MORTGAGE GUIDE | UAE EXPATS | DUBAI PROPERTY | RICADI MORTGAGES | 2026 EDITION
What the Banks Won’t Tell You — And What Every Expat Deserves to Know Before Signing Anything
By Adi | Founder & Lead Mortgage Advisor, Ricadi Mortgages, Dubai
Specialist in Expat Home Financing, Refinancing & Investment Property Mortgages across the UAE
ricadimortgages.com | +971 56 364 6906
You did it. You took the leap.
You packed your life into suitcases, crossed time zones, and landed in one of the world’s most extraordinary cities. You have built a career here. A community. A life. And now, you are standing at the edge of the biggest financial decision of your time in the UAE — buying property.
But somewhere between the dazzle of the Dubai skyline and the stack of paperwork the bank has just placed in front of you, a knot forms in your stomach. Because you have heard things. Conflicting things. From colleagues, from WhatsApp groups, from that one friend who swears the system is impenetrable for expats.
What if those things are wrong?
Most of them are.
After years of helping expats from over 40 nationalities navigate the UAE mortgage landscape, the team at Ricadi Mortgages has heard every misconception in existence. Some are harmless misunderstandings. Others are actively costing expats hundreds of thousands of dirhams — in missed opportunities, wrong banks, bad timing, and financing strategies built on fiction.
This is the guide that corrects all of that.
“The most expensive mistakes in real estate are not made in the market. They are made in the mind — in the stories we tell ourselves before we ever speak to an expert.”
— Adi, Founder, Ricadi Mortgages
What follows is the most comprehensive, honest, and SEO-optimised guide to expat mortgage misconceptions in the UAE. Read it once. Share it with every expat you know. Then book a call with us — because knowledge is the beginning, but the right advisor is how you finish.
Misconception 1: Expats Cannot Get a Mortgage in the UAE
This is, without question, the most persistent and damaging myth in the entire expat property conversation. Walk into any gathering of recently arrived expats in Dubai Marina or JLT and you will hear it whispered with absolute certainty: mortgages are for Emiratis. Expats rent. That is just how it works.
It does not just how it works.
| MYTHExpats cannot get a mortgage in the UAE. Property ownership is only accessible to UAE nationals. | RICADI FACTExpats can absolutely obtain mortgages in the UAE. Dozens of local and international banks actively lend to foreign residents. Expat buyers represent a substantial portion of all mortgage applications processed in Dubai each year. |
The UAE Central Bank’s mortgage framework explicitly provides for expatriate home financing. Banks including Emirates NBD, ADCB, Mashreq, FAB, HSBC, Standard Chartered, RAKBANK, and ENBD actively market mortgage products designed for foreign residents.
The distinction is not eligibility — it is terms. Expats and UAE nationals operate under slightly different loan-to-value ratios, as mandated the Central Bank of UAE (CBUAE) Mortgage Rulebook. But different terms are a universe away from no access.
What Are the Actual Eligibility Requirements for Expat Mortgages in the UAE?
- Valid UAE residency visa (or non-resident status for offshore buyers — different terms apply)
- Minimum monthly income typically between AED 15,000 and AED 25,000 depending on bank and loan size
- Minimum 6 months in current employment for salaried applicants; 2 years trading history for self-employed
- Clean UAE credit bureau (AECB) record
- Ability to demonstrate down payment funds (typically 20% for first property under AED 5M)
- Age at loan maturity: maximum 65 years for salaried expats; 70 for self-employed
| Ricadi Insight: Do Not Self-DisqualifyOne of the most heartbreaking situations we encounter is an expat who spent three years renting unnecessarily because they assumed they were ineligible. Never assume. A 15-minute consultation with Ricadi Mortgages will tell you exactly where you stand — with no obligation and no guesswork. |
Misconception 2: You Need a Massive Down Payment — Far More Than You Actually Do
The second most common myth is a close cousin of the first. Expats who do acknowledge that mortgages are theoretically accessible often believe the down payment requirement makes them practically impossible. ‘You need 50% down,’ a colleague says. ‘The banks want 40% at least,’ says another.
