Abu Dhabi Commercial Court ruling
An Abu Dhabi Commercial Court ruling ordered a young man to pay a car rental company AED 73,422 after breaching a three-year vehicle lease, the court record shows. The judgment, handed down by the Abu Dhabi Commercial Court (first instance), follows the return of the leased vehicle in February 2026 and a consultant expert report that quantified unpaid rent, fines, repair costs and fees.
Key facts of the case and judgment
The rental company sued the lessee after he rented a vehicle under a three-year lease at AED 6,000 per month and received the car in April 2025, according to court filings. The company alleged the defendant stopped paying monthly installments, left unpaid traffic fines and road tolls, and returned the car in a damaged condition, triggering repair costs assessed by the court-appointed expert.
According to the court, the expert report and supporting documents established a total claim of AED 74,222, which the plaintiff adjusted by AED 800 in legal fees to arrive at AED 73,422. The court ordered payment of that amount, statutory interest at 3 percent per year from the date of demand until full settlement, and additional procedural costs including attorney and expert fees.
How the court reached its decision
The judgment relied on multiple documentary elements presented by the rental company, as well as the expert consultant’s technical report. The court stated it was satisfied that the vehicle had been delivered in good condition and that the lessee failed to honor his contractual obligations, including rental payments, traffic fines and applicable toll charges.
Furthermore, the expert’s assessment quantified damage repair costs and legal expense items, which the court accepted after deducting a modest fee claimed by the plaintiff. The defendant’s requests — including a demand for the rental company to provide vehicle ownership and insurance documents and an offer to deposit the car key with the court — were largely dismissed by the tribunal.
Legal context: vehicle leases and commercial disputes
Vehicle lease agreements typically include express remedies for missed payments, late fees, and compensation for damage beyond normal wear and tear. In commercial disputes, courts often rely on expert valuations to establish repair costs and on contractual attachments that specify penalties or liquidated damages for breach.
In this case, the court balanced documentary proof and the expert report to calculate the outstanding sum and applied a statutory rate of interest, a common practice in commercial law to compensate creditors for delayed payment. Meanwhile, requests to involve the insurer were not granted because the court found the lessee had not shown entitlement to compel the insurance company into the dispute at the current stage.
Implications for car rental businesses and lessees
The ruling underscores the importance of clear contract terms and meticulous record-keeping for both car rental companies and customers. Rental firms should document vehicle condition at handover, maintain copies of insurance and ownership documents, and pursue formal recovery steps when tenants default, experts say.
For lessees, the ruling highlights exposure to cumulative liabilities that can include unpaid rent, contractual penalties, unresolved traffic fines, toll charges and repair costs. Therefore, parties should carefully review lease obligations and preserve proof of payments and vehicle condition on return to avoid disputes and potential court judgments.
What happened to the defendant’s requests?
The defendant asked the court to disregard the plaintiff’s expert report, to require production of the vehicle’s ownership and insurance documents, and to permit him to deposit the car key with the court. The court rejected most of these procedural requests, finding the available evidence and the expert report sufficient to substantiate the claim.
Consequently, the lessee remains liable for the principal sum of AED 73,422 plus legal interest and costs. The court also ordered payment of AED 200 for attorney fees and AED 3,150 for the consultant expert, in addition to court costs and fees tied to the proceedings.
Next steps and what to watch
The decision is subject to the usual appellate remedies under UAE commercial court procedures; parties frequently have a defined statutory period to file an appeal. Observers should watch for whether the defendant seeks to appeal and whether the rental company pursues enforcement measures if the judgment is not satisfied within the prescribed timelines.
Additionally, similar disputes may prompt rental companies to tighten contract terms and dispute-resolution clauses, while lessees may increasingly request documented handover protocols and clearer insurance disclosures. Therefore, industry stakeholders and consumers should monitor any shifts in standard lease practices and regulatory guidance affecting vehicle rentals and commercial contract enforcement.

