Complete guide to end-of-service benefits under UAE Labor Law
Federal Decree-Law No. 33 of 2021 - Updated for 2026
Essential information about end-of-service benefits in UAE
UAE gratuity is governed by Federal Decree-Law No. 33 of 2021 on the Regulation of Labour Relations, which replaced the previous 1980 labor law [web:28][web:29]. The law mandates that all private sector employees who complete at least one year of continuous service are entitled to end-of-service gratuity calculated based on their basic salary [web:22][web:24]. This gratuity is a legal right, not a discretionary benefit, and employers must pay it within 14 days of employment termination [web:29].
Maximum total gratuity cannot exceed 2 years of total salary
Step-by-step calculation methodology under UAE law
| Years of Service | AED 8,000 Salary | AED 12,000 Salary | AED 18,000 Salary |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Year | AED 5,600 | AED 8,400 | AED 12,600 |
| 3 Years | AED 16,800 | AED 25,200 | AED 37,800 |
| 5 Years | AED 28,000 | AED 42,000 | AED 63,000 |
| 7 Years | AED 44,000 | AED 66,000 | AED 99,000 |
| 10 Years | AED 68,000 | AED 102,000 | AED 153,000 |
| 15 Years | AED 108,000 | AED 162,000 | AED 243,000 |
The amounts shown are 100% gratuity (employer termination or limited contract completion). If you RESIGN from unlimited contract, reductions apply: Less than 1 year: Zero. 1-3 years: Zero from resignation. 3-5 years: 33.33% (one-third). 5+ years: 100% full amount. UAE law is more favorable than some GCC countries for resignation cases after 5 years of service [web:23].
How your gratuity amount changes based on separation type
Unlike Kuwait (10 years) and Saudi Arabia (10 years for full entitlement), UAE grants 100% gratuity to employees who resign after just 5 years of service [web:23]. This makes UAE one of the most employee-friendly jurisdictions in the GCC for gratuity rights. After 5 years, you have full mobility without losing gratuity benefits.
Legal timeline for gratuity payment under UAE law
Under Federal Decree-Law No. 33 of 2021, UAE employers must pay all end-of-service entitlements within 14 days from the employee's last working day [web:29]. This includes final salary, gratuity, unused annual leave encashment, and any other outstanding dues. The 14-day period includes weekends and public holidays, making it a strict calendar day deadline [web:29].
The 14-day countdown begins from your last physical working day, not the date you submitted resignation or received termination notice [web:29]. If your last working day is January 15, payment must be completed by January 29. Employers cannot delay by requesting additional documentation or clearances - all settlements must occur within this period. Any legitimate deductions (loans, damages) must be documented and deducted within the same 14-day window.
Maximum gratuity limit under UAE law
UAE law caps maximum gratuity at 2 years of the employee's total salary (not just basic) [web:24]. This cap only affects long-service, high-salary employees. For most employees with typical service durations (5-15 years), the cap is not reached. The cap uses total salary including allowances, making it more generous than the basic-only calculation [web:24].
| Total Salary | 2-Year Cap | Years to Reach Cap | Basic Salary |
|---|---|---|---|
| AED 10,000 | AED 240,000 | ~21 years | AED 7,000 |
| AED 15,000 | AED 360,000 | ~21 years | AED 10,500 |
| AED 20,000 | AED 480,000 | ~21 years | AED 14,000 |
| AED 30,000 | AED 720,000 | ~21 years | AED 21,000 |
| AED 50,000 | AED 1,200,000 | ~21 years | AED 35,000 |
The 2-year cap typically requires 20+ years of continuous service to reach for most salary levels. Employees with 5-15 years service (the majority) receive their full calculated gratuity without hitting the cap. The cap primarily affects very long-service employees (25+ years) or those with exceptionally high salaries. UAE's cap is more generous than Kuwait (18 months) but less than some other jurisdictions.
Recent changes and current practices
Starting January 1, 2026, minimum salary for UAE nationals in private sector revised upward [web:24]. This affects gratuity calculations for Emirati employees but doesn't change the calculation formula itself. Expatriate salary regulations remain market-driven without government minimums [web:23].
MOHRE enhanced online complaint filing system for 2026 [web:22]. Employees can now file gratuity disputes entirely online through mohre.gov.ae portal or UAE Pass app. Resolution timelines improved to 2-3 weeks for conciliation, down from 4-6 weeks in previous years. Virtual hearings now standard option [web:23].
2026 enforcement includes heavier penalties for employers who delay gratuity payments beyond 14-day deadline [web:23][web:29]. Fines increased and repeat offenders face business license restrictions. MOHRE tracking employer compliance more strictly through digital monitoring systems, protecting employee rights better than ever.
Some UAE employers implementing gratuity savings accounts where portion of gratuity deposited monthly into employee's account. While not mandatory, this trend provides employees better financial security and guaranteed payment even if company faces financial difficulties. Consider requesting this arrangement when negotiating employment terms.
2026 practices emphasize clear documentation [web:25]. Employers must provide detailed final settlement statements showing gratuity calculation breakdown. Employees should verify calculations match legal formula. Any deductions must be itemized with legal justification. Keep digital copies of all employment documents for disputes [web:29].
Most UAE free zones now align with mainland labor law for gratuity calculations [web:31]. DIFC, ADGM, and other financial free zones may have slight variations but generally follow the 21/30 days formula. Always verify specific free zone regulations with your employer or free zone authority if employed in special economic zone.
Essential numbers and information
Common questions about UAE gratuity law
Official contacts and helpful information
UAE's gratuity system under Federal Decree-Law No. 33 of 2021 provides strong employee protections [web:28][web:29]. The 14-day payment deadline, clear calculation formula, and accessible complaint procedures through MOHRE ensure employees can claim their rightful benefits [web:29]. With digital filing options, free complaint submission, and typical resolution within 3-6 weeks, UAE offers one of the most efficient labor dispute systems in the region [web:22][web:23]. Don't hesitate to claim your gratuity - it's your legal right earned through years of service.