Differences Between Law Firms, Legal Consultancies, and Petition Services

Differences Between Law Firms, Legal Consultancies, and Petition Services

Many people in the United Arab Emirates confuse three entities that appear similar on the surface yet differ fundamentally in their legal status and in the scope of what each is permitted to do: legal services offices that prepare and file case petitions with the courts (including the type known as the “Al-Adheed” service centres and similar filing centres), legal consultancy offices, and law firms. The UAE legislator has assigned each category its own distinct legal standing, and overstepping it entails liability and a violation. In this article we set out the differences precisely, place before you a comparison and distinction table, and offer practical tips to help you choose the right entity for your legal need.

What is the difference between legal services offices that file petitions with the courts, legal consultancy offices, and law firms in the UAE?

First: The General Landscape — Three Categories with Three Different Legal Capacities

The Federal Decree-Law on regulating the professions of advocacy and legal consultancy settled the boundaries of each profession and restricted their practice to those registered on the official rolls held by the Ministry of Justice, with parallel regulation in the Emirate of Dubai through the Legal Affairs Department. Legal services and petition-filing offices, by contrast, fall outside the framework of the “profession” in its legal sense, being merely a provider of clerical and procedural services. The relationship between the three categories can be pictured as a ladder on which authority widens as one ascends:

Ladder of Widening Legal Authority
Law Firms
Advice + drafting + pleading and representation before the courts + attending investigations
Legal Consultancy Offices
Legal advice + drafting and reviewing contracts and memoranda — without pleading
Legal Services & Petition-Filing Offices (“Al-Adheed” type)
Clerical, procedural work: preparing the petition and filing the case electronically — without advice or pleading

Second: Legal Services & Case-Petition Filing Offices (“Al-Adheed” and the like)

These offices — sometimes called legal services centres or case-petition preparation and filing offices — are commercial establishments licensed by the competent economic authority for clerical/procedural activity, with approval from the judicial authority to access the courts’ electronic systems. Their nature is that of a provider of a formal service, not a legal professional entity, and those who run them are neither registered advocates nor registered legal consultants.

What they actually do
• Drafting and preparing the statement of claim and applications per the approved forms.
• Filing the case and submitting applications electronically through the courts’ systems.
• Preparing documents and coordinating certified legal translation.
• Following up on purely formal and administrative procedures.
What they may not do
• Provide legal advice or a legal opinion.
• Draft legal memoranda and pleadings as professional work.
• Plead or represent clients before the courts.
• Attend investigations before the Public Prosecution or judicial law-enforcement officers.
A key caution: drafting the petition in writing is one thing; building the legal position and assessing the remedies, the legal basis and the defences is another. These offices bear no professional responsibility for the soundness of your legal position, and they are no substitute for an advocate where the matter calls for defence or pleading.

Third: Legal Consultancy Offices

A legal consultancy office is a licensed office in which the profession of legal consultancy is practised by a legal consultant whose name is registered on the roll of legal consultants held by the Ministry of Justice (and in the Emirate of Dubai, registration and licensing with the Legal Affairs Department of the Government of Dubai is added). It is a genuine professional entity that bears responsibility for its legal opinion, yet its scope stops at advice and drafting, short of pleading.

  • Providing legal advice and opinions to individuals and companies.
  • Drafting and reviewing contracts, agreements, memoranda and legal studies.
  • Preventive legal support for establishments and negotiating on the client’s behalf outside the courtroom.
  • The dividing line: a legal consultant, in that capacity, does not hold the right of audience, pleading and representation before the courts; that right is reserved for an advocate registered on the roll of practising advocates.

Fourth: Law Firms

A law firm is the licensed office in which an advocate registered on the roll of practising advocates with the Ministry of Justice (and the competent local authority) practises the profession of advocacy in full. It is the broadest category in authority, for it combines everything a legal consultancy office does and adds appearance and representation before the judiciary.

Pleading and representation before all courts and judicial authorities, subject to the rules.
Attending investigations before the Public Prosecution and judicial law-enforcement officers and defending the client.
Preparing memoranda and defences, providing advice and drafting contracts.
A regulatory note: the legislation restricts the full right of pleading before the courts to the national advocate registered on the roll of practising advocates, in accordance with the conditions and controls set by the laws regulating the profession and the decisions of the local judicial authorities.

Fifth: A Comprehensive Distinction & Comparison Table

Point of comparisonServices & petition-filing officesLegal consultancy officesLaw firms
Legal statusClerical/procedural service providerProfessional (advisory) entityFull professional entity
Governing legislationEconomic licence + judicial approvalLaw regulating the two professions and its regulationsLaw regulating the two professions and its regulations
Capacity of the person in chargeService clerk (not registered)Registered legal consultantRegistered practising advocate
Preparing the petition & filing the case
Providing legal advice/opinion
Drafting contracts & memoranda
Pleading & representation before courts
Attending investigations & defence
Professional liability for the legal positionLimited (formal)Present (advisory)Full
Need help identifying the right entity for your case?Specialised legal consultation
AWADH ALMHEIRI LAW FIRM AND LEGAL CONSULTATIONS
✓ A precise assessment of your legal position before any step.
✓ Professional drafting of contracts, memoranda and defences.
✓ Pleading and representation before the courts and judicial authorities.
We serve you with legal expertise that combines preventive advice and pleading before the judiciary.

