UAE Labor Laws Full Guide for Foreign Employers [2026]

In this post, I’m going to explain all the labor laws that a foreign employer must know while hiring in the United Arab Emirates.

In fact, at FMC Group, we follow all these labor laws and get employees hired for other companies, acting as an Employer of Record.

This post covers all the requirements that a foreigner must comply with before hiring, alternative options to direct hiring, employee handling rules, payroll rules, and the risks of hiring in the UAE.

Without further delay, let’s get started.

Picture of Peter J. Heidinger
Peter J. Heidinger

Author

Picture of Leah Maglalang
Leah Maglalang

Co-author

UAE Labor Laws Full Guide for Foreign Employers 2026
UAE Labor Laws Full Guide for Foreign Employers 2026

In this post, I’m going to explain all the labor laws that a foreign employer must know while hiring in the United Arab Emirates.

In fact, at FMC Group, we follow all these labor laws and get employees hired for other companies, acting as an Employer of Record.

This post covers all the requirements that a foreigner must comply with before hiring, alternative options to direct hiring, employee handling rules, payroll rules, and the risks of hiring in the UAE.

Without further delay, let’s get started.

UAE Labor Laws Full Guide for Foreign Employers [2026]

Picture of Peter J. Heidinger
Peter J. Heidinger

Author

Picture of Leah Maglalang
Leah Maglalang

Co-author

Table of Contents

Get in Touch with Us

leah

Leah Maglalang

Business Coordinator UAE

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UAE Labor Law Overview for Foreign Employers

UAE Labor Law Overview for Foreign Employers

What Foreign Companies Must Know Before Hiring

As of May 2026, a modernized, enforcement-heavy framework governs all private-sector employment in the UAE. This framework is built around Federal Decree-Law No. 33 of 2021 and its subsequent amendments (2023–2024).

Foreign employers underestimate the centralization and controlled employment in the UAE, but here are the non-negotiables in 2026:

  • You cannot hire employees informally
    Every worker must be hired through a locally registered entity or a licensed intermediary (e.g., EOR).
  • Employment is tied to immigration sponsorship
    The employer is responsible for work permits, residency visas and ongoing compliance.
  • All contracts must be fixed-term
    Under current UAE private-sector labour law, employment contracts must be fixed-term contracts. Unlimited contracts are no longer issued under the MoHRE system. Fixed-term contracts are renewable, and the previous 3-year maximum duration has been removed.
  • Wages must be processed through WPS
    Salaries are monitored through the Wage Protection System, making off-system payments a compliance violation.
  • Strict Emiratisation policies apply (for certain companies)
    Mainland companies with 50+ employees must meet annual Emirati hiring quotas, with financial penalties for non-compliance.  
  • Enforcement risk is significantly higher post-2024

Penalties can reach AED 1 million per violation and authorities actively audit contracts, payroll, and hiring structures.  

Legal Framework: Federal Decree Law No. 33 of 2021

The foundation of UAE employment law is Federal Decree-Law No. 33 of 2021, which replaced the older 1980 labor law framework.

What this law covers:

  • Employment contracts and work models
  • Wages, benefits, and working hours
  • Leave entitlements and termination rules
  • Anti-discrimination and workplace protections
  • Dispute resolution mechanisms

It applies to all private-sector employers and both UAE nationals and expatriates.

Mainland vs Free Zone Employment Regulations

The difference between Mainland and Free Zone directly affects your hiring process, employee sponsorship, payroll operations, and compliance.

 

Area

Mainland (Onshore UAE)

Free Zone

Regulatory Authority

Ministry of Human Resources & Emiratisation (MOHRE)

Individual Free Zone Authority

Applicable Labor Law

Federal Decree-Law No. 33 of 2021 (fully enforced)

Same law applies in most zones; DIFC & ADGM have separate laws

Market Access

Can hire and operate across the UAE without restriction

Typically limited to Free Zone + international markets

Employee Visa Sponsorship

Direct through MOHRE + immigration

Managed by Free Zone authority (simplified process)

WPS (Payroll Compliance)

Mandatory for all employees

May be optional depending on Free Zone  

Emiratisation Requirements

Mandatory for eligible companies (50+ employees)

Generally not required

Employment Contracts

Standardized MOHRE contracts (fixed-term only)

Similar structure, but issued via Free Zone system

Office Requirement

Physical office required

Flexible (flexi-desk, virtual office options available)  

