Organisations in the United Arab Emirates facing an Oracle review are tested on Database options enabled without entitlement, the per-employee Java SE Universal Subscription, and Oracle-on-VMware where Oracle asserts the whole cluster must be licensed. A strong Gulf reseller channel and the choice between onshore UAE law and free-zone English-law jurisdictions shape the response. This page lists the firms covering Oracle in the UAE with balanced pros and cons — a directory, not a ranking.
Last reviewed: 5 June 2026 · Reviewed quarterly · A directory, not a ranking. This page is information, not legal advice.
UAE entities face an Oracle review run by GLAS (formerly LMS) across Database Enterprise Edition options, Java SE and Oracle-on-VMware soft partitioning. The Java per-employee model and the “whole cluster” VMware position are the highest-value findings; onshore UAE civil law, the English-law DIFC and ADGM free zones, and the federal PDPL shape the engagement. The firms below combine Oracle expertise with coverage of the UAE market.
Listed alphabetically with pros and cons — a directory, not a ranking.
Gulf-based software asset management and IT cost-optimization firm working across multi-vendor estates in the Middle East and Africa region.
GCC-native licensing firm covering Oracle, Microsoft, IBM and SAP with SAM-readiness and renewal support across the Gulf.
Independent boutique known for Oracle-on-VMware and cloud (AWS/Azure) licensing, covering audit defense, negotiation, renewals and cloud cost.
Independent boutique led by former Oracle executives, focused on Oracle and Java contracts, compliance and negotiation.
Buyer-side independent licensing advisory with one of the broadest multi-vendor footprints, covering Oracle, Microsoft, SAP, IBM, Broadcom, Salesforce, ServiceNow and Workday.
Independent multi-vendor SAM advisory with offices across the UAE, UK, India, Spain, the US and Singapore, covering several gap markets.
DEMO — listings are compiled from public information and labelled demo until the verified registry is live. Firms are listed alphabetically, never ranked. Independence is shown as a pro; reseller, Big-4 or vendor-side audit ties are shown as a con — each a factual trade-off for you to weigh.
Oracle audits in the UAE are run by Global Licensing and Advisory Services (GLAS, formerly LMS). Database Enterprise Edition is licensed by Processor or Named User Plus, options such as Partitioning and Diagnostics Pack are frequently enabled without entitlement, the Java SE Universal Subscription is priced per employee across the whole workforce, and Oracle treats VMware soft partitioning as requiring the entire cluster. In the Gulf, deployments are often acquired through a reseller, which can complicate entitlement records.
Do not assume reseller-supplied entitlement records are complete, and do not run Oracle’s scripts before taking advice. Reconstructing entitlements, Java scope and VMware partitioning are where the number moves.
The UAE has a dual legal landscape: onshore, federal civil law applies, with commercial obligations under the Civil Transactions Law and a long limitation period for many claims, while the DIFC and ADGM free zones operate common-law systems with their own courts and English-language proceedings. The federal Personal Data Protection Law (Federal Decree-Law No. 45 of 2021), together with the DIFC and ADGM data-protection regimes, constrains cross-border data transfer, and government buyers apply data-residency requirements. Contracts often choose DIFC or English governing law with arbitration before the DIAC, and Arabic is the official language for onshore filings. This is information, not legal advice.
The firms above are listed alphabetically, not ranked. Read the pros and cons, and weigh independence against a vendor relationship for yourself: a buyer-side independent has no incentive to expand your spend, while a firm that also resells, runs vendor-side audits, or sits inside a sales motion carries a potential conflict of interest with buyer-side defense.
Oracle findings in the UAE resolve the way they do elsewhere: the headline number is an opening position. They are typically reduced by reconstructing entitlements (including reseller-supplied licenses), licensing only the Database options actually used, scoping Java employee counts, contesting the “whole cluster” VMware position, and weighing a ULA or Java subscription against a one-off settlement.
Independent advisers report that the gap between the initial claim and the final settlement is frequently substantial, but every figure is case-specific and self-reported — treat any percentage as indicative until independently verified. Around 62% of companies reported a major-vendor audit in the last 12 months, and roughly 52% of buyers now bring in outside help (2025 surveys). Vendor-specific audit rates are survey-reported (Oracle ~31% (2025 surveys)).
Under the Java SE Universal Subscription, the metric is per employee and counts the whole workforce, including contractors, not only Java users. Scoping that population and considering alternative runtimes is where the exposure is usually reduced.
It can matter a great deal. DIFC and ADGM apply common-law principles with English-language courts, while onshore disputes fall under federal civil law. The governing-law and dispute-resolution clauses shape both strategy and timeline. This is information, not advice.
Oracle does not recognise VMware as a hard partition and typically asserts the whole cluster must be licensed. That position is widely contested, and the architecture often supports a much narrower licensable footprint.
Many UAE deployments are bought through resellers, so entitlement records can be fragmented. Reconstructing what was actually purchased and deployed is often the first step in reducing an opening claim.
Yes. The directory and matching are free for buyers, including in the UAE. We take no money from software publishers, add no markup, and no vendor ever sees your brief. We publish no prices; fees are agreed directly with the firm.
Tell us your situation and we route your brief to firms covering Oracle in United Arab Emirates. The directory and matching are free for buyers — no markup, no referral pressure, and no firm is recommended over another.
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