Dubai Tenant Rights 2026: Complete RERA Protection Guide
Dubai's rental market protects over 80% of the city's residents who are tenants. This guide covers every aspect of tenant rights — from rent increase caps to eviction protections to dispute resolution at the RDC.

Key Takeaways
- RERA caps rent increases at 5-20% depending on how far below market your rent is
- Landlords must give 12 months notarized notice for eviction (personal use, sale, renovation)
- Ejari registration is mandatory and required for DEWA, visas, and school enrollment
- Security deposits capped at 5% (unfurnished) or 10% (furnished) of annual rent
- Rental Dispute Center resolves disputes within 10-30 working days for AED 345
Dubai Tenant Rights 2026: Complete RERA Protection Guide
Dubai's rental market is one of the most dynamic in the world — over 80% of the city's residents are tenants, and the regulatory framework that protects their rights has evolved significantly over the past two decades. The Real Estate Regulatory Agency (RERA), operating under the Dubai Land Department (DLD), enforces a comprehensive set of tenant protections that are among the strongest in the Middle East.
Yet many tenants — particularly newcomers — are unaware of their full rights, from rent increase caps to eviction protections to maintenance obligations. This guide provides a complete, current reference for tenant rights in Dubai in 2026, covering every aspect of the rental relationship from contract signing to dispute resolution.
RERA Rental Law: The Foundation
Dubai's tenant protections are primarily governed by:
- Law No. 26 of 2007 — The original Dubai Rental Law, establishing the core framework
- Law No. 33 of 2008 — Amended provisions on rent increases, eviction, and dispute resolution
- Decree No. 43 of 2013 — The RERA Rent Increase Calculator, setting maximum annual rent increases
- Law No. 7 of 2006 — The Strata Law, governing jointly-owned property (relevant for service charges)
- RERA Rental Index — Updated quarterly, providing the benchmark for fair rental values
These laws apply to all residential and commercial tenancies in Dubai, regardless of the tenant's nationality.
Key Tenant Rights
1. Security of Tenure
The most important tenant right in Dubai is security of tenure. Once a valid rental contract is in place:
- The landlord cannot force the tenant to vacate before the contract expires
- The contract automatically renew at the same terms unless either party gives proper notice
- The tenant has the right to remain in the property for the full contract period
Contract duration: Standard residential leases are 1 year. Commercial leases can be 1–5 years.
2. Rent Increase Caps
Dubai law strictly limits how much a landlord can increase rent at contract renewal. The limits are determined by the RERA Rent Increase Calculator (Decree No. 43 of 2013):
| Rent vs. RERA Index | Maximum Increase |
|---|---|
| Below index by 0–10% | No increase allowed |
| Below index by 11–20% | Maximum 5% increase |
| Below index by 21–30% | Maximum 10% increase |
| Below index by 31–40% | Maximum 15% increase |
| Below index by 40%+ | Maximum 20% increase |
Example: If your current rent is AED 80,000 and the RERA index shows the fair market rent for your unit is AED 95,000, your rent is 15.8% below the index. The landlord can increase by a maximum of 5% — to AED 84,000.
Important: The landlord must give 90 days' written notice before the contract expiry date to implement a rent increase. Without proper notice, the rent remains unchanged.
3. Maintenance Obligations
Dubai law clearly assigns maintenance responsibilities:
Landlord responsibilities:
- Structural repairs (walls, roof, foundation)
- Plumbing and electrical systems (pipes, wiring, switches)
- Air conditioning systems (unless contract specifies otherwise)
- Major appliance repair (if provided by landlord)
- Painting and general upkeep of the property structure
- Pest control for structural infestations
Tenant responsibilities:
- Day-to-day cleanliness and minor upkeep
- Replacing light bulbs and small consumables
- Minor repairs caused by tenant negligence
- Maintaining provided appliances in good working order
- Reporting maintenance issues promptly to the landlord
Service charges (for building-wide maintenance, cleaning, security) are the landlord's responsibility. The tenant should not be asked to pay service charges unless explicitly stated in the contract.
