The UAE National Media Office (NMO) has officially referred a group of social media users to the Federal Public Prosecution for violating media content standards. This landmark enforcement highlights the country’s zero-tolerance policy toward harmful online behavior and sets a precedent for influencers, content creators, and businesses operating in the Emirates.


What Happened?

On August 26, 2025, the NMO confirmed it had flagged and escalated violations of media content ethics after repeated monitoring and warnings.

Authorities stated:

“Monitoring is ongoing to ensure a responsible media environment and safeguard communities from harmful content.” — UAE Media Office

This move comes just months after the UAE’s new Media Law (Federal Decree-Law No. 55 of 2025) took effect, introducing stricter penalties, licensing requirements for influencers, and broader definitions of prohibited content.


Key Facts: UAE Media Content Enforcement

AreaDetails
Law EnforcedFederal Decree-Law No. 55 of 2025 on Media Regulation
AuthorityNational Media Office & Federal Public Prosecution
Penalties for ViolationsFines up to AED 1 million (repeat violations up to AED 2 million)
Criminal LiabilityDefamation, insults, trolling, hate speech may lead to imprisonment (up to 1 year)
Cybercrime LawArticle 43: Online insults = jail + fine
Penal Code Article 426Public insults: fines up to AED 50,000
Influencers/BusinessesMandatory media or business license for paid collaborations
Scope of Monitoring24/7 monitoring of social media platforms and online publishers

Why This Matters for Social Media & Business

1. Digital Accountability is Law

The UAE has moved beyond “soft guidelines” — digital responsibility is now legally enforceable. Both individuals and companies are liable.

2. Heavy Penalties for Non-Compliance

Violations can result in financial ruin for influencers and SMEs who rely on Instagram, TikTok, or YouTube for business.

“Posting without a license, or ignoring content standards, is no longer an option. The penalties can exceed a company’s annual marketing budget.” — Affinitas DMCC Legal Desk

3. UAE Protects Social Harmony

The framework is aligned with the UAE’s wider national values: tolerance, coexistence, and safeguarding community from harmful narratives.


Penalties in Detail

  • Fines: AED 100,000 – AED 1 million for unlicensed or harmful content.
  • Prison: Up to 12 months for online defamation or repeated violations.
  • Bans: Pages/accounts can be suspended, blocked, or restricted.
  • Business Impact: Repeat offenders risk license suspension from free zones or DED.

What Businesses, Influencers, and Expats Must Do

✅ Obtain a media license if you are monetizing online content.
✅ Align with UAE cultural and ethical standards in all posts.
✅ Train social media teams on compliance (avoid defamation, fake news, trolling).
✅ Monitor user-generated content on brand pages.
✅ Seek legal consultation if uncertain — penalties are severe.


At Affinitas DMCC, we see this as a turning point for digital business in the UAE:

  • Influencers and creators must treat their accounts as regulated businesses, not hobbies.
  • SMEs and corporates must integrate media compliance into their marketing & PR.
  • Expat entrepreneurs need specialized guidance on the intersection of business setup, licensing, and compliance.

The UAE’s prosecution of social media violators is a wake-up call for individuals and businesses alike. With fines reaching millions of dirhams and reputational risks at stake, digital compliance is no longer optional.

If you’re an influencer, entrepreneur, or business operating in Dubai or across the Emirates, now is the time to audit your digital strategy, secure the correct licenses, and ensure compliance with the latest regulations.


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