Flexible behaviour requires decision-making that integrates both perceptual and mnemonic-related information. While the dorsal premotor cortex (PMd) is known to support decision-making based on perceptual computations, its contributions to decisions based on mnemonic information for motor planning are underexplored. Here, investigating local field potential (LFP) oscillations in PMd of monkeys performing a transitive inference task required the formation and retrieval of mnemonic representations of an arbitrarily defined rank order among perceptual items. Our results highlight that a dynamic interplay between lower frequencies (Theta, Alpha, Beta) and high-Gamma oscillatory activity of LFP reflects a mechanism for accessing and manipulating memory-related information underlying decision-making. These findings provide evidence that the PMd plays a role in multiplexing both perceptual and mnemonic information, extending its competence beyond the association of perceptual input with motor decisions.