The DBR Rule — Your Real Salary Constraint
When people ask how much salary they need to buy a Dubai property, they focus on the down payment. The real gatekeeper is a different number: the Debt Burden Ratio, or DBR. This is the rule the bank uses to decide whether it will lend to you at all, and it caps your borrowing based on income more tightly than the deposit does.
The DBR comes from the Central Bank of the UAE (CBUAE) Regulation issued under Circular 31/2011 and updated in later mortgage regulations. The formula is simple: DBR = total monthly debt repayments divided by your gross monthly income. Total monthly debt means everything — your new mortgage payment plus any car loan, personal loan, and 5% of your credit card limit.
The cap is 50% for most borrowers and 60% for UAE nationals borrowing from certain lenders. In plain terms: your total monthly loan payments cannot swallow more than half your salary. This is a hard line the bank will not cross, no matter how big your deposit is.
Here is the math that decides everything. If your mortgage payment is AED 5,000 per month and you have no other debt, you need a minimum gross salary of AED 10,000 per month to satisfy the 50% DBR cap. Double the mortgage payment, and you double the salary you need. The down payment gets you in the door; the DBR decides how far you can walk.
Worked example: Sara earns AED 12,000 a month and has a car loan costing AED 1,500 a month. At a 50% DBR cap, her total allowed monthly debt is AED 6,000. Subtract the car loan, and only AED 4,500 is left for a mortgage. That AED 4,500 ceiling — not her savings — is what limits the size of the property she can buy.
LTV Limits by Buyer Type
The Loan-to-Value ratio (LTV) is the second big rule. It sets the maximum percentage of the property price a bank will lend you. Whatever the bank does not lend, you must pay in cash as your down payment. The CBUAE sets these limits, and they depend on who you are and how much the property costs.
The current limits (latest CBUAE update) split buyers into three groups: UAE nationals, expatriate residents, and non-residents. First-time buyers get the most generous terms; second properties are capped lower for everyone.
For a first property, UAE nationals can borrow up to 85% for homes priced up to AED 5 million, dropping to 70% above AED 5 million. Expatriate residents can borrow up to 80% below AED 5 million and 65% above it. Non-residents are capped at 65% regardless of price. Any second property — for any buyer — is capped at 65% LTV.
The table below shows what these limits mean in real down-payment cash. For most expat buyers targeting a property under AED 5 million, the number to remember is 20% down.
| Buyer type | Property value | Max LTV | Down payment % | Down payment on AED 1.5M |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| UAE national (1st home) | Up to AED 5M | 85% | 15% | AED 225,000 |
| UAE national (1st home) | Above AED 5M | 70% | 30% | n/a |
| Expat resident (1st home) | Up to AED 5M | 80% | 20% | AED 300,000 |
| Expat resident (1st home) | Above AED 5M | 65% | 35% | n/a |
| Non-resident | Any value | 65% | 35% | AED 525,000 |
| Any buyer (2nd property) | Any value | 65% | 35% | AED 525,000 |
Total Upfront Cost — DLD Fees and Transaction Costs
The down payment is only part of the cash you need on day one. Dubai charges several transaction fees on top, and most buyers underestimate them badly. Budget for these before you fall in love with a listing.
The Dubai Land Department (DLD) transfer fee is 4% of the purchase price, paid by the buyer. This is the biggest single fee after the deposit. On top of that sits the DLD trustee (registration office) fee of AED 4,000 for transactions above AED 500,000, plus a mortgage registration fee of 0.25% of the loan amount. Your bank will also charge a property valuation fee of roughly AED 2,500 to AED 3,500, and the real estate agent typically takes a 2% commission.
The table below adds these up for a AED 1.5 million property bought by an expat with an 80% mortgage. The total upfront cash needed is around AED 400,000 — not the AED 300,000 down payment alone. That extra roughly AED 100,000 in fees is the number that catches first-time buyers off guard.
Worked example: Ahmed buys a AED 1.5M apartment. He budgeted AED 300,000 for his 20% deposit and thought he was ready. Adding the 4% DLD fee (AED 60,000), the AED 4,000 trustee fee, the 0.25% mortgage registration on his AED 1.2M loan (AED 3,000), a AED 3,000 valuation, and 2% agent commission (AED 30,000), his real cash requirement jumps to AED 400,000. Always add roughly 6% of the price on top of your deposit for fees.
| Cost item | Rate | Amount on AED 1.5M (80% LTV) |
|---|---|---|
| Down payment | 20% of price | AED 300,000 |
| DLD transfer fee | 4% of price | AED 60,000 |
| DLD trustee fee | Fixed (>AED 500K) | AED 4,000 |
| Mortgage registration | 0.25% of loan (AED 1.2M) | AED 3,000 |
| Valuation fee | Fixed | AED 3,000 |
| Agent commission | 2% of price | AED 30,000 |
| Total upfront cash | — | AED 400,000 |
Minimum Salary by Property Price — The Dataset
This is the section you came for. The table below shows the minimum gross monthly salary you need for properties from AED 750K to AED 3M, assuming you carry no other debt. If you have a car loan or personal loan, add its monthly cost to the required salary.
The assumptions are realistic for 2026: a 25-year mortgage term, a 4.5% annual interest rate (the current UAE average for a variable-rate loan), 80% LTV (the standard expat first-home limit), and the 50% DBR cap. The monthly payment is the standard amortising mortgage payment on the 80% loan.
