The United Arab Emirates (UAE) has introduced amendments to the Wage Protection System (WPS) through MOHRE Resolution No. 340/2026, with the changes taking effect from 1 June 2026. The revised framework introduces a standardised salary payment deadline for private sector employers, accelerated enforcement measures for non-compliance and an increased WPS compliance threshold. 

abu dhabi skyline lnscp

The changes reflect continued regulatory focus on payroll compliance, wage protection and labour market oversight across the UAE private sector. For multinational organisations operating in the UAE, the developments further reinforce the importance of effective payroll governance, compliance monitoring and operational readiness. 

Key Changes to the UAE WPS 

The revised framework introduces several important changes to salary payment requirements and WPS compliance obligations for employers registered with the Ministry of Human Resources and Emiratisation (MOHRE). 

Salary Due Date Aligned to the First Day of the Gregorian Month 

Under the revised rules, the salary due date will be the first day of every Gregorian month for the previous month’s wages. Any payment made after this date will be classified as a delayed salary payment under the WPS framework. 

The changes introduce a more standardised approach to salary payment timing across the UAE private sector. 

For employers operating regional or global payroll models, this is likely to require closer review of payroll processing calendars, approval timelines, funding arrangements and payroll governance procedures to help ensure salary payments can be completed within the revised timeframe. 

Accelerated Enforcement Measures for Non-Compliance 

The amendments also introduce a more immediate enforcement framework for delayed salary payments. 

Day 2: Non-Compliance Alerts 

Employers may receive a non-compliance notification if salaries remain unpaid two days after the due date. 

Day 5: Suspension of New Work Permits 

Where salary payments remain outstanding for five days, the issuance of new work permits may be suspended. 

For organisations with ongoing recruitment activity or workforce mobility into the UAE, this could create workforce planning and onboarding challenges if payroll non-compliance issues are not resolved promptly. 

Day 11: Administrative Fines and Additional Enforcement Action 

Where non-compliance continues beyond eleven days, employers may become subject to administrative fines and additional enforcement measures. 

The revised timelines are likely to increase focus on payroll controls, exception management and compliance monitoring. 

Increase in the WPS Compliance Threshold 

The amendments also increase the WPS compliance threshold from 80% to 85%. 

As a result, a greater proportion of employees must be paid accurately and on time for an employer to maintain compliant status under the WPS framework. 

The updated threshold may place additional pressure on payroll accuracy, employee data integrity and payroll operational controls, particularly for organisations managing large or complex workforce populations. 

Operational Considerations for Employers 

The revised WPS framework is likely to increase scrutiny around payroll timeliness and compliance management across the UAE private sector. 

In preparation for implementation, employers should consider reviewing: 

  • Payroll processing calendars and approval timelines
  • Funding processes for salary payments 
  • WPS reconciliation and compliance monitoring procedures
  • Escalation processes for payroll exceptions or delays
  • Coordination between payroll, HR, finance and mobility teams
  • Business continuity and contingency planning for payroll operations

The changes may be particularly relevant for multinational organisations managing payroll across multiple jurisdictions, where centralised payroll operations or cross-border approval structures can introduce additional processing dependencies. 

Preparing for the 1 June 2026 Implementation Date 

Although the amendments will take effect from 1 June 2026, employers should begin assessing operational readiness well in advance. 

Early preparation will help organisations identify process gaps, strengthen payroll governance frameworks and reduce the risk of non-compliance once the revised requirements come into force. The changes also reflect a broader regional trend towards increased payroll transparency, digital compliance monitoring and more proactive labour market enforcement. 

For organisations with regional workforce structures, ensuring alignment between local UAE payroll requirements and broader global payroll governance frameworks is likely to become increasingly important. 

UAE – Global Insights 

For further guidance on payroll, employment law and compliance requirements in the UAE, visit the UAE Global Insights section on the activpayroll website

Next Steps 

Organisations operating in the UAE should review payroll processes, funding timelines and compliance controls ahead of the 1 June 2026 implementation date. 

If you require support preparing for the upcoming UAE WPS changes, complete our Contact Us form and a member of our expert team will be happy to assist. 

By scaling, streamlining, or ensuring your people are taken care of, we bring absolute clarity to your global business.

Latest news & insights

 
May 22, 2026 | 3 minute read

Explore how parental leave affects annual leave accrual and payments in New Zealand, and learn essential...

 
May 21, 2026 | 3 minute read

Navigate the complexities of employee secondments to Australia, focusing on compliance, tax obligations, and...

 
May 19, 2026 | 3 minute read

Malaysia introduces LINDUNG 24 Jam from June 2026, expanding SOCSO to 24-hour accident coverage with a...

Talk to a specialist today and find out how we support the growth of over 500 businesses with a range of activpayroll solutions designed to help your global payroll and people operations succeed.