eSignature Legality Guide

eSignature Legality in Bahrain

Electronic signatures are legally recognized in Bahrain under Legislative Decree No. 54 of 2018 promulgating the Electronic Communications and Transactions Law (amended in 2021), which replaced the earlier 2002 law and is overseen by the Ministry responsible for information and communications technology.

New to the topic? Read ESIGN, UETA and eIDAS explained.

eSignature legality summary

The Law provides that information, records, and signatures are not denied legal effect merely because they are electronic, and it adopts a UNCITRAL-style framework that also covers trust services and electronic transferable records. It distinguishes a basic electronic signature from a “secure” electronic signature that meets rigorous criteria and is backed by an accredited trust service provider; a secure signature enjoys presumptions of attribution and integrity.

Types of permitted electronic signature

A basic electronic signature is any electronic data used with intent to sign (a typed name, an “I accept” action, or a drawn signature). A “secure” electronic signature must be uniquely linked to and capable of identifying the signatory, under their sole control, tamper-evident, created by a secure device, and based on a certificate from an accredited provider — carrying the strongest evidentiary weight. The Law also recognizes qualified electronic seals and time stamps.

Documents that may be signed electronically

Most commercial agreements — NDAs, vendor and SaaS contracts, procurement, HR paperwork, leases, and service agreements — can be concluded electronically where no special form is required.

Use with caution / not typically appropriate

Where a law requires a particular form, notarization, or a higher-assurance signature, use that method. For high-stakes or government-facing matters, a secure, certificate-backed signature gives the strongest footing.

  • Personal-status and family-law matters within Sharia-court jurisdiction (marriage, divorce, custody, wills, succession)
  • Documents requiring notarial authentication
  • Real-property title deeds and documents creating interests in land
  • Negotiable instruments (cheques, bills of exchange, promissory notes)

Seminal court cases

None reported.

Primary sources

Disclaimer: This guide is general information, not legal advice, and is not a guarantee that any signature will be enforceable for a particular document, transaction, or jurisdiction. E-signature and data-protection laws change frequently. Confirm the requirements for your specific document and parties, and consult a licensed lawyer in the relevant country before relying on electronic signing.

Last reviewed: June 15, 2026

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