59A7D41EB44EABC4F2C2B68D88211BF4 UAE Labour Law and Career Updates 2026

Monday, December 20, 2010

New regulations in UAE Labour Law aim to liberalise labour market

The aim behind the new labour law that will come into effect on January 1, is to lessen the control of employers over employees and liberalise the labour market, a top government official told .The source clarified that the new law completely scraps the "no objection certificate" (NOC).
"The new laws allow an employee to transfer his sponsorship after the contract with his current employer expires, but the employee must inform his sponsor that he will not be renewing his contract 30 days before its expiry," he added.
"The employee will be granted a period of 30 days once his contract expires to find a new job and sponsor. This period is basically given to the employee to complete procedures such as the issuance of a new visa in accordance with the Ministry of Interior's procedures and signing the contract with the new sponsor. However, if the period expires and the employee's paperwork is not completed, he will be considered illegal," added the source.Once the employer and employee's pact was regulated by a contract, the ministry would not be able to interfere in matters pertaining to both parties in accordance with Law number 129 in regard to regulating the relationship between both parties.
"When the contract expires, the employee is granted a special permit by the ministries of labour and interior, allowing him to stay in the country for 30 days to complete paperwork and finalise procedures for the new work visa under the new job and employer," the government official said.
Under the new system, if an employee completed the two-year working period, the employer had no right to force an employee to stay on the job and would no longer face a six-month ban, since the new system scrapped the NOC.
Humaid Bin Deemas, Acting Director-General of the Ministry of Labour, told once a job contract expired or was legally terminated, the Labour Ministry would have the authority to allow workers to take up new jobs without the consent of former employers or the so-called NOC.
"Workers, skilled and unskilled, who end their job contracts legally and complete at least two years of service, will get a labour permit outright," he said.Previously, these workers had to complete at least three years of service with their previous employers and had to obtain an NOC letter.Professional and skilled workers in the first three categories according to the Uniform Gulf Occupational Classification would also be exempt from the six-month ban.
He estimated these three categories (the first category with university or post graduate degrees, the second with less than university degrees and the third category including skilled workers with high school degrees) included 800,000 workers.
Bin Deemas said even for unskilled and semi-skilled workers, companies would lose the right to stop them from getting other jobs if the firm failed to honour its legal or contractual obligations, for example, by not paying salaries for 60 days and not offering proper accommodation. Workers, he said, could also take up new jobs if the employer stopped the business for economic or technical reasons and these workers reported the closure to the Labour Ministry within 60 days.
Bin Deemas said the UAE as determined to protect the rights and welfare of the workers as well as their employers "but these rights and benefits will be fulfilled in keeping with the law. It is not the employer's right to approve or disapprove switching of jobs. But it is his right that workers complete the job contract in the event of contracts with limited period".
Concerning fees, Bin Deemas said a resolution would be issued shortly determining a complete set of "more affordable fees".
Previously, workers had to pay job-switch fees, which were determined according to service of the worker, the category of the business among other factors and which reach up to Dh14,000.
The government official added that the goal behind the ministry's new law was to bring the labour market's level on a par with that of Germany, Canada, the US and other Western countries, as well as cancelling the employers' monopoly of the labour market. The new rules defined three cases in which the worker shall have the right to get a work permit without fulfilling the condition of working at least two years with the employer:
When joining his new job, the worker should be classified in the first, second or third professional class and that his salary should be not less than Dh12,000, Dh7,000 and Dh5,000 if he is in the first, second and third class respectively. nNon-compliance of the employer with legal and labour obligations towards the worker or in the event the worker has no role in terminating the work relationship

Deconstructing the UAE Labor Ban Exemptions: Past Regulations vs. Current Laws

When Humaid Bin Deemas, then Acting Director-General of the UAE Ministry of Labour, introduced the 2011 labor reforms, it was a massive turning point for the expatriate workforce. For the first time, "professional and skilled workers" across three specific categories were granted a pathway to bypass the automatic six-month labor ban without needing their employer’s consent, provided they met rigid salary and degree benchmarks.

Today, the modern UAE employment landscape operates under a completely modernized, contract-driven system regulated by Federal Decree-Law No. 33 of 2021 (The New UAE Labour Law).

If you are updating an old article, here is how the historic 2011 "Three Skill Categories" and "Contract Exceptions" have transformed under current legislation, mapped out completely through direct comparison points.

