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settle or litigate in the UAE

Settle or Litigate in the UAE? When to Accept a Settlement After Law No.9 (2025)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 day ago

The decision to settle or litigate in the UAE confronts every business owner, in-house counsel and creditor who has a live commercial dispute and a settlement offer on the table. Law No.9 of 2025 materially changed the enforceability calculus by expanding the circumstances under which a settlement document can be endorsed with an executive writ, making a well-drafted settlement nearly as powerful as a court judgment in the hands of a creditor. This article provides a dimension-by-dimension comparison, concrete cost and timing data, and a clear decision framework so you can choose the path that protects your money, your time and your commercial relationships.

The Choice in Plain Terms, and Who Faces It

At its simplest, you have two routes when a UAE commercial dispute reaches a tipping point. You can accept a settlement, a negotiated agreement that ends the dispute on agreed terms, and take immediate steps to make it enforceable. Or you can pursue litigation or arbitration, a formal adjudication that may yield higher damages, legal precedent and court-backed enforcement tools, but at significantly greater cost and delay.

Before 2025, many parties hesitated to settle because a private settlement agreement was merely a contract: if the other side breached, you had to start fresh proceedings to enforce it. Law No.9 (2025) and related Dubai procedural updates changed that dynamic. Settlement documents that meet prescribed requirements can now be endorsed with an executive writ or recorded as enforceable court minutes, giving the creditor direct access to execution without re-litigating the underlying dispute.

This guide is for anyone facing that choice right now: SME owners weighing a supplier’s offer, in-house counsel evaluating a counterparty’s proposed release, creditors holding a promissory note alongside a settlement draft, or litigants mid-trial considering whether to stop and agree terms. The factors that should drive your decision are enforceability, cost, timing, liability exposure, cross-border enforcement needs and confidentiality, each analysed below with specific reference to the 2025–2026 legal framework.

One threshold point before diving in: the right answer is rarely “always settle” or “always litigate.” The right answer depends on identifiable, concrete conditions, and this article names them.

Option A: Settlement, What It Is, When It Applies, Who It Suits

A settlement in the UAE context is any agreement by which the parties to a dispute resolve their claims without, or in place of, a court or tribunal decision. Settlements take several legally distinct forms, and the form you choose directly determines how enforceable the agreement is.

  • Private contractual settlement. A written agreement signed by both parties (and often notarised) that sets out payment terms, a release of claims and confidentiality provisions. This is the simplest form, but it is enforceable only as a contract, if the other side breaches, you must bring separate proceedings to compel performance.
  • Settlement recorded in court minutes. If litigation is already underway, the parties can ask the presiding judge to record their settlement in the court minutes. Once recorded, the settlement has the force of a court judgment and can be executed through the court’s enforcement department. This is the gold standard for onshore enforceability in the UAE.
  • Settlement endorsed with an executive writ. Under the 2025 reforms, including Law No.9 (2025) and Dubai’s enhanced pre-litigation dispute resolution framework, qualifying settlement documents can be endorsed with an executive writ without the need for full litigation. The practical effect is that a creditor can proceed directly to execution (bank garnishment, asset seizure) if the debtor defaults, without re-filing a claim.
  • Consent order or settlement order. In the DIFC Courts and ADGM Courts, settlements can be entered as consent orders, which carry full enforceability within those jurisdictions and can be ratified for enforcement onshore.

Who settlement suits: parties who need speed and certainty of recovery; creditors whose counterparty is willing to pay but needs structured terms; businesses that want to preserve a commercial relationship; and any party that values confidentiality over public vindication. Settlement is also the rational choice when the cost of full litigation would consume a disproportionate share of the claim value.

Option B: Litigation or Arbitration, What It Is, When It Applies, Who It Suits

Litigation means bringing or defending a claim before the UAE courts, whether onshore (Dubai Courts, Abu Dhabi Judicial Department, federal courts) or in the common-law free-zone courts (DIFC Courts, ADGM Courts). Arbitration means referring the dispute to a private tribunal under institutional rules (DIAC, ICC, ADCCAC, LCIA) or ad hoc rules, typically pursuant to an arbitration clause in the underlying contract.

Onshore litigation proceeds through a first-instance hearing, with rights of appeal to the Court of Appeal and, on points of law, to the Court of Cassation. Proceedings are conducted in Arabic; foreign-language documents require certified translation. Court filing fees are calculated as a percentage of the claim value. The process is thorough but can take twelve months to several years through final appeal.

