The UAE has issued a new Federal Decree-Law introducing wide-ranging amendments to the Commercial Companies Law, representing a significant milestone in the country’s 2025 legislative reform programme. These changes are aimed at reinforcing the UAE’s status as a leading global business hub by modernising corporate structures, expanding financing mechanisms, and enhancing regulatory clarity across jurisdictions.
At DY Legal Consultants, we view these reforms as a strategic step toward fostering a more competitive, flexible, and investment-friendly corporate environment. The amendments provide businesses with greater freedom to structure operations, attract capital, and scale across the UAE while maintaining strong governance and shareholder protection.
Introduction of Non-Profit Companies
One of the most notable developments is the formal introduction of the non-profit company as a recognised legal structure under federal law. This marks a major expansion of the UAE’s corporate framework.
Unlike traditional companies, non-profit entities are required to reinvest all net proceeds into achieving their stated objectives, rather than distributing profits to shareholders or partners. This new structure offers a clear and transparent legal vehicle for social, cultural, charitable, and developmental initiatives, while ensuring proper governance and regulatory oversight. It also enables philanthropic and mission-driven organisations to operate with greater certainty and legal protection.
Greater Flexibility in Capital Structures
The amendments introduce enhanced flexibility in how companies may structure their capital. Businesses are now permitted to issue multiple classes of shares or ownership interests, each carrying different rights and obligations. These may include varying voting rights, dividend entitlements, redemption features, or liquidation preferences, as defined in the company’s constitutional documents.
This change aligns the UAE more closely with international corporate and investment practices and is particularly beneficial for private equity transactions, venture capital investments, family-owned businesses, and corporate restructurings. Investors and founders can now achieve more tailored arrangements that better reflect commercial realities and risk allocation.
Expanded Financing Options for Private Joint-Stock Companies
In a significant shift, private joint-stock companies are now permitted to raise capital through private subscriptions on licensed UAE financial markets. Previously, access to such funding often required conversion into a public joint-stock company or reliance on offshore structures.
This reform enables companies to attract institutional and qualified investors locally while preserving the advantages of remaining private. It is expected to strengthen domestic capital markets, reduce reliance on foreign funding hubs, and encourage investment activity within the UAE’s financial ecosystem.
Seamless Corporate Relocation Across Jurisdictions
The decree-law introduces clear rules governing the relocation of companies between emirates, as well as between mainland authorities and financial free zones, without the loss of legal identity.
By setting out defined procedures and safeguards, the law enhances corporate mobility while protecting shareholder rights, particularly those of minority investors. For businesses expanding, restructuring, or consolidating operations across the UAE, this ability to relocate without liquidation and re-incorporation represents a substantial operational and strategic advantage.
Modernisation of Share Transfers and Shareholder Rights
The amendments also modernise provisions relating to share transfers and shareholder agreements. Widely used international mechanisms such as tag-along and drag-along rights are now formally recognised within the legal framework.
This provides greater certainty in mergers, acquisitions, and exits, reducing reliance on complex contractual arrangements outside company documents. The law also clarifies procedures for dealing with shares upon the death of a shareholder or partner, offering improved continuity and stability—particularly important for family-owned enterprises.
Enhanced Transparency for In-Kind Capital Contributions
To strengthen transparency and investor protection, stricter controls have been introduced for valuing in-kind contributions to company capital. Any non-cash assets—such as property, equipment, or intellectual property—must now be assessed by accredited valuers in accordance with prescribed standards.
These measures help prevent inflated valuations and ensure fairness among shareholders, reinforcing confidence in corporate governance and financial disclosures.
Governance Reforms and Operational Continuity
Additional reforms introduced in 2025 focus on reducing operational bottlenecks and ensuring continuity in corporate management. These include provisions allowing:
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A manager’s resignation to take effect after 30 days if no action is taken
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Boards of directors to continue operating for up to six months after their term expires
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Regulatory authorities to appoint directors where shareholders are unable to reach agreement
Together, these measures address governance gaps and prevent disruptions in companies facing internal deadlock.
Disclaimer: The content in this article is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.