For years, the multi-billion dollar question for global investors was simple: is the code in your digital wallet legally considered “property”? If the law doesn’t recognize it as such, then courts couldn’t properly protect it. Well, Dubai has delivered a definitive answer, fundamentally changing the risk profile for anyone dealing in digital assets within the Emirate.
UAE’s new Digital Asset rules explained
The critical change came from the Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC) Courts, the specialized commercial judiciary that operates under Common Law principles. This legal body took decisive steps to establish a solid foundation for digital asset protection:
- Crypto is Intangible Personal Property: A key ruling in the Huobi v Tabarak case, following the enactment of the DIFC Digital Assets Law (No. 2 of 2024), formally classified cryptocurrencies and digital tokens as intangible personal property. This means your Bitcoin is now treated with the same legal respect as a stock certificate, a car title, or a traditional bank account balance.
- The Power of the Freeze: Once classified as property, the courts gained the authority to use their most powerful legal defense tools. Most notably, they can issue Worldwide Freezing Orders (WFOs). If a judge suspects a fraudster is trying to move or liquidate stolen crypto, the WFO can effectively pause the assets globally. This is the single most important step in protecting investor capital during a dispute.
New tools for Crypto and Digital Asset
To support this legal evolution, the DIFC Courts have rolled out specialised services and technologies tailored to digital asset disputes, making them crypto-ready:
- Secure Custody Services: The courts now have the ability to work with secure third-party custodians who can hold digital assets during legal proceedings. This ensures that crypto under dispute remains protected and traceable throughout the court process.
- Blockchain Intelligence Tools: Judges and legal teams can use blockchain forensic tools to trace transactions on distributed ledgers. This is crucial in disputes involving stolen, lost or contested digital assets, where traditional financial tracking methods don’t apply.
- Training and Judicial Expertise: Court staff and judges are receiving technical training so they better understand blockchain, wallets, smart contracts and digital asset custody, bridging the gap between technology and the law.
These innovations mean the Dubai judiciary can handle crypto disputes with the same confidence as traditional asset disputes, reducing ambiguity and strengthening enforcement.
Other regulatory framework in the UAE
Dubai courts’ efforts fit into a broader UAE strategy to regulate and secure digital assets:
- In 2022, the UAE issued Cabinet Decision No. 111 of 2022 on the Regulation of Virtual Assets and their Service, requiring digital asset operations to be licensed and regulated, a foundational step in establishing legal clarity.
- Dubai passed Law No. 4 of 2022 on the Regulation of Virtual Assets and its subsidiary regulations, empowering the Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority (VARA) to oversee onshore digital asset activities, including custody, issuance, and enforcement.
- Separately, the DIFC enacted Digital Assets Law No. 2 of 2024, defining digital assets as intangible property, clarifying how ownership and control are legally understood, which is key for disputes, transfers and enforcement actions.
Together these rules form a legal infrastructure where digital assets are no longer grey-area technology, but recognised property with rights, protections, and legal remedies.Dubai is not just accepting digital assets, it is integrating them into its legal system with real protections and enforceable rights. From specialised court tools to updated regulations recognising crypto as property, the UAE is shaping a judicial environment ready for the digital economy’s future. This strategic evolution promises greater legal certainty, stronger investor trust, and a leading role for Dubai in global digital asset law.