Hiring Flexibility

More regulated, stricter compliance

More flexible setup and faster onboarding

Ability to Hire at Scale

Easier for large teams (no strict visa caps tied to packages)

Often limited by visa quotas based on license

Compliance Burden

Higher (WPS, audits, Emiratisation, MOHRE oversight)  

Lower, but still subject to Free Zone rules

Best Use Case

Companies targeting UAE market or scaling local teams

Startups, remote teams, international-first companies

 

Market Entry Options for Hiring in the UAE

Market Entry Options for Hiring in the UAE

Setting Up a Local Entity

Foreign companies have three main ways to hire employees in the UAE, and one of them is “Direct Hiring,” where you set up a legal entity and hire employees yourself without a third party. If you go with this option, then it involves:

  • Registering a Mainland LLC or Free Zone company
  • Obtaining a trade license
  • Opening a corporate bank account
  • Registering with labor and immigration authorities
  • Setting up WPS payroll

Key benefits that you get are full control over employment contracts, payroll, and IP, with the ability to operate commercially in the UAE.

But remember that this process can take 1–3 months or longer, requires ongoing compliance, and involves higher fixed costs with compliance risk.

Hiring Through an Employer of Record (EOR)

An Employer of Record (EOR) is the fastest and most compliant way for foreign companies to hire in the UAE without setting up an entity.

How EOR Works:

  • The EOR becomes the legal employer on paper
  • You manage day-to-day work and performance
  • The EOR handles:
    • Employment contracts
    • Visa sponsorship
    • Payroll (via WPS)
    • Benefits and gratuity
    • Labor law compliance

Key advantages of partnering with an EOR lie in fast hiring without a legal entity, full compliance, and suitability for testing the UAE market.

Higher per-employee costs and less direct control over the employment structure are trade-offs when working with an EOR.

Using Free Zones for Employment

Free Zones offer a middle ground between full entity setup and EOR.

Here is How it works:

You set up a Free Zone company (simpler than Mainland)

The Free Zone authority helps with, Licensing, Visa quotas, Basic HR/admin processes.

Key advantages

  • Faster and easier setup than Mainland
  • Lower compliance burden (no Emiratisation in most cases)
  • Flexible office requirements (e.g., flexi-desks)

Limitations

  • Restricted direct access to UAE mainland market
  • Visa quotas tied to license packages
  • Still requires entity setup and admin management

Employment Contracts and Compliance Requirements

Employment Contracts and Compliance Requirements

Mandatory Contract Structure in the UAE

Every employee in the UAE must have a written employment contract. Employers must register it with MOHRE in the Mainland and the respective authority in the Free Zone. It must be in Arabic (English can be attached).

Required clauses (non-negotiable)

 

Clause

Requirement

Job Title & Role

Clearly defined scope of work

Salary Structure

Basic salary + allowances

Contract Duration

Fixed-term (mandatory)

Working Hours

As per UAE law (typically 8 hrs/day)

Leave Entitlements

Annual, sick, maternity, etc.

Probation Period

If applicable (max 6 months)

Notice Period

30–90 days (post-probation)

Termination Terms

Grounds + compensation rules

 

Fixed-Term Contracts and Renewal Rules

As of 2026, the UAE has fully eliminated unlimited (open-ended) contracts. Key rules foreign employers must understand:

  • Only fixed-term contracts are allowed
  • Contracts can be:
    • Short-term (project-based)
    • Long-term (multi-year)
  • No statutory maximum duration for fixed-term employment contracts under current UAE Labour Law (post-2022 amendment)
    • The previous 3-year contract cap has been removed 
    •  Contract duration is now mutually agreed between employer and employee and specified in the fixed-term contract 
  • Unlimited renewals allowed
    • Contracts can be renewed repeatedly by mutual agreement  
  • Automatic renewal risk
    • If employee continues working after expiry → contract is considered renewed under same terms  

If termination is without valid reason, the employer has to compensate up to 3 months’ salary. 

Probation Period and Termination During Probation

The UAE government strictly regulates the probation period. 

  • Maximum probation period: 6 months  
  • Must be explicitly stated in the contract
  • Cannot be extended beyond 6 months and re-applied to the same employee

Termination Rules During Probation

 

Scenario

Notice Requirement

Employer terminates employee

Minimum 14 days’ written notice

Employee resigns (leaving UAE)

Minimum 14 days’ notice

Employee switches to another UAE employer

30 days’ notice + compensation obligations

Remember that there is no payable gratuity during the probation period, and termination cannot be discriminatory or retaliatory.

