New Dubai Property Visa Rules 2026: DLD Changes You Need to Know
DLD has removed the AED 750K minimum for property residency visas. Learn the new rules, thresholds, and step-by-step application process for 2026.

Key Takeaways
- This change, combined with ongoing digitization of the application process and new intermediate visa tiers, makes 2026 the most favorable year yet for property-linked residency.
- But the rules are nuanced, and making the wrong property choice can leave you with a home but no visa.
- Previously, only properties valued at AED 750K or above could qualify for residency sponsorship.
New Dubai Property Visa Rules 2026: DLD Changes You Need to Know
Key Takeaways
- DLD has removed the AED 750,000 minimum property value threshold for residency visa eligibility — a significant expansion of who can qualify
- Multiple visa categories are available based on property value: standard residency, Golden Visa (AED 2M+), and new intermediate tiers
- The application process has been digitized through Dubai REST, reducing processing time from weeks to days
- Common mistakes include buying non-qualifying property types, missing document requirements, and misunderstanding the difference between ownership and visa eligibility
- Aigents Realty can help you identify visa-eligible properties and navigate the entire application process
Dubai's property-linked residency visa program has been one of the emirate's most powerful investment incentives — and it just got significantly more accessible. The Dubai Land Department (DLD) has removed the AED 750,000 minimum property value threshold that previously restricted visa eligibility to mid-to-high-value purchases, opening the door for a much broader range of investors to secure UAE residency through property ownership.
This change, combined with ongoing digitization of the application process and new intermediate visa tiers, makes 2026 the most favorable year yet for property-linked residency. But the rules are nuanced, and making the wrong property choice can leave you with a home but no visa. Here's everything you need to know.
What Changed — DLD Removes AED 750K Minimum
The headline change is straightforward: the AED 750,000 minimum property value requirement for a standard property residency visa has been eliminated. Previously, only properties valued at AED 750K or above could qualify for residency sponsorship. This threshold excluded a significant portion of Dubai's property market, particularly in affordable areas like JVC, International City, and Dubai South.
Why This Matters
Dubai's property market has a substantial inventory below the old threshold. According to DLD transaction data, approximately 35% of all residential transactions in 2025 were for properties valued below AED 750,000. These buyers could own property in Dubai but couldn't use it as a basis for residency — they needed separate employment or investor visas.
The removal of this threshold means:
- More properties qualify for visa sponsorship across all price segments
- Lower entry point for residency-by-investment — previously AED 750K minimum, now effectively any freehold property
- Greater flexibility for portfolio investors who own multiple smaller properties
- Alignment with Dubai's population growth strategy — the emirate needs residents, not just property owners
What Hasn't Changed
Several important rules remain in place:
- Only freehold properties qualify — leasehold and non-freehold areas are excluded
- The property must be completed (ready) — off-plan properties don't qualify until handover
- Joint ownership is recognized, but each owner's share must meet the relevant threshold
- The visa is tied to property ownership — selling the property cancels the visa
New Visa Categories and Property Thresholds
With the AED 750K minimum removed, the visa structure now looks like this:
Standard Property Residency Visa
| Requirement | Details |
|---|---|
| Property value | Any completed freehold property (no minimum) |
| Visa duration | 2 years, renewable |
| Sponsorship scope | Property owner + spouse + children (under 18) |
| Work permission | No — requires separate work permit |
| Processing time | 5–7 business days (digital) |
This is the baseline visa. It provides residency but doesn't include work rights. For investors who don't need to work in Dubai (remote workers, retirees, passive investors), this is sufficient.
Intermediate Property Visa (AED 1M–2M)
| Requirement | Details |
|---|---|
| Property value | AED 1,000,000–2,000,000 |
| Visa duration | 3 years, renewable |
| Sponsorship scope | Property owner + spouse + children + one domestic worker |
| Work permission | Limited — can sponsor own business activity |
| Processing time | 3–5 business days (digital) |
This intermediate tier was introduced in 2025 and provides enhanced benefits including longer duration and the ability to sponsor domestic workers and certain business activities.