4. Early Termination Rights
Tenants can terminate a lease early, but must provide:
- 2 months' written notice (for residential leases)
- 3 months' written notice (for commercial leases)
- The notice must be given before the contract expiry date
If the tenant breaks the lease without proper notice, the landlord can claim:
- Rent for the notice period
- Any penalties specified in the contract (typically 1–2 months' rent)
5. Right to Sublet
Tenants can sublet their property only with written landlord consent. Without consent, subletting is a breach of contract and grounds for eviction. The original tenant remains responsible for the subtenant's obligations.
Ejari: Rental Contract Registration
Ejari (Arabic for "my rent") is DLD's mandatory rental contract registration system. Every residential and commercial lease in Dubai must be registered through Ejari.
Why Ejari Matters
- Legal validity: An unregistered contract is not legally enforceable
- RERA protection: Only Ejari-registered tenants can file disputes at the Rental Dispute Center
- Emirates ID: Ejari registration is required for visa processing and Emirates ID updates
- Utility connections: DEWA requires Ejari registration to set up electricity and water
- School enrollment: Many schools require Ejari as proof of residence
How to Register
- Collect documents: Signed contract, landlord's title deed, tenant's passport/Emirates ID, property details
- Register online: Via the Ejari app or website (ejari.ae), or at a typing center
- Pay the fee: AED 195 per registration
- Receive confirmation: Ejari certificate issued within 1–2 working days
Registration must be completed within 30 days of contract signing.
Rent Increases & Disputes
The RERA Rent Calculator
The RERA Rent Calculator is available at rera.ae and provides the benchmark rental value for every property type and area in Dubai. It is updated quarterly based on actual transaction data.
How to use it:
- Enter your property area, type, and number of bedrooms
- The calculator shows the RERA index value (fair market rent)
- Compare your current rent to the index value
- The calculator shows the maximum permissible increase
Challenging an Unfair Increase
If a landlord proposes an increase that exceeds the RERA calculator limits:
- Check the RERA calculator — Confirm the maximum allowed increase
- Respond in writing — State that the increase exceeds legal limits
- File a dispute — If the landlord insists, file at the Rental Dispute Center (RDC)
- RDC decision — The center will enforce the RERA calculator limits
Cost: AED 345 to file a rental dispute at the RDC
Eviction Rules
Valid Grounds for Eviction
A landlord can only evict a tenant for the following reasons (Law No. 33 of 2008):
- Non-payment of rent — After 30 days' written notice demanding payment
- Breach of contract terms — Subletting without consent, illegal use, property damage
- Landlord's personal use — Landlord or immediate family intends to occupy the property
- Property sale — Landlord sells the property to a buyer who intends to occupy
- Major renovation — Property requires substantial renovation that cannot be done with a tenant present
- Demolition — Property is to be demolished and redeveloped
Notice Periods
| Eviction Reason | Notice Period | Notice Format |
|---|---|---|
| Non-payment | 30 days | Written notice |
| Contract breach | 30 days | Written notice |
| Personal use | 12 months | Written notice via notary |
| Property sale | 12 months | Written notice via notary |
| Renovation | 12 months | Written notice via notary |
| Demolition | 12 months | Written notice via notary |
Critical: For reasons 3–6, the 12-month notice must be delivered through a notary public. Email or verbal notice is not sufficient. The notice must be received at least 12 months before the contract expiry date.
Compensation for Eviction
If a tenant is evicted for landlord personal use, property sale, or renovation:
- The landlord must pay no compensation under current law
- However, the tenant can negotiate compensation as part of the eviction agreement
- Some landlords offer 1–2 months' rent as a goodwill gesture
Invalid Eviction Attempts
The following are not valid grounds for eviction:
- "I want to rent it for more money" — Not a valid reason
- "I don't like the tenant" — Not a valid reason
- "The market rent is much higher" — Not a valid reason (use the RERA calculator instead)
- "I found a better tenant" — Not a valid reason
If a landlord attempts eviction without a valid reason, the tenant can file at the RDC and the eviction will be blocked.
Dispute Resolution: The RDC
The Rental Dispute Center (RDC) at DLD is the exclusive forum for resolving rental disputes in Dubai. Regular courts do not handle rental matters.