 

Hiring Process and Work Permits

Hiring Process and Work Permits

Work Permit and Visa Sponsorship Process

In the UAE, employees cannot legally work until both labor approval (work permit) and the residency visa are completed.

Standard hiring workflow

  • Job Offer & Contract Signing

Employer issues a formal offer aligned with MOHRE standards

  1. Work Permit Application (MOHRE Approval)

Employer applies for a work permit through MOHRE or Free Zone authority 

  • Entry Permit Issuance

Allows the employee to enter or remain in the UAE legally

  • Medical Test & Emirates ID Registration

Mandatory health screening + biometric registration

  • Residence Visa Stamping

Employee becomes a legal resident under employer sponsorship

  • Labor Contract Registration & Work Permit Activation

Final step, employee can legally start working

Required Documentation for Foreign Employees

The UAE maintains a strict documentation standard. If submissions are incomplete or inconsistent, this can be a major cause of delays or rejections.

Document

Requirement

Passport Copy

Minimum 6 months validity

Passport-size Photo

UAE-compliant format

Signed Job Offer / Contract

Issued via MOHRE system

Educational Certificates

Required for skilled roles (attested if applicable)

Medical Fitness Certificate

Completed in UAE

Entry Permit / Visa Application Forms

Submitted by employer

Employers must have a valid trade license, an establishment card, an approved visa quota, and a clean compliance record.

Emiratisation Requirements (If Applicable)

 

Emiratisation is a mandatory workforce nationalization policy supervised by MOHRE. It applies exclusively to mainland private sector companies most free zone companies are exempt.

Who It Applies To

Companies with 50+ employees must achieve a 10% Emirati representation in skilled roles (occupational levels 1–5) by December 2026. This is built on a cumulative schedule of 2% annual growth (broken into two 1% half-year increments), starting from 2023. The 2026 milestone targets are 8% by mid-2026 and 10% by year-end.

Companies with 20–49 employees operating in 14 designated economic sectors — including banking, finance, insurance, real estate, IT, healthcare, manufacturing, hospitality, and telecommunications — must employ a minimum of 2 Emirati nationals by end of 2026.

Payroll, Compensation, and Benefits

Payroll Compensation and Benefits

Salary Structures and Allowances in the UAE

For foreign employers, understanding salary composition is critical. It is contract-driven but legally structured.

Standard salary structure

Component

Description

Basic Salary

Fixed wage stated in contract (core legal reference)

Allowances

Housing, transport, food, or other benefits

Total (Gross) Salary

Basic salary + allowances

There is no universal minimum wage for expatriates, but employers must set the agreed salary in the contract and pay it in full. For UAE nationals, the minimum salary in the private sector is AED 6,000 per month, effective 1 January 2026. Note that gratuity is calculated only on the basic salary, not total compensation, and allowances are contractual (not mandatory).

Wage Protection System (WPS) Compliance

The Wage Protection System (WPS) is the UAE’s core payroll enforcement mechanism. 

What WPS requires

  • Salaries must be:
    • Paid on time
    • Paid in full
    • Processed through approved banks/exchange houses
  • Applies to all MOHRE-registered private sector employers  

How it works

  1. Employer prepares a Salary Information File (SIF)
  2. File is submitted through a bank or payroll provider
  3. Data is validated and monitored by MOHRE in real time  

Key compliance rules

Requirement

Rule

Payment frequency

At least once per month  

Payment deadline

1st of every Gregorian month with no grace period (effective on 1 June 2026)

Currency & method

Bank transfer or approved payroll channel

Data reporting

Mandatory SIF submission

The AED 50,000 figure is the maximum cap on fines, and not a flat penalty. WPS enforcement is tiered: MOHRE flags the company at Day 15, suspends work permit services at Day 17, refers companies with 50+ employees to Public Prosecution at Day 30, and imposes fines of AED 5,000 per employee (up to AED 50,000) from Day 60. Repeated non-compliance results in permanent permit suspension until arrears are cleared.

Mandatory and Optional Employee Benefits

The UAE law partially mandates the employee benefits and employers offer them partially by market competitiveness. 