Golden Visa (AED 2M+)
| Requirement | Details |
|---|---|
| Property value | AED 2,000,000+ |
| Visa duration | 10 years, renewable |
| Sponsorship scope | Property owner + spouse + children (no age limit) + domestic workers |
| Work permission | Full — no separate work permit needed |
| Processing time | 2–3 business days (digital) |
| Additional benefits | No sponsor required, can stay outside UAE for 12+ months without losing visa |
The Golden Visa remains the premium option. The AED 2M threshold hasn't changed, but the benefits continue to expand. Key advantage: children have no age limit for sponsorship, making this ideal for families with adult dependents.
Multiple Property Aggregation
A critical rule that many investors miss: you can aggregate multiple properties to reach a threshold. If you own three properties worth AED 500K each (total AED 1.5M), you qualify for the intermediate tier. If you own two properties worth AED 1M each (total AED 2M), you qualify for the Golden Visa.
This aggregation rule makes the visa program accessible to portfolio investors who prefer diversification over a single high-value purchase.
Golden Visa vs Standard Property Residency
Understanding the differences between these visa types is essential for making the right investment decision:
| Feature | Standard Residency | Intermediate (AED 1M–2M) | Golden Visa (AED 2M+) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Duration | 2 years | 3 years | 10 years |
| Renewal | Every 2 years | Every 3 years | Every 10 years |
| Sponsor needed | Yes (property) | Yes (property) | No |
| Work rights | Separate permit needed | Limited self-employment | Full work rights |
| Family sponsorship | Spouse + children under 18 | Spouse + children + 1 domestic | Spouse + children (any age) + domestics |
| Outside UAE limit | 6 months | 6 months | 12+ months |
| Property requirement | Any freehold | AED 1M–2M | AED 2M+ |
| Processing time | 5–7 days | 3–5 days | 2–3 days |
| Cost | AED 3,000–5,000 | AED 5,000–8,000 | AED 15,000–20,000 |
The key decision factor: If you plan to work in Dubai, the Golden Visa's full work rights eliminate the need for a separate employer-sponsored work permit. This alone can justify the higher property investment threshold for professionals and entrepreneurs.
Step-by-Step Application Process
The application process has been significantly streamlined through digital integration with DLD's Dubai REST platform:
Step 1: Verify Property Eligibility
Before purchasing, confirm that the property qualifies:
- Must be in a freehold area (check the DLD freehold zone list)
- Must be completed and handed over (off-plan doesn't qualify)
- Must have a registered title deed with DLD
- Must be owned by the applicant (not rented or leased)
Step 2: Purchase the Property
Complete the property purchase through standard channels. Ensure:
- Title deed is registered with DLD
- Property is valued at the appropriate threshold for your desired visa tier
- Purchase is documented with a DLD-registered sales agreement
Step 3: Gather Required Documents
Prepare the following documents (all now accepted digitally):
- Passport copy (valid for at least 6 months)
- Title deed (original or certified copy from DLD)
- Property valuation certificate (from DLD-approved valuer — required for Golden Visa)
- Sales agreement (DLD-registered)
- Passport-size photographs (digital upload)
- Medical fitness certificate (from UAE-approved medical center)
- Health insurance proof (UAE-registered insurance policy)
- Bank statement (showing financial capacity — 3 months)
- No objection letter (from current employer, if applicable)
Step 4: Submit Application via Dubai REST
The entire application can now be submitted digitally through the Dubai REST app or portal:
- Log in with UAE Pass (digital identity)
- Select "Property Residency Visa" application type
- Upload all required documents
- Pay processing fees online
- Receive application reference number
Step 5: Medical Fitness Test
Complete the mandatory medical fitness test at an approved UAE medical center. This is a standard health screening (blood test, chest X-ray) and costs approximately AED 700–1,000.
Step 6: Receive Visa
Processing times:
- Standard residency: 5–7 business days
- Intermediate: 3–5 business days
- Golden Visa: 2–3 business days
The visa is issued digitally and linked to your UAE Pass identity. Physical visa stickers are no longer required — the digital visa is recognized at all UAE entry points.