These numbers are not just wrong — they are significantly wrong. And they are keeping expats from starting a conversation that could fundamentally change their financial trajectory in the UAE.
| MYTHYou need a down payment of 40-50% as an expat to qualify for a UAE mortgage. | RICADI FACTAs of 2026, the minimum down payment for expats buying their first property under AED 5 million is 20%. For properties over AED 5M, it is 30-35%. These are Central Bank-mandated minimums, not bank-specific whims. |
The Official UAE Down Payment Structure — 2026 Reference Table
Here is the definitive breakdown, sourced directly from the CBUAE Mortgage Rulebook:
| Buyer Type | Property Value | Min. Down Payment | Max LTV |
| Expat (1st property) | Under AED 5M | 20% | 80% |
| Expat (1st property) | Over AED 5M | 30% | 70% |
| Expat (2nd property / invest. | Any value | 40% | 60% |
| Non-Resident | Any value | 35-40% | 50-65% |
| Any buyer – Off-Plan | Any value | 50% | 50% |
| UAE National (1st property) | Under AED 5M | 15% | 85% |
Source: UAE Central Bank Mortgage Rulebook (CBUAE Rulebook) — current as of Q1 2026. Rates and LTVs are subject to periodic regulatory review. Always verify current rules with your Ricadi mortgage advisor.
What About the Additional Costs Beyond the Down Payment?
This is where many expats are caught off guard — not the down payment itself, but the associated transaction costs that must be paid upfront and cannot be financed. Being fully aware of these prevents any unpleasant surprises at the signing table.
- 4% of the property purchase price — typically the single largest additional costDubai Land Department (DLD) transfer fee:
- 0.25% of the loan amount + AED 290DLD mortgage registration fee:
- Up to 1% of the loan amount (plus 5% VAT)Bank processing fee:
- Approximately AED 2,500 to AED 3,500Property valuation fee:
- Typically 2% of purchase priceReal estate agent commission:
- Variable, approximately AED 5,000 to AED 10,000Conveyancing / legal fees:
Total transaction costs for a first-time buyer in Dubai — beyond the down payment — typically range between 6% and 8% of the purchase price. Budget for this from the outset.
| Ricadi Tip: The True Cash RequirementFor a AED 1,500,000 apartment, a 20% down payment is AED 300,000. Add DLD fees (AED 60,000), mortgage registration (approximately AED 4,040), and bank/agent costs, and your true cash requirement is closer to AED 380,000 to AED 400,000. Planning for this from day one prevents delays and disappointment. Ricadi Mortgages provides a complete cost breakdown during every initial consultation — for free. |
Misconception 3: Your Own Bank Will Give You the Best Mortgage Rate
You have banked with the same institution for three years. You have your salary account there. Your savings sit there. You know the branch manager name. Surely, when it comes to your mortgage, they will reward your loyalty with the best rate in the market?
This is one of the most financially costly assumptions an expat can make in the UAE mortgage market.
“Loyalty is a virtue in friendship. In banking, it is often a luxury you pay for without knowing.”
— Common wisdom among UAE mortgage brokers
| MYTHMy existing bank will automatically offer me the best mortgage rate as a loyal customer. | RICADI FACTBanks compete for mortgage business, not reward loyalty automatically. The UAE has 20+ active mortgage lenders with significantly different rates, fee structures, and underwriting criteria. Your bank may not even be the best fit for your profile. |
Why the UAE Mortgage Market Demands Comparison
The UAE mortgage market is one of the most competitive in the Middle East, with over 20 banks and financial institutions offering home financing products. The difference between the best available rate and an average rate on a 25-year mortgage can amount to hundreds of thousands of dirhams over the loan’s lifetime.
Consider: a 0.5% difference in interest rate on a AED 1.5 million mortgage over 25 years translates to approximately AED 150,000 to AED 200,000 in additional interest payments. The cost of not comparing is not trivial.
Fixed vs. Variable Rate Mortgages — What Expats in the UAE Often Misunderstand
UAE mortgage interest rates operate in two primary structures, and the choice between them is one of the most consequential decisions in the entire process.