Mandatory benefits (legal requirements)

Benefit

Requirement

End-of-Service Gratuity (EOSB)

21–30 days’ basic salary per year of service  

Annual Leave

Minimum 30 days/year after 1 year  

Sick Leave

Up to 90 days (paid + unpaid structure)  

Health Insurance

Mandatory in Dubai & Abu Dhabi (employer-provided)  

WPS Salary Payment

Mandatory payroll compliance system

Optional / market-driven benefits

 

Benefit

Common Practice

Housing Allowance

Standard for expat employees

Transport Allowance

Widely offered

Bonuses / Incentives

Performance-based

Private Health Upgrades

Beyond minimum coverage

Education Allowance

Optional benefit

 

Working Hours, Leave, and Employee Entitlements

Working Hours Leave and Employee Entitlements

Standard Working Hours and Overtime Rules

Employers must track time, overtime, and payroll records for compliance audits in the UAE. 

Standard working hours

  • 8 hours per day / 48 hours per week is the legal maximum for most employees  
  • Certain roles (e.g., senior executives, managerial staff) may be exempt from overtime rules

Overtime rules

Scenario

Compensation

Overtime (regular hours)

+25% of hourly wage

Night overtime (10 PM – 4 AM)

+50% of hourly wage

Work on rest day

Substitute day off or overtime pay

Ramadan adjustment (mandatory)

  • Working hours are reduced by 2 hours per day for all employees
  • Overtime beyond reduced hours must still be compensated (25%–50%)

Leave Policies (Annual, Sick, Maternity, Public Holidays)

Leave entitlements in the UAE are statutory rights. 

Annual leave

Service Period

Entitlement

6–12 months

2 days per month

1+ year

30 calendar days per year

Sick leave

Total entitlement: 90 days per year

  • First 15 days → Full pay
  • Next 30 days → Half pay
  • Remaining 45 days → Unpaid

Maternity & parental leave 

Maternity leave: 60 days total (45 full pay + 15 half pay)

Additional unpaid leave may apply in medical cases

Parental leave: 5 days paid leave (for both parents, within 6 months of birth)

Public holidays

  • Employees are entitled to paid public holidays as declared by the UAE government  
  • If required to work, employer must provide compensatory leave or additional pay

End-of-Service Benefits (Gratuity)

End-of-service gratuity (EOSB) is a mandatory statutory payment. It is one of the largest financial liabilities for employers in the UAE. Employees must complete at least 1 year of continuous service to get this. 

Gratuity calculation

Service Period

Entitlement

First 5 years

21 days’ basic salary per year

After 5 years

30 days’ basic salary per year

 

Termination Rules and Offboarding Employees

Termination Rules and Offboarding Employees

Lawful Grounds for Termination

Under UAE labor law, termination must be based on valid and legally recognized grounds. At-will termination does not apply. 

Valid (lawful) termination scenarios

Scenario

Explanation

Contract expiry

Fixed-term contract ends and is not renewed

Mutual agreement

Both parties agree in writing

Performance or business reasons

Must be justified and documented

Redundancy / restructuring

Allowed with proper notice

Termination must not be arbitrary (unjustified dismissal) and retaliatory (e.g employee filed complaint).

Immediate termination (without notice – Article 44):

Allowed only in serious misconduct cases, such as:

  • Fraud or forged documents
  • Gross negligence causing loss
  • Unauthorized absence (e.g., 20+ days)
  • Workplace violence or misconduct

Notice Period and Severance Obligations

The UAE enforces strict notice period rules. Here are the notice period requirements:

Rule

Requirement

Minimum notice

30 days

Maximum notice

90 days

Contract governs exact duration

Must be stated in MOHRE contract

During the notice period, employees must continue working and employers have to pay full salary with benefits.

Employee Rights and Employer Obligations

Employee Rights and Employer Obligations

Anti-Discrimination and Equal Opportunity Laws

UAE labor law imposes strict anti-discrimination and equal opportunity standards. These come under Federal Decree-Law No. 33 of 2021 and related legislation. 

What is prohibited:

  • Discrimination based on:
    • Gender
    • Race or nationality
    • Religion or belief
    • Disability or social origin  
  • Unequal pay for the same role (gender pay equality is mandatory)  
  • Harassment, bullying, or any form of verbal/physical abuse in the workplace  

Health, Safety, and Workplace Regulations

Employers in the UAE have a legal duty of care. It means they have to ensure a safe and compliant working environment. Core requirements:

  • Provide a safe workplace that meets occupational health standards
  • Implement risk prevention measures (equipment, training, procedures)
  • Maintain incident reporting and emergency protocols

What safety now includes 

Area

Scope

Physical safety

Workplace hazards, equipment, site safety

Health protection

Medical fitness, insurance compliance

Mental wellbeing

Increasing focus in HR policies

Remote work safety

Ergonomics + digital work environment

Data Protection and Confidentiality

Data protection is a critical compliance area for employers in the UAE, especially with the enforcement of the Personal Data Protection Law (PDPL).

