UAE Employment Contract Guide
What to review and verify in your UAE employment contract before you sign — key terms explained, a complete checklist, red flags to watch for, and what to do if terms are not honoured. General information, not legal advice.
Your employment contract is the legal document that defines your rights, obligations, compensation, and conditions of termination in UAE. Once signed, it is binding — changes require mutual written agreement. Reading and understanding every clause before you sign is not just good practice, it is essential protection.
This guide explains the key terms, gives you a complete pre-signature checklist, identifies the red flags that warrant legal advice, and explains what to do if your employer does not honour the contract. This is general information, not legal advice. For specific contract concerns, consult a UAE-licensed employment lawyer or the MOHRE.
Key Contract Terms — What Each One Means
Every employment contract in UAE should address these elements. Here is what each term means and what to look for.
The figure used to calculate end-of-service gratuity, annual leave encashment, and sometimes overtime. Verify it matches the offer letter exactly — in currency (AED), amount, and payment frequency.
Typically 3 months, extendable to 6 in some contracts. During probation, both parties can terminate with shorter notice. Confirm the exact duration and the applicable notice period during this period.
Standard for professional roles: 1–3 months, mutual for both parties. Verify the same period applies to the employer — not just to you. A longer employer notice period gives you more security.
The UAE's Labour Law minimum is 30 days per year after completing 1 year of service (prorated in the first year). Confirm: the entitlement, the carry-over policy, and the leave year dates. Some employers offer more than the minimum.
Confirm the contract states entitlement in accordance with the UAE's Labour Law and clarifies the calculation basis — basic salary only, or total salary. See the Salary Guide for context.
Review carefully: what period, what activities, and what geographic scope is restricted. Overly broad clauses can affect your career mobility. UAE courts assess reasonableness, but enforcement risk is real.
Never sign a contract you have not read in full. Some employers present contracts for immediate signature on arrival in UAE. You have the right to ask for time to review — a legitimate employer will not pressure you to sign without adequate reading time.
Contract Checklist — What to Verify Before Signing
Go through every item on this list before you sign. Raise any discrepancy in writing with the employer before accepting.
Check: currency (AED), exact amounts, payment frequency, and that all promised components are listed. If the written contract differs from the verbal offer, raise it immediately — do not sign until it is corrected.
Vague or broad job descriptions can lead to scope creep. Ensure the contract describes what you were actually hired to do, not a generic version of the role.
Confirm the probation length and notice period during probation. Confirm the post-probation notice period is mutual — applying equally to employer and employee.
30 days minimum under the UAE's Labour Law. Confirm the carry-over policy (can unused leave be carried to the next year?) and whether leave can be cashed out on termination.
The UAE's standard working week is 48 hours. If the contract states 'overtime included in salary', clarify what this means in practice for your specific role and any shift requirements.
The calculation basis — basic salary only vs total salary — significantly affects your gratuity entitlement. Ensure it is clearly stated and consistent with the UAE's Labour Law.
Some contracts include clauses requiring repayment of recruitment or training costs if you leave within a specified period. Review these carefully — ensure any such clause is proportionate and reasonable.
If the contract is bilingual, the Arabic version is typically legally controlling in the UAE's courts. If you are not fluent in Arabic, seek an independent translation and confirm the two versions match.
Contract Red Flags — When to Be Concerned
These elements in a contract warrant careful review or professional legal advice before signing.
If the contract states a different salary, currency, or component structure from the written offer letter, this must be resolved before signing. Do not assume it is a typo.
Clauses purporting to waive end-of-service gratuity, annual leave entitlement, or other Labour Law rights are not legally enforceable — but their presence signals a problematic employer.
A non-compete restricting you from your entire professional field for years across the whole GCC is unlikely to be enforceable but creates real legal uncertainty. Negotiate scope, duration, and geography down before signing.
If you are not fluent in Arabic and the employer refuses to provide a bilingual contract or certified translation, this is a significant red flag. The Arabic version will control in any dispute.
This guide is general information, not legal advice. Employment law is complex and individual contract terms vary. If you have specific concerns about a contract, consult a UAE-licensed employment lawyer or contact the MOHRE's labour dispute resolution service.
If Your Employer Breaches the Contract
What you can do if your employer fails to honour the agreed employment terms.
Keep copies of your signed contract, all offer letters, payslips, and any written communication about your employment terms. If a breach occurs, this documentation is your evidence.
Put your concern in writing — email to HR or your manager, stating the specific breach and the outcome you are seeking. This creates a record and often resolves the issue without escalation.
If the employer does not resolve the issue, use MOHRE or the relevant labour dispute channel. Keep your contract, payslips, emails, and messages together before submitting a complaint.
If mediation fails, the dispute can be referred to the Labour Court. Seek legal advice before this stage — a UAE-licensed employment lawyer can advise on the strength of your case and the likely timeline.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about employment contracts and job offers in the UAE.
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