Fixed-rate mortgages lock your interest rate for an initial period — typically 1, 2, 3, or 5 years. Current fixed rates in Q1 2026 typically range from 3.85% to 4.25% per annum, depending on bank, term, and borrower profile. After the fixed period expires, the mortgage reverts to a variable rate.
Variable-rate mortgages are priced as EIBOR (Emirates Interbank Offered Rate) plus a fixed bank margin — typically 1.5% to 1.9%. As of February 2026, the 3-month EIBOR sits at approximately 3.59%, making current variable all-in rates approximately 5.1% to 5.5%.
| Critical Understanding: EIBOR and Your Variable RateEIBOR is the Emirates Interbank Offered Rate — the UAE equivalent of LIBOR. Your variable mortgage rate is calculated as EIBOR + your bank’s fixed margin. When EIBOR rises, your monthly payment rises. When it falls, it falls. The margin never changes, but EIBOR can — and does. In 2022-2024, EIBOR rose sharply, catching many variable-rate borrowers off guard. Stress-test your affordability at a rate 2% above today’s before committing to a variable product. |
Ricadi Mortgages compares live rates across all major UAE lenders simultaneously, identifies the optimal fixed-to-variable transition strategy for your specific income and timeline, and negotiates on your behalf — at no extra cost to you.
Misconception 4: Self-Employed Expats Cannot Qualify for a UAE Mortgage
Dubai has become one of the world’s great hubs for entrepreneurs, freelancers, digital nomads, and consultants. Free zone licenses, remote working infrastructure, and a business-friendly regulatory environment have attracted hundreds of thousands of self-employed professionals from across the globe.
And yet, one of the most stubborn myths in the expat mortgage space is that if you do not receive a salary certificate — if you are a business owner, a consultant, a freelancer — the doors to mortgage financing are closed.
They are not closed. They are simply different.
| MYTHSelf-employed expats cannot qualify for a UAE mortgage. You must be salaried to be eligible. | RICADI FACTSelf-employed expats can and do qualify for UAE mortgages. The documentation requirements differ from salaried employees, but multiple UAE banks actively accommodate entrepreneurs, business owners, and consultants. |
What Documents Do Self-Employed Expats Need for a UAE Mortgage?
- Valid UAE trade license (DED or Free Zone) — typically minimum 2 years of operation
- 2 years of audited financial statements or certified management accounts
- 6 to 12 months of personal and business bank statements
- UAE corporate tax registration or VAT registration (where applicable)
- Proof of business activity — contracts, invoices, client agreements
- Memorandum of Association (MOA) / Articles of Association
- For freelancers: freelance permit and evidence of consistent income streams
Why Self-Employed Applications Require Expert Navigation
Banks assess self-employed applicants differently because income is variable, business longevity matters, and financial statements can be interpreted in multiple ways. An experienced mortgage broker understands which banks are most receptive to self-employed profiles, how to present irregular income compellingly, and which documentation gaps can be compensated other strengths in your profile.
At Ricadi Mortgages, a significant proportion of our clients are self-employed. We have helped entrepreneurs, free zone business owners, consultants, and freelancers across Dubai secure competitive mortgage financing — often in situations where they had been told their bank that approval was impossible.
“The question is never whether you are salaried. The question is whether your income is real, consistent, and well-documented. If the answer is yes, there is almost always a path to a mortgage.”
— Adi, Ricadi Mortgages
Misconception 5: Renting is Always More Financially Sensible Than Buying for Expats
This is perhaps the most culturally embedded misconception of all — and the one that has quietly cost the most expats the most money over the longest period of time.
The narrative goes something like this: you are here temporarily, the market is volatile, ownership creates complications, and renting gives you flexibility. So you renew your lease year after year, watching your rent cheque disappear, while across the city, property values climb and your expat colleagues who bought quietly build equity.
| MYTHRenting is always the smarter financial choice for expats in the UAE, given job uncertainty and market volatility. | RICADI FACTFor expats planning to stay in the UAE for 3 or more years, buying with a mortgage is frequently more cost-effective than renting — especially given Dubai’s strong rental yields, sustained capital appreciation, and the fact that mortgage payments build equity while rent payments build nothing. |
The Numbers That Change the Conversation
Consider a concrete example using 2024 market data for Business Bay, one of Dubai’s most in-demand residential districts. A one-bedroom apartment is available at a purchase price of approximately AED 1,100,000. The same apartment rents for approximately AED 14,000 per month — AED 168,000 per year.
