Abu Dhabi has introduced a time-limited initiative allowing investors to renew or update economic licences that have been inactive for three years or more, granting a full waiver on late renewal fees. The move, aimed at encouraging compliance and supporting business continuity, marks another step in the emirate’s strategy to enhance its competitiveness and attract investment.
Phase one: Renewal window for pre-2010 licences
The Abu Dhabi Registration and Licensing Authority (ADRA) has announced that, throughout November 2025, investors whose licences expired before 2010 can regularise their status without incurring any late-renewal penalties.
Licences that have remained unrenewed for three years or longer are ordinarily transferred to an expired registry and become subject to revocation. By opening this grace period, ADRA aims to ease the process for affected investors and reintegrate dormant businesses into the formal economy.
A timeline for licences that expired after 2010 will be announced in subsequent phases. ADRA confirmed that this staged approach allows for a smooth implementation and ensures all business owners receive equitable access to the support measures.
Supporting a growing business environment
Mohammed Munif Al Mansoori, Director General of ADRA, said the initiative strengthens the emirate’s efforts to improve the ease of doing business and maintain investor confidence.
“This initiative supports the ease of doing business by allowing investors to regularise expired licences, while also streamlining processes that enable them to seize the promising opportunities within Abu Dhabi’s dynamic economy,” he said.
He added that extending eligibility to licences that lapsed before 2010 underscores Abu Dhabi’s commitment to inclusive support for all business operators.
“Our focus remains on delivering effective, business-friendly solutions that simplify licensing from set-up to every stage of the operational life cycle,” Al Mansoori noted.
Economic context and performance
The initiative comes at a time of robust economic performance across Abu Dhabi.
In the first half of 2025, the number of active business licences increased by 19 per cent compared with the same period in 2024, reflecting strong investor confidence.
According to the Statistics Centre – Abu Dhabi, the emirate’s gross domestic product grew by nearly 4 per cent year-on-year in the second quarter of 2025, reaching Dh306.3 billion ($83.4 billion). Growth has been driven primarily by the non-oil sector, highlighting the capital’s continued diversification away from hydrocarbons.
Non-oil foreign trade surged 34.7 per cent in the first half of the year to Dh195.4 billion, underscoring Abu Dhabi’s position as a competitive regional hub for commerce and investment.
Part of a broader reform agenda
The business renewal programme aligns with a series of reforms and regulatory updates designed to cultivate an investor-friendly ecosystem. Over recent years, Abu Dhabi has introduced simplified licensing processes, flexible ownership laws, and targeted incentives to attract both domestic and international enterprises.
By combining administrative flexibility with sustained economic growth, the new licensing initiative reflects Abu Dhabi’s broader vision: to maintain a transparent, accessible, and forward-looking business environment that supports entrepreneurs and strengthens the emirate’s standing as a global investment destination.
Phase one: Renewal window for pre-2010 licences
The Abu Dhabi Registration and Licensing Authority (ADRA) has announced that, throughout November 2025, investors whose licences expired before 2010 can regularise their status without incurring any late-renewal penalties.
Licences that have remained unrenewed for three years or longer are ordinarily transferred to an expired registry and become subject to revocation. By opening this grace period, ADRA aims to ease the process for affected investors and reintegrate dormant businesses into the formal economy.
A timeline for licences that expired after 2010 will be announced in subsequent phases. ADRA confirmed that this staged approach allows for a smooth implementation and ensures all business owners receive equitable access to the support measures.
Supporting a growing business environment
Mohammed Munif Al Mansoori, Director General of ADRA, said the initiative strengthens the emirate’s efforts to improve the ease of doing business and maintain investor confidence.
“This initiative supports the ease of doing business by allowing investors to regularise expired licences, while also streamlining processes that enable them to seize the promising opportunities within Abu Dhabi’s dynamic economy,” he said.
He added that extending eligibility to licences that lapsed before 2010 underscores Abu Dhabi’s commitment to inclusive support for all business operators.
“Our focus remains on delivering effective, business-friendly solutions that simplify licensing from set-up to every stage of the operational life cycle,” Al Mansoori noted.
Economic context and performance
The initiative comes at a time of robust economic performance across Abu Dhabi.
In the first half of 2025, the number of active business licences increased by 19 per cent compared with the same period in 2024, reflecting strong investor confidence.
According to the Statistics Centre – Abu Dhabi, the emirate’s gross domestic product grew by nearly 4 per cent year-on-year in the second quarter of 2025, reaching Dh306.3 billion ($83.4 billion). Growth has been driven primarily by the non-oil sector, highlighting the capital’s continued diversification away from hydrocarbons.
Non-oil foreign trade surged 34.7 per cent in the first half of the year to Dh195.4 billion, underscoring Abu Dhabi’s position as a competitive regional hub for commerce and investment.
Part of a broader reform agenda
The business renewal programme aligns with a series of reforms and regulatory updates designed to cultivate an investor-friendly ecosystem. Over recent years, Abu Dhabi has introduced simplified licensing processes, flexible ownership laws, and targeted incentives to attract both domestic and international enterprises.
By combining administrative flexibility with sustained economic growth, the new licensing initiative reflects Abu Dhabi’s broader vision: to maintain a transparent, accessible, and forward-looking business environment that supports entrepreneurs and strengthens the emirate’s standing as a global investment destination.
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