Yes — and it is the reason cheque recovery in the UAE can move far faster than an ordinary debt claim. This article explains what “executory instrument” means and why it gives the cheque holder a major advantage.
Last updated: May 2026. Part of our complete bounced cheque recovery guide.
Quick answer
A bounced cheque with a bank return memo for insufficient funds is treated as an executory instrument under UAE law. That means the holder can take it directly to execution and the court may issue a payment order without a full hearing, unless the debtor raises a valid objection (such as proof of payment).
What “executory instrument” means
Most debts require you to prove the debt exists before you can enforce it — file a claim, attend hearings, win a judgment, then enforce. An executory instrument skips the proving stage. The instrument itself is already accepted as evidence of a due, unpaid obligation, so you go more or less straight to enforcement.
A dishonoured cheque qualifies because:
- It is a written, signed promise to pay a fixed amount.
- The bank’s return memo confirms it was presented and went unpaid.
- Together these establish a confirmed, unpaid debt without further proof.
How the 2022 reform reinforced this
The 2022 cheque reforms (Federal Decree-Law No. 14 of 2020) moved most insufficient-funds cheques out of the criminal sphere and strengthened the direct-execution route. For a creditor, that is the better outcome: instead of a slow criminal complaint, you get a fast civil enforcement path.
The payment order — without a full trial
Because the cheque is executory, the court can issue a payment order on the strength of the cheque and return memo alone. The debtor’s options are narrow: pay, or raise a valid objection. A valid objection is something concrete — for example, proof the debt was already paid, or proof of forgery. A mere denial of liability is not enough.
This is why debtor arguments like “it was a security cheque” or “force majeure” usually fail to stop execution.
Why the return memo is critical
Without the bank return memo, the cheque is just paper. The memo is what proves presentation and dishonour. Always obtain and preserve it — it is the linchpin of the executory route.
What you still need to do
Being executory does not mean automatic. You still: serve a legal notice, file the execution case in the correct court, and then request enforcement measures. The advantage is speed and the low bar to obtaining a payment order.
Frequently asked questions
Does the court hold a full trial for a bounced cheque? Usually not. As an executory instrument, the cheque can support a payment order without a full hearing unless the debtor raises a valid objection.
What counts as a valid objection? Concrete evidence — proof of payment, forgery, or a similar defence. A bare denial of liability does not qualify.
What if I lost the return memo? Request a copy from the bank. The memo is essential to prove the cheque was dishonoured.
