UAE Commercial Eviction Process: Law and RDSC Procedures

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A definitive guide to evicting commercial tenants from retail, office, and industrial spaces in Dubai and Abu Dhabi using formal RDSC procedures.

4 min read
Verified Mar 2026
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Legal Disclaimer

This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.

Evicting a commercial tenant—whether it’s a small retail boutique, a massive industrial warehouse, or a corporate office tower—is a serious legal undertaking in the United Arab Emirates. The stakes are high, and the laws strictly favor due process over rapid landlord action.

Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Landlord-tenant laws change frequently. Always consult a licensed attorney in the UAE for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.

The Absolute Ban on Self-Help Evictions

Regardless of how much rent a corporate tenant owes, or how blatant their breach of contract is, commercial landlords in the UAE cannot physically lock out a tenant.

Actions that are considered illegal self-help include:

  • Changing the locks on the office doors or retail shop shutters.
  • Requesting the building management to deny access to the tenant's employees.
  • Disconnecting the water, electricity (DEWA/ADDC), or central chiller/cooling systems.

If a landlord attempts a self-help eviction, the corporate tenant will immediately file an urgent "restoring utility" or "restoring access" case at the Rental Dispute Settlement Centre (RDSC) or police. The landlord will face massive fines and be forced to financially compensate the tenant for lost business revenue.

Legal Grounds and Notice Requirements (Dubai)

In Dubai (under Law No. 26 of 2007, amended by Law No. 33 of 2008), the eviction process for commercial spaces mirrors the residential process but carries specific commercial triggers. All notices MUST be sent via Notary Public or Registered Mail.

The 30-Day Notice (At-Fault Eviction)

A commercial landlord can serve a notarized 30-day notice to evict prior to lease expiry for reasons including:

  1. Unpaid Rent: The most common reason. If a post-dated rent cheque bounces, the landlord serves the notice. The tenant has 30 days to clear the arrears.
  2. Unauthorized Subleasing: If the tenant subleases the office or warehouse without explicit written permission.
  3. Illegal Activities: Using the commercial space for unlicensed or illegal purposes.
  4. Commercial Abandonment: A unique clause for commercial leases. If a retail shop remains closed without a valid reason for 30 consecutive days or 90 non-consecutive days within one year, the landlord can initiate eviction.
  5. Significant Damage: The tenant undertakes structural alterations without permission, jeopardizing building safety.

The 12-Month Notice (No-Fault Eviction)

If the commercial tenant is paying rent and operating legally, the landlord can only demand they vacate by serving a massive 12-month notarized notice upon the expiry of the lease. This is allowed if:

  1. Major Renovation/Demolition: The landlord wishes to demolish the building or undertake comprehensive renovations that cannot be completed while the tenant occupies the space (requires official municipal permits).
  2. Owner Occupancy: The landlord wishes to recover the commercial space for their own personal business use (or that of their first-degree relatives), provided they do not own suitable alternative commercial space.
  3. Selling the Property: The landlord is selling the commercial unit.

The RDSC Execution Process

If a notarized notice period expires (whether 30 days or 12 months) and the corporate tenant refuses to vacate the premises:

  1. File the Case: The landlord must file a formal eviction case with the RDSC (in Dubai) or the Rent Dispute Settlement Committee (in Abu Dhabi).
  2. Hearings: The RDSC will review the Ejari contracts, the bounced cheques, and the proof of notarized notice delivery.
  3. Judgment and Execution: If the judge rules in favor of eviction, the court issues an execution order. The court (and police, if necessary) will manage the physical lock-out and possession handover. The landlord now has the legal right to seize remaining assets inside the unit to cover unpaid rent debts via a separate court-ordered asset auction.

Manage your commercial property portfolio efficiently with Landager, ensuring all notarized warning letters and 12-month eviction notices are tracked flawlessly to comply with UAE timelines.

Back to UAE Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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