Dubai Sets Hard Deadline for Private Sector to Adopt Agentic AI
Dubai Sets Hard Deadline for Private Sector to Adopt Agentic AI
Breaking News — Dubai has become the first government to impose a firm deadline on its private sector to transition to agentic artificial intelligence, a move that sets it apart from the vague, multi-year roadmaps adopted by most nations.
Crown Prince Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum announced the initiative on Sunday, requiring all private enterprises in the emirate to move toward autonomous AI systems. The directive includes a specific timeline — sources confirm companies must achieve full agentic AI integration within the next 24 months.
“This is not a pilot or a task force. It is an order with consequences,” said Dr. Layla Al-Mansoori, director of the Dubai Future Foundation. “The private sector must adapt or lose its license to operate.”
Background
Every major government today boasts an AI strategy. Most involve pilot programmes, advisory councils, and aspirational roadmaps that set no end date. Dubai’s approach breaks that trend by holding businesses accountable.

The initiative mandates the use of agentic AI — systems that can make decisions and execute actions autonomously, without human intervention. Sectors targeted include finance, logistics, healthcare, and retail.

Companies will be required to submit regular compliance reports, with penalties for non-adherence. The government has also launched a dedicated support fund to help small and medium enterprises make the shift.
What This Means
Experts say this deadline could accelerate the UAE’s already aggressive digital transformation. “Other governments talk about AI. Dubai is weaponizing it,” said Dr. Omar Khayyat, a professor of strategy at the Mohammed Bin Rashid School of Government.
The move may pressure neighboring Gulf states — and even global tech hubs — to adopt similar timelines. It also signals a shift from voluntary adoption to regulatory mandate, potentially reshaping the global AI race.
For businesses in Dubai, the clock is ticking. Early adopters may gain a competitive edge, while laggards risk extinction in what is becoming the world’s most aggressive experiment in autonomous governance.
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