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Last reviewed: 1 July 2026. This article summarises the current procedure, confirm registry fees and forms with local counsel before filing.
Understanding how to register security in the Maldives is essential for any lender, corporate treasury or in‑house counsel preparing to close a facility backed by Maldivian collateral. The process covers two principal instruments, company charges (fixed or floating) filed with the Registrar of Companies, and mortgages over land filed with the Land Registry, each governed by separate statutes and registries. With the Maldives Monetary Authority (MMA) and the National Financial Inclusion Strategy (NFIS) reforms of 2026 raising the bar on perfection standards and lender disclosure, the registration procedure now demands closer attention to documentation, timing and regulatory compliance than at any point in the past decade.
This guide walks through every stage, from eligibility checks to post‑registration monitoring, and provides the document checklists, timeline tables and cost schedules that lenders need to perfect security efficiently.
Security registration in the Maldives serves one core purpose: establishing the lender’s enforceable priority interest in collateral. The legal framework rests on several statutes. The Companies Act governs charges created by Maldivian companies, both fixed charges (over identified assets such as equipment or receivables) and floating charges (over a class of assets that changes in the ordinary course of business). The Land Act controls mortgages over freehold and leasehold land, while the Securities Act is relevant when collateral involves listed securities or capital‑market instruments administered by the Capital Market Development Authority (CMDA).
The registration obligation falls on the party creating the security (the borrower/chargor), but in practice it is lender counsel or the lender’s registered agent who drives the filing. The process applies to domestic commercial banks, development finance institutions, fintech lenders, and, critically, foreign lenders entering the Maldivian market through a power of attorney or local agent arrangement. Two registries handle filings: the Registrar of Companies for company charges, and the Land Registry (under the Ministry responsible for land and housing) for mortgages over real property. Where security involves listed securities, a parallel notification to the CMDA may be required.
The 2026 MMA compliance framework and NFIS reforms have added new obligations around disclosure, priority verification and ongoing reporting, making it more important than ever to follow a methodical, stepwise approach to charge registration in the Maldives.
Before any security instrument is drafted, both lender and borrower must satisfy several eligibility and capacity tests. Failure at this stage can invalidate the entire security package.
Any company registered under the Companies Act, whether a private company (Pvt Ltd) or a public company, may create charges over its assets. Registered foreign branches operating in the Maldives may also grant security, subject to any restrictions in their registration conditions. Sole proprietorships registered via the Maldives Business Portal can mortgage land they own, but the mechanism differs from the company charge regime.
A foreign lender seeking to hold security in the Maldives does not need a local branch but must satisfy the following prerequisites to ensure the registration is enforceable:
The security registration process in the Maldives follows seven sequential stages. Each stage identifies the responsible party, the key actions, and the practical output required before proceeding to the next step.
Who: Lender counsel, in consultation with borrower counsel.
The charge or mortgage instrument must clearly describe the secured obligations, identify the collateral with specificity, and specify whether the charge is fixed or floating. For land mortgages, the property description must match the Land Registry records verbatim, any discrepancy risks rejection at filing. Key drafting items include:
Who: Borrower’s board of directors and corporate secretary.
The borrower’s board must pass a resolution specifically authorising the creation of the security and the execution of the instrument. The resolution should name the directors authorised to sign and, where the company’s constitutional documents require it, confirm that shareholder approval has been obtained. The instrument is then executed by the authorised signatories in the presence of witnesses as required under Maldivian law. For foreign lenders, the POA holder signs on behalf of the lender.
Who: Lender counsel.
Before filing, lender counsel should conduct the following searches to confirm that the security can be validly registered and will achieve the intended priority:
Who: Borrower, notary public, embassy or consulate (for foreign documents), certified translator.
Maldivian registries require that instruments be in Dhivehi or accompanied by a certified translation. If any party is foreign, execution documents originating outside the Maldives must be notarised in the country of origin and legalised (or apostilled, if the originating country is a party to the Hague Apostille Convention). Translations must be prepared by a court‑approved translator, and the translation itself must be certified. The legalisation process for a foreign lender’s POA typically involves notarisation in the home jurisdiction, authentication by the relevant foreign ministry, and attestation by the Maldivian embassy or consulate.
Who: Registered agent or lender counsel.
This is the critical perfection step. The filing destination depends on the type of security:
For capital‑market securities used as collateral, a parallel notification to the CMDA may be required under the Securities Act.
Who: Lender operations and lender counsel.
Once the Registrar or Land Registry accepts the filing, the lender should obtain the registration certificate or registry entry confirmation. The effective priority date is generally the date and time of accepted filing, this must be verified against the specific provisions of the Companies Act (for charges) and the Land Act (for mortgages). Lender operations should update facility records, note the priority date, and send formal confirmation to the borrower and any custodian or security trustee.
Who: Lender counsel and lender operations.