With a 20% down payment of AED 220,000 and a mortgage for AED 880,000 at a blended rate of 4.5% over 25 years, the monthly mortgage payment is approximately AED 4,800. That is AED 9,200 less per month than renting the same property.
The down payment and transaction costs represent a significant initial outlay. But an expat who plans to remain in Dubai for 5 or more years will likely recover that upfront cost — and begin accumulating equity — well within that horizon. In a market where property values in prime Dubai locations have appreciated 20-40% over the past three years, the case for ownership is compelling.
When Does Renting Still Make Sense for an Expat?
Intellectual honesty requires acknowledging that buying is not universally superior. Renting remains sensible when your UAE tenure is confirmed to be less than 2 to 3 years, when your employment situation is genuinely uncertain, when you are in the early stages of financial establishment and cannot comfortably fund the down payment without straining liquidity, or when flexibility for career or personal reasons has genuine value to you.
The key word is genuinely. Most expats who cite ‘flexibility’ as their reason for renting have no concrete plans to leave. They are paying a premium for optionality they may never exercise.
| Ricadi Rent vs Buy CalculatorAt Ricadi Mortgages, we offer every prospective client a personalised rent vs buy analysis based on their specific property target, income profile, and projected UAE tenure. This analysis typically takes 30 minutes and produces a clear financial picture. Many expats who arrive uncertain leave with conviction — in one direction or the other. Book yours at ricadimortgages.com. |
Misconception 6: Non-Residents Cannot Get a Mortgage in the UAE
This misconception specifically affects the significant community of global investors who have their eye on Dubai property but do not hold UAE residency. International buyers from the UK, Europe, India, the United States, and across the world frequently ask: can someone who does not live in the UAE actually get a mortgage to buy there?
Yes. With specific conditions.
| MYTHIf you do not live in the UAE, you cannot get a mortgage to buy property there. Only residents qualify. | RICADI FACTNon-resident foreign nationals can obtain UAE mortgages, subject to different terms. LTV is typically capped at 50-65%, rates are slightly higher, and documentation requirements include international income proof and a higher down payment of 35-40%. |
Non-Resident UAE Mortgage: The Complete Picture
- 50-65% depending on bank and property value — meaning a down payment of 35-40% is requiredMaximum LTV for non-residents:
- Up to 15 years for non-residents at most banks (vs 25 years for residents)Maximum tenor:
- Typically 60 years for non-residentsMaximum age at maturity:
- 6 months of international bank statements demonstrating affordability, payslips or business financials, passport copyIncome documentation:
- Each UAE bank maintains an approved list of nationalities for non-resident lending — coverage is broad but not universal. Ricadi verifies this for each client profile.Eligible nationalities:
Why Non-Resident Buyers Particularly Benefit From a Mortgage Broker
For non-resident buyers, navigating the UAE mortgage market without local expertise is especially complex. Bank eligibility criteria vary widely. Some lenders actively seek non-resident business; others apply conservative policies. The documentation requirements are more demanding. And the process of establishing a UAE bank account — required for mortgage repayment — adds a layer of coordination that benefits greatly from experienced guidance.
Ricadi Mortgages has extensive experience working with non-resident investors from across the globe. We identify the right lenders, structure your documentation for maximum approval probability, and manage the process from initial consultation through to successful completion.
Misconception 7: Off-Plan Properties Cannot Be Financed With a Mortgage
Dubai’s off-plan market is one of the most dynamic in global real estate. Developer payment plans, early-phase pricing, and capital appreciation potential attract investors from across the world. And yet, a persistent misconception holds that mortgages cannot be used to finance off-plan purchases — that it is cash-only territory.
