For international businesses and individuals engaging counsel in an unfamiliar jurisdiction, the experience can vary enormously — from highly professional, internationally oriented firms to practitioners whose expertise is largely procedural and locally confined. Armenia is no different. The quality and sophistication of legal advisory spans a wide spectrum, and knowing what to look for makes a material difference.
The Scope of Legal Work in Armenia
typically span several broad categories: corporate and commercial law, M&A and investment transactions, regulatory and licensing, dispute resolution and arbitration, real estate, employment, and increasingly, technology and data law. For businesses operating in regulated sectors — finance, gaming, healthcare — sector-specific expertise is an additional and critical requirement.
What distinguishes the better firms is not the breadth of their practice areas but the depth of expertise within them, and crucially, the ability to advise foreign clients in a way that bridges local law with international business standards.
What International Clients Should Prioritize
Clients from the US, EU, or Gulf states engaging Armenian counsel for the first time should pay particular attention to three qualities: language fluency (English and/or Russian, depending on the client’s origin), responsiveness and communication standards, and demonstrable experience with cross-border transactions.
The ability to produce documentation — contracts, legal opinions, regulatory submissions — that meets international standards is not universal among local practitioners. Firms that regularly work with foreign clients, institutional investors, or international counterparties tend to have stronger capabilities in this respect.
Dispute Resolution and Arbitration
Armenia has a functioning civil court system, but experienced businesses typically prefer to structure commercial agreements with arbitration clauses directing any disputes to international arbitration (LCIA, ICC, or UNCITRAL rules) rather than domestic litigation. Local courts can be adequate for straightforward matters, but complex commercial disputes involving foreign parties benefit significantly from a neutral forum.
For disputes that do end up in Armenian courts, local representation by counsel with litigation experience is indispensable. Procedural knowledge, familiarity with judicial practice, and professional relationships within the legal community all affect outcomes in ways that document quality alone cannot.
Real Estate and Property Law
Armenia’s property market has attracted growing interest from foreign buyers, particularly in Yerevan. Foreign nationals can legally own property in Armenia, but title verification, encumbrance searches, and developer due diligence remain essential steps that should never be skipped. Unregistered encumbrances, informal ownership claims, and developer insolvency are among the risks that proper legal review is designed to catch.
