Dubai Rental Yields Guide 2026
Area-by-area yield comparison, calculation methodology, and strategies to maximise your rental return.
Dubai consistently ranks among the top global cities for residential rental yields — delivering 2–3x the returns seen in London, Singapore, or New York. Understanding how yields work, how to calculate them accurately, and which areas offer the best risk-adjusted return is fundamental to building a successful Dubai investment strategy.
How to Calculate Rental Yield
Gross yield: (Annual Rent ÷ Property Price) × 100. Example: AED 80,000 annual rent on AED 1,000,000 property = 8% gross yield. Net yield: ((Annual Rent − Annual Costs) ÷ Property Price) × 100. Annual costs include: service charges (AED 10–35/sqft/year depending on building), vacancy allowance (10–15% of gross typically assumed), property management fee if using an agent (8–12% of rent), maintenance (0.5–1% of value/year). A gross 8% yield in JVC typically nets 5.5–6% after costs — still exceptional versus international markets.
Best Yielding Areas 2026
Dubai South: 9–10% gross (studios/1BRs from AED 390K; airport expansion thesis). JVC: 8.5–10% gross (Dubai's highest-volume rental market; entry from AED 400K). Expo City Dubai: 8–9.5% gross (smart city positioning; entry from AED 480K). Arjan/Dubailand: 8–10% gross (emerging community; entry from AED 400K). Business Bay: 7.5–9% gross (central location; canal-facing premium). Dubai Marina: 7–9% gross (strong lifestyle and STR premium). Dubai Creek Harbour: 7–8.5% gross (fastest-appreciating Emaar community).
Long-Term Rental vs Short-Term Rental Yields
Long-term rental (LTR): annual tenancy, predictable income, minimal management, RERA-regulated rent increases. Typical gross yields: 6–10% depending on area and unit type. Short-term rental (STR/Airbnb): significantly higher gross income potential — typically 60–120% premium over LTR gross in tourist zones. Palm Jumeirah 1BR: AED 140,000/year LTR vs AED 250,000–320,000 gross via STR. Requires DTCM holiday home licence, more management effort, higher operating costs. Professional STR management costs 15–25% of gross revenue.
Service Charges: The Hidden Yield Killer
Service charges vary dramatically by building and have a direct impact on net yield. Budget buildings: AED 10–14/sqft/year. Mid-market: AED 15–22/sqft/year. Premium buildings: AED 22–35/sqft/year. Luxury/branded: AED 30–60/sqft/year. On a 700sqft 1BR apartment: service charges range from AED 7,000/year (budget) to AED 42,000/year (luxury). Always request the service charge budget before purchasing — it can reduce your effective yield by 1–2+ percentage points.
Yield vs Capital Appreciation Trade-off
High-yield areas (JVC, Dubai South, Arjan): 8.5–10% gross yield but modest capital appreciation (8–12% annually in 2025–2026). Low-yield but high-appreciation areas (Palm Jumeirah, Downtown, Dubai Hills): 5–6.5% gross yield but 18–35% capital appreciation in 2025. The optimal investment depends on your primary goal: income now (choose JVC/Dubai South) or wealth building long-term (choose Palm/Downtown). Many investors hold both types for balanced portfolio performance.
Yield Improvement Strategies
Furnished vs unfurnished: furnished units command 20–35% higher rents. Studio/1BR focus: these unit types deliver highest yield% vs 2BR+. Floor and view premium: higher floors and sea/park views command 10–15% rent premiums. Quality building selection: better amenities reduce vacancy and support higher rents. STR licence for tourist areas: dramatically improves income in Marina, JBR, Downtown, Palm. Post-handover entry: buying ready property priced at acquisition date construction-period costs can deliver yields that exceed current off-plan projections.
Dubai Rental Yields Guide 2026 — Investment Guide FAQs
Dubai's average gross residential rental yield is approximately 6–8%, with high-yield areas like JVC, Dubai South, and Expo City delivering 9–10%. Prime areas (Downtown, Palm Jumeirah) average 5–6.5% gross but offer stronger capital appreciation. Commercial yields average 8–14% gross — significantly higher than residential.
Dubai South consistently leads with 9–10% average gross yield, driven by airport expansion demand. JVC follows at 8.5–10%, benefiting from Dubai's largest rental demand pool. Expo City at 8–9.5%, Arjan at 8–10%, and Business Bay at 7.5–9% complete the top tier.
Gross yield = (Annual Rent ÷ Property Price) × 100. Net yield = ((Annual Rent − Service Charges − Vacancy − Management) ÷ Property Price) × 100. Use our Rental Yield Calculator for precise figures based on your specific property details.
Service charges (AED 10–35/sqft/year) reduce net yield by 1–2%. Vacancy periods (10–15% assumption for conservative modelling). Property management fees (8–12% of rent if using an agent). Maintenance costs (0.5–1% of property value/year). In high-supply areas, rental competition can also compress gross yields over time.
Yes — significantly. Prime tourist areas (Marina, JBR, Palm, Downtown) generate 60–120% higher gross income via STR vs long-term rental. A 1BR in Dubai Marina generating AED 110,000/year LTR can achieve AED 190,000–260,000/year gross via STR (at 65–70% occupancy). Net of management fees (20%), this is AED 152,000–208,000 net — still 40–90% above LTR.


