Sixth: Practical Tips for Choosing the Right Entity

1. Start from the nature of your needIf you have a court dispute or a prospect of litigation, your destination is a law firm, not a services centre.
2. Filing the petition is not enoughSubmitting the claim in writing does not build a sound legal position; errors in the remedies and the basis may harm your right.
3. Verify registration and licensingAsk to confirm the advocate’s or consultant’s registration on the Ministry of Justice rolls or with the competent local authority.
4. Distinguish advice from pleadingA consultant protects you preventively and drafts your contracts, but does not plead for you before the court.
5. Beware impersonation of capacityAnyone who offers “advice” or promises “pleading” without official registration violates the law and exposes you to risk.
6. Document the relationship in writingDefine the scope of service and the fees in a written agreement, especially when moving from a clerical service to a court mandate.

Seventh: Legal References

  • Federal Decree-Law No. (34) of 2022 on regulating the professions of advocacy and legal consultancy — Federal legislation.
  • Cabinet Decision No. (8) of 2025 on the Executive Regulation of Federal Decree-Law No. (34) of 2022 — Federal regulation.
  • Cabinet Decision No. (10) of 2025 on the Regulatory Bylaw for professional advocacy and legal consultancy companies — Federal regulation.
  • Cabinet Decision No. (45) of 2025 on the schedule of administrative penalties for breaches of the provisions regulating the two professions — Federal regulation.
  • Cabinet Decision on the Charter of Conduct for the professions of advocacy and legal consultancy — Charter regulating the profession.
  • Federal Law No. (23) of 1991 on regulating the profession of advocacy — Federal legislation (repealed, for historical reference).
  • Administrative Decision No. (51) of 2022 adopting the two bylaws on the registration of advocates and legal consultants in the Emirate of Dubai — Local legislation (Dubai).
  • Administrative Decision No. (52) of 2022 adopting the two bylaws on licensing law firms and legal consultancy offices in the Emirate of Dubai — Local legislation (Dubai).
  • Federal Civil Procedure Law No. (11) of 1992 and its Regulatory Bylaw — Federal legislation (the procedural reference for filing cases and registering petitions).
Need precise guidance between advice and pleading?

AWADH ALMHEIRI LAW FIRM AND LEGAL CONSULTATIONS places its expertise at your service to diagnose your legal position and identify the right entity and procedure from the very first step.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the core difference between a legal services office and a law firm?+
A services office performs clerical, procedural work limited to preparing the petition, filing the case electronically and preparing documents, with no legal professional capacity. A law firm, by contrast, is a full professional entity run by a registered advocate who holds the right to advise, draft, plead, represent before the courts and attend investigations.
What is the role of a legal consultancy office, and may it plead before the court?+
Its role is to provide legal advice and opinions, draft and review contracts and memoranda, and offer preventive support to establishments. However, it does not hold the right of audience, pleading and representation before the courts; that right is reserved for an advocate registered on the roll of practising advocates.
Do petition-filing offices remove the need to appoint an advocate?+
No. Submitting the claim in writing is a formal step that does not build the legal position, does not assess the remedies, the basis and the defences, and does not allow a defence before the judiciary. Whenever there is a dispute or a prospect of litigation, appointing an advocate is the correct choice to protect the right.
Which legislation regulates the professions of advocacy and legal consultancy in the UAE?+
Federal Decree-Law No. (34) of 2022 and its executive and regulatory bylaws issued by the Cabinet, in addition to the local regulation in the Emirate of Dubai through the Legal Affairs Department under Administrative Decisions Nos. (51) and (52) of 2022.
How do I verify that the office is licensed and the person in charge is officially registered?+
Ask for the registration and licensing details, and confirm that the advocate or consultant is listed on the Ministry of Justice rolls or with the competent local judicial authority. Providing advice or promising to plead by those who are not registered is a legal violation that warrants caution.
If you are caught between filing a petition, obtaining legal advice, and a mandate to plead, do not leave your position to chance; contact AWADH ALMHEIRI LAW FIRM AND LEGAL CONSULTATIONS for a sound diagnosis from the outset.Contact us
Legal Disclaimer

The information in this article is of a general nature and has been prepared for legal education and community awareness purposes. It does not constitute legal advice for any specific case and creates no advocate–client or agency relationship. Provisions vary according to the facts of each case and the legislation in force and its amendments. For any specific legal matter, it is recommended to consult the specialists at AWADH ALMHEIRI LAW FIRM AND LEGAL CONSULTATIONS to obtain appropriate advice.

This is a translation of the original Arabic article. In the event of any discrepancy between the two texts, the Arabic text shall prevail.

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