Arbitration Lawyers in the UAE & Egypt

Arbitration Lawyer Services for Complex Disputes

When a dispute threatens cash flow, control, or project delivery, the right arbitration strategy can materially change the outcome. We advise businesses, founders, investors, and executives on arbitration matters across the UAE and Egypt, including DIAC, CRCICA, ICC, and cross-border disputes, with a clear focus on position, enforceability, and commercial impact.

person in orange long sleeve shirt writing on white paper

Control the Dispute Before It Controls Your Business

Arbitration for Complex Commercial Disputes


Arbitration can be one of the most effective ways to resolve commercial disputes, but outcomes depend on strategy from the beginning. The key issues are rarely only legal. They also affect cash flow, project delivery, investor confidence, business continuity, and the realistic path to recovery.

At Al Adly & Co., we approach arbitration as a business-critical process. We help clients assess the arbitration clause, governing law, seat, institution, evidence position, and enforcement path before the dispute hardens into a more costly fight.

Our work is especially relevant for businesses operating across the UAE and Egypt, or using either jurisdiction as a base for regional trade, investment, development, real estate, distribution, or strategic partnerships.

Institutional & Procedural Considerations

Strategic Factors That Shape Arbitration Outcome


In arbitration, outcome is shaped not only by the merits, but by how the process is structured — including forum, seat, timing, and enforceability.

We help clients assess issues such as:

  • Whether a favorable award can realistically be recognized against assets in the UAE, Egypt, or elsewhere
  • Whether the language of proceedings will increase cost or complexity
  • Whether DIAC, CRCICA, ICC, or ad hoc arbitration is the right fit
  • Whether the chosen seat supports the intended approach
  • Whether the clause itself creates avoidable procedural risk
  • Whether the governing law supports the commercial position

These decisions are strongest when made early, not after the dispute is already moving against you.

Commercial Focus. Regional Execution.

Arbitration Services We Provide


We support arbitration matters from clause review and pre-dispute assessment through pleadings, hearings, settlement positioning, and post-award recovery planning.

Pre-Arbitration Review & Risk Assessment


Strong outcomes often begin before a request is filed. We assess the arbitration clause, notice requirements, governing law, seat, institution, language, interim relief options, and recovery realities so clients understand their position before escalation.

Construction, Engineering & Real Estate Arbitration


Construction and development disputes often involve delay claims, payment issues, defects, variation orders, consultant liability, and termination disputes. We help structure a clear arbitration approach in matters where the documentation and financial exposure are substantial.

Investment, Cross-Border & Institutional Arbitration


Cross-border disputes require more than local procedure. They require coordinated thinking across contracts, counterparties, jurisdictions, and recovery realities. We advise on institutional and ad hoc arbitration involving the UAE, Egypt, or both.

Commercial & Contract Arbitration


We represent clients in disputes arising from commercial agreements, supply arrangements, distribution relationships, service contracts, procurement contracts, and other contractual breakdowns. Our focus is on legal position, business pressure points, and practical recovery.

Shareholder, Partnership & Joint Venture Disputes


When founders, investors, or business partners fall into conflict, arbitration may determine control, exit, valuation, governance rights, deadlock consequences, and financial responsibility. We advise on disputes arising from shareholders’ agreements, side letters, joint venture arrangements, and management rights.

Arbitration Clause Drafting, Review & Negotiation


Many arbitration problems begin at contract stage. We help clients draft and negotiate clauses that address institution, seat, governing law, language, and number of arbitrators with the clarity needed to reduce future procedural risk.

Post-Award Recovery & Challenge Strategy


An award only creates value if it can be recognized, defended, or converted into recovery. We advise on recognition, recovery planning, challenge risk, and the related court steps connected to UAE and Egypt matters.

UAE + Egypt Arbitration Capability

Arbitration in the UAE & Egypt


Arbitration planning changes materially depending on the jurisdiction, institution, clause wording, and recovery objective. Our cross-border presence in Dubai and Cairo/Giza allows us to support arbitration matters with one coordinated approach across two key regional markets.

🇦🇪

UAE Jurisdiction

Arbitration in the UAE


The UAE is one of the region’s leading arbitration environments, with sophisticated commercial users and multiple procedural options. We advise on matters involving DIAC, ICC, TAHKEEM, ad hoc proceedings, and disputes connected to Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Sharjah, and wider UAE business activity.

For many UAE-related disputes, the key questions include:
  • Whether the clause is workable and enforceable.
  • Which institution or seat creates the strongest procedural position.
  • Whether urgent interim relief is needed.
  • Where the counterparty’s assets are located and what recovery will realistically involve

We also advise on legacy clause issues and UAE-related post-award planning where assets, counterparties, or project ties are local.

🇪🇬

Egypt Jurisdiction

Arbitration in Egypt


Egypt remains one of the region’s most important jurisdictions for arbitration, particularly in commercial, real estate, trade, and investment-related disputes. Effective arbitration in Egypt often depends on disciplined document handling, procedural planning, and practical thinking around case progression and recoverability.

