ADRA Licence Growth Shows Abu Dhabi Business Formation Spreading Beyond The Capital
ADRA reported a 21 per cent rise in new Abu Dhabi economic licences in Q1 2026, with Al Ain, Al Dhafra, freelance permits and 34 industrial facilities showing where activity is moving into operation.

ADRA Puts Licence Growth Inside Abu Dhabi's Business Pipeline
The Abu Dhabi Registration Authority said new economic licences in the emirate rose 21 per cent in the first quarter of 2026 from the same period in 2025, giving Abu Dhabi a fresh business-formation indicator at a time when Gulf economies are competing for companies, investors and talent.
ADRA is the Abu Dhabi Department of Economic Development arm that develops and regulates the business sector.
Its figures put licensing growth across regions and licence types, rather than only in one sector, which makes the data useful for tracking whether private-sector activity is spreading beyond a narrow cluster.
Al Ain And Freelance Licences Show Where Growth Is Fastest
Active licences in Abu Dhabi increased 12 per cent in Q1-2026 compared with the previous year.
Al Ain Region posted the fastest regional increase at 58 per cent.
Al Dhafra Region followed at 28 per cent, while Abu Dhabi recorded 18 per cent, showing that the business pipeline expanded across the emirate's main regions.
The licence mix also changed.
New commercial licences increased 20 per cent, professional licences rose 193 per cent, and agriculture, fisheries and livestock licences grew five per cent.
Tajer Abu Dhabi licences increased 17 per cent, freelance licences surged 261 per cent, and Mobdea licences grew 15 per cent.
Promotional offers rose two per cent and advertisements increased 26 per cent, pointing to stronger commercial activity around newly formed businesses.
Industrial Licences Move Into Production
ADRA also reported movement from licensing into operational capacity.
Industrial licences transitioning into the production phase increased three per cent during Q1 2026, with 34 new industrial facilities entering full operation in the first three months of the year.
That detail connects the licensing data to Abu Dhabi Industrial Strategy objectives around supply chains and local production capacity.
Licence issuance alone does not prove output, but factories entering production show where administrative approvals have begun to convert into real operating assets.
Policy Execution Is The Operating Burden
Hamad Sayah Al Mazrouei, Undersecretary of ADDED, linked the figures to Abu Dhabi's policies, legislative frameworks and business-sector resilience.
Mohamed Munif Al Mansoori, ADRA's Director General, said demand for establishing businesses in Abu Dhabi continues to grow and that the authority is working to support market stability, consumer rights and supply-chain continuity.
The unresolved operating burden is whether Abu Dhabi can turn a 21 per cent rise in new economic licences, a 261 per cent increase in freelance licences and 34 new industrial facilities into sustained company formation, production capacity and long-term private-sector value.
















