Our Expert in United Arab Emirates
No results available
Understanding how to terminate a commercial agency in the UAE is one of the most consequential compliance exercises a foreign principal or in-house legal team will face when restructuring distribution channels in the Emirates. Federal Law No. (3) of 2022 on Regulating Commercial Agencies replaced the decades-old 1981 regime, introducing clearer notice windows, a refined “material reason” standard for early termination, and a mandatory pre-court referral to the Commercial Agencies Committee housed within the Ministry of Economy. This guide sets out the step-by-step process, from verifying registration status through to Committee filing, compensation exposure and defensive drafting, so that counsel and commercial teams can navigate the 2025–2026 procedural landscape with confidence.
Federal Law No. (3) of 2022 governs the relationship between principals and their registered commercial agents across the UAE. The statute prescribes minimum notice periods, limits the grounds on which an agency can be terminated mid-term, and grants agents a right to claim compensation where termination or non-renewal occurs without a material reason.
Before any notice is served, principals must determine whether their agency is registered with the Ministry of Economy. Registration status dictates the entire procedural pathway: registered agencies trigger the jurisdiction of the Commercial Agencies Committee, whereas unregistered arrangements are treated as ordinary commercial contracts subject to the UAE Civil Code and the parties’ contractual terms.
The core decision flow is straightforward:
Principals contemplating termination of a commercial agency in the UAE should complete each of the following steps before any formal communication is dispatched to the agent:
Federal Law No. (3) of 2022 on Regulating Commercial Agencies is the primary statute governing the termination of commercial agencies in the UAE. It replaced Federal Law No. (18) of 1981 and its various amendments, modernising key aspects of the regime while retaining the protective architecture for registered agents. The Ministry of Economy confirmed the law’s policy intent at a dedicated panel session, emphasising the statute’s role in balancing principal flexibility with agent investment protection.
The table below summarises the key statutory provisions that affect the termination process:
| Statutory Provision | Summary | Practical Implication |
|---|---|---|
| Registration requirement | Commercial agencies must be registered with the MoE to benefit from statutory protections. | Unregistered agencies fall outside the scope of the law’s termination and compensation provisions. |
| Notice period | Written notice of at least one year, or half the contract term, whichever is shorter, before the intended termination or non-renewal date. | Principals must calendar the notice deadline well in advance; late notice may expose the principal to a compensation claim. |
| Material reason for early termination | Mid-term termination requires a material reason; the statute does not provide an exhaustive list. | The burden falls on the principal to evidence the material reason before the Commercial Agencies Committee. |
| Agent compensation | An agent may claim compensation for losses arising from termination or non-renewal where no material reason is established. | Principals must quantify maximum exposure before initiating termination. |
| Commercial Agencies Committee | Disputes arising from registered agencies must first be referred to the Committee at the Ministry of Economy. | Court proceedings or arbitration cannot generally proceed until the Committee process is exhausted. |
The registration status of a commercial agency determines whether Federal Law No. (3) of 2022 applies at all. Registered agencies enjoy full statutory protection, including the right to claim compensation and the right to have disputes heard first by the Commercial Agencies Committee. Unregistered agencies, by contrast, are governed solely by the terms of the contract and the general provisions of the UAE Civil Code.
Principals can verify registration by searching the Ministry of Economy’s Commercial Agencies Register or submitting a formal enquiry through the MoE’s commercial agencies services portal. The distinction has significant tactical consequences, summarised in the comparison table below:
| Scenario | Consequence on Termination Rights | Remedy Forum |
|---|---|---|
| Registered agency (on MoE register) | Agent may be entitled to statutory compensation on expiry or termination; Committee referral is mandatory. | Commercial Agencies Committee → Appeal to courts |
| Unregistered agency | No statutory compensation; contractual remedies only; treated as an ordinary commercial contract. | Courts or arbitration per contract |
| Expiry and non-renewal where no material reason is shown | Agent can claim compensation for loss of investment and goodwill under the statute. | Committee and/or courts assess quantum |
For principals seeking to exit an unregistered agency, the process is simpler: termination follows the contractual notice mechanism and the general UAE Civil Code rules on contract termination. Statutory compensation under Federal Law No. (3) of 2022 does not apply, though ordinary damages claims remain available.
Under Federal Law No. (3) of 2022, the UAE commercial agency notice period requires principals to provide written notice at least one year before the intended termination or non-renewal date, or before half the remaining contract term expires, whichever period is shorter. If the agreement specifies a longer notice window, the contractual term prevails.
Note: This template is provided for illustrative purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Principals should instruct local counsel to adapt the language to the specific facts and jurisdiction.
[Principal letterhead]
Date: [●]
To: [Agent name and registered address]
Re: Notice of non-renewal / termination of Commercial Agency Agreement dated [●] (the “Agreement“)
Dear [Agent],
Pursuant to Article [●] of the Agreement and Federal Law No. (3) of 2022 on Regulating Commercial Agencies, we hereby give you formal written notice that the Agreement will not be renewed upon its expiry on [●] / is terminated with effect from [●].
[If relying on material reason: This termination is based on the following material reason(s): [describe grounds, e.g., persistent failure to meet minimum sales targets for [●] consecutive quarters as documented in our correspondence dated [●], [●] and [●].]
We request that you cooperate in the orderly wind-down of the agency, including the transfer of customer records, return of promotional materials and settlement of outstanding accounts.
This notice is without prejudice to any rights or remedies available to either party under the Agreement or applicable law.
Yours faithfully,
[Authorised signatory]
Federal Law No. (3) of 2022 permits early termination of a registered commercial agency only where the principal can demonstrate a material reason. The statute does not provide an exhaustive catalogue of what constitutes a material reason for a commercial agency in the UAE, the standard is fact-sensitive and judged by the Commercial Agencies Committee and, on appeal, by the courts.