Federal Decree-Law No. 45 of 2021 (PDPL) governs collection, processing and storage of personal data. Separate regimes apply in DIFC and ADGM. 

Employer obligations

Area

Requirement

Lawful data processing

Must have clear legal basis (e.g., employment necessity)

Employee consent

Required for certain data uses

Data security

Protect against breaches and unauthorized access

Cross-border transfers

Must comply with UAE data transfer rules

Data retention

Store only as long as necessary

Risks and Compliance Challenges for Foreign Employers

Risks and Compliance Challenges for Foreign Employers

Misclassification of Employees vs Contractors

Misclassification is among the highest-risk compliance issues for foreign employers in the United Arab Emirates. 

If a worker operates under control, supervision, and exclusivity, the government considers it an employee, not an independent contractor. 

Common misclassification triggers

Indicator

Risk

Fixed working hours set by company

Indicates employment relationship

Exclusive service to one company

Not a true contractor

Company-provided tools/equipment

Signals employer control

Long-term engagement (12+ months)

Looks like disguised employment

Consequences of misclassification:

  • Retroactive liability for:
    • Salaries
    • Benefits (leave, gratuity)
  • Fines and potential work permit bans
  • Legal disputes initiated by employees

Non-Compliance with WPS and Labor Laws

The Wage Protection System (WPS) is the UAE’s primary enforcement tool. It is the most common failure point for foreign employers as well. 

Key compliance risks

Risk Area

What Goes Wrong

Late salary payments

No grace period” and Day 5 sanction trigger (effective on 1st June 2026)

Incorrect salary reporting

Mismatch between contract and WPS file

Off-system payments

Paying outside WPS is non-compliant

Partial payments

Underpaying or delaying allowances

 

Penalties, Fines, and Legal Exposure

UAE labor law imposes significant financial and operational penalties. 

Violation

Potential Consequence

WPS non-compliance

Fines up to AED 50,000

Labor law violations (general)

Fines ranging from AED 5,000 to AED 1,000,000

Fake Emiratisation

Heavy fines + backdated penalties

Misclassification / illegal hiring

Fines + business restrictions

Severe or repeated violations can result in work permit suspension, company blacklisting or restrictions on future hiring. Employees can also fine claims through MOHRE.

Dispute Resolution and Legal Support

Dispute Resolution and Legal Support

Handling Employee Complaints

In the UAE, employee disputes start informally and if the employer does not handle it properly, it escalates quickly into formal legal processes.

Common complaint triggers

Area

Example Issues

Unpaid wages

Salary delays, WPS discrepancies

Termination disputes

Arbitrary dismissal, unpaid notice

Gratuity issues

Incorrect calculation or delayed payment

Workplace violations

Discrimination, contract breaches

Recommended employer approach

  • Establish a formal internal grievance process
  • Document:
    • Employment contracts
    • Payroll records (WPS)
    • Communication with employees
  • Attempt internal resolution before escalation

Role of MOHRE in Disputes

The Ministry of Human Resources and Emiratisation (MOHRE) is the primary authority handling private-sector labor disputes in the Mainland UAE.  MOHRE’s receive employee complaints via online portals, call centers and service centers. It conducts mediations between employers and employees. Under the 2024 amendment, MOHRE can now issue binding executive decisions for claims not exceeding AED 50,000 — enforceable without going to court, with a 15-working-day appeal window to the Court of First Instance.”

Mediation process

  1. Employee files complaint
  2. MOHRE reviews and schedules mediation
  3. Both parties present evidence
  4. Authority attempts amicable settlement

Timeline: Typically a few days to a few weeks

If unresolved → escalates to labor court

Labor Court Process for Employers

If mediation fails, the case is referred to the UAE labor courts, where it becomes a formal legal proceeding.

Court process (simplified)

  1. Case referral from MOHRE
  2. Filing before competent labor court
  3. Submission of:
    • Contracts
    • Payroll/WPS records
    • Evidence of compliance
  4. Hearings and judgment

Hire Employees Seamlessly with FMC Group

Hire Employees Seamlessly with FMC Group

We have been providing employer of record services for over 15 years. Now we offer these services in 50 countries, including the UAE. FMC Group handles hiring, payroll, employee benefits, and everything an employer needs to hire employees. Book a 30-minute consultation call to get a detailed plan for your next hire in the UAE.

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