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When a company changes ownership in the UAE, business owners treat it as a done deal the moment the share transfer paperwork is signed. In reality, that is just one part of the process. What follows immediately after and what many businesses overlook is the legal obligation to update the UBO register with their licensing authority.
If you miss this step, you will be looking at written warnings, fines reaching into the tens of thousands of dirhams, and in repeat cases, the suspension of your trade license. Beyond the penalties, an outdated UBO record creates problems with banks, complicates license renewals, and can stall an otherwise routine due diligence review.
This guide covers everything a business owner or compliance manager needs to know about the UBO update in the UAE, requirement after an ownership change, what triggers it, what you need to do, and how quickly you need to act.
UBO means “Ultimate Beneficial Owner.” It refers to a natural person who directly controls or benefits from a corporation, not through a nominee or trust, but as the actual owner of the business.
Cabinet Resolution No. 58/2020 is considered the first UBO rule in the UAE. The regulation became effective on August 28, 2020, and has been revised later by Cabinet Decision No. 109/2023. Together, these two resolutions serve as the basis of the UAE Corporate AML regime.
The purpose of the framework is simple, as the government authority wants to know who truly sits behind every registered business. This complies with the country’s requirements under FATF (Financial Action Task Force) standards and ensures the legitimacy of the business environment, making it safe for investors, banks, and foreign entities.
As per Article 5 of Cabinet Resolution No. 58 of 2020, a natural person qualifies as a UBO if they meet any of the following criteria:
If none of the above criteria can identify a natural person with certainty, the person who controls the company through other means is treated as the UBO. If even that is not possible, a senior management official of the company is deemed to be the UBO by default.
One important detail from the law: if two or more natural persons jointly own a qualifying percentage together, all of them are treated as UBOs for that combined holding.
This definition is intentionally wide. It looks past nominee arrangements, offshore structures, and multi-layer holding companies to find the real individual in control.
This is often where many businesses encounter difficulties. While not all internal reorganizations alter the UBO’s identity, many ownership changes do, and the requirement to update information begins immediately once the change is implemented.
A UBO update UAE is required in the following situations:
That last point deserves emphasis. If a holding company owns shares in your UAE business and that holding company changes its shareholders, your UAE company may have a new UBO even though nothing changed on your own share register. It is mandatory for you to establish ownership regardless of the number of persons or structures involved in order to identify the individual who lies at the end of the ownership chain.
Under Article 8(5) of Cabinet Resolution No. 58 of 2020, a company cannot register or validate a document for a change of ownership until the person buying the shares or their representative submits a declaration. This declaration must state if there will be a change in the beneficial owner and, if so, identify the new UBO. In simple terms, you cannot transfer ownership without first addressing the UBO.
Under Cabinet Resolution No. 58 of 2020 and its update, Cabinet Decision No. 109 of 2023, every relevant company in the UAE must:
These are not one-time submissions. They are living records that must reflect the current state of ownership at all times.
The 15-day period is the deadline. According to Articles 8 and 14 of Cabinet Resolution No. 58 of 2020, any change in the information on the register of beneficial owner shall be updated and registered by the company within 15 days from the time such changes have been identified. The same provision shall apply to the Register of Partners/Shareholders.
For newly formed organizations, the UBO register should be prepared within 60 days of incorporation or licensing.
The 15‑day period begins from the effective date of the ownership change, not from a later “documentation‑complete” date, nor is it reset with each annual license renewal. If there was an owner change in February, but it wasn’t registered until October, the non-compliance period has been ongoing since then.
The Register of Ultimate Beneficial Owners must include the following details for each UBO:
When the shareholder is a corporation, the registration information for the corporate shareholder must be provided, along with further identification of the individuals who control it. The legislation provides for unlimited tracing through companies to the individuals controlling a business entity.
All records must be kept for a minimum of five years after the date of dissolution, liquidation, or de-registration of the company.
Once an ownership change occurs, here is the practical process to follow within your 15-day window:
Determine whether the transaction changes who qualifies as a UBO. Map the full ownership chain and identify which natural persons meet the 25% threshold after the change takes effect.
Amend the Register of Ultimate Beneficial Owners as well as the Register of Partners/Shareholders. Add the amendment date, purpose of amendment, as well as all necessary information regarding both UBOs – outgoing and incoming.
Collect valid copies of passports, new share certificates or transfer documents, any resolution from the board, as well as a completed form on UBO.
Where you file depends on where your company is registered:
| Entity Type | Where to File |
|---|---|
| Dubai mainland | Dubai Economy and Tourism (DET) portal |
| Abu Dhabi mainland | Abu Dhabi Department of Economic Development (ADDED) portal |
| Other mainland emirates | Respective emirate DED portal |
| JAFZA, DMCC, DAFZA, DSO, SHAMS, RAKEZ, and other commercial Free Zones | Each Free Zone’s own compliance or company services portal |
| Offshore companies | Through the registered agent with notarised documentation |
After a successful submission, the licensing authority gives you a UBO certificate that shows that you meet the standards. Banks, auditors, and potential business partners always ask for this certificate.
The penalty system for not complying with UBO rules comes from a government resolution that fines those who break the rules. The fines increase if the violations happen again.
| Violation | First Offence | Second Offence | Third Offence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Failing to create and maintain a UBO register | Written warning | AED 50,000 + 30 days to fix | AED 100,000 + license suspension for at least 12 months |
| Incomplete data in the UBO register | Written warning | AED 20,000 + 15 days to fix | AED 40,000 + license suspension for at least 6 months |
| Failing to update within 15 days | Written warning | AED 30,000 + 15 days to fix | AED 60,000 + license suspension for 6 months |
| Failing to create a Register of Partners or Shareholders | Written warning | AED 50,000 + 60 days rectification | AED 100,000 + 12‑month suspension. |
Despite all that, the impact of suspending a trade license on the operations of most firms is far worse than the financial penalty. Additionally, banks are required to conduct UBO tests during KYC and CDD. The inability to renew or update a UBO’s registration results in the freezing or closure of a company’s bank account, thereby affecting its operations.
In accordance with Cabinet Decision No. 109 of 2023, enforcement actions started from January 2024, and audits intensified throughout 2025 and into 2026. The UAE has further incorporated UBO information into the national AML risk assessment of anti-money laundering risks and connected UBO registers with financial institutions using the GoAML system provided by the UAE Financial Intelligence Unit. This means that compliance gaps do not sit in isolation they surface across the banking and regulatory system.
Not all entities are subject to these rules. The following are exempt under Article 3 of Cabinet Resolution No. 58 of 2020:
Every other entity, including mainland companies, civil companies, branch offices, and non-financial Free Zone establishments, falls fully within the requirements of the UBO framework and must comply with the same timelines and documentation standards.
An ownership change for a UAE company doesn’t stop at signing the share transfer. It triggers a 15-day timeline for you to update your UBO register and inform the licensing authority, a mandatory requirement now strictly enforced.
This entails determining who can be considered as a UBO following the change, updating your registers, compiling all necessary documents, and submitting the notification within the specified deadline. The issued UBO Certificate then serves as proof of compliance for banks and auditors.
In cases where ownership passes through holding or offshore structures, the key is to ensure you have followed the entire process. It is a minor effort that saves you from avoidable costs and hassle later.