Private sector companies operating in the UAE with 50 or more employees are approaching a key compliance deadline: June 30, 2026 is the cutoff for achieving the required 1 per cent semi-annual growth in Emiratisation targets within skilled job categories. Companies that fail to meet the target face financial penalties, making it one of the most significant near-term HR compliance obligations for businesses operating across the country.
The Emiratisation programme — overseen by the Ministry of Human Resources and Emiratisation (MOHRE) — forms a cornerstone of the UAE’s broader strategy to increase the participation of Emirati nationals in the private sector economy. The current framework requires covered companies to increase their ratio of Emirati skilled employees in a staged, measurable way, with semi-annual targets creating regular checkpoints for compliance monitoring.
What Companies Need to Do Before June 30
For companies that have not yet met the current cycle’s targets, the remaining weeks require focused action. MOHRE’s Nafis programme — the primary vehicle for Emiratisation support — provides subsidised recruitment, salary support, and training pathways that can help employers accelerate the hiring of qualified Emirati candidates in time for the deadline. Employers are advised to review their current Emiratisation ratios, identify eligible open roles that can be filled by UAE nationals, and engage with Nafis support channels proactively rather than waiting for a compliance review.
Skilled jobs — the category to which the 1 per cent growth requirement applies — encompass a wide range of roles in sectors including banking, finance, technology, healthcare, logistics, hospitality, and retail management. Roles in administrative functions and technical operations that require specialised qualifications are generally included within scope, while manual and low-skill positions are typically excluded from the calculation.
Federal Job Market Expands in Parallel
Alongside the private sector Emiratisation push, the federal government is expanding its own employment footprint in 2026. The year has seen 7,842 new federal vacancies created amid an ongoing restructuring of government entities, with seven new government bodies being established under a combined budget of AED 1.315 billion. The combination of new entities and existing departmental reorganisation is generating meaningful employment opportunities for UAE nationals across a range of technical, administrative, and policy functions.
For Emirati job seekers, the current environment is the most target-rich in recent years. Both the public and private sectors are actively recruiting UAE nationals, with financial services, fintech, and energy transition roles among the fastest-growing areas of demand. Companies building out AI, data analytics, and digital infrastructure capabilities are increasingly looking for UAE national talent in technical and product roles — a shift from the historical concentration of Emiratisation in customer-facing and administrative positions.
Sectors Driving New Emiratisation Roles
Dubai’s fintech sector and Abu Dhabi’s energy transition infrastructure are among the fastest-growing areas of Emiratisation-eligible employment. Financial technology companies in the DIFC and Abu Dhabi Global Market are actively building Emiratisation pipelines, partly because the sector’s growth has attracted regulatory attention that makes proactive nationalisation a competitive advantage in licensing conversations. Abu Dhabi’s clean energy and hydrogen projects are generating engineering, project management, and environmental science roles that represent a new frontier for Emirati workforce participation in the private sector.
Penalties and Enforcement
Companies that do not meet their June 30 targets face financial penalties calculated on a per-employee basis for each unfilled Emiratisation position. The penalty structure has been progressively strengthened over recent years, increasing the financial consequences of non-compliance and improving the incentive for companies to invest seriously in their Emiratisation pipelines rather than treating it as a secondary compliance exercise. MOHRE has also increased its monitoring of semi-annual reporting, reducing the window for companies to rely on end-of-year corrections.
With three weeks remaining until the deadline, companies that have yet to meet their targets should treat Emiratisation hiring as an urgent business priority — not merely a regulatory one. The talent pipeline is available, government support tools are accessible, and the cost of non-compliance now materially exceeds the investment required to meet the requirement.