The strength of the material reason case turns on documentary evidence. Industry observers note that principals who file well-prepared evidence packages with the Committee achieve materially better outcomes. A recommended evidence pack should include:
| Exhibit Category | Examples | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Sales and performance data | Quarterly reports, audited accounts, CRM exports | Demonstrate persistent shortfall against targets |
| Correspondence | Warning letters, cure notices, meeting minutes | Show the principal gave the agent opportunity to remedy |
| Contractual provisions | Signed agreement, amendments, KPI annexes | Establish the obligations the agent breached |
| Third-party evidence | Customer complaints, market research, expert reports | Corroborate non-performance or reputational damage |
| Compliance records | Audit findings, regulatory notices, sanctions screening | Support illegality or compliance-failure grounds |
For registered agencies, the Commercial Agencies Committee at the Ministry of Economy is the mandatory first stage of dispute resolution. The Committee’s jurisdiction covers termination disputes, compensation claims and other matters arising under Federal Law No. (3) of 2022. A party cannot generally bypass the Committee and proceed directly to court or arbitration.
| Stage | Indicative Timeframe | Next Step |
|---|---|---|
| Filing with MoE | Immediate (upon submission of complete dossier) | Committee review and scheduling |
| Committee hearing and decision | Varies; allow several months for complex cases | Decision issued → appeal window opens |
| Court appeal (if filed) | Within the statutory period following Committee decision | Court proceedings / final judgment |
| Arbitration (where applicable) | Depends on contractual arbitration clause and timing | Tribunal constituted per rules; may run parallel to or after Committee stage |
Where the agency agreement contains an arbitration clause, the interplay with the Committee pathway depends on timing and the nature of the dispute. The likely practical effect is that the Committee retains initial jurisdiction for registered-agency disputes even where an arbitration clause exists, but arbitration may proceed for contractual claims that fall outside the Committee’s statutory remit or after the Committee stage has concluded. Principals should not assume that an arbitration clause overrides the mandatory Committee referral requirement.
Commercial agency termination compensation in the UAE arises where a registered agent is terminated or not renewed without a material reason, and the agent can demonstrate losses resulting from that termination. The agent bears the burden of proving both the absence of a material reason and the quantum of its claimed losses.
| Factor | How Assessed | Evidence Required |
|---|---|---|
| Duration of the agency | Longer relationships attract higher compensation; investment period weighed | Original and renewal agreements; registration dates |
| Agent’s investment | Capital expenditure on warehousing, staff, marketing and infrastructure | Audited financial statements; asset registers; lease agreements |
| Contribution to market development | Growth in brand awareness, customer base and market share attributable to agent | Sales data; marketing reports; customer acquisition metrics |
| Lost profits | Net commissions or margins the agent would have earned over the residual term | Historical P&L; projected forecasts; expert valuation |
| Goodwill | Value of the agent’s established relationships and market position | Third-party valuation; comparable transaction data |
This example is simplified for illustrative purposes and does not constitute advice on any specific claim.
In practice, the Committee or court may discount or increase this figure based on contributory fault, mitigation, whether the agent was offered a new agreement on different terms, and the reliability of the financial evidence.
Before commencing termination, principals should evaluate whether the matter is more effectively resolved through negotiated settlement, Committee proceedings, litigation or arbitration. Early settlement negotiations, sometimes involving a structured buy-out of the agent’s remaining rights, can avoid the cost and uncertainty of Committee and court proceedings.
The following clause structures are commonly deployed to manage termination risk when drafting or renegotiating UAE commercial agency agreements. They should be adapted by local counsel for each transaction:
The table below provides a sample 8-week project plan covering the principal’s key actions from the initial decision to terminate a commercial agency in the UAE through to Committee filing. Actual timelines will vary depending on case complexity and agent response.
| Week | Action | Owner |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Internal board or management approval to proceed with termination | General counsel / commercial director |
| 2 | Engage local UAE dispute-resolution counsel; instruct legal opinion on material reason and compensation exposure | Legal team |
| 3 | Compile full evidence pack (sales data, breach correspondence, audit reports, contractual documents) | Legal and finance |
| 4 | Draft and finalise termination / non-renewal notice letter; notarise where required | Legal team |
| 5 | Serve notice on the agent (notarised / registered delivery); retain proof of service | Legal team |
| 6 | File copy of notice with the Ministry of Economy; prepare Committee complaint dossier | Legal team |
| 7 | Submit complaint to Commercial Agencies Committee (if dispute arises or pre-emptive filing strategy adopted) | Legal team |
| 8 | Begin wind-down coordination: transition planning, customer communications, stock management | Commercial and operations |
Terminating a commercial agency in the UAE under the post-2022 statutory regime requires principals to navigate a precise procedural sequence: verify registration, calculate notice windows, build a robust evidence pack for any material reason relied upon, file with the Commercial Agencies Committee, and prepare for compensation exposure. Each step carries substantive legal risk, and the difference between a well-prepared termination and a poorly executed one can amount to millions of dirhams in compensation liability. Principals and counsel planning to terminate a commercial agency in the UAE should engage specialist dispute-resolution advisers at the earliest opportunity to ensure compliance with Federal Law No. (3) of 2022 and to develop the strongest possible position before the Committee and the courts.
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.
posted 25 minutes ago
posted 48 minutes ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
posted 8 hours ago
posted 9 hours ago
posted 9 hours ago
posted 9 hours ago
posted 10 hours ago
posted 10 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Advisory Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest advisor briefings and news within Global Advisory 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.
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 Advisory Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional advisory services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced advisors, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message