DIFC and ADGM litigation follows common-law procedural rules, conducts hearings in English and applies its own substantive law (where contractually chosen). These courts are particularly favoured by international parties and offer well-developed enforcement reciprocity arrangements.

Arbitration under DIAC or ICC rules typically resolves within nine to twenty-four months, depending on complexity. Arbitral awards issued in the UAE benefit from the 1958 New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, giving them wide cross-border enforceability, a significant advantage for parties that need to enforce outside the UAE.

Who litigation or arbitration suits: claimants with strong evidence who seek the highest possible damages award; parties that need injunctive or interim relief (freezing orders, specific performance); businesses that want to establish legal precedent; and creditors whose counterparty refuses to negotiate in good faith. Litigation can also be deployed strategically, filing a claim to signal seriousness and force the counterparty to settle on better terms.

Settle vs Litigate in the UAE, Side-by-Side Comparison

The following table compares the two options across the dimensions that matter most to a party with a live dispute. Use it as a quick-reference decision aid before reading the detailed analysis below.

Dimension Settlement (Accept) Litigation / Arbitration (Pursue)
Eligibility Any claim where both parties can agree terms Any valid claim; requires jurisdiction and forum selection
Typical direct cost (legal fees) Lower, negotiation and drafting only; commonly 20–60 % of litigation cost Higher, pleadings, discovery, hearings, appeals, full counsel fees
Timing to resolution Days to weeks (if documented and endorsed) Months to years (trial + appeals); arbitration 9–24 months
Enforceability (UAE onshore) High if recorded as court minutes or endorsed with executive writ under Law No.9 (2025) Judgment or arbitral award enforceable via execution department
Enforceability (Dubai specific) Dubai may endorse settlements with executive writs for immediate enforcement (2025 changes) Dubai court judgments and DIFC/ADGM awards enforceable via normal execution
Cross-border enforceability Requires court order, executive writ or exequatur; arbitral-settlement hybrids strongest Arbitral awards enforceable under NYC Convention; foreign judgments require recognition
Confidentiality Usually private (contractual) Court hearings public; arbitration confidential if agreed
Risk of non-payment Exists if settlement not converted to enforceable writ Court enforcement tools (garnishment, travel ban) available
Injunctive relief Limited; parties can include injunctive clauses by agreement Courts and arbitrators can issue injunctions and interim measures
Tax / accounting effect Possible VAT or corporate-tax implications, verify with tax adviser Same; damages classification matters for tax treatment
Reversibility Generally final once release is signed; challengeable only for fraud or duress Judgments can be appealed; arbitral awards subject to limited annulment grounds

Dimension-by-Dimension Analysis: Settle or Litigate in the UAE

Enforceability of Settlement Agreements in the UAE

Enforceability is the dimension that changed most with the 2025 reforms. A settlement is only as good as your ability to compel payment if the other side defaults. Under Law No.9 (2025) and Dubai’s enhanced pre-litigation dispute resolution framework, qualifying settlement documents can now be endorsed with an executive writ, effectively converting a private agreement into an instrument with the enforcement power of a court judgment.

  • Private contract only: Enforceable as a contract. If breached, you must file a new claim to obtain a judgment before you can execute.
  • Court-recorded minutes: Treated as a judgment. You can proceed directly to the execution department for garnishment, travel bans or asset seizure.
  • Executive writ endorsement (Law No.9 (2025) / Dubai practice): If the settlement document meets formal requirements (clear obligations, specified amounts, payment schedule, enforcement clause), it can be presented for endorsement. Once endorsed, the creditor can apply for execution without re-litigating.
  • Litigation judgment or arbitral award: Automatically enforceable through the court execution department (for judgments) or upon ratification (for arbitral awards).

The critical takeaway: a settlement that is not recorded as court minutes or endorsed with an executive writ remains a private contract with limited direct enforcement power. Always secure the highest available level of enforceability before signing a release.

Cost, Settlement vs Litigation

The settlement vs litigation cost gap in the UAE is substantial. The table below sets out typical cost ranges for a small-to-medium commercial dispute. Actual fees vary by counsel, claim complexity and forum.

