Tenants Guide Dubai

Dubai's rental market spans waterfront residences, urban high-rises, gated villa neighborhoods, and emerging investment districts. Each carries its own price profile, lease terms, and lifestyle. As a real estate agency built on 12+ years of international expertise and daily local insight, Takween Aldar guides tenants through every stage of the rental process: budget setup, property search, contract review, Ejari registration, and utility activation. This guide walks through what to expect.

Step 1: Define Your Budget and Needs

Start by setting a realistic budget and identifying your priorities: location, building age, parking, amenities, or community type. Dubai rental listings show only the annual rent, so build the additional costs into your total figure from the outset:

  • Security deposit (5–10% of annual rent)
  • Real estate agency commission (typically 5% of annual rent, payable on signing)
  • DEWA, gas, and telecom connection deposits
  • Dubai Municipality housing fee (5% of annual rent, billed monthly through DEWA)
  • Moving and relocation costs

Step 2: Prepare Your Documents and Funds

Have your passport (with valid residence visa), Emirates ID, and recent salary certificate or proof of income ready before viewings begin. Cheques for the security deposit, first rental payment, and agency commission should also be prepared so you can move quickly when you find the right property. The strongest tenancies in Dubai often go to whoever submits a complete offer first.

Step 3: Work With a Qualified Advisor

Partner with a RERA-certified advisor who can show you listings beyond what's publicly available, negotiate terms with the landlord on your behalf, and identify maintenance issues during viewings so they're resolved before you move in. A strong real estate agency does more than open doors. They protect your interests through negotiation, contract review, and the full handover process.

Step 4: Submit Your Offer

Once you've identified the right property, your advisor will submit and negotiate your offer with the landlord. You'll provide documents along with cheques for the security deposit, first rental payment, and agency commission. Payment terms vary widely in Dubai. Landlords may accept anywhere from one cheque for the full annual rent to four or six post-dated cheques across the lease term. Note: bounced cheques carry legal consequences in the UAE, so confirm funds before issuing any cheque.

Step 5: Review and Register the Tenancy Agreement

Review the tenancy contract carefully with your advisor before signing. Pay particular attention to the rent figure, payment structure, maintenance responsibilities (typically split between tenant and landlord by repair value), early termination clauses, and renewal terms. Once signed, the lease must be registered with Ejari, Dubai's official rental regulation system, before utilities can be activated. Ejari registration also gives you legal standing if any dispute arises during the tenancy.

Step 6: Activate Your Utilities

Apply for Dubai Electricity and Water Authority (DEWA) services online using your Ejari number, Emirates ID, and passport. After paying the connection deposit (refundable at end of tenancy), service is typically activated within 24 hours. You'll separately need to arrange gas connections (where applicable, usually for villas) and internet/telecom services with providers like du or Etihad Etisalat (e&). Once everything is connected, you're ready to move in.

Renting with Takween Aldar

Whether you're moving to Dubai for the first time or relocating between properties, our real estate agency offers end-to-end support: budget planning, property search, contract negotiation, Ejari registration, and full coordination through move-in day. Our 21-day relocation setup is built for tenants who need to move quickly without compromising on the right home.

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