Power of Attorney Services

Vehicle / car Power of Attorney (POA’s) in Dubai (RTA use cases)

This guide is informational only. Requirements vary by authority and by the institution that must accept your POA’s. This is not legal advice.

Quick answer

Vehicle Power of Attorney (POA’s) are used when a vehicle owner needs an agent to complete car-related actions on their behalf—often selling or transferring ownership when the owner can’t attend. Acceptance can depend on the exact authority wording, correct vehicle identifiers, and an execution route the relevant counterparty accepts. Requirements can vary, so confirm before you notarise.

Common situations where vehicle POA’s are used

  • Selling a car when the owner is overseas or unavailable.
  • Transferring ownership between parties when the owner cannot attend.
  • Completing vehicle registration-related steps that require owner authority (varies by workflow).

What to include in vehicle POA’s

  • Explicit authority to sell/transfer the vehicle (avoid vague wording).
  • Vehicle identifiers where relevant (plate number, chassis/VIN, registration details).
  • Authority to sign transfer forms and submit documents at the relevant centre (where required).
  • Any limits you want (single vehicle only, single transaction only, expiry date).

Step-by-step (typical approach)

  • Confirm what the receiving counterparty needs (RTA centre, buyer, insurer, finance provider if any).
  • Draft vehicle POA’s with the exact action(s) required and vehicle identifiers.
  • Prepare IDs for principal and agent; gather vehicle registration documents.
  • Execute/notarise the POA’s through an accepted notary route.
  • Agent attends with the POA’s + supporting documents and follows the centre’s procedure.

What to upload for review

  • Principal passport/EID copy (as applicable).
  • Agent passport/EID details.
  • Vehicle registration details (or a copy of the registration card if available).
  • One sentence describing the exact action: sell / transfer / register / collect documents.
  • If the owner is overseas: country/city and target date.

Common pitfalls

  • Scope is missing the exact act (e.g., transfer authority not clearly stated).
  • Vehicle is not identified clearly, so the POA’s cannot be tied to the asset.
  • Name/ID mismatch between POA’s and vehicle records.
  • Assuming one POA’s will be accepted by every counterparty (insurers/finance providers may have their own requirements).

FAQs

Sometimes yes, if the vehicle POA’s include explicit sale/transfer authority and are executed correctly. Requirements can vary by workflow and counterparty.

Often it helps. Identifying the vehicle clearly reduces ambiguity, especially when the POA’s are meant for a single vehicle/transaction.

Often yes for formal use. Confirm the accepted route for your specific workflow.

Additional approvals or documents may be required by the finance provider, and POA’s alone may not be sufficient. Confirm requirements early.

Often you can start remotely, but the execution/attestation chain depends on where you are signing and the receiving party’s requirements.

Governance

Maintenance: Updated for material UAE authority/trustee process changes and recurring user confusion.
Method: Editorial Policy