Answers to the questions Dubai buyers actually ask.
Direct, source-cited answers on Dubai property ownership, residency, taxation, and process — written by RERA-licensed advisors, reviewed by cross-border specialists, available in seventeen languages.
- ownershipregulation4 min read
Can foreigners buy property in Dubai?
Yes. Since 2002, non-UAE nationals can buy 100% freehold property in designated zones across Dubai, with full ownership rights, no nationality restrictions, and no requirement to be physically present in the UAE for the purchase.
Read answer → - visainvestmentregulation4 min read
What is the Dubai Golden Visa property investment threshold?
The UAE Golden Visa requires a minimum property investment of AED 2 million (approximately USD 545,000) — either a single property or a combined portfolio. The visa grants 10 years of renewable residency, covers the holder's spouse, all children regardless of age, and parents, with no minimum-stay requirement in the UAE.
Read answer → - investmentregulationdeveloper5 min read
Are Dubai off-plan property investments safe?
Yes, when bought from a RERA-licensed developer through proper channels. All off-plan funds in Dubai must be held in escrow accounts supervised by the Real Estate Regulatory Agency (RERA); developers can only draw against verified construction milestones. Combined with the major developers' track records since 2002, this makes Dubai one of the most regulated off-plan markets globally.
Read answer → - financeprocessinvestment5 min read
How does the Dubai off-plan payment plan work?
A typical Dubai off-plan payment plan requires 10–20% on signing, 40–60% spread across construction milestones over 2–4 years, and the balance at handover. Major developers offer post-handover plans extending payments 2–5 years after key collection, with no interest. All payments go to a RERA-supervised escrow account, not the developer.
Read answer → - ownershipregulation3 min read
Freehold vs leasehold in Dubai — what's the difference?
Freehold means perpetual, inheritable, transferable ownership of both the unit and a share of the land — the standard for premium Dubai property and the only structure available to foreign buyers. Leasehold means a long-term lease (typically 30–99 years) of an asset whose underlying ownership remains with the original developer or the government. Foreigners can only buy freehold in designated zones.
Read answer → - taxinvestmentregulation4 min read
What taxes apply to Dubai property?
In Dubai, there is no annual property tax, no capital gains tax, no inheritance tax, and no personal income tax on rental yield. The only direct property-related taxes are a one-time 4% Dubai Land Department transfer fee at purchase and a 5% VAT on commercial property (residential is VAT-exempt). However, residents of other countries remain liable for their home tax regime on Dubai-derived income.
Read answer → - financeprocessinvestment4 min read
Can foreigners get a mortgage in Dubai?
Yes. UAE banks offer mortgages to non-resident foreign buyers at loan-to-value (LTV) ratios up to 50–60% (resident foreigners qualify for up to 80%). Typical interest rates in 2026 range from 4.5% to 6.5% fixed for 1–5 years, with terms up to 25 years. Mortgages are generally only available on completed property, not off-plan.
Read answer → - investmentfinance5 min read
What ROI do Dubai off-plan properties deliver?
Dubai off-plan property has historically delivered total returns of 15–25% per year, combining capital appreciation (typical 8–15% p.a. between launch and handover) with rental yields of 6–9% on completed property. Net returns after costs typically run 12–18% IRR for the buyer who holds through handover and into the rental phase.
Read answer → - processinvestmentfinance4 min read
How do I sell Dubai off-plan property before handover?
You can resell a Dubai off-plan unit before the project is delivered via a Sales Progression Form (SPF) at the developer's office. Most developers require at least 30% of the purchase price to be paid before assignment is permitted. Admin fees range from 1–5%, plus a Dubai Land Department No-Objection Certificate (NOC) at AED 525–5,250. The transaction completes in 2–4 weeks.
Read answer → - investmentarea5 min read
Which Dubai area has the highest ROI?
By gross rental yield, the highest-ROI Dubai areas in 2026 are Dubai South (8–10%), JVC (7–9%), and Dubai Hills (7–8%) for emerging-district yield plays. For total return (capital appreciation + yield), Dubai Marina, Downtown, and Palm Jumeirah deliver 12–15% blended IRR through their combination of strong appreciation and 6–8% yield. The right answer depends on whether you prioritise yield or capital growth.
Read answer → - ownershipregulationprocess4 min read
How is Dubai property inherited — and why do foreigners register a DIFC Will?
Without a registered will, Dubai courts default to UAE Sharia succession rules even for non-Muslim foreigners — which rarely matches a Western estate plan. A DIFC Wills Service Centre will (AED 10,000–15,000) lets you elect your home-country distribution and name guardians for minors, with the Dubai courts enforcing it directly.
Read answer → - regulationprocessfinance4 min read
Can I run Airbnb / short-term rentals on a Dubai property — and what licence do I need?
Yes — short-term rentals are legal but regulated by DET (Dubai Department of Economy and Tourism). Owners need a Holiday Homes permit (AED 1,520/year per unit) plus Tourism Dirham collection (AED 10–15/night). Net yields run 8–12% vs 5–7% on long lets, but operating costs and occupancy risk are real.
Read answer → - ownershiptaxinvestment5 min read
Should I buy Dubai property in my own name or through a company?
For one or two units held long-term, personal name is simplest and cheapest. For 3+ units, family-wealth structures, or planned resale-flipping, a UAE Free Zone company or offshore holding company (RAK ICC, JAFZA Offshore) gives estate-planning, exit, and confidentiality advantages — at AED 12,000–25,000 setup plus annual licensing.
Read answer → - processregulation3 min read
How long does a Dubai property transfer take from offer to title deed?
A ready (secondary) property transfer takes 30–45 days from signed MoU to title-deed in hand. An off-plan SPA registers with DLD/Oqood within 30 days of payment but the title deed itself is issued at handover (typically 18–36 months later). Remote buyers add 5–7 days for Power of Attorney notarisation.
Read answer → - financeprocessregulation4 min read
What happens if I default on Dubai off-plan payments?
Dubai Law 19 of 2017 protects buyers — developers cannot terminate without a 30-day grace period plus formal DLD notification. After default the buyer typically loses 25–40% of project value already paid (depending on construction stage), but the unit can also be re-sold by the buyer through DLD's escrow-protected resale before termination, often recovering most of the paid amount.
Read answer →