Qadi AI compliance platform starts in Dubai with pre-seed funding to change how firms check rules in the Middle East. The company creates the region’s first system that turns local laws into AI tools for quick and right checks. Firms can now use automation instead of slow manual reviews. This setup helps businesses handle growing rules on AI and data without big teams or long waits.​
How the Platform Works
Qadi AI compliance platform reads laws, rules, and policy papers with AI agents. These agents check contracts like NDAs and MSAs against local standards. They send approvals to the right people and alert teams when deals pass. The tools also scan media files for ads and finance rules to meet standards right away.​
The Dubai firm came out of stealth mode just now. It mixes Middle East and North Africa legal know-how with data security for safe work. Legal teams get tools that spot issues early, speed up approvals, and cut down on mistakes and extra work. Users run the agents in their own systems, which keeps data private and fits local needs.​
Funding and Next Steps
Incubayt leads the pre-seed funding for Qadi. The money helps grow the team of AI and legal experts. The firm plans tests with law offices, banks, and government groups in the GCC. Early partners will use the platform to test real workflows and give feedback for fixes.​
Founder Mohamad El Charif says Qadi acts as the main tool for rule checks. It links legal advice with AI for new services. Investor Sami Khoreibi notes that AI built for local rules helps clients in the region. Both see it as a base for safe AI growth in government and business.​
Growth in the Region
Qadi fits with other RegTech companies made for Gulf laws. Governments change rules on AI, data safety, and online services, which raises the need. The platform grows digital rule systems across areas for even checks. It handles law updates quickly, so firms stay ahead.​
The Middle East sees rapid changes that attract global capital, and Qadi adds a rule-check layer. Groups run agents in their own setups for fast choices. This makes the firm a key part as AI use grows quickly. Demand comes from banks, law firms, and agencies that need trust in digital tools. Qadi plans to add more features like risk scores and report tools soon. Regional leaders push AI rules to balance growth and safety, which boosts tools like this. The startup eyes wider rollout after pilots succeed.​