Cost Item Settlement (Typical Range) Litigation / Arbitration (Typical Range)
Lawyer negotiation and drafting fee AED 5,000 – AED 50,000 AED 50,000 – AED 500,000+
Court filing fees (onshore UAE) Minimal (document filing only) AED 500 – AED 10,000+ (percentage of claim value)
Arbitration institutional fees (DIAC / ICC) N/A if settling without arbitration AED 20,000 – AED 200,000+ (depends on amount and institution)
Enforcement / execution costs AED 1,000 – AED 20,000 (attestation, translation, writ) AED 5,000 – AED 50,000+ (garnishment, bank orders, travel)
VAT / tax considerations Possible VAT on certain monetary settlements, seek tax counsel Same, damages classification matters; verify with tax adviser

For claims below AED 500,000, full litigation costs can consume 30–60 % of the recovery. Settlement with proper enforcement drafting is often the more efficient path when the counterparty is solvent and willing to pay.

Timing, Realistic Timelines and Acceleration Levers

Speed is frequently the decisive factor for businesses with cashflow pressure.

  • Settlement: Negotiation and drafting can be completed in days to four weeks for a straightforward commercial dispute. If terms are recorded as court minutes during ongoing litigation, enforcement can follow within days. Under Dubai’s 2025 executive-writ procedure, endorsement and execution can proceed in as little as one to two weeks after filing, depending on court workload.
  • Onshore litigation: First-instance judgment typically takes six to eighteen months. Appeals add six to twelve months per level. Total time from filing to final, non-appealable judgment can exceed two years.
  • Arbitration: Institutional arbitration under DIAC or ICC rules generally resolves within nine to twenty-four months, including award issuance. Ratification of the award for execution in UAE courts adds a further one to three months.

To accelerate settlement enforcement: request court minutes at the earliest opportunity if litigation is already pending, and ensure the settlement document is drafted in a form that qualifies for executive-writ endorsement under the 2025 framework.

Liability and Release Language, What You Must Secure

A settlement is only final if the release language is airtight. The following clauses are essential in any UAE settlement agreement:

  • Clear payment schedule with specified amounts, currencies and due dates.
  • Liquidated damages for breach, a pre-agreed penalty if the debtor defaults on any instalment.
  • Express waiver and release, each party releases the other from all claims arising out of the dispute.
  • Confidentiality clause, prohibiting disclosure of terms except as required by law or enforcement.
  • Jurisdiction and enforcement clause, specifying the court or forum with jurisdiction to enforce, and expressly consenting to execution or executive-writ endorsement.
  • Interest on late payment, a contractual rate of interest that applies from the date of any missed payment.
  • Express consent to execution, a statement that the parties agree the settlement may be presented for endorsement as an executive writ or recorded in court minutes.

Omitting any of these elements can leave you with an unenforceable document or one that requires fresh litigation to interpret. Engage counsel to draft or review the settlement before you sign any release.

Cross-Border Enforcement, Awards, Judgments and Settlements

If you need to enforce outside the UAE, the form of your resolution document matters enormously.

  • Arbitral awards are the most portable. The UAE is a signatory to the 1958 New York Convention, and arbitral awards issued in the UAE are recognisable and enforceable in over 170 contracting states.
  • Court judgments can be enforced abroad, but recognition depends on bilateral treaties or reciprocity arrangements. UAE judgments are recognised in several GCC states and in jurisdictions with which the UAE has concluded enforcement treaties.
  • Settlement agreements that are merely private contracts are generally not enforceable abroad as judgments. To secure cross-border enforceability, convert the settlement into a court judgment (via court minutes) or an arbitral award (via a consent award). Alternatively, obtain an executive writ and seek exequatur in the target jurisdiction.

For international parties, the safest approach is to settle within an arbitration framework and request a consent award, which travels under the New York Convention.

Practical Steps to Make a Settlement Enforceable in Dubai and Other Emirates

Use this checklist to convert a negotiated settlement into an enforceable instrument:

  1. Negotiate clear, unambiguous terms, specify amounts, dates, obligations and consequences of breach.
  2. Draft the settlement agreement with all essential clauses (see liability and release section above). Have counsel review in both English and Arabic where the settlement will be filed with an Arabic-language court.
  3. Request court minutes or judicial attestation if litigation is already pending. The presiding judge records the agreed terms in the case minutes, giving them the force of a judgment.
  4. Apply for executive-writ endorsement under Dubai’s 2025 pre-litigation framework (or equivalent emirate-level procedure) if no litigation is pending. Submit the qualifying settlement document to the competent authority for endorsement.
  5. Register the order or writ with the execution department, once endorsed, file the writ with the court execution judge to initiate enforcement measures (garnishment, travel ban, asset seizure).
  6. Preserve evidence, retain copies of all signed documents, correspondence and payment records. If the counterparty breaches, you will need these to apply for swift enforcement.

