UAE Lease Requirements: Mandatory Registrations
Understand the strict lease requirements in the UAE, the importance of Ejari and Tawtheeq, and what constitutes a valid tenancy contract.
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The days of scribbling a rudimentary, handshake rental agreement on a piece of paper are long gone in the United Arab Emirates. Leasing residential property in the UAE is a highly structured, digitally enforced process.
Mandatory Digital Registrations
For a tenancy contract to have any legal weight in the UAE, it must be officially registered with the relevant emirate's government housing database.
- Dubai: Must be registered in Ejari.
- Abu Dhabi: Must be registered in Tawtheeq.
Consequences of Not Registering
If a landlord and tenant sign a private contract but fail to register it via Ejari or Tawtheeq:
- The tenant cannot connect Dewa/ADDC (water and electricity).
- The tenant cannot sponsor dependents (spouse/children) for residency visas.
- The landlord cannot file a legal case regarding unpaid rent or eviction with the Rental Dispute Settlement Centre (RDSC). The court will immediately reject an unregistered contract.
The Standard "Unified" Contract
In Dubai, the Ejari system generates a Unified Tenancy Contract. This standard government format covers the absolute basics:
- Landlord and Tenant names and passport/Emirates ID details.
- Broker details (if applicable, ensuring they have a valid RERA BRN license).
- Property size, location, and specific premise number (Makani).
- Total rent value and the breakdown of cheques (e.g., 1 cheque, 4 cheques, or 12 post-dated cheques).
- Security deposit amount.
The Addendum (Additional Terms)
While the Ejari Unified Contract is mandatory, it is basic. The true protection for UAE landlords lies in the Addendum. The Addendum is a document attached to the Ejari contract containing specific, negotiated rules. Common valid addendum clauses include:
- Maintenance Thresholds: Specifying who pays for what (e.g., "Tenant pays for repairs under 500 AED").
- Alterations: Forbidding the tenant from painting walls or drilling extensive holes without prior written consent.
- Pets: Explicitly allowing or banning pets, or charging a "pet deposit."
- Occupancy: Barring subletting entirely or limiting the number of occupants to prevent dangerous overcrowding in apartments.
Note: Any clause in the Addendum designed to override federal UAE law or RERA regulations (e.g., "Landlord can evict at any time for any reason with 30 days notice") is invalid and will not be upheld by a judge, even if the tenant signs it.
Ensure your lease addendums are airtight by storing and tracking all UAE Ejari contracts alongside your customized clauses within Landager's lease management system.
Back to UAE Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.
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