The Evolving Rules of UAE Job Mobility

1. Minimum Salary Thresholds

  • The 2011 Rule: To change jobs before completing a two-year contract without facing a six-month ban, workers had to meet mandatory minimum monthly salary floors based on their educational classification:

    • Category 1 (University/Post-grad Degree): Minimum salary of AED 12,000.

    • Category 2 (Diploma/Post-secondary): Minimum salary of AED 7,000.

    • Category 3 (High School Certificate): Minimum salary of AED 5,000.

  • The Modern Update: The Ministry of Human Resources and Emiratisation (MOHRE) has completely abolished these salary thresholds as a requirement to avoid a labor ban. Job mobility is no longer dictated by how much money an employee earns. The six-month ban framework has been completely eliminated for normal, compliant job transitions, meaning your salary tier has no impact on your freedom to switch companies.

2. Professional Skill Classifications

  • The 2011 Rule: Workers were divided into three straightforward categories based purely on whether they held a degree, a diploma, or a high school certificate to determine their ban immunity.

  • The Modern Update: The old three-tier structure has been replaced by a more comprehensive 9-level professional classification system aligned with international standards (ISCO). Employees in Skill Levels 1, 2, and 3 (ranging from executives and doctors to technicians and skilled clerical staff) remain completely exempt from labor restrictions when changing jobs, provided they properly serve the notice period specified in their employment contract.

3. Contract Fulfillment & Employer Control

  • The 2011 Rule: Bin Deemas clarified that while employers had no right to veto a job switch via an NOC, they did have the right to demand workers complete their limited-term contracts. Unskilled workers were structurally locked into a company for a minimum of two years before they could switch freely.

  • The Modern Update: The UAE has completely eliminated unlimited-term contracts in favor of Fixed-Term (Limited) Contracts for all private-sector employees. Crucially, workers are no longer required to complete the full multi-year duration of a contract to leave safely. Either party can legally terminate a fixed-term contract early at any time, simply by serving a contractually agreed written notice period, which must legally fall between 30 and 90 days.

4. Immediate Resignation Due to Employer Breach

  • The 2011 Rule: For lower-skilled categories, an employer lost their right to stop a worker from transferring only if they failed to pay salaries for a consecutive 60 days, or failed to provide proper accommodation, followed by a lengthy court process.

  • The Modern Update: Under Article 45 of Decree-Law No. 33 of 2021, employees can walk out instantly without giving any notice and transition to a new job if an employer fails to meet statutory duties. This includes non-payment of wages through the Wage Protection System (WPS) for more than 15 days (down from the historic 60 days) or cases of workplace harassment/assault, provided it is reported to MOHRE within 5 business days.

5. When a 1-Year Ban is Triggered Today

  • The 2011 Rule: Bans were heavily focused on a six-month standard cooling-off period for anyone who didn't hit the salary tiers or complete two full years of service.

  • The Modern Update: The historic 6-month ban is gone, but MOHRE actively enforces a strict one-year labor ban for specific contractual violations:

    • Probation Violations: If an employee resigns during their 6-month probation period to join a new UAE employer, they must provide 30 days' written notice. Failing to provide this statutory notice results in a one-year work permit ban.

    • Absconding: Simply abandoning a job or being absent without a valid reason for more than 7 consecutive days allows an employer to file a work-abandonment report, which carries an automatic one-year ban.

The modern UAE labor market has evolved away from rigid sponsorship controls toward a transparent, mutually binding contract model. For expatriate workers, career mobility is entirely protected by the law—provided contractual notice periods are respected and changes are processed through official MOHRE digital channels.

#UAELabourLaw #MOHRE #UAEDecree33 #JobTransitionUAE #DubaiJobs #ExpatLifeUAE #LabourBanExemption



Sunday, December 19, 2010

Navigating Job Changes in the UAE: From the Death of the NOC to Fixed-Term Contracts

If you look back at how the UAE labor market functioned over a decade ago, changing jobs as an expatriate worker was an administrative minefield. For years, the dreaded No-Objection Certificate (NOC) and the automatic six-month work ban dictated employment mobility, frequently trapping workers in unfavorable positions or forcing them to leave the country entirely just to switch employers.

The landscape took its first massive step forward on January 1, 2011, under Ministerial Resolution No. 1186 of 2010. Introduced by then-Minister of Labour Saqr Gobash, these landmark reforms effectively removed the six-month ban for anyone who finished their two-year contract, infusing vital flexibility into the private sector.

