Leases collect signatures from people who are rarely in the same room: landlord, tenant, sometimes an agent and a guarantor. E-signing turns a week of office visits into a single afternoon.
The agreement itself, addenda, handover checklists, and renewal letters all run through the same flow — with every party receiving the sealed copy automatically.
Is it legal?
Lease agreements between private parties can be e-signed across the GCC under the general electronic-transactions laws. Note the distinction from registration: where a jurisdiction requires municipal or platform registration of tenancy (e.g. Ejari in Dubai, Ejar in Saudi Arabia, municipality attestation in Qatar), that registration is a separate administrative filing — the signed contract remains the underlying agreement, and e-signing it is valid.
Upload the lease PDF with its addenda.
Add landlord, tenant, and any agent/guarantor — sequential order if you need the tenant to sign first.
Send. Each party verifies by one-time code and signs from any device.
All parties get the sealed PDF; the certificate records who signed, when, and from where.
Registration platforms are separate administrative requirements where they apply — the e-signed contract is the agreement you register. E-signing does not remove a registration duty, and registration does not replace signatures.
Yes — add them as a signer like any other party; they verify by one-time code from wherever they are.
Same flow. Commercial leases are ordinary B2B contracts under GCC e-transactions laws; company signatories can also apply a company stamp field alongside signatures.
Free plan includes 5 documents a month. Signers never need an account.
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