Key rule: All foreign documents presented to UAE courts must be (1) attested through the full chain from your home country to UAE MOFA, and (2) translated into Arabic by a UAE Ministry of Justice accredited translator. Without both steps, the document will not be accepted.
Document Checklist by Category
Essential for Both Parties
RequiredOriginal marriage certificate
Must be the original or a certified copy. If issued abroad, needs attestation.
Certified Arabic translation of marriage certificate
By a UAE Ministry of Justice accredited translator. AED 100–400.
Valid passports (both parties)
Copies of current passport — all pages with stamps.
UAE residence visa or Emirates ID
Or tourist visa stamp if on short-term stay. Both parties' residency status affects which court has jurisdiction.
Recent passport-size photographs
4–6 photos each. Some courts specify white or grey background.
If Children Are Involved
RequiredChildren's birth certificates (originals + Arabic translation)
Attested if issued abroad.
Children's UAE school enrollment records
Relevant if custody arrangement involves school district.
Children's passports or UAE ID cards
Required for identifying the children in custody orders.
Current custody arrangement (if any prior order exists)
Any existing formal custody agreement or prior court order.
For Contested Alimony or Financial Claims
Recent salary certificate or employment letter
For both parties if relevant. Certifies current monthly income.
Bank statements (last 3–6 months)
Key for proving income or establishing standard of living.
UAE property title deeds
If joint property or family home is part of the settlement.
Vehicle registration documents
If vehicles are part of the asset division.
Business ownership documents
Trade license, shareholding certificates if a business is at stake.
Rental agreement / utility bills
Proves current residence and helps establish household expenses.
Expats Only — Additional Requirements
RequiredMarriage certificate attested by home country notary
First step in the attestation chain. Varies by country — may require state or federal authentication.
Attestation by home country Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Second attestation step. Known as "legalisation" in some countries.
UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs attestation
Final step. Required before UAE courts will accept foreign documents.
Home country embassy in UAE attestation (if required)
Some countries require an additional embassy stamp in the UAE. Check with your embassy.
How to Attest a Foreign Marriage Certificate for UAE Courts
This is the step that catches most expats off guard. The full attestation chain for a foreign marriage certificate is:
Get the document notarised by a local notary in your home country.
Submit to the relevant state or regional government for authentication (varies by country).
Submit to your home country's Ministry of Foreign Affairs for the foreign affairs apostille or legalisation stamp.
Submit to your home country's embassy or consulate in the UAE (if your country requires this step).
Submit to the UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) in Abu Dhabi, Dubai, or the relevant emirate. MOFA attestation can now be done online via the MOFA UAE portal or through approved service agents.
Take the fully attested document to a UAE Ministry of Justice accredited legal translator for the Arabic certified translation.
Countries that use the Apostille system
If your home country is a member of the Hague Apostille Convention (US, UK, Australia, most EU countries), you can replace steps 2 and 3 with a single apostille stamp — significantly faster. UAE MOFA accepts apostilled documents. Countries not in the convention (Pakistan, India, some Middle Eastern countries) must complete the full legalisation chain.
Document Preparation Timeline
- Request certified copy of marriage certificate from issuing registry
- Begin home-country attestation chain
- Gather financial documents (bank statements, salary certificates)
- Complete UAE MOFA attestation
- Submit to accredited Arabic translator
- Consult with a lawyer and confirm what they need for your specific case
- Collect all translated and attested documents
- Organise children's documents if applicable
- Confirm all parties have valid UAE residence documents
- Bring originals AND certified copies of everything
- Bring payment for court fees (AED 500–1,500)
- Bring your lawyer or confirm appointment with the filing agent
Frequently Asked Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does it cost to attest a marriage certificate for UAE divorce?
Attestation costs vary significantly by country of origin. In total, the full attestation chain (home country notary + state authentication + home country foreign affairs + UAE MOFA) typically costs AED 300–1,000 equivalent. Professional document clearing agencies in the UAE charge AED 300–600 to handle the UAE MOFA step on your behalf. Adding the certified Arabic translation, budget AED 500–1,500 total per foreign document.
What if my spouse refuses to provide documents?
If your spouse refuses to produce documents they control (bank statements, property documents), your lawyer can apply to the court for a disclosure order. The court can compel production of financial documents. For documents issued by third parties (banks, employers), your lawyer can request the court to issue subpoenas or information orders directly to the institution.
Do UAE marriage certificates need attestation too?
UAE-issued marriage certificates (issued by the UAE courts or authorised religious officials) are already official UAE government documents and do not need attestation for use in UAE courts. However, if you need to use a UAE marriage certificate abroad (for divorce recognition in another country), it would need UAE MOFA attestation and then authentication in the destination country.
How long does the attestation process take?
UAE MOFA attestation for routine documents takes 1–3 working days in person, or 3–5 days online. The home country steps vary widely — the US State Department takes 8–12 weeks for apostille by mail, while UK Foreign Office apostille takes 10 days. Most expats spend 2–6 weeks completing the full chain before their documents are ready for court. Plan this well in advance of your intended filing date.
Can I hire someone to handle document attestation for me?
Yes. Document clearing agencies (PRO services) in the UAE handle the MOFA and translation steps efficiently for AED 300–800 depending on the service. For the home country steps, you need to either handle it yourself, use your home country's embassy in UAE, or hire a local service in your home country. Your UAE lawyer will typically coordinate or recommend reliable service providers.
Not Sure Which Documents You Need?
Document requirements can differ by emirate, case type, and nationality. A brief consultation will give you a precise list for your situation and avoid costly delays at filing.
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