portal identifier for each party. This gives the court a clear basis for ordering e‑service.
  • Define “deemed receipt.” State when a notice is deemed received, for example, on the date shown by the system delivery confirmation or, for email, 24 hours after sending to the designated address.
  • Include an obligation to update. Require each party to notify the other of any change to their service address or email within a specified number of days. Failure to update should not invalidate service to the last notified address.
  • Address escalation. Provide that if electronic delivery fails, the sending party may serve by courier or registered post to the physical address, and that such service is deemed effective on the date of delivery or attempted delivery.
  • Preserve urgent relief. State expressly that the notice clause does not restrict either party’s right to apply to the court for interim or emergency relief without prior notice where permitted by law.

Sample clause 1, email service with read receipt

“Any notice required or permitted under this Agreement shall be given by email to the address specified in the Execution Block. A notice sent by email shall be deemed received at the time the sender’s email system records successful delivery, or 24 hours after sending (whichever is earlier), provided that if such time falls outside Business Hours, the notice shall be deemed received at the opening of the next Business Day. Each party shall notify the other of any change of email address within 5 Business Days.”

Sample clause 2, court e‑portal service

“Each party consents to service of court documents through the electronic system of the competent UAE court. Service effected through the court’s electronic portal shall be deemed valid service for all purposes. Each party undertakes to maintain a current registered email address and mobile number with the court’s electronic filing system.”

Sample clause 3, agent‑based service for foreign parties

“The Foreign Party hereby irrevocably appoints [Agent Name], of [Agent Address, UAE], as its agent for service of process in the UAE. Service on the Agent shall constitute valid and effective service on the Foreign Party. The Foreign Party shall ensure that the appointment remains in force for the duration of this Agreement and for 12 months after its termination or expiry.”

Sample clause 4, arbitration carve‑out

“The notice and service provisions of this Clause apply to court proceedings only. For disputes referred to arbitration under Clause [X], notices shall be given in accordance with the applicable arbitration rules. Nothing in this Clause restricts either party’s right to apply to any court of competent jurisdiction for interim or conservatory measures.”

Emergency and Interim Relief, Preserve Urgent Remedies Under E‑Filing Rules

The shift to e‑filing does not diminish a party’s ability to seek urgent interim relief, but it does impose new practical requirements. Applications for freezing orders, injunctions or attachment orders must be filed through the electronic portal, and the court expects the supporting evidence, including any proof of service of prior notices, to be uploaded in digital format at the time of filing.

To preserve emergency remedies, parties should ensure that their notice clauses explicitly carve out urgent applications from any advance‑notice requirements. Early indications suggest that courts are scrutinising the digital evidence trail closely when deciding ex parte applications: a claimant who can produce portal receipts, timestamped email correspondence and certified server logs demonstrating the urgency and the respondent’s knowledge of the dispute is significantly better positioned than one relying solely on traditional paper evidence.

Where time is critical, practitioners should also note that Dubai Courts and certain federal courts now offer expedited e‑filing tracks for urgent applications, with same‑day case‑number allocation and immediate referral to the duty judge.

Service of Process in the UAE, Comparison Table by Entity Type

Entity type Primary service route Proof required / practical notes
Individual resident in UAE Personal service by process server or e‑service via court portal (where permitted) Portal receipt or process‑server affidavit; record date, time and delivery method
UAE company (onshore) Service via registered agent/office; or MOJ/court‑approved electronic notification Corporate registry extract + agent acceptance or portal logs; board/POA records if served on a director
Free‑zone entity (DIFC/ADGM) Service under the relevant free‑zone court rules (DIFC Part 9 / ADGM procedural rules); email service with court permission Court‑approved service order; email delivery confirmation; affidavit of service where required by rules
Foreign defendant (outside UAE) Diplomatic/consular channels; bilateral judicial cooperation; or service via contractually appointed in‑country agent Apostille/translations and consular confirmation; or contractual clause proof (email + agent acceptance letter)

Conclusion

The 2026 reforms to service of process in the UAE represent the most significant procedural shift in a generation. Every business with UAE‑governed contracts should audit its notice and service clauses now, adopt the electronic‑service language the courts expect, and ensure that its litigation teams understand the new evidence requirements for proof of service. The sample clauses and checklists in this guide provide a starting point, but bespoke drafting, tailored to the specific transaction, counterparty and dispute‑resolution mechanism, remains essential. To connect with a qualified UAE dispute resolution lawyer, visit our lawyer directory.

Last reviewed: June 19, 2026.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ashraf El Motei at Motei & Associates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. UAE Ministry of Justice, Federal Civil Procedure Law (Federal Law No. 42 of 2022, as amended)
  2. UAE Ministry of Finance, Electronic Invoicing Guidelines (February 2026)
  3. Bird & Bird, Service of Claim Documents Q&A: United Arab Emirates
  4. DLA Piper Intelligence, Dispute Resolution in the Middle East: Service
  5. DGR Legal, International Process Service: Dubai, UAE
  6. U.S. Department of State, Judicial Assistance: United Arab Emirates
  7. Al Tamimi & Company, UAE Dispute Resolution Briefings
  8. Kennedys Law, UAE Civil Procedure Updates

FAQs

Is electronic service of process permitted in the UAE after the 2026 reforms?
Yes. The amended Federal Civil Procedure Law expressly permits electronic service through court‑approved channels, including the court’s own electronic portal, certified SMS and, with court authorisation, email to a designated address.
Designate multiple channels (email, physical address, court portal), define “deemed receipt” with a clear timestamp rule, and include an obligation for each party to update their service details. See the four sample clauses above.
Courts accept portal receipts with timestamps, system‑generated delivery and read confirmations, certified MOJ server logs, and, for personal service, traditional process‑server affidavits.
No. E‑filing is mandatory for most civil and commercial claims in federal and Dubai courts. However, a valid arbitration clause redirects the dispute to arbitral proceedings, where court e‑filing rules apply only to ancillary applications.
Not automatically. Email service requires court authorisation and is typically only permitted where the contract designates a specific email address for service or the defendant has used that address in prior proceedings.
Serve at the company’s registered office address (confirmed via registry extract). If that fails, apply to the court for substituted service, providing evidence of failed attempts including any bounced electronic notifications.
Preserve all system logs, portal receipts and delivery confirmations. If the court’s electronic system recorded successful delivery, that is presumptive proof of service. If there is genuine doubt, the court may order re‑service by an alternative method.
Place the notice and service clause in the boilerplate section and cross‑reference it in the execution block. Ensure each party’s designated service details, physical address, email and agent (if applicable), appear in a schedule or the signature page for easy updating.
how to appeal a district court judgment in Finland

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

Service of Process in the UAE After the 2026 Reforms: Electronic Service, E‑filing and Contract Clauses Businesses Must Use

Send welcome message

Custom Message