kb-consumer-protection-mena
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name: kb-consumer-protection-mena
description: Use when advising on consumer protection obligations in MENA jurisdictions, including misleading commercial practices, product liability, warranty obligations, e-commerce consumer rights, complaint and recall procedures, and enforcement by consumer protection authorities. Covers UAE (Consumer Protection Law 2023), KSA (Consumer Protection Law), Egypt (Law 181/2018), and Lebanon (Law 659/2005), with sector-specific notes for financial services and digital platforms.
license: MIT
metadata:
id: kb.consumer-protection-MENA
category: kb
practice_area: Consumer Protection
jurisdictions: [UAE, KSA, EG, LB, MENA]
priority: P2
intent: [consumer protection, product liability, misleading practices, warranty, e-commerce, MENA]
related: [kb-advertising-marketing-law, kb-competition-law-mena, kb-data-privacy-mena, review-commercial-contract]
source: Louis — HAQQ Legal AI (github.com/sboghossian/mini-claude-for-legal)
version: "1.0"
Knowledge Pack — Consumer Protection in MENA
Scope
This pack covers the legal framework protecting consumers from deceptive, unsafe, or unfair commercial practices in MENA jurisdictions. It covers:
- Core consumer protection legislation by jurisdiction
- Prohibited commercial practices (misleading, aggressive, deceptive)
- Product safety and product liability
- Warranty and after-sales service obligations
- E-commerce and digital consumer rights
- Complaint handling and regulatory enforcement
- Sector-specific rules (financial services, pharmaceuticals, real estate)
UAE
Legislation
Federal Decree-Law 5/2023 on Consumer Protection (replaced Federal Law 24/2006 and its amendments). Significant modernization addressing digital commerce and platform obligations.
Regulator
Ministry of Economy (Consumer Protection Department) — primary enforcement. Sector regulators enforce sector-specific consumer protection:
- CBUAE — financial services
- Ministry of Health — pharmaceuticals
- VARA Marketing Rulebook — virtual assets
Core prohibited practices
- Misleading advertising: false or deceptive representations about goods or services — price, quality, origin, safety
- False claims: unfounded safety, health, or environmental claims
- Unconscionable terms: contract terms that are grossly unfair to consumers (standard form contracts scrutinized)
- Anti-competitive bundling affecting consumers
Warranties
- Minimum implied warranty: goods must be fit for purpose and match description
- Duration: varies by product; minimum 1 year on durable goods is common practice; manufacturer warranty supplemented by statutory rights
- After-sales service: regulated for certain product categories (electronics, appliances)
- Disclaimer of implied warranties generally not effective against consumers
E-commerce
- Right to return (cooling-off): consumers have a right to return certain goods purchased online within a defined period (7–14 days depending on product category)
- Digital product disclosures required
- Platform liability for marketplace sellers increasingly addressed
Enforcement
- Fines: up to AED 2M per violation; escalating for repeat offenses
- Product recall orders: Ministry can mandate recall and restitution
- License suspension: for systemic violations
- Criminal referral: for intentional fraud
KSA
Legislation
Consumer Protection Law (Royal Decree M/35 1428H / 2007 as amended). Implementing regulations issued by Ministry of Commerce.
Regulator
Ministry of Commerce (Consumer Protection General Directorate) — primary enforcement. Sector regulators: SFDA (food, drugs, cosmetics), SAMA (financial services), GAC (competition-linked consumer issues).
Core obligations
- Price labeling: prices must be clearly displayed in SAR
- Product information: Arabic language requirements for product information
- Warranty: minimum 1 year on durable goods; longer for motor vehicles
- Returns and exchanges: consumer right to return defective goods; exchange rights
Prohibited practices
- Misleading advertising (see [[kb-advertising-marketing-law]])
- Discriminatory pricing between different consumer groups (unless justified)
- Imposing arbitrary terms not disclosed at time of purchase
Food and pharmaceutical advertising
SFDA enforces strict rules on health claims, labeling, and advertising for food, drugs, and cosmetics. Pharmaceutical advertising directly to consumers is restricted.
Egypt
Legislation
Consumer Protection Law (Law 181/2018) and its executive regulations — significant modernization of consumer protection in Egypt.