Step 7: Emirates ID Application
After receiving the visa, apply for an Emirates ID card through the ICP (Identity and Citizenship Authority). This is a separate process but is required for all UAE residents.
Required Documents Checklist
Use this checklist to ensure you have everything before starting the application:
- Valid passport (6+ months validity)
- DLD-registered title deed
- Property valuation certificate (for Golden Visa applications)
- DLD-registered sales agreement
- Digital passport photographs
- Medical fitness certificate
- UAE health insurance policy
- 3-month bank statement
- UAE Pass registration (digital identity)
- No objection letter from employer (if currently employed in UAE)
- Marriage certificate (for spouse sponsorship)
- Children's birth certificates (for family sponsorship)
- Domestic worker contract (for intermediate/Golden Visa domestic sponsorship)
Common Mistakes to Avoid
These are the mistakes that most frequently cause visa application failures or delays:
1. Buying in a Non-Freehold Area
Not all areas in Dubai are freehold. Some areas (particularly older neighborhoods like Deira, Bur Dubai, and certain industrial zones) are leasehold or restricted. Buying property in these areas will not qualify for a residency visa, regardless of value.
How to avoid: Always verify the area's freehold status through DLD before purchasing. Aigents Realty's platform automatically filters properties by visa eligibility.
2. Purchasing Off-Plan Before Handover
Off-plan properties cannot qualify for residency visas until they are completed and the title deed is registered. This means investors who buy off-plan for visa purposes may wait 2–4 years before they can apply.
How to avoid: If you need residency immediately, purchase a ready property. If you're investing in off-plan for long-term value, understand that visa eligibility is deferred until handover.
3. Misunderstanding Joint Ownership Rules
Joint ownership (multiple owners on one title deed) is recognized for visa purposes, but each owner's share must independently meet the threshold for their desired visa tier. Two owners each holding 50% of a AED 2M property each have a AED 1M share — qualifying for the intermediate tier, not the Golden Visa.
How to avoid: Calculate your individual ownership share and match it to the appropriate visa tier. For Golden Visa eligibility through joint ownership, each owner's share must be at least AED 2M.
4. Failing to Maintain Health Insurance
UAE health insurance is a mandatory requirement for all residency visas, including property-linked visas. Failing to maintain continuous coverage can result in visa cancellation.
How to avoid: Purchase UAE-registered health insurance before applying and maintain it continuously. Dubai's DHA (Dubai Health Authority) has a list of approved insurers.
5. Not Understanding the Work Rights Limitation
The standard property residency visa does NOT include work rights. If you need to work in Dubai, you must either:
- Obtain a separate work permit through an employer
- Qualify for the Golden Visa (which includes full work rights)
- Establish a company and obtain an investor/work permit through that entity
How to avoid: If employment in Dubai is part of your plan, target the Golden Visa threshold (AED 2M+) or plan for a separate work authorization pathway.
6. Selling the Property Without Visa Transition
The property residency visa is tied to property ownership. Selling the property automatically triggers visa cancellation. If you're planning to sell and stay in Dubai, you need to transition to a different visa type before completing the sale.
How to avoid: If you plan to sell your visa-qualifying property, first obtain an alternative visa (employment, investor, or another property-linked visa) before completing the sale transaction.
7. Ignoring the Outside-UAE Time Limit
Standard and intermediate residency visas require you to be present in the UAE at least once every 6 months. Extended absences can trigger visa cancellation. The Golden Visa allows absences of 12+ months.
How to avoid: If you travel frequently or maintain residence in multiple countries, the Golden Visa's extended absence allowance is a significant advantage worth the higher property investment.
How Aigents Realty Helps with Visa-Eligible Properties
Aigents Realty's AI-powered platform is specifically designed to help investors navigate the property visa landscape:
Visa eligibility filtering. Our platform automatically identifies properties that qualify for residency visas, filtering by freehold status, completion status, and value thresholds. You'll never waste time on properties that can't qualify.
