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HomeTopicsHousing and Rent

Dubai

Housing and Rent

Rental checklists, area notes, and red flags before signing.

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AI summary · assistance only

You'll find that finding the right housing in Dubai can be challenging, especially for newcomers. Most newcomers are surprised by the high cost of furnished apartments, which can be AED 15,000-25,000 more per year, but may save you AED 20,000-40,000 on furniture. Watch out for areas like Jumeirah Village Circle and Al Quoz, which offer more affordable options, with studios starting at lower prices than in Marina or Downtown. When renting, be prepared to pay by post-dated cheques, typically 4 cheques per year, and negotiate the price - landlords expect it, and you can often meet in the middle, such as offering AED 68,000 for an apartment priced at AED 75,000. To get started, visit the DEWA website today to learn about registering your utility account, a crucial step before moving in.

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Viewing apartments — what to check that agents won't tell you

Trust L1Updated Mar 4, 2026

Dubai · Experience date Mar 27, 2026

Check during viewing: water pressure in shower (some older buildings are terrible), mobile signal inside the flat (basement or thick walls block signal), elevator reliability (ask neighbors), parking assigned or shared, gym/pool hours and condition, whether building allows pets. Run the tap, flush the toilet, check all AC vents. Spend 20 minutes minimum — agents will try to rush you.

Contributor: Priya Sharma

Utility costs breakdown — what to budget monthly

Trust L1Updated Apr 26, 2026

Dubai · Experience date Dec 29, 2025

Typical monthly costs for a studio/1BR in Dubai: DEWA electricity+water AED 300-600 in winter, AED 700-1,400 in summer. Internet (du/Etisalat home fiber) AED 199-299/month. Service charges (maintenance fee) AED 300-700/month included in or separate from rent. Building parking: AED 100-300/month if not included. Total overhead on top of rent: AED 1,000-2,500/month.

Contributor: Sophie Martin

Al Quoz and Jumeirah Village Circle for budget options

Trust L1Updated Mar 19, 2026

Dubai · Experience date Feb 11, 2026

JVC (Jumeirah Village Circle) has some of the newest buildings in Dubai at lower prices than Marina/Downtown. Studios from AED 45,000/year. No Metro but RTA buses run. Al Quoz is industrial-residential mix — very cheap (studios AED 35,000) but not comfortable for daily life unless you have a car. JVC is much better quality of life for the price.

Contributor: Sophie Martin

Latest from the community

Cheque payments — how the rental system actually works

May 1, 2026

Dubai · Experience date Nov 20, 2025

Dubai rents are paid by post-dated cheques, not monthly. Standard is 4 cheques (quarterly) but you can negotiate — 1 cheque (full year) often gets you 5-10% discount, 12 cheques (monthly) usually costs 10-15% more. Bring a UAE bank account before signing. If you can't write cheques yet, some landlords accept cash or bank transfer for first payment while you set up banking.

Contributor: Emma Larsson

Maintenance responsibility — what landlord must fix

Mar 20, 2026

Dubai · Experience date Apr 14, 2026

Under Dubai law: landlord is responsible for structural issues, major AC repairs, plumbing failures. Tenant pays for minor repairs under AED 500 (typically). Get all maintenance promises in writing before signing. Most leases say 'tenant responsible for minor maintenance' — make sure the definition of 'minor' is clear. AC is critical in Dubai — confirm if unit is centralized (building pays) or split unit (you pay electricity).

Contributor: Raj Patel

JLT vs Marina — honest cost comparison for first apartment

Mar 8, 2026

Dubai · Experience date Apr 13, 2026

Rented in both areas. Marina studios start AED 65,000/year, JLT studios AED 52,000/year for similar size. JLT has better value, quieter at night, but fewer dining options walking distance. Marina is louder, more tourists, but everything is walkable. For remote workers: JLT. For social people: Marina. Both have Metro access via JLT/DMCC station.

Contributor: Chloe Bennett

Noise levels by area — what nobody tells you

Mar 8, 2026

Dubai · Experience date Dec 3, 2025

Marina Walk and JBR Beach: loud until 2am on weekends (restaurants, tourists). Downtown Burj Khalifa area: fountains shows every 30 min 6pm-11pm, loud on weekends. Business Bay: fairly quiet. JLT clusters: quiet after 10pm. Jumeirah: peaceful residential. If you're a light sleeper, avoid Marina/JBR side of buildings facing the walk.

Contributor: Tom Fletcher

Agent fees in Dubai — you shouldn't always pay 5%

Mar 7, 2026

Dubai · Experience date Mar 3, 2026

Standard real estate agent commission is 5% of annual rent, paid by tenant. But for direct landlord deals found on Dubizzle, there's zero commission. Some agents now charge 2-3% for rental. Always ask upfront. Agent fee is separate from Ejari fee and security deposit. On a AED 70,000 apartment, 5% = AED 3,500 — not small.

Contributor: Maria Santos

Property apps with accurate pricing data

Mar 3, 2026

Dubai · Experience date Nov 11, 2025

Before negotiating, check: RERA Rental Index at dubailand.gov.ae — this shows the legal maximum rent for your area and flat size. Landlord cannot raise your rent beyond RERA index when renewing. Also check Property Monitor app for recent transaction data. Going in with market data gives you real negotiating power.

Contributor: David Okonkwo

Ejari registration is mandatory — don't skip it

Feb 10, 2026

Dubai · Experience date Mar 21, 2026

Ejari is the official Dubai government tenancy registration system. Your landlord or agent must register your contract at rera.ae or Ejari office. Cost: AED 220, paid by tenant (standard). You need Ejari for: Emirates ID application, bank account opening, school enrollment. Without it you'll hit walls everywhere. Takes 2-3 days after landlord submits.

Contributor: Sophie Martin
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