Read it like this: to buy a AED 1.5M home, you put down AED 300K, pay roughly AED 6,670 a month, and need a minimum salary of about AED 13,400 a month to satisfy the DBR. A AED 750K studio needs only around AED 6,700 a month in salary — within reach for many mid-level professionals.
Remember that this minimum assumes zero other debt. Every AED 1,000 of existing monthly loan repayment raises the salary you need by AED 2,000 to keep the same DBR headroom.
| Property price | Down payment (20%) | Loan (80%) | Monthly payment (25yr, 4.5%) | Min gross salary (50% DBR) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AED 750,000 | AED 150,000 | AED 600,000 | ~AED 3,335 | ~AED 6,700/month |
| AED 1,000,000 | AED 200,000 | AED 800,000 | ~AED 4,447 | ~AED 8,900/month |
| AED 1,500,000 | AED 300,000 | AED 1,200,000 | ~AED 6,670 | ~AED 13,400/month |
| AED 2,000,000 | AED 400,000 | AED 1,600,000 | ~AED 8,894 | ~AED 17,800/month |
| AED 2,500,000 | AED 500,000 | AED 2,000,000 | ~AED 11,117 | ~AED 22,300/month |
| AED 3,000,000 | AED 600,000 | AED 2,400,000 | ~AED 13,341 | ~AED 26,700/month |
Best Entry-Level Areas for Each Salary Tier
Numbers only help if you know where they buy. Dubai has a wide spread of freehold areas, and each salary tier maps to realistic neighbourhoods. The prices below are 2026 entry points for apartments — villas cost more.
If you earn AED 8,000 to AED 12,000 a month, your realistic targets are studios and one-bedroom units in Jumeirah Village Circle (JVC) at AED 600K to AED 900K, International City at AED 400K to AED 600K, or Al Qusais at AED 500K to AED 750K. These are the classic first-rung areas for salaried buyers.
At AED 12,000 to AED 18,000 a month, you move up to Dubai Sports City (AED 900K to AED 1.2M), Arjan, and Dubai Silicon Oasis — larger one-bedrooms and small two-bedrooms with better community amenities.
At AED 18,000 to AED 30,000 a month, Business Bay one- and two-bedroom apartments (AED 1.2M to AED 2M), JBR studios, and Dubai Creek Harbour come into range. These are prime, well-connected districts.
Above AED 30,000 a month, the top freehold addresses open up: Palm Jumeirah apartments, Downtown Dubai near Burj Khalifa, and villa communities like Emirates Hills. Use the salary figures from the previous table to check which tier your income lands in before you shortlist areas.
| Salary tier (AED/month) | Realistic areas | Typical entry price |
|---|---|---|
| 8,000–12,000 | JVC, International City, Al Qusais | AED 400K–900K |
| 12,000–18,000 | Dubai Sports City, Arjan, Silicon Oasis | AED 900K–1.2M |
| 18,000–30,000 | Business Bay, JBR, Creek Harbour | AED 1.2M–2M |
| 30,000+ | Palm Jumeirah, Downtown, Emirates Hills | AED 2M+ |
Mortgage Rates in Dubai 2026
Your monthly payment — and therefore the salary you need — depends heavily on the interest rate. Understanding how Dubai rates work saves you money over 25 years.
Most UAE mortgages are priced as EIBOR plus a bank margin. EIBOR is the Emirates Interbank Offered Rate; the 3-month EIBOR is the common benchmark. Your rate is that benchmark plus the bank's fixed margin. Because EIBOR moves with the wider rate environment, your payment can change over the life of the loan.
Many banks offer a fixed-rate period first — typically 1 to 3 years — before the loan reverts to a floating EIBOR-linked rate. In 2026 the standard range runs from about 3.99% to 5.5%, depending on your LTV, salary, and whether you are salaried or self-employed. Lower LTV and a strong salary get you the better end of that range.
You also choose between conventional and Islamic (Sharia-compliant) mortgages. Islamic home finance uses a Murabaha or Ijara structure — the bank buys the property and sells or leases it to you — rather than charging interest directly, but the effective cost is comparable. Compare both.
To shop rates, use the CBUAE guidance and independent UAE bank comparison sites, and run the numbers through the Calcureal mortgage calculator before you commit. A half-percent difference in rate on a AED 1.2M loan changes your monthly payment by roughly AED 350.
The Off-Plan Route — A Lower Entry Point?
If the upfront cash feels out of reach, off-plan property looks tempting. You buy directly from a developer before or during construction, on a staged payment plan, and the entry deposit is lower than a ready-home mortgage requires.
A typical off-plan plan asks for 10% to 20% down at booking, then spreads the balance across the construction period, with a large final chunk due on handover. This lowers the immediate cash barrier and can suit buyers who expect their income to rise before completion.
But off-plan carries real risks. Construction can be delayed, and you earn no rental income while you wait. The DLD fee still applies — and since January 2025, the 4% developer/DLD registration fee is charged upfront even on off-plan purchases, so you do not escape that cost by buying early. You are also exposed to the developer's financial health.
Protect yourself with one rule: only buy from a developer registered with RERA (the Real Estate Regulatory Agency), and confirm the project is registered with an escrow account so your payments are protected. Check the developer and project status on the DLD/RERA portal before you sign anything.
Worked example: Priya buys a AED 1M off-plan apartment on a 10% booking plan. She pays AED 100,000 to book, plus the 4% DLD fee (AED 40,000) upfront — AED 140,000 to start, against roughly AED 260,000 for a ready home with a mortgage. The lower entry is real, but she carries construction risk and no rent for two years until handover.