
There are two types of enforcement:
1. Financial contributions
2. Administrative penalties
Most companies focus on contributions. The real risk sits in penalties.
For companies with 50+ employees:
This creates a compounding cost problem. Delays are not neutral. They are expensive.
For companies with 20–49 employees in targeted sectors:
This is not tied to monthly progress. It is a direct annual cost if hiring obligations are not met.
For many SMEs, this is equivalent to hiring a full-time employee. Which is exactly the point.
Regulators are actively monitoring for misuse. “Tick-box hiring” is no longer tolerated.
Examples of violations:
This is commonly referred to as fake Emiratisation.
Penalties can reach up to AED 500,000, alongside additional restrictions on the company.
This is where compliance shifts from operational to legal risk.
Understanding the real cost is critical.
Scenario 1: 1 missing Emirati
Scenario 2: 3 missing Emiratis
Scenario 3: Delayed hiring
The key takeaway:
Non-compliance is not a one-time fine.
It is an ongoing financial drain.
Most companies do not fail because they ignore Emiratisation. They fail because they lack execution.
A simple control framework:
1. Policy alignment
2. Continuous sourcing
3. Structured hiring process
The fastest way to reduce penalties is simple.
Fill roles faster.
Dawlati is built for this:
It is not just a hiring tool. It is a cost-control and risk-reduction system.
What is the Emiratisation fine?
A financial contribution paid per missing Emirati employee in required roles.
How much is the Emiratisation penalty per employee?
It varies, but contributions are applied monthly and increase over time.
What is the AED 108,000 Emiratisation fine?
A fixed annual contribution applied to companies with 20–49 employees in targeted sectors if hiring requirements are not met.
What is fake Emiratisation?
Artificial or non-genuine hiring practices used to appear compliant.
What happens if a company circumvents Emiratisation?
Severe penalties, including fines up to AED 500,000 and regulatory action.
Emiratisation penalties are not designed to punish. They are designed to force action.
The real cost is not the fine itself.
It is the lack of a system to prevent it.



