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Dubai Marina property financed by UAE mortgage

Dubai Mortgage Guide for Foreigners & Non-Residents 2026

One of the common misconceptions about Dubai property investment is that you must buy outright. The UAE has a well-developed mortgage market that allows both residents and non-residents to finance property purchases — enabling higher returns through leverage.

This guide explains how the UAE mortgage market works for foreigners, what you can borrow, which banks to approach, and how to navigate the process from outside the UAE. For a full overview of buying steps, see our how to buy off-plan guide.

UAE Mortgage Overview

Dubai Marina skyline — UAE mortgage market for foreigners and expats
Dubai's mortgage market is open to both resident expats and non-resident international investors.

The UAE Central Bank regulates mortgage lending. Key rules established in 2012 and still in force:

LTV Limits for Expatriates (Non-UAE Nationals):

  • Properties up to AED 5M: Maximum 75% LTV (you pay 25% down)
  • Properties above AED 5M: Maximum 65% LTV (you pay 35% down)
  • Off-plan property: Up to 50–65% LTV (depends on the bank and developer)
  • Second property: Maximum 65% LTV

LTV Limits for UAE Nationals:

  • Properties up to AED 5M: Maximum 80% LTV
  • Properties above AED 5M: Maximum 70% LTV

Maximum loan term: 25 years (age limit usually 65–70 at end of term)

75%
Max LTV (Expat, <AED 5M)
4.0–5.5%
Fixed Rate Range 2026
25 yrs
Maximum Loan Term
60%
Typical Non-Resident LTV

Who Qualifies?

UAE Residents (Expats with UAE Visa)

Full access to UAE mortgage market. Requirements:

  • UAE residency visa (minimum 6 months validity)
  • Minimum monthly income: AED 15,000–25,000 (varies by bank)
  • 6–12 months UAE employment or 2+ years self-employment
  • Clean credit history (AECB — UAE credit bureau check)

Non-Residents (Overseas Investors)

Limited but available options. Requirements:

  • Evidence of regular income from abroad (payslips, bank statements)
  • Minimum monthly income: AED 25,000–40,000 (higher than residents)
  • Property in a prime zone (banks prefer Dubai Marina, Downtown Dubai, Business Bay)
  • Available through: ADCB, Mashreq, HSBC UAE, Standard Chartered UAE

Self-Employed Individuals

  • 2+ years audited company financials
  • Business bank statements
  • Higher income requirements
  • Some banks require 3 years trading history

Mortgage Types Available

Fixed Rate Mortgage

Interest rate fixed for 1, 2, 3, or 5 years. Provides payment certainty. 2026 fixed rates: 4.0–5.5% per annum (2-year fix typical)

Variable Rate Mortgage

Rate linked to EIBOR (Emirates Interbank Offered Rate) + bank margin. 2026 variable rates: EIBOR + 1.5–2.5% (total currently ~4.5–5.5%) More risk but potentially cheaper if EIBOR falls.

Islamic Mortgage (Murabaha)

Sharia-compliant financing structure — the bank buys and resells the property to you at a mark-up. No interest charged. Functionally equivalent to a conventional mortgage for most buyers. Available from: Dubai Islamic Bank, Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank, Amlak Finance.

Top UAE Mortgage Lenders

Bank Suitable For Typical Min Income Non-Resident?
Emirates NBD Residents AED 15,000/month Limited
ADCB Residents + non-residents AED 20,000/month Yes (select cases)
Mashreq Residents + non-residents AED 15,000/month Yes (select cases)
HSBC UAE International buyers AED 25,000/month Yes
Standard Chartered UAE Non-residents AED 30,000/month Yes
Dubai Islamic Bank Sharia-preferred AED 15,000/month No
Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank Sharia-preferred AED 20,000/month Limited

UAE Banks (Local)

  • • Higher LTV — up to 75% for residents
  • • Sharia-compliant options (DIB, ADIB)
  • • Lower minimum income thresholds for residents
  • • Faster approvals with local documentation
  • • Limited to non-residents in most cases

International Banks (UAE-Licensed)

  • • HSBC UAE, Standard Chartered UAE, Mashreq
  • • Non-resident mortgages available
  • • Global income documentation accepted
  • • Higher income thresholds (AED 25,000–40,000/month)
  • • LTV typically capped at 50–60% for non-residents

