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From the UK to the UAE: Tips for a Successful Relocation
Stacey Nevin
The “to do list” when relocating with family (whether permanently or for a fixed term) can be a long one. If you’re contemplating a move to the Middle East, below are some tips to get you started:
i) Understand the Visa requirements.
Britons currently benefit from a 30-day free visit visa when arriving in the UAE. However, if you’re planning on living or working there, you will need a long term residence visa and a suitable work related visa. There are a number of options, with differing eligibility requirements. Check these carefully and ensure you can meet these requirements. Where your visa is sponsored by your employer, ensure you understand the notice periods or probation terms, and what your options are to remain should your employment be terminated. If you are returning to the UAE after a period away, check if this break in residency has any impact on your visa position in the UAE ahead of your return.
ii) Understand your tax position.
For UAE-resident individuals and businesses with UK connections (whether through property ownership, historic residency, source income, or corporate structures) an understanding of how His Majesty’s Revenue & Customs conducts enquiries, exchanges data, and asserts jurisdiction is essential.
ii) Don’t leave school planning too late
If relocating with children, timing this so it fits neatly with the school calendar is ideal but not always possible. School rankings and reports differ from Ofsted. Take the time to understand these to consider the best options for your child, and secure a place so your children’s education can continue without interruption.
iv) Organise and update the important documents
It’s a long trip to retrieve a must have document. Where originals are needed, take these with you. If copies suffice, consider having these stored electronically for easy, organised access, particularly if family members are joining later and may need these in the UK too.
If you plan to stay in the UAE long term or indefinitely, consider taking updated will estate planning advice so your affairs are in order.
v) Build your network early
Relocating to any jurisdiction, away from family and friends, can feel daunting. The warmth and hospitality in the UAE never ceases to amaze me. Make connections and build your network at the outset.
With many clients who live and work in the UAE, Kingsley Napley can advise or signpost you to a trusted expert in the UAE should you need this.
It may feel like an administrative burden to keep personal affairs in order, be that your Will, financial or estate planning. That burden can be even greater when the rules of two (or more) countries are relevant. We regularly help French nationals living in the UK to take steps to plan their personal affairs, given that the legal and administrative rules of two countries will be relevant to their legal documents.
Contrary to what some aspects of the British media may lead you to believe, life in the Middle East remains a very attractive prospect for many. Britons continue to relocate there and, according to a recent report in the Times, a large proportion of those who left the UAE recently are returning to the place they now call home.
It has been just over a decade since the offence of controlling or coercive behaviour came into force with the Serious Crime Act 2015. With this offence, the criminal law formally recognised that prolonged emotional, psychological and financial abuse can be just as damaging to a victim as physical abuse. The impact of such behaviour has also been recognised by the family courts, particularly in the context of children and applications for non-molestation and occupation orders.
For a number of years, research has shown that children and young people want information about what is happening to their family when their parents decide to separate. Many want the opportunity to be heard when decisions are being made about them.
Family dynamics are complex at the best of times. When one family member is unwell, stress and worry can quickly lead to friction and mistrust among siblings and parents alike.
Hi, I’m Olivia, a family lawyer and mediator at Kingsley Napley LLP working alongside four other brilliant mediators in our team. In this short blog, I set out what you can expect from your first meeting with a family mediator.
For separated or divorced families, Christmas time is often an emotionally charged time of year, fraught with practical challenges as parents try to agree contact time and arrangements for Christmas events. Claire Wood shares some tips on how best to prepare for the issues which may arise at Christmas.
According to the PDSA’s 2024 report on pet populations, over 51% of UK adults currently own a pet. To many their pets are not “just pets”, but beloved family members and a core part of their family unit. If something unforeseen should happen in the future, most would want the best for their pets. Often, however, when an unplanned major live event happens, such as a divorce or the death of a pet owner, thought has not been given to what should happen to the pets.
It is 16 May 2022. Sotherby’s, New York. A collection is being auctioned, achieving the highest total from a single sale in the auction house’s 277-year history. $922.2 million. The culmination of a bitter divorce between Harry Macklowe (property mogul) and Linda Macklowe (prominent art curator).
When a party sits down to prepare their financial disclosure on divorce, thoughts can turn to the valuable or sentimental items which may have been gifted between spouses or received from family members during the marriage. The idea of having to share or relinquish such items to a soon-to-be-ex-spouse can leave some people clutching their pearls (quite literally), but is this ever actually required in financial proceedings on divorce?
Assets are typically placed in a trust for legitimate purposes, such as safeguarding wealth for future generations. However, arguments that a trust is in fact a “sham” created to hide the true ownership of assets often arise in the context of divorce litigation, bankruptcy/insolvency where a creditor seeks to argue that a trust is a pretence seeking to shield assets from creditors, or in estate disputes, where beneficiaries look to bring assets of the deceased back into an estate.
It is National Fertility Awareness Week and, this year, the campaign is “Every Voice, Every Journey”.
Francophone couples living in England or those who own assets here may be surprised at the differences between a standard English prenuptial agreement and the ‘contrats de mariage’ which are so common across continental Europe.
Family relationships involving international couples can be complex and the need for cross-border planning and an understanding of other jurisdictions is critical for family lawyers working in London. Claire Wood helps clients to understand some of the differences in approach across the channel.
Connie Atkinson was published in the October 2022 edition of ThoughtLeaders4 HNW Divorce magazine discussing the rise of cryptoassets in financial remedies.
The Court of Appeal recently handed down judgment in Helliwell v Entwistle [2025] EWCA Civ 1055, examining the importance of disclosure when entering into a pre-nuptial agreement.
On 30 July 2025, Mr Justice Peel handed down a judgment in the case of BC v BC [2025] EWHC 2016 (Fam), confirming the “sanctity of confidentiality” about Financial Dispute Resolution (‘FDR’) and private FDR (‘pFDR’) hearings.
On 2 July 2025 the Supreme Court handed down its long-awaited judgment in the case of Standish v Standish. Practitioners have been particularly interested to see if, and how, the Court would develop the judicially created principles of ‘needs’, ‘compensation’, and ‘sharing’ which apply to the division of finances on divorce. In particular, what would the Court say in relation to ‘the sharing principle’: should all assets be shared, or only those generated by the parties’ common endeavour during their marriage?
In this blog we consider whether a pre-nuptial agreement is a good option to help protect the estates of vulnerable individuals in the event that their marriage should come to an end.
Whether you consider yourself neurodiverse, you are the loved one of someone who is neurodiverse or you want to support a neurodivergent individual in family proceedings, this blog provides a summary of the best practice which should be used by family lawyers to help neurodivergent individuals navigate the family legal system.
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Stacey Nevin
Charlotte Daintith
Stacey Nevin
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