However, employment law didn't stop evolving there. Fast forward to today, and the UAE has completely overhauled its labor framework under Federal Decree-Law No. 33 of 2021 (and its subsequent modern cabinet updates). The old rules of 2011 have been completely replaced by a digital, contract-driven system.

Here is how the old 2011 regulations stack up against the current UAE labor laws, and what you need to know about changing jobs today.

1. The Death of the NOC & Employer Consent

  • The 2011 Rule: Workers could only bypass the six-month work ban if they completed a full two-year contract or secured a formal "No Objection" transfer from their existing sponsor.

  • The Modern Update: The concept of an employer holding veto power via an NOC is completely obsolete. Today, changing jobs is entirely a matter of contract fulfillment. A new employer simply applies for a fresh work permit online through the Ministry of Human Resources and Emiratisation (MOHRE). Provided you end your current employment legally, your old boss cannot block the move.

2. From "Unlimited" Terms to Fixed-Term Contracts

  • The 2011 Rule: Workers were largely tied to rolling, open-ended relationships, with a mandatory "two-year service" checkpoint required to unlock standard job mobility.

  • The Modern Update: The UAE has completely abolished unlimited-term contracts. All private-sector employees must now be on Fixed-Term (Limited) Contracts (capped at a maximum of three years per term, though renewable indefinitely).

    • Upon Contract Expiry: If your contract finishes and either party chooses not to renew, you can switch jobs instantly with a clean transition.

    • Early Resignation: You can break a contract early for a new opportunity, provided you serve the contractually agreed written notice period (which must legally be between 30 and 90 days).

3. Salary Tiers vs. Modern Mobility

  • The 2011 Rule: To jump to a new job before finishing a two-year contract without a ban, you had to hit strict minimum monthly salary thresholds based on your professional class:

    • First Class (Degree holders): Dh 12,000

    • Second Class (Diploma holders): Dh 7,000

    • Third Class (High school graduates): Dh 5,000

  • The Modern Update: Because job mobility is now tied strictly to fulfilling your fixed-term contract or serving your notice, these specific salary thresholds for transferring without a ban no longer exist. Anyone, from executive staff to manual laborers, can change jobs cleanly by simply adhering to their contract's termination and notice clauses.

4. When Can a 1-Year Work Ban Still Be Triggered?

While the archaic 2011 automatic bans are gone, MOHRE actively enforces a one-year work permit ban for specific modern violations:

  • Probation Violations: The probation period is capped at 6 months. If you want to resign during probation to join another UAE employer, you must provide at least 30 days’ written notice (and your new employer may have to compensate your old one for recruitment costs). Leaving without giving this legal notice triggers an automatic 1-year ban.

  • Absconding: Simply stopping work or disappearing without giving formal contractual notice results in a valid work abandonment complaint, initiating a 1-year work ban.

5. Walking Away Instantly: Employer Non-Compliance

  • The 2011 Rule: If an employer breached their obligations, the worker had to file complaints, undergo multi-month inspection reports to prove the business was closed, and win a lengthy court battle for salaries to transfer without a ban.

  • The Modern Update: Under Article 45 of Decree-Law No. 33 of 2021, workers can quit immediately without notice and move jobs if:

    1. The employer breaches clear statutory duties (such as failing to pay salaries via the Wage Protection System for more than 15 days).

    2. The worker faces workplace assault or harassment, provided it is reported to MOHRE within 5 business days.

      Disputes are now handled rapidly and digitally via the MOHRE smartphone app, minimizing the bureaucratic drag of the past.

At a Glance: How the Law Has Transformed

FeatureThe 2011 FrameworkCurrent UAE Labour Law Framework
Contract StyleUnlimited or 3-Year LimitedFixed-Term Only (Unlimited completely abolished)
Employer NOCRequired if 2-year service was incompleteAbolished; mobility is tied to contract compliance
Notice StandardDependent on employer approvalStrictly mandated 30 to 90 days in writing
Automatic Bans6-month ban unless specific criteria/salary tiers metNo automatic ban; 1-year bans reserved for probation or notice breaches.
Final SettlementComplex, often penalized early resignationAll dues and gratuity must legally be paid within 14 days of exit.

The UAE labor market has shifted decisively away from protective corporate sponsorship toward a highly agile, mutually accountable contract model. For expatriate workers, this means unprecedented career freedom—provided you know your contract, respect your notice period, and handle your transitions through official MOHRE channels.

