Articles of Association
AOA
Definition
Companion charter to the MOA detailing internal governance — director powers, share-transfer rules, meeting protocols. Drafted together with the MOA; rejected AOA filings are a common cause of license-application delays.
Also known as
- Articles of Incorporation
- Bylaws
- Company Constitution
- Internal Regulations
Attributes
| Type | Legal document |
|---|---|
| Jurisdiction | UAE |
| Governing authority | Ministry of Economy and Commerce |
| Companion document | Memorandum of Association |
| Primary purpose | Internal corporate governance |
What it is
Articles of Association (AOA) is the second of two foundational charter documents for a UAE limited company, sitting alongside the Memorandum of Association. Where the MOA captures the headline pact between shareholders — names, shares, capital — the AOA governs how the company operates day-to-day: how directors are appointed and removed, the powers reserved to the general meeting, share-transfer mechanics, dividend rules, dispute-resolution steps, and amendment thresholds.
UAE licensing authorities require both documents to be notarised and filed in Arabic. Drafting errors or inconsistencies between MOA and AOA are one of the most common causes of license-application rejections at DET and free-zone authorities.
Key characteristics
- Legal role
- Internal governance rulebook
- Pairs with
- Memorandum of Association (MOA)
- Filing
- Arabic original notarised at incorporation
- Amendment
- Requires shareholder resolution + re-notarisation
How it works
- Drafting: The AOA is prepared concurrently with the MOA during company setup. Shareholders or their legal representatives define internal governance rules.
- Regulatory Review: The draft is submitted to the licensing authority—such as a free zone authority, the DIFC Registrar, or the relevant DED department—for approval.
- Notarisation and Signing: Shareholders sign the AOA before a notary or authorised registrar, depending on jurisdiction requirements.
- Filing: The executed AOA becomes part of the company's official records and is referenced for future amendments, such as changes to share capital or director appointments.
- Ongoing Compliance: The company must operate according to AOA provisions. Amendments require shareholder resolution and re-filing with the licensing authority.
Types of Articles of Association
| Type | Description | When it applies |
|---|---|---|
| Standard Template AOA | Pre-drafted articles provided by free zone authorities or mainland regulators with limited customisation. | Used for typical small-to-medium setups where shareholders accept default governance terms. |
| Customised AOA | Tailored provisions for specific shareholder arrangements, veto rights, or specialised governance structures. | Applies to joint ventures, family offices, or investor-backed companies requiring bespoke protections. |
| DIFC/ADGM Model AOA | Articles conforming to common law principles and the specific company laws of the DIFC or ADGM. | Required for companies incorporated in these financial centres, which operate under English common law-influenced regimes. |
Examples
A mainland LLC in Dubai submits its AOA to the DED as part of its initial trade license application. The document specifies that board meetings require a quorum of two-thirds of directors and that share transfers must first be offered to existing shareholders. In the DMCC free zone, a trading company uses the authority's standard AOA template but adds bespoke provisions restricting the transfer of shares to non-UAE nationals without board consent. A DIFC-registered investment firm drafts a customised AOA that aligns with the DIFC Companies Law and includes detailed committees for risk and audit oversight.
Why it matters
A weak AOA is invisible at incorporation but expensive at exit — share transfers, deadlocks, and investor rounds all depend on the clauses you wrote (or didn't) at day zero.
Common misconceptions
Misconception
AOA is just a template — same for everyone.
Reality
Authorities accept template clauses, but transfer restrictions, board powers, and dividend mechanics should be tuned to the shareholder structure.
FAQs
- Is the AOA the same as the MOA?
- No. The MOA is the high-level pact between shareholders covering names, shares, and capital. The AOA is the operating manual — how the board runs, how shares transfer, how disputes resolve. Both are mandatory and notarised together at company incorporation.
- Can the AOA be amended after incorporation?
- Yes — through a shareholder resolution passed at the threshold the AOA itself specifies (typically 75%+). The amended AOA is notarised and filed with the licensing authority. New shareholders, capital changes, and board structure changes usually require AOA amendment.
See also
- MOA(Memorandum of Association)
- Board Resolution
- Shareholder
For better understanding, see also
- How to Set Up a Subsidiary Company in UAE(post)
- Start a Business in Dubai Free Zone | Expert Guide(post)
- How to Start a Business in Dubai: Everything You Need to Know(post)
- How to Open a Business Bank Account in Dubai: Your Comprehensive Guide for 2025(post)
- Certificate of Incorporation in UAE : What It Is and Why You Need It(post)
- Set Up an E-commerce Business in UAE: Your Expert Guide for Success(post)
- How to Start a Software Company in Dubai: License, and Costs(post)
- How to Get an Educational Institute Business License in Dubai: A Comprehensive Guide 2025(post)
- How to Get an Educational Institute Business License in Dubai: A Comprehensive Guide 2025(post)
- Opening a Foreign Company Branch in Dubai – Requirements, Process & Benefits(post)
- Your Strategic Advantage: Why AML Compliance Service in UAE is Your Best Business Investment(post)















