Arbitration · Al Safar & Partners

Arbitration Agreement Drafting in Dubai.

Premier Arbitration Agreement Drafting Solutions in Dubai As your essential resource for arbitration agreement drafting in Dubai, our team is dedicated to crafting clear, enforceable arbitration clauses that protect your interests and withstand judicial scrutiny in the UAE and internationally.

Drafting Effective Arbitration Agreements for UAE Contracts

An arbitration agreement — whether a stand-alone submission agreement or a clause within a larger contract — is the foundation of the arbitration process. If it is poorly drafted, the entire dispute resolution mechanism can unravel. Courts have refused to enforce arbitration clauses that are ambiguous about the seat of arbitration, the institutional rules, or the scope of disputes covered. At Al Safar & Partners, we draft arbitration agreements that are clear, enforceable, and strategically tailored to the commercial context and the parties' priorities.

Essential Elements of a Valid Arbitration Agreement

Under UAE Federal Arbitration Law No. 6 of 2018, a valid arbitration agreement must:

  • Be in writing (signed agreement or exchange of written communications)
  • Clearly express the parties' agreement to arbitrate disputes of a specified nature
  • Be entered into by parties with legal capacity
  • Not cover matters that are excluded from arbitration under UAE law (such as certain family and criminal matters)

Beyond these minimum requirements, a well-drafted clause should specify: the arbitration institution (DIAC, ICC, LCIA etc.); the seat of arbitration; the language of proceedings; the number of arbitrators; the governing law; and the scope of disputes covered (all disputes, specific disputes, or excluding certain matters).

Common Arbitration Clause Mistakes We Prevent

  • Pathological Clauses: Clauses that refer to non-existent institutions, contradict each other, or leave essential terms undefined — causing preliminary disputes about whether arbitration can proceed at all.
  • Wrong Seat Choice: The seat determines the supervisory court that can set aside the award and the procedural law. Choosing the right seat — Dubai, DIFC, Abu Dhabi, Paris, Singapore, London — has major strategic and enforcement implications.
  • Inadequate Scope: Clauses that are too narrow (omitting important categories of dispute) or create ambiguity about which disputes are covered.
  • Mismatch with Governing Law: Arbitration agreements that contradict the governing law clause of the main contract, creating conflicts between the procedural and substantive legal frameworks.
  • Multi-Party Complexity: In contracts involving multiple parties — consortiums, joint ventures, construction chains — the arbitration clause must address joinder, consolidation and multi-party scenarios that simple two-party clauses do not contemplate.

Institutional vs. Ad Hoc Arbitration Agreements

Institutional arbitration (DIAC, ICC, LCIA etc.) provides administrative support, established rules and institutional oversight. Ad hoc arbitration gives parties full flexibility to design their own procedure but requires more careful drafting and party cooperation during the proceedings. We advise on which approach is most appropriate for the commercial context and the sophistication of the parties.

Review of Existing Arbitration Clauses

We review arbitration clauses in existing contracts and advise on their enforceability and potential weaknesses before a dispute arises — when it is much easier and cheaper to address them. This is particularly valuable before signing large construction contracts, joint venture agreements, distribution arrangements and real estate development agreements.

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, through a written amendment or addendum to the original contract. Both parties must agree. We draft such amendments frequently when parties to an ongoing commercial relationship decide to formalise their dispute resolution preference before a dispute arises — or when courts have proven too slow or expensive for previous disputes.
A pathological clause is one that contains defects preventing arbitration from proceeding as intended — referring to a non-existent institution, containing internal contradictions, failing to specify an essential term, or omitting to properly define what disputes are covered. Courts have varying approaches to curing pathological clauses, but litigation about the arbitration clause itself is expensive and time-consuming. Proper drafting from the outset avoids this entirely.
DIAC is the most common choice for Dubai-based commercial contracts. ICC is preferred for international contracts with parties from multiple regions. LCIA is favoured by English law practitioners and international financial services contracts. The right choice depends on the nature of the dispute, the nationalities of the parties, the contract value, and strategic considerations about the seat and enforcement. We advise on institution selection as part of our contract review service.
Under UAE consumer protection law and certain provisions of the Arbitration Law, pre-dispute arbitration clauses in standard-form consumer contracts may not be enforceable. Arbitration agreements in a business-to-business context are treated differently. We advise on the enforceability of arbitration provisions in your specific contractual context.
The seat (or legal seat) of arbitration determines the legal framework — which court supervises the arbitration, which procedural law applies, and where the award can be challenged. The venue (or physical venue) is simply where the hearings take place. The seat and venue can be in different locations — for example, a DIFC-seated arbitration may hold hearings in London. This distinction has significant legal consequences.

Get Your Arbitration Clause Drafted

Al Safar & Partners — trusted lawyers in Dubai since 1979. Contact us today for expert legal advice.

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