This is partially true and often misunderstood. Let us be precise.
| MYTHYou cannot use a mortgage to buy off-plan property in the UAE. You must pay cash during construction. | RICADI FACTMortgages for off-plan properties exist in the UAE, but with strict conditions: LTV is capped at 50% for all buyers, banks typically release funds only at handover, and not all off-plan projects are on a bank’s approved list. |
How Off-Plan Mortgage Financing Actually Works in the UAE
During the construction phase, the buyer pays the developer directly according to the agreed payment schedule — typically a combination of upfront booking fee and milestone-based payments tied to construction progress. The mortgage element does not activate until the property reaches handover and is registered with the Dubai Land Department.
At handover, the bank releases mortgage funds to settle the remaining balance owed to the developer. This means the buyer must fund all pre-handover payments from their own resources — the mortgage bridges the final payment gap at completion.
The key implication: buying off-plan with a mortgage requires robust liquidity during the construction phase, not just the ability to service a mortgage. Ricadi Mortgages helps clients plan this cash flow from day one.
What to Check Before Committing to an Off-Plan Purchase With Mortgage Intent
- Is the developer and specific project on your target bank’s approved list? Not all developers qualify — check before signing anything.
- Does the payment plan timeline align with your liquidity? Can you comfortably fund construction milestones while managing living costs?
- What is the handover timeline? Delays in Dubai’s construction market are not uncommon and can affect financing arrangements.
- What is the LTV and rate for off-plan at handover — and has your mortgage pre-approval accounted for this?
“In real estate, the devil is always in the detail. Off-plan deals require a financial strategy, not just a deposit cheque.”
— Adi, Ricadi Mortgages
Misconception 8: The Mortgage Process in the UAE Takes Months and Is Overwhelmingly Complex
Fear of process is one of the quietest deal-killers in the UAE property market. Expats who would otherwise be ready, willing, and financially able to buy property delay for months — sometimes years — because they anticipate a bureaucratic larinth. The paperwork alone, they imagine, will require six months and a full-time legal team.
The reality, for a well-prepared applicant working with the right advisor, is significantly more encouraging.
| MYTHGetting a mortgage in the UAE is an incredibly complex, months-long process that requires enormous preparation. | RICADI FACTWith complete documentation and expert guidance, mortgage pre-approval in the UAE can be issued in 3 to 7 business days. Full mortgage approval, from pre-approval to offer letter, typically takes 2 to 4 weeks. The right broker makes the process genuinely straightforward. |
The UAE Mortgage Process — Step Step
Understanding the process demystifies it entirely. Here is what the journey looks like for a typical expat buyer working with Ricadi Mortgages:
- Ricadi reviews your income, nationality, employment status, target property, and financial profile. Eligibility is assessed across multiple lenders simultaneously. This takes approximately 30 to 60 minutes.Step 1 — Free Initial Consultation:
- Ricadi provides a precise document checklist tailored to your profile. For a salaried expat, this typically includes passport, Emirates ID, visa, salary certificate, 3-6 months payslips, 3-6 months bank statements, and existing liability letter. Ricadi reviews all documents for completeness before submission.Step 2 — Document Preparation:
- Submitted to the most suitable lender(s). Pre-approval confirmation typically arrives within 3 to 7 business days. This document confirms your borrowing capacity and is valid for 60 to 90 days.Step 3 — Mortgage Pre-Approval:
- Once you identify your property, the bank commissions an independent valuation (AED 2,500 to AED 3,500). The mortgage is then formally structured against the valued property.Step 4 — Property Identification and Valuation:
- Full mortgage approval typically arrives within 5 to 10 business days following valuation. The formal offer letter sets out all terms.Step 5 — Final Approval and Offer Letter:
- Ricadi coordinates with the DLD, conveyancer, and seller to complete the transfer and mortgage registration. Keys in hand.Step 6 — Completion:
| Total Timeline With Ricadi Mortgages:From initial consultation to mortgage offer letter: typically 3 to 5 weeks for a straightforward salaried case with complete documentation. From offer letter to completion: a further 2 to 4 weeks depending on property transfer logistics. Total: 5 to 9 weeks from your first call to keys in hand. This is not a process to fear. It is a process to manage — and Ricadi manages it for you. |
Misconception 9: You Must Apply for a Mortgage Directly With a Bank — A Broker Adds No Value
Some expats approach the mortgage process with the conviction that going directly to a bank is both faster and cheaper than working with a broker. No middleman, no fees, no complications. Why involve another party?
