UAE Commercial Security Deposits: Landlord Guidelines
Understand the norms for commercial security deposits in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, including standard percentages, bank guarantees, and refund rules.
Legal Disclaimer
This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.
Security deposits act as the primary financial safety net for commercial landlords in the United Arab Emirates. While they function similarly to residential deposits, the scale, complexity, and negotiation leverage differ significantly in the commercial sector.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Landlord-tenant laws change frequently. Always consult a licensed attorney in the UAE for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.
Standard Commercial Deposit Amounts
The UAE market generally operates on fixed percentages for commercial security deposits, similar to the residential sector.
- Standard Office/Retail: The widely accepted standard is 5% to 10% of the annual rental value.
- Industrial and Heavy Commercial: For high-risk facilities, massive warehouses, or spaces requiring extremely complex tenant fit-outs (like a factory or a large restaurant with heavy kitchen equipment), landlords often push for higher deposits, sometimes requesting 10% to 20% or requiring the deposit to be provided as an irrevocable Bank Guarantee rather than a cash cheque.
The exact amount must be explicitly defined in both the Ejari/Tawtheeq registration and the customized lease Addendum.
Holding the Funds
Unlike some jurisdictions where commercial deposits must be held in specialized escrow accounts, commercial landlords in the UAE typically hold the security deposit directly (usually cashing the deposit cheque immediately upon signing the lease). They act as the custodian of the funds until the end of the tenancy.
Fit-Out Deposits
In commercial leasing, a secondary type of deposit is extremely common: the Fit-Out Deposit.
When a commercial tenant (like a retail shop or clinic) wants to undertake significant construction ("fit-out") to customize the shell-and-core space, the landlord or Building Management will usually demand a separate Fit-Out Deposit.
- This is entirely distinct from the lease security deposit.
- It covers potential damage caused to the building's common areas, elevators, or central HVAC systems by the tenant's contractors during the construction phase.
- Once the fit-out is completed, inspected, and approved by the building management and Civil Defense, the Fit-Out Deposit is refunded to the tenant's company.
Deductions and Reinstatement at Move-Out
At the end of a commercial lease, disputes frequently arise over the property's condition.
The Reinstatement Clause
Almost all well-drafted UAE commercial leases include a strong "Reinstatement" clause in the Addendum. This mandates that upon vacating, the commercial tenant must strip out all their custom fixtures, walls, and branding, returning the space to the exact "shell-and-core" or "Cat A" condition it was in when handed over.
If the tenant vacates but leaves their restaurant kitchen built-out or their custom office partitions standing (unless the landlord explicitly agreed in writing to keep them):
- The landlord is fully legally entitled to use the commercial security deposit to pay contractors to demolition the fit-out and reinstate the space.
- If the demolition costs exceed the deposit, the landlord can file a case against the corporate tenant at the Rental Dispute Settlement Centre (RDSC) to recover the remaining costs.
Handling Deposit Disputes
If an amicable agreement over deposit deductions fails, either the corporate tenant or the commercial landlord can initiate a formal dispute at the RDSC.
To win an RDSC case regarding commercial deposit deductions, the landlord's strongest piece of evidence will always be a professional, signed Move-In Condition Report (with extensive photography) demonstrating the exact state the property was handed over in.
Streamline your commercial move-in and move-out inspections with Landager's digital documentation tools, ensuring your right to retain deposits is always backed by undeniable photographic proof.
Back to UAE Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.
Sources & Official References
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