Disclaimer: This article provides a historical and modern overview of UAE Labour Law for informational purposes and should not be construed as formal legal counsel.

Thursday, December 16, 2010

"UAE End of Service Gratuity (EOSG) 2025: New Calculation Rules and Contract Types"

💰 UAE End of Service Gratuity (EOSG): New Calculation Rules and Contract Types (2025 Update)

The calculation and entitlement rules for the End of Service Gratuity (EOSG) have been entirely updated under the Federal Decree-Law No. 33 of 2021 (the New UAE Labour Law), effective from February 2, 2022.

1. The Core Calculation (Article 51)

The calculation method (21 days for the first 5 years, 30 days thereafter) remains, but the maximum cap is removed, and the calculation basis is confirmed.

Old Law (Article 132)

Current Law (Article 51)

Calculation: 21 days for the first 5 years, 30 days for subsequent years. Maximum Cap: Total gratuity cannot exceed 2 years' salary.

Calculation: Same rates apply. 21 days for the first 5 years, 30 days for subsequent years. Maximum Cap: REMOVED. The total gratuity is not capped at two years' salary.

Part of the Year: Entitled to a prorated amount after one year of service. (Article 133)

Part of the Year: Confirmed. The worker is entitled to a prorated amount for the fraction of the year, provided one full year of service is completed.

Leaves Without Pay: Not included in the service period. (Article 132)

Leaves Without Pay: Confirmed. Periods of unpaid leave are excluded from the service period calculation.

2. The Calculation Basis: BASIC Salary Only

The current law explicitly confirms the calculation basis.

Old Law (Article 134)

Current Law (Article 51)

Basis: Calculated based on the last basic salary. Confusing Point: Stated allowances "shall be included in the basic salary" (which was legally disputed).

Basis: Calculated exclusively on the Basic Salary. Clarified: The law confirms that allowances (housing, transport, commission, etc.) are NOT included in the gratuity calculation.

3. Contract Type Distinction: UNLIMITED is ABOLISHED

This is the most critical change. The distinction between Unlimited and Limited contracts for EOSG calculation is GONE because the Unlimited Contract type is abolished for new/renewed contracts.

Old Law (Articles 137 & 138)

Current Law (Article 51 & 42)

Unlimited Contract Resignation: Reduced Gratuity (1/3 or 2/3 reduction based on service period).

Fixed-Term Contract Resignation: NO REDUCTION. The worker is entitled to the full gratuity regardless of the length of service (after 1 year), provided they comply with the lawful termination (notice period).

Limited Contract Resignation: Forfeiture unless service exceeded 5 years.

Forfeiture: ELIMINATED. There are no reductions or forfeitures for an employee's resignation under the new law, provided they follow the lawful notice period.

4. Forfeiture and Dismissal (Article 51 & 44)

The conditions for the worker being banned from gratuity have been streamlined and simplified.

Old Law (Article 139)

Current Law (Article 51)

Forfeiture: Worker dismissed under Article 120 (gross misconduct) OR worker voluntarily resigns without notice (unlimited contract) OR limited contract worker resigns before 5 years.

Forfeiture: The worker forfeits the entire gratuity ONLY if they are dismissed for one of the 11 specific reasons listed in Article 44 (Gross Misconduct).

Voluntary Resignation: Forfeiture is ABOLISHED for lawful resignation.

5. Death, Savings, and Pensions (Article 51)

  • Death: Confirmed. If the worker dies, the employer must pay the full gratuity to the heirs.
  • Savings/Pension Funds (Article 140 & 141): Confirmed. The worker retains the right to choose between the gratuity or any better terms offered by a savings/pension scheme, provided the scheme terms allow it.

6. Return Tickets (Not in EOSG Law)

The obligation for return tickets is NO LONGER tied to the EOSG Law but to the general conditions of the employment contract (Article 13).

  • Current Rule: The employer is responsible for the worker's return ticket to their home country upon termination of the contract, unless the worker joins a new employer in the UAE, or the worker is dismissed for gross misconduct (Article 44 reasons).

 

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

UAE consider changes to end-of-service gratuity policy for expatriates

Under UAE law, all employers must pay employees an end-of-service gratuity. It is meant to serve a similar role as pension schemes do in the West and parts of Asia.

