Reed Smith Client Alerts

Key takeaways

  • Real estate disputes are on the rise in the Middle East and Africa, driven by rapid development, cross-border investments, and complex joint ventures.
  • Arbitration is the preferred method for resolving high-value, cross-border real estate disputes, offering confidentiality, flexibility, and enforceability.
  • Litigation remains common for local or low-value disputes, particularly in African jurisdictions with developing arbitration frameworks.
  • Common disputes include construction delays, joint venture or shareholder disagreements, ownership and lease issues, regulatory concerns, and infrastructure-related claims
  • Proactive dispute planning is essential – parties should conduct thorough due diligence, draft clear contracts, and include robust dispute resolution clauses to manage risk.

A booming market with growing dispute risks

The real estate markets across the Middle East and Africa are undergoing continued growth. Fuelled by large-scale urban development, infrastructure investment, and a surge in cross-border capital, these regions have become hotbeds for property development and acquisition. Yet, with this rapid expansion comes an increase in the volume and complexity of disputes. Investors, developers, and stakeholders alike must therefore pay close attention to the mechanisms available for resolving such disputes – particularly in cross-border contexts where jurisdictional issues can complicate matters considerably

Disputes in real estate are as varied as the projects themselves. From disagreements over land titles to claims involving delays in construction or breach of joint venture agreements, the nature of these conflicts often requires sophisticated legal tools and thoughtful planning. Against this backdrop, dispute resolution has become a critical consideration – not just when conflicts arise, but as part of any prudent transactional strategy from the outset.