This reasoning is understandable — and almost entirely incorrect when it comes to the UAE mortgage market specifically.
| MYTHUsing a mortgage broker adds unnecessary cost and complexity. Going directly to the bank is faster and better. | RICADI FACTIn the UAE, reputable mortgage brokers like Ricadi are compensated banks, not clients. You pay nothing extra to use a broker. In return, you gain market-wide comparison, expert negotiation, faster processing, and an advocate who represents your interests — not the bank’s. |
What a Ricadi Mortgage Advisor Actually Does For You
- Compares live rates and terms across 20+ UAE lenders simultaneously — saving you weeks of individual bank visits
- Identifies which banks are most suitable for your specific profile — nationality, income type, employment status, property type
- Negotiates on your behalf — experienced brokers secure rates and terms that individual applicants typically cannot access directly
- Manages all documentation and bank communication — you provide the documents once; Ricadi handles the rest
- Advises on optimal fixed vs variable strategy based on current EIBOR trajectory and your personal risk tolerance
- Provides a free, clear rent-vs-buy financial analysis
- Coordinates with DLD, conveyancer, and all parties through to completion
- Offers 24/7 availability — because mortgage decisions do not keep office hours
Ricadi Mortgages charges no upfront or advisory fees to borrowers. Our compensation comes from the banking institutions we work with — standard practice across the UAE mortgage brokerage industry. You receive expert, personalised, end-to-end service at no additional cost.
“The best investment you can make is in the people who know more than you do.”
— Charlie Munger, Vice Chairman, Berkshire Hathaway
Misconception 10: Losing Your Job Means Losing Your Property Immediately
This is the fear that underlies many expats’ reluctance to buy. Dubai is a city of opportunity — but also a city of contract employment, project-based roles, and economic cycles. What happens, the thinking goes, if the job disappears? Do they repossess the property the next day?
The reality is considerably more nuanced — and considerably less apocalyptic.
| MYTHIf you lose your job in the UAE, the bank will immediately repossess your property and you will lose everything. | RICADI FACTMortgage default in the UAE follows a structured legal process. Immediate repossession does not occur. Banks are required to follow CBUAE guidelines, and expats typically have time to explore options including refinancing, restructuring, selling the property, or using savings/redundancy proceeds to maintain payments. |
What Actually Happens if an Expat Loses Their Job?
Under UAE law, a mortgage default triggers a formal legal process — not an immediate seizure. The bank must follow regulatory procedures, which typically include notification, a defined grace period, and formal legal action through the courts before any repossession can occur.
In practice, the most important protective strategies are: maintaining an emergency fund equivalent to 3 to 6 months of mortgage payments; having income protection or redundancy cover where available; and communicating with your lender proactively if your income is disrupted. Banks prefer restructuring and forbearance to default proceedings — the process is expensive for lenders too.
Many expats also hold properties that carry significant equity — meaning a controlled sale, even in a difficult period, frequently recovers the outstanding mortgage balance and preserves financial dignity.
| Planning Ahead: Building Your Mortgage Safety NetRicadi Mortgages advises every client to stress-test their mortgage affordability at current rate + 2%, maintain a dedicated mortgage reserve fund, and consider income protection insurance. Smart preparation eliminates 90% of the worst-case scenarios that keep expats from buying. We build this planning into every client engagement. |
The Complete UAE Expat Mortgage Misconceptions: Quick Reference Summary
| The Misconception | The Reality |
| Expats cannot get mortgages | Expats absolutely can. Dozens of UAE banks lend to foreign residents. |
| Need 40-50% down payment | First property under AED 5M: 20% minimum. Mandated CBUAE. |
| My bank gives the best rate | 20+ lenders compete. Rate differences worth AED 100,000+ over loan life. |
| Self-employed cannot qualify | Yes they can — with 2 years accounts and correct documentation. |
| Renting is always smarter | For 3+ year tenure, buying is frequently more cost-effective. |
| Non-residents cannot borrow | Non-residents can borrow at 50-65% LTV with correct documentation. |
| Off-plan cannot be financed | Off-plan mortgages exist — capped at 50% LTV, funded at handover. |
| Process takes months | Pre-approval in 3-7 days; full process 5-9 weeks with Ricadi. |
| Brokers add cost and complexity | Ricadi charges no client fees. Expert guidance, better rates. |
| Job loss = instant repossession | A structured legal process applies. Planning eliminates most risk. |
Frequently Asked Questions — UAE Expat Mortgages Answered Ricadi
Can expats get a UAE mortgage without a salary certificate?
