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Down Payment in Dubai: How Much Cash Do You Really Need?

Posted by Preeminent on February 10, 2026
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Quick summary

Lenders also check your debt-to-income limits (monthly debt servicing), commonly capped around 50% of gross income in underwriting’s. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start writing!

Minimum down payment typically starts at 20% for UAE residents and 25% for non-residents for many properties but requirements rise for higher-value homes and depending on the bank.

Expect additional purchase costs (Dubai Land Department transfer fee ~4%, mortgage registration fees, trustee and admin fees).

Introduction

Buying property in Dubai is a popular goal for many expats and investors – but the headline down-payment percentage is only the start of the cash you’ll need. This guide breaks down the actual upfront cash required, shows worked examples, and gives a practical SEO checklist (the “condition”) so this article will be search-engine friendly and useful to readers.


What determines how much cash you need?

  1. Residency status – (UAE national, UAE resident expat, non-resident) – rules and LTV limits differ.
  2. Property price band – properties above AED 5M often require higher deposits.
  3. New-build vs ready property – developer payment plans can reduce initial cash (off-plan options, staged payments).
  4. Bank appetite and your profile – income, credit, residency, and other liabilities affect the bank’s LTV offer.

Official baseline down-payment rules (what most buyers can expect)

  • UAE residents: commonly 20% minimum on properties under certain thresholds (varies by bank and property value).
  • Non-residents / foreign buyers: commonly 25% or more; many lenders require larger deposits (and some banks will finance less than these maximums).
  • High-value properties (often ≥ AED 5,000,000): minimums typically increase to 30%+.

Note: some banks and special programs can change these numbers always confirm with your lender.


Example calculations digit-by-digit so there’s no doubt

Scenario A Resident buyer, ready property priced AED 1,500,000

  • Down payment (20%):
    1,500,000 × 20/100 = (1,500,000 ÷ 100) × 20 = 15,000 × 20 = AED 300,000.
  • Dubai Land Department transfer fee (4%):
    1,500,000 × 4/100 = (1,500,000 ÷ 100) × 4 = 15,000 × 4 = AED 60,000.
  • If bank finances 80% then loan = 1,200,000; mortgage registration fee (typical 0.25% of loan):
    1,200,000 × 0.25/100 = (1,200,000 ÷ 100) × 0.25 = 12,000 × 0.25 = AED 3,000.
  • Total immediate cash required at purchase (approx): 300,000 + 60,000 + 3,000 = AED 363,000 (plus any agent/trustee/NOC costs).

Scenario B — Non-resident buyer, same property, down payment 25%

  • Down payment (25%): 1,500,000 × 25/100 = (1,500,000 ÷ 100) × 25 = 15,000 × 25 = AED 375,000.
  • Add DLD (AED 60,000) + mortgage fees total upfront ≈ AED 438,000 (approx).

(These worked examples use typical percentages; your real quote may differ depending on the bank, developer offer or any negotiated terms.)


Other upfront costs to include (don’t forget these)

  • Dubai Land Department (DLD) transfer fee ~4% of sale price.
  • Mortgage registration fee (usually 0.25% of loan + admin fee).
  • Trustee / conveyancing fees (typically AED 2,000 – 4,000).
  • Agency / brokerage fee (if applicable) and NOC costs.

Financing rules lenders apply

  • Banks assess Loan-to-Value (LTV) based on residency and property class non-residents often face lower LTVs (i.e., higher down payments).
  • Debt service limits: lenders commonly cap your total monthly debt obligations (including the mortgage) at a percentage of income often around 50% for expatriates in practice.

Ways to reduce initial cash outflow

  • Developer payment plans (off-plan): staged payments can lower upfront cash vs ready property.
  • Look for promotional offers from banks or developers (cashback, reduced down payment for a limited period).
  • Joint ownership (e.g., with family) to share initial deposit and qualify for a better LTV.

Frequently Asked Questions(FAQ)

Usually starts around 20–25% for many cases, but non-residents often face higher minimums depending on the lender and property value.

DLD transfer fee (~4%), mortgage registration (≈0.25% of loan + admin), trustee fees, agent fees and any developer NOC costs.

Yes, but LTVs are usually lower for non-residents and banks may require higher deposits or additional documentation.

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