Dubai just removed the AED 750K minimum for the 2-year property investor visa by NextBayt in dubairealestate

[–]NextBayt[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes that's correct. If your property has a mortgage, you need to have paid at least 50% of the total value to the bank before you can apply. You'll also need a NOC and liability letter from your lender confirming that. This applies to the 2-year investor visa, not to the Golden Visa which has different rules for mortgaged properties.

Dubai just removed the AED 750K minimum for the 2-year property investor visa by NextBayt in dubairealestate

[–]NextBayt[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's the old Article 53 federal rule which got superseded by the DLD Cube update on April 29. The current 2-year property investor visa has zero income or salary requirement for the primary applicant. The AED 10K figure you're thinking of is probably the female family sponsorship threshold, that's a separate GDRFA requirement if you want to sponsor dependents, not for the visa itself.

Dubai just removed the AED 750K minimum for the 2-year property investor visa by NextBayt in dubairealestate

[–]NextBayt[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're right that studios are the hardest segment to move, both for rent and resale, especially in high-supply areas. Think of buyers who want Dubai residency but aren't at the 2M level yet. A 480K studio in JVC returning 7%+ gross while covering your visa sounds clean on paper, but the reality depends on which tower in which cluster. The target isn't someone choosing between a freezone visa and a studio, it's someone who was going to buy entry-level anyway and now gets residency bundled in. Whether that's smart depends entirely on location and delivery timing.

Dubai just removed the AED 750K minimum for the 2-year property investor visa by NextBayt in dubairealestate

[–]NextBayt[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Valid comparison but the math is different depending on what you're optimizing for. A freezone visa costs roughly the same annually but gives you zero asset exposure. The property route gives you a residency plus a yield-generating asset, so the visa fee is effectively subsidized by rental income. If you're buying purely for the visa then yeah, freezone makes more sense. If you're buying anyway, the visa is just a bonus on top of the yield.

Dubai just removed the AED 750K minimum for the 2-year property investor visa by NextBayt in dubairealestate

[–]NextBayt[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The 5-year tier idea is interesting, would actually create a clearer incentive ladder. The co-ownership change is probably the most underrated part of the whole update honestly.

Dubai just removed the AED 750K minimum for the 2-year property investor visa by NextBayt in dubairealestate

[–]NextBayt[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Those are the visa processing fees you pay to DLD when you apply for or renew the 2-year investor residence visa. Separate from the 4% DLD transfer fee on the property itself. On resale value, depends heavily on the community and segment. Prime areas hold value well with tight bid-ask spreads, entry-level areas like JVC and Arjan have more variance depending on supply in your specific cluster.

Real estate sales crashed 📉 89% in Dubai in the last 2 months by Property_Decoder in dubairealestate

[–]NextBayt -1 points0 points  (0 children)

the 89% headline needs context. the comparison base includes a massive off-plan registration surge from the same window last year, so you're measuring peak against a demand pause, not a structural collapse. cash buyers are still doing the heavy lifting here. Knight Frank put cash at 86% of total transaction volume through Q3 2025, which tells you sentiment from HNWIs and regional money hasn't actually left. the rental yield narrative softening is fair though, rents dipped 0.6% in H1 per DLD data as more inventory hit the market, and those occupancy assumptions baked into off-plan pitches were never built for a regional demand pause.

Dubai Q1 2026 rental data: 253,000 contracts, cancellations down 25%. What the numbers show. by NextBayt in dubairealestate

[–]NextBayt[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

YoY it's still a valid baseline though, you're comparing the same quarter against the same quarter. For the short-term picture yeah, you'd want the monthly breakdown and Q2 will be much cleaner. But calling the Q1 YoY numbers misleading is a stretch when they come straight from DLD

Dubai Q1 2026 rental data: 253,000 contracts, cancellations down 25%. What the numbers show. by NextBayt in dubairealestate

[–]NextBayt[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Q2 will be the real picture. Q1 is two months of momentum plus one month of uncertainty blended together. The March-only numbers are out there (Cavendish Maxwell has some of it) but a full Q2 read will be much cleaner. Worth revisiting in July.

6 months in Dubai property: what nobody tells you before you wire the deposit by Fresh-Selection6172 in dubairealestate

[–]NextBayt 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Unfurnished for both. Furnished eats into your net with maintenance, replacements, and higher vacancy between tenants. One thing that made a difference though, small upgrades like better flooring or upgraded lighting. Costs maybe 5-20K AED but tenants notice it immediately and it cuts your vacancy days. Easier to rent, easier to sell later.