UAE officials have had preliminary discussions with the International Labour Organisation and several consultants in the region about requiring companies to set aside the money for employee gratuities, instead of paying them out of the operating budgets. This would ensure the funds remain available in case the company encounters financial problems.
An end-of-service gratuity: the name makes it sound so generous, like a tip received from an employer in exchange for outstanding service.In fact, the gratuity foreign workers in the UAE receive is mandated by the UAE Government to compensate for the absence of a true pension scheme. But the payment is not fully guaranteed nor widely understood and as a result, there are talks about reforming the current system.
The UAE is in talks with the International Labour Organisation (ILO) about either establishing a Government-run pension fund for expatriates or requiring employers to set aside employee gratuities in a separate pool to ensure it is available when employees qualify for it.
Currently, almost all companies pay gratuities out of their general operating budgets, which can lead to problems if a company runs into financial trouble.

"It is not always paid. I receive letters every day from employees who say they do not receive their salary or end-of-service benefit," says Maurizio Bussi, the deputy regional director for Arab States at the ILO, who adds that the UAE Government is "looking seriously" at the proposed changes. "There is a commitment from the Government in principle that the workers should be paid."

The combined liabilities of companies in the UAE for end-of-service benefits is more than US$4 billion (Dh14.6bn), according to research last year by the consultancy Watson Wyatt. For the GCC, it totals more than $15bn. Those figures are believed to be growing rapidly as employees stay in their jobs longer after the financial crisis. This is significant because gratuities are paid out based on an employee's final salary, although many employees leave their jobs without knowing what they are owed.

"We are seeing that the employee, more often than not, just does not understand it," says Jahangir Aka, a Dubai-based senior executive officer with SEI, a global investment firm that helps to manage pension funds. "He thinks it is like pension law in the West [and parts of Asia] and it is not."
The current UAE system works like this: each foreign employee earns 21 days' pay for each full year of service for the first five years, and 30 days for each year of employment more than five years. The maximum gratuity is two full years' pay. However, the amount owed is slashed by two thirds if the employee leaves voluntarily before serving three full years, and by one third if an employee leaves before the end of five years.

If employees are made redundant, they qualify for the full gratuity.These rules only apply to foreign workers. Emirati workers are eligible for a Government pension.
These are the minimum requirements as established by the Government. Watson Wyatt recently surveyed more than 100 Gulf companies to see if many were offering enhanced gratuities or formal pensions to recruit and retain staff. Only 30 per cent were offering extra incentives.
"Up until now, cash has been king. The companies have said, 'We are paying you loads of money so you can go out and get your own pension'," says Iain Collins, a Dubai-based senior consultant at Watson Wyatt. "The overriding message was that most companies are simply providing what they are told to provide by the law."
Further, it is common practice for UAE companies to pay a modest base salary to an employee and increase the total compensation with add-ons such as utilities and housing, in part because the gratuity is based solely on the base salary. "Most companies structure their compensation to minimise that final payment," says Mr Collins.
Mr Collins says this is "slowly but surely changing" as companies adopt western-style standards of employee retention. The old model was created in the pre-financial crisis era, when employee turnover was much higher and companies mostly assumed a large portion of the workforce would be moving on in a year or two.
"The hot employees have churned and gone back [to their home countries]. We've got a different employee base than we did five years ago. Most of us are comfortable with a longer-term view now," says Mr Aka.
But as the gratuities get larger, it becomes more important that the money is somehow ring-fenced to ensure that it is available when needed.
The money could be allocated to a fund controlled by the Government or by individual companies. Employees are the obvious beneficiaries of either structure because their gratuities are protected, but the financial industry in the Gulf is also making the case that companies will benefit as well.
"Right now, to pay Dh100, you have to take Dh100 off the balance sheet. If you do it smartly, to pay 100, you only have to take 93 off. We can grow the money for him," says Mr Aka, whose firm administers and manages pension funds.
There are potential ancillary benefits as well. In most emerging markets, there are rules requiring that a certain percentage of the funds are invested within that country (in Oman, for example, only 20 per cent of pension assets can be invested outside the country).
In the UAE, that could provide a much-needed boost to liquidity in the markets. Also, bringing in executives to administer and manage the funds could aid the local financial sector. "You incubate the growth of an asset management industry," Mr Aka says.
At the moment, Bahrain is the only Gulf country with something like a pension plan for foreign workers. Mr Bussi, of the ILO, says the UAE "could set the standard" for Gulf countries if it enacts the proposals being discussed.
Most experts caution that a change in the law is not imminent, not least because most UAE companies are not having difficulty attracting skilled workers."It is still an attractive region to work, given what is going on elsewhere in the world," says Mr Collins.