In my role at Diligencia, heading up our Corporate Intelligence team, I regularly support clients with one of their key needs: identifying ultimate beneficial owners (UBOs). In the Middle East and Africa, the regions we specialise in, there is no one-size-fits-all approach and UBO disclosure laws differ from country to country. Over the past few years, however, we have seen a clear acceleration in regulatory reforms aimed at enforcing UBO transparency, requiring companies to disclose the natural persons who ultimately own or control them. These reforms are driven primarily by the need to combat financial crime, meet international standards (notably those set by the Financial Action Task Force, or FATF), and encourage legitimate investment through stronger corporate governance.
Below I outline some things to be aware of when it comes to understanding UBO disclosure laws in the Middle East.
Table of contents
What is a UBO?
Why UBO laws matter in the Middle East
Key jurisdictional frameworks
Middle East UBO disclosure laws: Jurisdiction comparison table
Common features across Middle East UBO regimes
Business implications and compliance strategies
A beneficial owner is a natural person, not just a registered shareholder or legal owner, who ultimately owns or controls a legal entity or benefits from its assets, even if that control is exercised indirectly (e.g., through other entities or layered ownership structures). This concept is central to modern corporate transparency standards and global Anti‑Money Laundering/Counter‑Financing of Terrorism (AML/CFT) frameworks.
Regional governments have introduced UBO disclosure laws to:
Many Middle Eastern jurisdictions historically lacked centralised beneficial ownership reporting. The latest reforms, however, mark a significant shift toward systematic disclosure and registry maintenance for almost all companies operating in the region.
Saudi Arabia
In February 2025, Saudi Arabia introduced its first formal UBO disclosure regime, a major development in the Gulf region’s corporate governance landscape:
United Arab Emirates
In the UAE, UBO disclosure is well‑established and continues to evolve:
The UAE’s system requires companies to keep multiple internal registers and provide detailed personal information about UBOs, though the federal regime does not make such information public.
Qatar
Qatar’s UBO disclosure regime has been in place for several years and is embedded in commercial registry requirements:
Qatar has long prohibited bearer shares and require nominee directors/shareholders to disclose their nominators, which helps reveal the natural persons behind corporate ownership.
Bahrain and other Gulf States
Many GCC members, such as Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, and Qatar, have introduced UBO or beneficial ownership reporting obligations as part of commercial registration procedures:
|
Country |
Ownership Threshold |
Reporting Authority |
Reporting Frequency & Updates |
Exemptions |
Penalties for Non-Compliance |
|
Saudi Arabia |
25% ownership or significant control |
Ministry of Commerce |
At incorporation, update within 15 days of change, annual confirmation |
Subsidiaries of companies listed on a Saudi exchange |
Fines, administrative penalties, potential restrictions on business activity |
|
United Arab Emirates (UAE) |
25% ownership/control (direct or indirect) |
Ministry of Economy & relevant free zone authorities |
Submit upon incorporation; update within 15 days of change; weekly reporting in some zones |
Listed companies, government entities, certain financial free zone entities (DIFC/ADGM) |
Fines, suspension of business activity, reputational scrutiny |
|
Qatar |
25% or more ownership/control |
Ministry of Commerce & Industry |
At commercial registration; update promptly on changes |
Government-owned entities |
Fines, administrative penalties, potential suspension of registration |
|
Bahrain |
25% ownership/control |
Ministry of Industry, Commerce & Tourism |
At licensing; update on change |
Government entities |
Fines, license restrictions |
|
Oman |
25% ownership/control |
Ministry of Commerce, Industry & Investment Promotion |
Upon registration and when ownership changes |
Government entities |
Fines and administrative measures |
|
Kuwait |
25% ownership/control |
Ministry of Commerce & Industry |
At registration and update as needed |
Government entities |
Fines and administrative enforcement |
While details vary, most Middle Eastern UBO laws share several characteristics:
1. Ownership thresholds
UBOs are generally defined by ownership/control of 25% or more of shares or voting rights, either directly or indirectly. This aligns with international standards and helps ensure real owners are identified.
2. Register requirements
Companies must keep a UBO register that contains detailed information such as:
These registers are typically not public, but must be made available to regulators.
3. Ongoing reporting and updates
Businesses are required to update authorities promptly — often within 15 days — of any change in beneficial ownership. Annual confirmations of existing information are also standard.
4. Exemptions and special cases
Most regimes exempt:
5. Penalties for non‑compliance
Penalties vary by country but often include:
For example, fines can range from tens of thousands of AED in the UAE to hundreds of thousands of Saudi riyals in Saudi Arabia for failure to comply with UBO reporting obligations.
For multinational and local companies navigating UBO laws in the Middle East, my advice includes:
UBO Explorer interactive diagram on ClarifiedBy
About the author
Mina Mouhoub, Managing Director - Operations
Mina leads Diligencia’s consulting and due diligence solution team, working on a range of business intelligence and investigations, such as enhanced due diligence, international asset tracing, and supporting clients entering new markets in unfamiliar or high-risk jurisdictions. Prior to joining Diligencia in 2016, Mina was engaged with a global economic research and consultancy firm. She speaks native-level Arabic, French and English.
About Diligencia
Diligencia helps customers from around the world to find essential information on organisations registered in Africa and the wider Middle East, drawing on primary sources that are otherwise hard to find. Using our curated data, we enable our clients to effectively manage their compliance obligations, allowing them to continuously monitor their suppliers and counterparty risks in the MEA region.