Termination
United Arab Emirates
Grounds
Termination is possible on these grounds: by agreement, on the expiry of a fixed-term contract, through resignation, through incapacity or death, through dismissal with notice provided it is for a legitimate reason or through summary dismissal by reason of any of the grounds listed at Article 44 of the Labor Law.
In the DIFC, termination for cause by either party (without notice, in the case of dismissal of the employee) is lawful in circumstances where the conduct of one party warrants termination where a reasonable employer or employee would have terminated the employment.
In the ADGM, termination for cause (summary dismissal) by the employer is lawful in circumstances where a reasonable employer would consider immediate termination to be warranted due to the employee's conduct. The employee may terminate for cause (without notice or end of service gratuity) if the employer commits a crime which has a material and detrimental impact on the employee, commits a repudiatory breach of a provision of the employment contract, or materially contravenes the ADGM Employment Regulations in a way that has a material and detrimental impact on the employee.
Employees subject to termination laws
All employees.
Restricted or prohibited terminations
Employees who have not exhausted the statutory sick-leave entitlement are protected from dismissal on grounds of health, until the full sick-leave entitlement has been taken.
In addition, under the Labor Law, employees may not be provided with a termination notice while on any of the leaves prescribed under the Labor Law (sick leave, annual leave, maternity leave, parental leave, study leave and bereavement leave). Notice will begin on the 1st day following the day prescribed for the employee’s return from leave, unless both parties agree otherwise.
Third-party approval for termination/termination documents
UAE nationals are entitled to higher protection from dismissal. As part of such additional protection, approval from MOHRE is recommended before the employment of a UAE national can be terminated.
Mass layoff rules
No mass layoff rules exist.
Notice
Under the Labor Law, there is a statutory minimum notice of 30 days and a maximum permitted notice of 90 days. There is a minimum notice period of 14 days during an employee’s probation period.
In the DIFC, the minimum notice periods are:
- 7 days if the period of continuous employment is less than 3 months
- 30 days if the continuous employment is over 3 months but less than 5 years and
- 90 days if the continuous employment is in excess of 5 years.
In the ADGM, where the employee has been continuously employed for 1 month, the minimum notice periods are:
- 7 days if the period of continuous employment is less than 3 months and
- 30 days if the continuous employment is 3 months or more.
Statutory right to pay in lieu of notice or garden leave
Depends on contract terms. However, it should be noted that Article 62(4) of the DIFC law contains strict provisions in relation to payment in lieu of notice.
Under the Labor Law and DIFC Employment Law, garden leave and payment in lieu of notice is permitted and can be contractually agreed between the parties. Under ADGM Employment Regulations, payment in lieu of notice is permitted and can be contractually agreed between the parties. The ADGM Employment Regulations do not set out any specific right to garden leave; however, it can be contractually agreed between the parties and in practice is often implemented.
Severance
Unless terminated under Article 44 of the Labor Law or “for cause” in the DIFC and ADGM, employees are entitled to salary and benefits to the termination date, notice (or payment in lieu), payment in lieu of accrued but untaken annual leave, the cost of a flight/air ticket to repatriate the employee to their home country (unless (i) dismissal is attributable to employee and the employee has the funds to pay their own costs; or (ii) the employee has obtained alternative sponsorship to remain in the UAE), an end-of-service gratuity payment and reimbursement of unpaid business expenses. Under the Labor Law, in case of employer termination, the end-of service-gratuity is computed at 21 days' pay per year of service for the first 5 years of employment, provided the employee has reached a year's service (pay to include basic pay only) and 30 days' pay for each subsequent year. Such payment cannot exceed 2 years' pay. The position is the same in the ADGM.
In the DIFC, with regards to end-of-service gratuity, the DIFC Worker Workplace Savings Scheme known as DEWS replaced the end-of-service gratuity on February 1, 2020. Therefore, workers in employment before February 1, 2020 and who have at least 1 year’s continuous service with their employer on termination can either be paid the end-of-service gratuity accrued before the implementation of DEWS or on termination, or have their accrued gratuity transferred into DEWS.