Regulator
Consumer Protection Agency (CPA) — dedicated authority for consumer protection enforcement.
Core features
- Prohibition on misleading and deceptive commercial practices
- Product safety: minimum safety standards; reporting of unsafe products
- Warranty: statutory warranty rights for defective goods
- Contract terms: certain terms void as against consumers (limitation of liability, unilateral contract modification)
- E-commerce: CPA has published guidance on online consumer rights
Enforcement
- CPA can impose fines, order product recalls, mandate corrective advertising
- Criminal penalties for intentional consumer fraud
- Class action-style collective consumer complaints recognized
Lebanon
Legislation
Consumer Protection Law (Law 659/2005) — principal legislation. Supplemented by sector-specific consumer protections (BDL circulars for banking products).
Regulator
Ministry of Economy and Trade (MOET) — enforcement of general consumer protection law.
Practical status
Lebanon's consumer protection enforcement has been significantly weakened by the ongoing financial and political crisis. Formal enforcement actions are limited. The more significant consumer protection developments in Lebanon relate to banking/depositor rights rather than general consumer goods.
Key rules
- Prohibition on misleading representations
- Price display obligations
- Product safety standards (aligned with international standards)
- Warranty rights for defective products
Cross-cutting themes
Product safety and recall
All MENA jurisdictions have product safety frameworks:
| Element | Description |
|---|---|
| Safety standards | Products must comply with mandatory safety standards (often aligned with EU/international standards) |
| Reporting obligation | Manufacturers/importers must report known safety defects to the regulator |
| Recall | Regulator may mandate recall; manufacturer may initiate voluntary recall |
| Notification | Consumer notification required for safety recalls |
Product liability
Product liability in MENA is generally based on:
- Civil-law tort principles (Lebanon, Egypt, UAE onshore)
- Consumer protection statute (mandatory warranty, defective product liability)
- Common-law negligence and strict product liability (DIFC, ADGM)
MENA-specific: strict product liability (liability without proof of negligence) is not as fully developed in civil-law MENA jurisdictions as in EU/US law. Liability typically requires proof of defect + damage + causation.
E-commerce consumer protection
Digital consumer rights are actively developing across MENA:
- Distance selling cooling-off rights (UAE: adopted; KSA: adopted; Egypt: developing; Lebanon: limited)
- Digital content rights: refund and access rights for digital products
- Platform liability: marketplaces increasingly held responsible for trader misconduct
- Data protection: overlaps with data privacy law (see [[kb-data-privacy-mena]])
Financial services consumer protection
Financial services consumers receive additional protection under sector-specific regimes:
- CBUAE Consumer Protection Regulation: banking product disclosures, fees, complaints
- SAMA customer protection rules: fair lending, product suitability
- DFSA and FSRA: conduct of business rules for DIFC/ADGM
Compliance checklist for businesses selling to consumers in MENA
- Product information in Arabic (where required)
- Price clearly displayed (in local currency)
- Statutory warranty offered; duration meets jurisdiction requirements
- After-sales service procedure documented
- Returns policy compliant with e-commerce cooling-off rules
- Safety standards certification obtained
- Complaint handling procedure in place
- Standard terms reviewed for unfair contract terms
- Advertising claims substantiated (see [[kb-advertising-marketing-law]])
How to use this pack
Load this pack when the user:
- Needs to assess whether a business practice complies with MENA consumer protection law
- Is reviewing standard terms and conditions for B2C use
- Has a product safety or recall issue
- Is structuring an e-commerce offering for MENA consumers
- Needs to understand warranty obligations in MENA
Caveats & currency
UAE's 2023 Consumer Protection Law is recently enacted and implementing regulations may still be developing. Egypt's CPA is building its enforcement track record. Lebanon's enforcement is practically limited. Always verify current regulator guidance for sector-specific consumer protection rules.
Related skills
- [[kb-advertising-marketing-law]] — misleading advertising and marketing practices
- [[kb-competition-law-mena]] — unfair competition and consumer-affecting competition violations
- [[kb-data-privacy-mena]] — data protection in consumer-facing digital products
- [[review-commercial-contract]] — reviewing B2C terms for compliance