The POA’s Desk
EPISODE 16 — POAs FOR OVERSEAS PRINCIPALS. THE PRACTICAL WORKFLOW.
Welcome back to the POA’s desk.
In the last episode we covered POA cancellation. In this episode we cover the practical workflow for issuing a UAE POA when the principal is overseas — the most common scenario we handle at POAS.
Overseas principals fall into a few groups. UAE residents temporarily abroad. Former UAE residents who have relocated but still own UAE assets. Foreign investors who own UAE property without ever having lived here. Family members of UAE residents acting on inherited or jointly held assets. Each group has the same fundamental requirement — issue a UAE-valid POA without being physically in the UAE — but the practical paths differ.
The two main routes are remote notarisation and consular attestation. We covered remote notarisation in Episode 12. Consular attestation is the older route, still required in some cases, and worth understanding because the choice between the two routes affects time, cost, and complexity.
Remote notarisation is the preferred route when available. A UAE notary verifies the principal’s identity and signature through a video session, the document is registered in the UAE notary system, and the notarised PDF is delivered digitally. The whole process can complete in days. The fees are modest. The principal does not need to leave home.
Consular attestation is the route used when remote notarisation is not available, or when the receiving authority specifically requires consular-attested documents. The principal notarises the POA at a notary in their home country. The document is then attested by the foreign affairs ministry of that country, then by the UAE embassy or consulate, then by the UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs once it arrives in the UAE. Translation and registration in the UAE follow. The process takes weeks. The fees can run from AED 3,000 to AED 6,000 or more depending on the country and the courier costs.
So the first question for any overseas principal is which route applies. We confirm that before drafting begins. If remote notarisation is available, we use it. If not, we plan the consular chain.
The practical workflow for remote notarisation looks like this. The principal contacts us with their requirement. We confirm the type of POA needed and the receiving authority. We collect supporting documents — passport, identification, property documents if applicable, company documents if applicable. We draft the POA in English and Arabic. We schedule the remote notarisation session at a time that works for the principal’s timezone. The principal joins the session, presents identification, and signs. The notarised PDF is delivered shortly afterward. The whole process typically completes within three to five working days.
The practical workflow for consular attestation is longer. We draft the POA. The principal takes it to a notary in their country. They send it to their foreign affairs ministry for attestation. They send it to the UAE embassy or consulate. The document is then sent to the UAE — usually by courier — where it is attested by the UAE MOFA, translated to Arabic, and registered. Total time depends on each link in the chain, but four to six weeks is common.
A few specific scenarios worth flagging.
The principal has dual nationality. They can choose which country to notarise from, depending on which has the easier consular chain. Some passports give access to faster routes than others. We help with this choice when relevant.
The principal is in transit. They are travelling and may not be in any single country long enough to complete a consular chain. Remote notarisation is often the only practical option, and we work to schedule the session during a window when the principal can reliably join.
The principal needs the POA urgently. Both routes have minimum timelines, but remote notarisation is significantly faster. If the receiving authority requires consular attestation and the principal needs the document quickly, this is a constraint we flag early — there are no shortcuts in the consular chain.
The principal has limited identification. Some routes require a passport with biometric data. Some require the principal to be in a country where the UAE has a recognised consular presence. We confirm the principal’s identification documents and location before deciding the route.
At POAS, our fixed fees cover the remote notarisation route. The consular route involves variable third-party costs that depend on the country and the courier, so we quote those separately.
In Episode 17 we cover the simpler case — POAs from inside the UAE — and what changes when the principal is here.
I’m Patrick. Thanks for joining me at the POA’s desk.