How to File a Dispute
- Prepare documents: Ejari certificate, rental contract, correspondence, evidence
- File online: Via the RDC portal or at the DLD office in Deira
- Pay the fee: AED 345 (residential) or AED 500 (commercial)
- Attend the hearing — Both parties present their case
- Receive the decision — Typically within 10–30 working days
Common Dispute Types
- Rent increase disputes — Landlord proposes increase above RERA limits
- Maintenance disputes — Landlord refuses to repair; tenant deducts from rent
- Eviction disputes — Tenant challenges eviction notice
- Early termination disputes — Penalty amounts and notice compliance
- Deposit disputes — Landlord refuses to return security deposit
Enforcement
RDC decisions are enforceable through DLD. If a party refuses to comply:
- DLD can impose fines
- The case can be escalated to Dubai Courts for enforcement
- Non-compliant landlords can face property registration restrictions
Common Violations: What Landlords Cannot Do
- Increase rent above RERA calculator limits — Illegal regardless of market conditions
- Evict without valid grounds and proper notice — The tenant has legal protection
- Refuse to register the contract with Ejari — Mandatory under law
- Charge service charges to the tenant — Unless explicitly in the contract
- Enter the property without notice — Landlord must give reasonable notice (typically 24 hours)
- Shut off utilities — DEWA connections cannot be disconnected by the landlord
- Withhold the security deposit without justification — Must be returned within 14 days of vacating
- Change the locks — Illegal while the tenant has a valid contract
- Demand rent in a different currency — Rent must be in AED unless both parties agree otherwise
- Add new clauses mid-contract — Contract terms cannot be changed during the lease period
Security Deposits
Standard Deposit Amounts
- Residential: Maximum 5% of annual rent (for unfurnished) or 10% (for furnished)
- Commercial: Maximum 10% of annual rent
Example: For an unfurnished apartment at AED 80,000/year, the maximum deposit is AED 4,000.
Deposit Return
The landlord must return the security deposit within 14 days of the tenant vacating, minus any deductions for:
- Unpaid rent
- Property damage beyond normal wear and tear
- Outstanding utility bills
The landlord cannot deduct for:
- Normal wear and tear (paint fading, minor scuffs)
- Maintenance that was the landlord's responsibility
- Pre-existing damage not caused by the tenant
FAQ
Can a landlord increase my rent by 20%?
No. Rent increases are capped by the RERA Rent Increase Calculator. The maximum increase is 20%, and this only applies when your current rent is more than 40% below the RERA index value. Most tenants are entitled to much smaller increases or no increase at all.
What if my landlord refuses to register Ejari?
Ejari registration is mandatory. If the landlord refuses, you can file a complaint with RERA. The landlord can face fines of AED 5,000–50,000 for non-registration. You can also register Ejari yourself with a copy of the signed contract.
Can I deduct rent for maintenance issues?
Dubai law does not explicitly allow rent deduction for maintenance. However, the RDC has consistently ruled that tenants can deduct reasonable repair costs from rent if:
- The landlord was notified in writing and given reasonable time to repair
- The issue is the landlord's responsibility (structural, plumbing, AC)
- The repair was necessary for habitability
- The tenant provides receipts for the repair costs
What notice do I need to give to move out?
For residential leases: 2 months' written notice before the contract expiry date. For commercial leases: 3 months' written notice. Notice must be delivered in writing (email is acceptable if the contract specifies email as a communication channel).
Can my landlord evict me to sell the property?
Yes, but only with 12 months' written notice delivered through a notary public. The notice must be received at least 12 months before your contract expiry date. If proper notice is not given, the eviction is invalid and you can remain in the property.
Is my landlord responsible for AC maintenance?
Yes. Under Dubai rental law, air conditioning maintenance is the landlord's responsibility unless the contract explicitly transfers this obligation to the tenant. Many newer contracts include a clause making AC maintenance the tenant's responsibility — read your contract carefully.
What if my landlord enters without notice?
The landlord must give reasonable notice (typically 24 hours) before entering the property, except in emergencies. Unauthorized entry is a violation of tenant rights and can be reported to RERA.
This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Dubai rental laws and RERA regulations are subject to change. Always consult a qualified legal professional for dispute-specific guidance. Information current as of April 2026.
Genie AI
AI Property AdvisorGenie AI is an advanced artificial intelligence system that analyzes thousands of data points to provide personalized real estate investment recommendations. Powered by Dubai Land Department data, market trends, and sophisticated algorithms, Genie AI helps investors make data-driven decisions.
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