Key Mortgage Costs

Cost Amount
Mortgage arrangement fee 1% of loan + VAT (5%)
Mortgage registration (DLD) 0.25% of loan + AED 290
Property valuation AED 2,500–3,500
Life insurance (mandatory) 0.4–0.7% of loan/year
Building insurance AED 2,500–5,000/year

For a AED 1.5M mortgage, the one-time setup costs are approximately:

  • Arrangement fee: AED 15,750 (1% + VAT)
  • DLD registration: AED 4,040 (verified via Dubai Land Department)
  • Valuation: AED 3,000
  • Total setup: ~AED 22,790

Investment Tool

Mortgage Affordability Calculator

Estimate your UAE mortgage payment, total cost, and return on equity based on property price, LTV, and interest rate.

Use Calculator

The Mortgage Process

Step 1: Pre-Approval (6–8 weeks before purchase)

Submit income documents, bank statements, passport, visa, and proof of address. Bank issues a pre-approval letter confirming how much you can borrow. This letter is often required by developers and sellers.

Step 2: Property Selection and SPA

Find your property and sign the Sales & Purchase Agreement (SPA). The bank will review the SPA as part of final approval.

Step 3: Property Valuation

Bank orders an independent RICS-certified valuation. Mortgage is limited to the lower of: purchase price OR valuation.

Step 4: Final Approval and Offer Letter

Bank issues formal mortgage offer. You sign the offer letter.

Step 5: Completion

Mortgage funds released to the seller/developer on the date of title deed transfer. DLD registration of the mortgage charge happens simultaneously.

Off-Plan Mortgage Considerations

Mortgages on off-plan properties work differently:

  • Most developers require cash installments during construction
  • At handover, you can arrange a mortgage to cover the handover balance
  • Some banks offer specific “off-plan completion mortgages” — arranged in advance, drawn at handover
  • Start the mortgage application 6–9 months before expected handover

Understanding payment plans explained is essential before committing to an off-plan purchase with a mortgage strategy.

Mortgage vs Cash: Which Is Better?

Cash advantages:

  • No interest cost
  • Simpler transaction
  • Developer sometimes offers slight discount for cash
  • No credit assessment

Mortgage advantages:

  • Leverage — your AED 500K down payment controls a AED 2M asset
  • Improved return on equity (ROE) when rental yield > mortgage rate
  • Capital preservation — use remaining cash for diversification

Example (AED 2M property, 7% yield):

Cash purchase:

  • Return: AED 140,000/year on AED 2M = 7.0%

Mortgage purchase (75% LTV at 4.5%):

  • Rental income: AED 140,000
  • Mortgage interest (AED 1.5M at 4.5%): AED 67,500
  • Net return on AED 500K invested: AED 72,500 = 14.5% return on equity

Leverage multiplies your return on capital — at the cost of interest and added risk. This calculation works as long as yield > mortgage rate. In Dubai’s current environment (7.2% yield vs 4.5% rate), the leverage case is compelling. See our rental yields guide for zone-by-zone yield data.

Contact our advisors for recommendations on UAE mortgage brokers who specialise in international clients.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. UAE banks lend to non-UAE nationals — both residents and, in some cases, non-residents. UAE resident expats have access to the full mortgage market (up to 75% LTV for properties up to AED 5M). Non-residents face more restrictions — typically 50–60% LTV maximum and availability through select international-facing banks. Both groups face standard income and credit assessment.

UAE Central Bank regulations limit mortgage LTV for expatriates: 75% for properties up to AED 5M (you pay 25% down), 65% for properties above AED 5M, and 65% for off-plan properties (where mortgages are available). UAE nationals receive slightly higher limits (80%/70%).

UAE mortgage rates in 2026 typically range from 3.75–5.5% per annum. Variable rate mortgages linked to EIBOR (Emirates Interbank Offered Rate) start lower. Fixed rate mortgages for 1–5 years provide certainty. Some banks offer special fixed introductory rates. Compare across Emirates NBD, ADCB, Mashreq, HSBC UAE, Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank, and Dubai Islamic Bank for the best rates.