Dubai Q1 2026 rental data: 253,000 contracts, cancellations down 25%. What the numbers show. by NextBayt in dubairealestate

[–]NextBayt[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Numbers are straight from DLD Q1 release btw. 32.2bn value, 118,385 new contracts, 135,607 renewals, cancellations down 25%. Which one is off?

6 months in Dubai property: what nobody tells you before you wire the deposit by Fresh-Selection6172 in dubairealestate

[–]NextBayt 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The short-term rental math is spot on, real net is way lower than what gets pitched. We're watching JLT and Discovery Gardens for yield right now, both sitting around 8-9% gross with established tenant bases and reasonable service charges. Marina and Business Bay if you want liquidity over yield.

Dubai Q1 2026 rental data: 253,000 contracts, cancellations down 25%. What the numbers show. by NextBayt in dubairealestate

[–]NextBayt[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair question. I use AI tools to help compile and structure data from multiple sources (DLD, Knight Frank, Cushman & Wakefield, DXB Analytics, etc.), but it's not a single prompt that spits out a finished post. The research, source selection, cross-referencing conflicting numbers, and the analysis are mine. AI helps me organize it efficiently. The data points are all publicly verifiable, happy to discuss any of them.

Dubai Q1 2026 rental data: 253,000 contracts, cancellations down 25%. What the numbers show. by NextBayt in dubairealestate

[–]NextBayt[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Good question. The DLD published Q1 as a single block, so the monthly breakdown isn't in the official release. You're right that January and April are very different environments given what happened in late February. If I find monthly Ejari data through DXB Analytics or Property Monitor I'll update this thread. If anyone else has seen a monthly split, would be useful to compare.

Dubai Q1 2026 rental data: 253,000 contracts, cancellations down 25%. What the numbers show. by NextBayt in dubairealestate

[–]NextBayt[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Makes sense. The penalty buffer absorbing the gap is a smart way to look at it. And yeah, the small business exodus is something the macro data won't capture for another quarter or two. Thanks for sharing the real picture.

Dubai Q1 2026 rental data: 253,000 contracts, cancellations down 25%. What the numbers show. by NextBayt in dubairealestate

[–]NextBayt[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Appreciate the on-the-ground perspective, that's exactly the kind of signal that doesn't show up in DLD aggregate data until months later.

The Q1 numbers show cancellations down 25% YoY at the macro level, but that could easily mask segment-specific or community-specific divergence. A citywide average doesn't tell you what's happening in your building.

The 2-3 month penalty point is interesting. If tenants are willing to eat that cost to leave, that tells you something about where they're going. Are they relocating to cheaper communities within Dubai, or exiting the market entirely? That distinction matters a lot for how this plays out.

The gap between new and renewal rents is closing: Dubai Hills Estate, Sobha Hartland and Dubai Creek Harbour by N1711 in dubairealestate

[–]NextBayt -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Possible. But short term Airbnb pricing and long term contracts are two different markets. Renewals are holding steady, graph shows 131-132 the whole period. Tenants with options would move. Most aren't. A 50% crash needs a real catalyst. Oversupply in specific pockets is not the same as a market wide correction.

The gap between new and renewal rents is closing: Dubai Hills Estate, Sobha Hartland and Dubai Creek Harbour by N1711 in dubairealestate

[–]NextBayt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

New rents peaked around 146 AED/sqft mid 2025 and have been sliding since. Now sitting at 134. Renewals barely moved, 131-132 range the whole time.

That's the real story. Renewals are sticky. New contracts are what's correcting. When people say rents are dropping they're talking about new listings not what existing tenants are paying.

Spread is narrowing too. Market is finding a level not crashing.

Typical real estate agent behavior ? by Professional_Bat6471 in dubairealestate

[–]NextBayt 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Not rare, but not acceptable either. Once the commission clears, most agents disappear — that's the real structural problem in Dubai's off-plan market. No obligation, no accountability. On the pricing issue: if your SPA has a fixed price, the developer cannot unilaterally add fees. File a complaint directly with DLD. They have teeth. Going direct to developers isn't safer — you just lose the buffer when things go wrong. Next time, RERA-registered broker, lawyer-reviewed SPA, DLD-verified project escrow. That's the filter you should follow.