After perfection of security in the Maldives is confirmed, several ongoing obligations apply:
The following table consolidates every document typically required when filing a charge or mortgage with the relevant Maldivian registry. Lenders should treat this as a pre‑filing checklist and confirm current registry requirements with local counsel before submission.
| Document | Notes (issuer, format, validity) |
|---|---|
| Executed charge or mortgage instrument | Original, signed by borrower and witnesses. Must specify fixed or floating charge. Notarise if lender is foreign‑incorporated. |
| Board resolution authorising creation of security | Certified copy stamped by company secretary. Include extract of minutes and list of authorised signatories. |
| Certified constitutional documents (MOA/AOA) | Certified within 30–90 days of filing (confirm current registry validity window). Must show borrowing powers. |
| Company search / no‑encumbrance certificate | Official search from Registrar of Companies via the Maldives Business Portal showing existing charges and company status. |
| Land title or lease certificate and title plan | Official Land Registry extract. For leasehold, include lease agreement and evidence of lessor consent to mortgage. |
| Share certificates and updated register extract | Required for charges over shares. Certified copies; lodge share transfer instrument if blank transfer taken as security. |
| Power of Attorney (foreign lenders) | Notarised in home jurisdiction + legalised or apostilled. Must specifically authorise filing and enforcement actions. |
| Identification documents (passports / national ID) | Certified copies for lender, borrower directors, and authorised signatories. KYC requirements per MMA AML/CFT rules. |
| Certified translations | Required where originals are not in Dhivehi or English. Prepared by court‑approved translator; translation must be certified. |
| Prescribed registration forms | Registrar of Companies charge registration form (via Maldives Business Portal) or Land Registry mortgage form (via Ministry portal). Confirm current form codes with local counsel. |
Industry observers expect the registries to digitise additional filing forms during 2026, so lenders should verify current form names and codes directly via the Maldives Business Portal or the Ministry portal before each filing.
The registration timeline for security in the Maldives varies depending on the type of collateral, the registry workload, and whether foreign legalisation is required. The table below provides indicative durations for each stage. Lenders should build contingency time into transaction timetables, particularly for land mortgages and cross‑border legalisation.
| Step / Event | Who | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Drafting security documents and review | Lender counsel & borrower | 3–7 business days (simple); 2–3 weeks (complex/syndicated) |
| Corporate approvals and execution | Borrower directors / corporate secretary | 1–5 business days |
| Notarisation, legalisation and translations | Notary / embassy / certified translator | 1–10 business days (varies by jurisdiction of origin) |
| Pre‑filing searches and due diligence | Lender counsel | 1–5 business days |
| File charge with Registrar of Companies | Registered agent / counsel | 3–15 business days (registry processing) |
| File mortgage with Land Registry | Registered agent / counsel | 5–20 business days (land registry processing) |
| Receipt of registration certificate | Registrar / Land Registry | 1–5 business days after acceptance |
| Perfection confirmation and records update | Lender operations | 1–2 business days |
| Re‑perfecting existing security (2026 requirements) | Lender counsel & registered agent | 1–2 weeks (begin immediately if regulator requires, see 2026 changes below) |
The effective priority date for company charges is generally the date and time of accepted filing with the Registrar of Companies, while mortgage priority is determined by the date of entry in the Land Registry. Lenders should verify the exact statutory rule under the relevant provisions of the Companies Act and Land Act, as the distinction between “filing date” and “acceptance date” can affect priority in contested situations. Where expedited processing is available, local counsel can advise on whether premium filing options exist at either registry.
The fees to register a charge or mortgage in the Maldives comprise registry fees, stamp duty, professional fees and ancillary costs. The table below provides an indicative schedule, all amounts should be confirmed with the relevant registry and with MIRA before filing.
| Item | Amount (Indicative) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Registrar of Companies, charge registration fee | Confirm with registry | May be a flat fee or scaled by secured amount. Verify via the Maldives Business Portal. |
| Land Registry, mortgage filing fee | Confirm with registry | Per‑instrument fee or value‑band fee. Verify via Ministry portal. |
| Stamp duty | Confirm with MIRA | Applicable rate depends on instrument type and secured amount. Check current MIRA schedule. |
| Legal fees (local counsel) | USD 1,000–10,000+ | Depends on transaction complexity. Simple bilateral charge at lower end; syndicated or multi‑asset at higher end. |
| Notarisation / legalisation / apostille | Varies by jurisdiction | Typically USD 50–500 per document depending on country of origin. |
| Certified translation | Varies | Per‑page rate charged by court‑approved translator. Budget for all non‑Dhivehi/English originals. |
| MMA / regulator compliance filing fees | Confirm with MMA | May apply where collateral involves regulated financial instruments or capital‑market securities. |
Lenders should also consider whether goods and services tax (GST) applies to professional fees, and whether any withholding tax obligations arise on cross‑border interest payments secured by the charge. Early tax structuring advice is critical for foreign lender security arrangements in the Maldives.
The 2026 regulatory cycle has introduced several changes that directly affect how lenders create, register and maintain security interests in the Maldives. The MMA’s updated prudential guidance and the NFIS framework place heightened emphasis on perfection standards, ongoing disclosure and lender reporting. Early indications suggest that the likely practical effect will include stricter registry scrutiny of filing completeness and more frequent requests for supplementary documentation.
Lenders with existing registered security should take the following immediate steps:
Industry observers expect that the MMA will continue to refine its MMA compliance security requirements throughout 2026, so lenders should establish a monitoring process for new circulars and guidance notes published on the MMA website.
Even experienced transaction teams encounter problems at the filing stage. The following pitfalls are the most frequent causes of delay, rejection or loss of priority in Maldivian security registration.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Premier Chambers at Premier Chambers, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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