Note: procedures differ between emirates and between onshore courts and the DIFC/ADGM free-zone courts. In the DIFC, settlements can be entered as consent orders under the DIFC Court Rules. In ADGM, the ADGM Courts can issue consent orders with similar effect. Always confirm the procedure applicable to your specific forum.

What Changed in 2025: Law No.9 (2025) and the Settlement Enforceability Reforms

Law No.9 (2025) is the headline reform that shifted the settlement vs litigation analysis in the UAE. The law expanded the categories of documents that can be treated as executive instruments, instruments that entitle the holder to proceed directly to execution without first obtaining a court judgment. Before this reform, only court judgments, certain notarised instruments and a narrow class of commercial papers (such as cheques and promissory notes) qualified. After the reform, settlement agreements that meet prescribed formal requirements can be endorsed with an executive writ, provided they contain clear, unconditional obligations.

Dubai’s enhanced pre-litigation dispute resolution framework, introduced through procedural updates in mid-2025, built on this reform. As reported in practitioner commentary, Dubai now permits parties to present settlement documents for endorsement before the competent judicial authority, which can issue an executive writ if the document satisfies the formal requirements. The likely practical effect is that creditors with well-drafted settlements can bypass first-instance litigation entirely and proceed to enforcement within weeks rather than months.

Important limitations remain. Not every settlement automatically qualifies for executive-writ endorsement. The document must contain clear, quantified obligations, vague undertakings or conditional promises will not qualify. The endorsement process is discretionary: the judicial authority reviews the document and can refuse endorsement if formal requirements are not met. Industry observers expect that, as the new procedure matures, judicial practice will develop clearer standards for what qualifies, but in the current transitional period, careful drafting by experienced counsel is essential.

Additionally, the UAE Government’s official guidance on alternative methods to settle commercial disputes now reflects expanded ADR pathways, including mediation and conciliation centres that can facilitate settlements capable of being recorded and enforced under the new framework.

Decision Framework: When to Accept Settlement vs When to Litigate in the UAE

Use the table below to match your priority to the recommended path. Then run through the six-step decision checklist to confirm your choice.

If Your Priority Is… Choose…
Speed and immediate cash recovery Settlement, with payment terms and court endorsement or executive writ
Highest possible recovery and legal vindication Litigation or arbitration, when evidence is strong and you can absorb cost and delay
Confidentiality Settlement (contractual) or arbitration (if confidentiality agreed)
International enforcement Arbitration award or settlement converted to court judgment or consent award
Avoiding litigation costs while getting certainty Settlement, with express enforcement clause and judicial endorsement
Injunctive relief or urgent interim measures Litigation, seek interim relief from the court or tribunal immediately

Choose settlement when:

  • The counterparty is solvent and willing to pay on structured terms.
  • Your claim is below AED 500,000 and litigation costs would consume a disproportionate share of recovery.
  • You need cash within weeks, not months.
  • You want to preserve a commercial relationship with the counterparty.
  • Confidentiality is critical to your business.
  • You can secure court minutes or an executive writ to guarantee enforceability.

Choose litigation or arbitration when:

  • The counterparty refuses to negotiate or has a history of non-compliance.
  • You need injunctive or interim relief (asset freezes, specific performance).
  • Your evidence is strong and the potential damages significantly exceed any settlement offer.
  • You need to enforce internationally and an arbitral award under the New York Convention is the most reliable route.
  • Establishing legal precedent matters for your ongoing business operations.
  • The counterparty is a complex group or state-owned entity requiring formal court process.

Six-Step Decision Checklist

  1. Assess claim strength. How strong is your evidence? If it is overwhelming, litigation may yield a substantially better outcome.
  2. Evaluate counterparty solvency. A judgment against an insolvent party is worthless. If solvency is uncertain, take the settlement now.
  3. Estimate net recovery after costs. Subtract projected legal fees, court fees and enforcement costs from the expected recovery under each path.
  4. Determine timeline tolerance. Can your business absorb twelve to twenty-four months of litigation? If not, settle.
  5. Plan enforcement. Where are the counterparty’s assets? If offshore, plan for cross-border enforcement and choose the instrument (arbitral award, court judgment, executive writ) that travels best.
  6. Engage counsel if any red flags appear. Complex jurisdictional issues, cross-border enforcement needs, state-owned counterparties or high-value claims all warrant professional advice before committing to either path.