Threshold matching. We match properties to your desired visa tier, showing you options that qualify for standard residency, intermediate, or Golden Visa based on your budget and goals.
Portfolio aggregation analysis. For investors considering multiple smaller properties, our AI calculates aggregate values and identifies combinations that reach higher visa tiers — often finding Golden Visa qualification through properties you wouldn't expect to combine.
Document preparation support. Our platform generates the document checklist specific to your visa type and guides you through the digital application process via Dubai REST integration.
Ongoing compliance monitoring. We track changes to DLD visa rules and notify you when regulations change, ensuring your visa status remains valid throughout your ownership period.
FAQ
What is the minimum property value for a Dubai residency visa in 2026?
There is no longer a minimum property value for the standard property residency visa. DLD has removed the previous AED 750,000 threshold. Any completed freehold property in Dubai now qualifies for a 2-year residency visa.
Can I get a Golden Visa with property below AED 2 million?
No. The Golden Visa requires a minimum property value of AED 2 million. However, you can aggregate multiple properties — if the total value of all your Dubai freehold properties exceeds AED 2 million, you qualify for the Golden Visa.
Do off-plan properties qualify for residency visas?
No. Only completed (ready) properties with registered title deeds qualify. Off-plan properties become eligible only after handover and title deed registration. If you need residency immediately, purchase a ready property.
Can I sponsor my family on a property residency visa?
Yes. All property residency visa types allow family sponsorship:
- Standard: spouse + children under 18
- Intermediate (AED 1M–2M): spouse + children + one domestic worker
- Golden Visa (AED 2M+): spouse + children (any age) + domestic workers
Can I work in Dubai on a property residency visa?
Only the Golden Visa (AED 2M+) includes full work rights. Standard and intermediate property residency visas require a separate work permit if you want to be employed in Dubai. However, you can establish a business and obtain work authorization through that entity.
What happens to my visa if I sell the property?
The property residency visa is tied to property ownership. Selling the property triggers visa cancellation. Before selling, you should transition to an alternative visa type (employment, investor, or another property-linked visa) to maintain your residency status.
How long does the visa application process take?
Processing times have been significantly reduced through digital processing:
- Standard residency: 5–7 business days
- Intermediate: 3–5 business days
- Golden Visa: 2–3 business days
All applications can now be submitted digitally through Dubai REST.
Do I need a property valuation certificate?
Property valuation certificates are required for Golden Visa applications (to prove the AED 2M threshold). For standard and intermediate visas, the registered title deed value is generally sufficient, though DLD may request a valuation in some cases.
Can multiple property owners each get a visa?
Yes. Each joint owner can apply for a residency visa based on their individual ownership share. However, each owner's share must independently meet the threshold for their desired visa tier. Two 50% owners of a AED 2M property each have a AED 1M share, qualifying for the intermediate tier.
What areas in Dubai are freehold (visa-eligible)?
Most areas developed since 2002 are freehold, including Dubai Marina, Downtown Dubai, Palm Jumeirah, JVC, Business Bay, Dubai Hills, Dubai Creek Harbour, and most newer communities. Older areas like Deira and Bur Dubai are generally leasehold. Always verify freehold status through DLD before purchasing.
Check your visa eligibility with Aigents Realty — we'll match you with properties that qualify for UAE residency and guide you through the entire application process. Our AI-powered platform filters by freehold status, completion status, and visa thresholds, ensuring you never waste time on properties that can't qualify.
Related AiGentsRealty resources
Sources and further reading
Process and risk checklist
For legal, rental, mortgage, visa, and transaction topics, verify the current rule with the relevant authority or a qualified adviser before acting. Dubai procedures can change, and your nationality, financing method, property type, contract status, and ownership structure can affect the correct process. Keep written documentation, confirm all fees before transfer, and avoid relying on verbal promises when a permit, title deed, tenancy contract, or payment obligation is involved.
The safest approach is to compare the official requirement, the contract wording, and the practical timeline. If those three do not match, pause and clarify before paying a deposit or signing. Good process discipline protects buyers, sellers, landlords, and tenants from avoidable disputes.