Yes. Self-employed expats and those with non-traditional income structures can qualify using bank statements, audited financials, business turnover evidence, and tax filings. Ricadi Mortgages specialises in structuring these applications for optimal approval outcomes.
What is the minimum salary for a mortgage in the UAE in 2026?
Most UAE banks require a minimum monthly income of AED 15,000 for salaried expats and AED 25,000 for self-employed applicants. However, requirements vary lender and loan size. Some banks accept AED 12,000 for smaller loans.
Can I get a UAE mortgage if I earn in a foreign currency?
Yes. UAE banks frequently accept income denominated in foreign currencies. The income is converted to AED for affordability assessment using the bank’s prevailing exchange rate. Non-AED income earners should be mindful of FX risk on ongoing repayments.
How does the UAE Golden Visa affect mortgage eligibility?
The UAE Golden Visa significantly strengthens a mortgage application demonstrating long-term residency commitment. Some lenders offer more favourable terms to Golden Visa holders. Ricadi Mortgages provides specific guidance for Golden Visa applicants.
Should I choose a fixed or variable mortgage rate in the UAE right now?
In Q1 2026, with EIBOR stabilising around 3.59-3.67%, a 3-year fixed rate (currently 3.85-4.25%) provides payment certainty and protection against potential rate rises. Ricadi advises modelling both scenarios against your specific income profile and outlook before deciding.
Can I remortgage or refinance my existing UAE property?
Yes. Refinancing in the UAE is common and can deliver significant savings if you are on an uncompetitive rate. Early settlement penalties are capped at 1% of the outstanding balance or AED 10,000 (whichever is lower). Ricadi Mortgages conducts a free refinancing viability assessment on request.
A Final Word — To Every Expat Who Has Ever Wondered ‘Is This Even Possible for Me?’
“The secret of getting ahead is getting started.”
— Mark Twain
Dubai is not just a place to pass through. For millions of expats from every corner of the world, it has become the place where ambitions are realised, where wealth is built, where families are raised, where lives are genuinely made.
Property ownership is not a privilege reserved for those who were born here. It is a right — accessible, achievable, and financially compelling — for expats who are informed, prepared, and guided the right expertise.
Every misconception we have addressed in this guide has, at some point, caused a real person to delay a real decision that would have materially improved their financial life. That is the true cost of misinformation in this market.
You now know better. The question is simply: what is your next step?
“Real estate cannot be lost or stolen, nor can it be carried away. Purchased with common sense, paid for in full, and managed with reasonable care, it is about the safest investment in the world.”
— Franklin D. Roosevelt, 32nd President of the United States
At Ricadi Mortgages, we do not just process loan applications. We build financial strategies for people who have chosen to make the UAE home. We have done it for clients from the UK, India, Europe, the Philippines, South Africa, Lebanon, the United States, and dozens of other nations. We work 24/7, we compare the entire market, we negotiate hard, and we stay with you from your first question through to the day you receive your keys.
Your mortgage journey does not have to be confusing. With Ricadi, it does not have to be.
| Ready to Cut Through the Confusion?Talk to a Ricadi Mortgage Expert Today — Free ConsultationRicadi Mortgages | Dubai, UAEwww.ricadimortgages.com | +971 56 364 6906Simplify. Secure. Succeed. |
About Ricadi Mortgages
Ricadi Mortgages is Dubai’s trusted full-service mortgage brokerage, founded Adi — one of the UAE’s most recommended mortgage advisors. With deep relationships across all major UAE banks and a client base spanning 40+ nationalities, Ricadi provides free, independent, expert mortgage advice for expat residents, non-residents, self-employed professionals, and property investors. Services include purchase mortgages, refinancing, equity release, investment property finance, and pre-approval consulting. Available 24/7.