When to Hire a Dispute-Resolution Lawyer for This Decision

Many straightforward commercial settlements can be negotiated between business people directly. But certain conditions make professional legal advice essential, not optional. You should engage a dispute-resolution lawyer when any of the following apply:

  • You need to record the settlement as court minutes or obtain an executive writ. The procedural requirements are technical and vary by emirate and forum. Errors can render the document unenforceable.
  • The dispute involves cross-border enforcement. If the counterparty’s assets are outside the UAE, you need counsel who can advise on New York Convention routes, exequatur proceedings and bilateral treaty coverage.
  • The counterparty has a history of non-payment or breach. Counsel can build enforcement protections (liquidated damages, security deposits, guarantee structures) into the settlement that a non-lawyer is unlikely to consider.
  • The claim is high-value or involves complex corporate structures. Settlements involving group companies, state-owned entities or multiple jurisdictions require careful drafting of release, indemnity and enforcement provisions.
  • You need injunctive or interim relief alongside settlement. If there is a risk of asset dissipation, counsel can apply for a freezing order while settlement negotiations proceed.

What to Ask a Dispute-Resolution Lawyer at First Consultation

  • Can my settlement document qualify for executive-writ endorsement under Law No.9 (2025)?
  • What is the realistic timeline and cost for litigation if settlement fails?
  • Where are the counterparty’s assets, and what is the best enforcement route?
  • What release language do I need to prevent future claims on the same facts?
  • Should we record the settlement in court minutes, seek an executive writ, or pursue a consent arbitral award?
  • What are the tax implications of the proposed settlement amount?

To find a UAE dispute-resolution lawyer with experience in settlement enforcement and the Law No.9 (2025) framework, use the Global Law Experts directory.

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 Government, Alternative Methods to Settle Commercial Disputes
  2. Alsuwaidi & Company, Dubai Enhances Pre-Litigation Dispute Resolution Framework
  3. Afridi & Angell, Litigation and Enforcement in the United Arab Emirates (Overview)
  4. DLA Piper Intelligence, Dispute Resolution Handbook (Settlement Chapter)
  5. Dewey & LeBoeuf, How Litigation Can Be Used to Force a Settlement in the UAE
  6. GCCBDI, Commentary on Law No.9 (2025)

FAQs

Should I accept a settlement or litigate my commercial dispute in the UAE?
Accept settlement when you need speed, cost savings and confidentiality, provided you can secure court minutes or an executive writ for enforcement. Litigate when evidence is strong, damages are high, or injunctive relief is needed. Consult a dispute-resolution lawyer for claims involving complex facts or cross-border enforcement.
Yes. Settlement agreements can be recorded in court minutes during pending litigation, giving them the force of a judgment. Under Law No.9 (2025) and Dubai’s 2025 procedural updates, qualifying settlement documents can also be endorsed with an executive writ for direct enforcement without re-litigation.
Settlement is preferable when the counterparty is solvent and willing to pay, the claim value does not justify full litigation costs, you need recovery within weeks, or confidentiality is important. It is especially attractive when the settlement can be converted into an enforceable instrument.
Hire counsel when you need to record the settlement as court minutes or obtain an executive writ, the dispute involves cross-border enforcement, the counterparty has a non-payment history, the claim is high-value, or complex corporate structures are involved.
Yes. Under Dubai’s enhanced pre-litigation dispute resolution framework (2025), settlement documents that contain clear, quantified obligations can be presented for endorsement with an executive writ. The endorsement is discretionary, the judicial authority reviews formal requirements, so precise drafting by counsel is essential.
If the settlement was recorded as court minutes or endorsed with an executive writ, you can apply directly to the execution department for enforcement measures (bank garnishment, travel ban, asset seizure). If the settlement is a private contract only, you must file fresh proceedings to obtain a judgment before enforcing, which is why securing an enforceable instrument at the time of settlement is critical.
Generally, yes. Arbitral awards issued in the UAE are enforceable in over 170 countries under the 1958 New York Convention. Court judgments depend on bilateral treaties or reciprocity, which limits their reach. For international disputes, arbitration, or a settlement recorded as a consent arbitral award, offers the broadest enforcement coverage.
Normally, no. A properly drafted settlement includes an express waiver and release of all claims arising from the dispute. Once signed, you are barred from bringing new proceedings on the same facts unless the settlement can be set aside for fraud, duress or material misrepresentation. Have counsel review the release language before signing.
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Settle or Litigate in the UAE? When to Accept a Settlement After Law No.9 (2025)

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