Our role may include:
  • Reviewing arbitration clauses under Egyptian-law contracts.
  • Handling arbitration planning from notice through award
  • Coordinating evidence, expert positioning, and submissions
  • Advising on recovery and set-aside risk
  • Managing disputes where Egyptian counterparties, assets, or governing law are central

We advise on matters involving CRCICA, ad hoc proceedings, and disputes connected to Cairo, Giza, Alexandria, and cross-border commercial relationships involving UAE-based parties or investors.

Arbitration vs Litigation-What fits Best

Dispute Route Selection

Arbitration vs. Litigation: Choosing
the Right Path 


Arbitration is not always the right path, but choosing the wrong forum early can limit recovery, increase cost, and reduce negotiating leverage.

The right route depends on:

  • The wording of the contract.
  • Whether urgent relief is needed.
  • Confidentiality concerns.
  • The location of assets.
  • The cost profile of the dispute. 

In some cases, litigation is better. In others, negotiated settlement, interim pressure, or a broader dispute-resolution strategy produces the stronger commercial outcome. Our role is to help clients choose the route that best protects leverage, value, and business continuity.

Why Clients Instruct Us

Why Choose Al Adly & Co. for Arbitration Matters in the UAE & Egypt?


Arbitration requires legal precision, but high-value commercial disputes also require business judgment, regional execution, and recoverability-focused thinking.

Cross-Border Capability Across 
the UAE & Egypt

With capability across Dubai and Egypt, we help clients manage disputes that move across contracts, counterparties, and legal environments through one coordinated approach.

Arbitration-Focused Leadership

Ahmed Adly brings more than 20 years of legal experience across the UAE and Egypt, holds an LL.M. in Arbitration, is a registered arbitrator at DIAC, and is a member of CIArb. Clients value that combination of arbitration knowledge, commercial judgment, and cross-border execution.

Commercially Focused, Not Process-Led

We do not treat arbitration as a filing exercise. We assess procedural posture, pressure points, legal risk, and business exposure alongside the merits of the case.

Founder, Investor & Executive Perspective

Our work is particularly relevant where disputes affect control, liquidity, projects, reputation, strategic relationships, or long-term business value.

Bilingual Regional Execution

In cross-border disputes touching the UAE and Egypt, bilingual legal execution matters. We help bridge English-language commercial operations with Arabic-language legal and documentary realities where procedure, recognition, or court support requires it.

Al Adly & Co.

Meet The Team


Our team brings together strategic legal experience across the UAE and Egypt — advising founders, executives, investors, and government-linked entities on complex, high-value disputes. In arbitration matters, clients value our combination of regional execution, business fluency, and recoverability-focused thinking. Ahmed Adly brings more than 20 years of legal experience across the UAE and Egypt, holds an LL.M. in Arbitration, is a DIAC-registered arbitrator, and is a member of CIArb.

Ahmed Adly

Founder & Managing Partner

Nedaa Ahmed

Group Manager

Akram Gideon

Senior Legal Associate

Act Early. Preserve Leverage.

When Should You Contact an Arbitration Lawyer?


The best time to involve arbitration counsel is usually before the dispute is fully escalated.

Early advice is particularly valuable when:

  • A contract contains an arbitration clause that is unclear, outdated, or contested
  • a notice of breach or termination is about to be issued
  • a counterparty has suspended payment or performance
  • urgent asset or evidence protection may be needed
  • a shareholder, joint venture, or partnership dispute is escalating
  • a project delay, variation, or termination issue is becoming formal
  • the dispute is cross-border and recovery risk matters from the outset

Early legal input can materially affect forum, procedural posture, settlement pressure, and the quality of the record you carry into the arbitration itself.

F.A.Q.

Your Questions, Answered Directly.


What if the arbitration clause is unclear or outdated?

An unclear or legacy clause should be reviewed before any formal step is taken. Clause wording can affect jurisdiction, seat, procedure, and whether the dispute moves efficiently or becomes more vulnerable to challenge.

DIAC, CRCICA, or ICC: what changes strategically?

The institution can affect cost, case progression, administration, language, and recovery posture. The right choice depends on the contract, the dispute value, the parties, and the jurisdictions involved.

Can arbitral awards be enforced in the UAE and Egypt?

They can, but enforceability depends on the award, the seat, the applicable legal framework, and where the counterparty’s assets are located. Recognition and recovery should be considered from the beginning.

Is arbitration better than litigation for this dispute?

Not automatically. Arbitration can offer confidentiality, procedural flexibility, specialist decision-makers, and stronger cross-border enforceability in many commercial disputes. Litigation may still be better depending on urgency, remedies, and asset location.

Information on this page is general and not legal advice; advice depends on your facts and jurisdiction.

Contact us

Take Control Before the Dispute Controls the Timeline


Arbitration rewards preparation, clarity, and commercial discipline. We can assess your clause, identify key risks, evaluate forum options, and map the most effective path forward across the UAE and Egypt.

Get in Touch

Please Select a Service
  • Advisory
  • Business Setup
  • Corporate & Commercial
  • Crypto & Fintech
  • Real Estate Law
  • Dispute Resolution
  • Other
0 of 350

Contact Information

Egypt

  • Phone
    +20 121 2556 843
  • Landline
    +20 238 8643 53

United Arab Emirates

  • Phone
    +971 55 3033 002
  • Landline
    +971 44 3026 66

Tell us what has happened, what your contract says, and what business outcome matters most to you.