BIS reclassifies UAE to EAR Country Group A:5, opening license-free STA exports under conditions
US exporters can ship specified military, satellite, dual-use and advanced-computing items to the UAE license-free only where STA conditions and recipient-approval are both met — otherwise standard EAR licensing still applies
- — Export-compliance teams at US defense and aerospace companies must confirm STA eligibility and that the recipient is the UAE Government or an approved commercial entity before exporting Commerce-controlled military items or supporting UAE UAV programs license-free — shipments that fail either test do not receive license-free authorization and remain subject to standard EAR licensing.
- — Export-compliance teams at US satellite and spacecraft manufacturers must verify STA qualification and recipient approval before exporting or effecting in-country transfers of covered commercial satellites and spacecraft to the UAE, since license-free treatment is conditional rather than automatic.
- — Export-compliance teams at US suppliers of advanced computing hardware (including AI chips and servers) and of dual-use oil and gas, desalination or civil-nuclear equipment must confirm STA eligibility and approved-recipient status against the implementing Federal Register notice before treating exports to the UAE as license-free — and should track the UAE's continued adherence to the diversion-prevention and investment commitments the status is premised on.
- — Export-compliance teams at US defense and aerospace companies
- — Export-compliance teams at US satellite and spacecraft manufacturers
- — Export-compliance teams at US advanced-computing (AI hardware) and dual-use equipment suppliers
- — Effective: 10 July 2026 — BIS announced the reclassification to EAR Country Group A:5 and the D:3/D:4 removal on this date; the precise scope and conditions take effect through the implementing Federal Register notice.
- — Ongoing condition: the A:5 status is premised on the UAE's commitments to prevent diversion and misuse of sensitive US technology and, for advanced computing, on the May 2025 U.S.-UAE AI framework investment commitments — changes to those could affect the status.