UAE Landlord-Tenant Laws: Complete Guide for Property Owners
Comprehensive overview of United Arab Emirates rental property laws, covering Dubai's Ejari system, Abu Dhabi's Tawtheeq, and the 2026 Corporate Tax updates.
Disclaimer Legal
Acest conținut este doar în scop informativ și educațional general. Nu constituie consultanță juridică și nu ar trebui să vă bazați pe el ca atare. Legile se schimbă frecvent — verificați întotdeauna reglementările actuale și consultați un avocat licențiat din jurisdicția dvs. pentru sfaturi specifice situației dvs. Landager este o platformă de management imobiliar, nu un cabinet de avocatură.Informații verificate ultima dată: April 2026.
The United Arab Emirates (UAE) real estate market is governed at the emirate level. Dubai and Abu Dhabi have highly developed registration systems that provide strong legal protections for both parties.
Key UAE Rental Concepts
1. Mandatory Contract Registration
Leases must be registered to be legally enforceable.
- Dubai (Ejari): Required for DEWA (utilities) connection and for filing any legal case.
- Abu Dhabi (Tawtheeq): Part of the Department of Municipalities and Transport (DMT) framework.
2. Rental Increases
- Dubai: Increases are not arbitrary; they MUST follow the RERA Rental Index calculator. If the index shows no increase is allowed, the landlord cannot raise the rent even with a contract clause.
- Abu Dhabi: A maximum 5% cap applies to annual renewals.
3. Eviction Procedures
UAE law favors tenant stability.
- Eviction for non-payment: Requires a 30-day notarized notice.
- Eviction for personal move-in/sale (Dubai): Requires a 12-month notice sent via Notary Public. Landlords who evict to "move in" but then re-rent to someone else face severe penalties (rent refund + damages).
4. Maintenance and Repairs
Standard UAE contracts (Ejari/Tawtheeq) specify that landlords are responsible for major maintenance (AC units, plumbing, structural) while tenants handle minor maintenance (below AED 500-1000, depending on the contract).
5. 2026 Tax Compliance
Individual residential landlords do not pay income tax in the UAE. However, with the 9% Corporate Tax in effect for businesses, corporate owners must maintain audited financial statements for their rental portfolios to accurately deduct maintenance, management fees, and depreciation before tax is applied on profits above the 375,000 AED threshold.
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