Own a Dubai apartment, or about to buy one? The rule that decided whether your property could earn you UAE residency is gone. On 1 May 2026, the Dubai Land Department scrapped the AED 750,000 minimum property value for sole owners on the 2-year property investor visa. A studio in Jumeirah Village Circle or a one-bed in Dubai South now opens the same door that once needed a AED 750,000-plus property.
That one change brings the visa within reach of mid-market buyers, first-time owners and end-users who were locked out before. Here is what changed, who qualifies now, how this visa differs from the 10-year Golden Visa (the part most people get wrong), and the documents, fees and timeline involved.
What changed in Dubai's property investor visa rules?
On 1 May 2026, the Dubai Land Department removed the AED 750,000 minimum property value for sole owners applying for the 2-year property investor residence visa. Sole owners can now qualify regardless of property value. For jointly owned property, each co-owner must hold a share worth at least AED 400,000. The separate 10-year Golden Visa still requires AED 2 million in property.
At a glance
| Point | Detail |
|---|---|
| What was removed | The AED 750,000 minimum property value for sole owners (2-year visa) |
| Sole owners now | Eligible at any property value |
| Joint owners | Each co-owner needs a share worth at least AED 400,000 |
| Golden Visa (10-year) | Unchanged: still needs AED 2 million in property |
| Effective | Confirmed by the Dubai Land Department on 1 May 2026 |
| Who benefits most | Mid-market buyers, studio and one-bedroom owners, first-time investors |
Who qualifies for the 2-year property investor visa now?
The 2-year property investor visa is a renewable residence permit linked to property you own in Dubai. It lets you live in the UAE without an employer sponsor and sponsor your family, and it has long been a stepping stone toward the 10-year Golden Visa eligibility rules . The new rules change who can get on that first step.
Sole owners
If you are the only person named on the title deed, you can apply regardless of what the property is worth. There is no longer a minimum value. The property must be a completed, registered unit located in Dubai (other emirates and DIFC properties are not accepted for this route), with the title deed in your name.
Joint owners and the AED 400,000 share rule
If the property is owned by more than one person, each owner who wants the visa must hold a share worth at least AED 400,000. This applies even when owners hold equal shares. So a couple who jointly own a AED 800,000 apartment split 50/50 each hold AED 400,000, and each can qualify. Split the same property three ways and the per-person share drops below the threshold.
Worth knowing
The AED 750,000 floor had stood for well over a decade. Removing it for sole owners is the single biggest accessibility change to this visa route in recent memory, and it is aimed squarely at the affordable and mid-market end of Dubai's property market.
2-year investor visa vs 10-year Golden Visa: which one do you get?
This is the point we see misunderstood most often. Buying any property does not automatically grant a Golden Visa. The two routes are structurally different, and assuming you qualify for the 10-year visa when you actually qualify for the 2-year one can throw off your whole residency plan.

| Feature | 2-year Property Investor Visa | 10-year Property Golden Visa |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum value (sole owner) | No minimum under the new rules | AED 2 million |
| Joint ownership | Each co-owner needs a share of at least AED 400,000 | Must meet Golden Visa value rules |
| Validity | 2 years, renewable | 10 years |
| Mortgage | Allowed; paid-up equity is assessed, not headline value | Allowed where the paid-up portion reaches AED 2 million |
| Best for | Mid-market and first-time owners seeking a lower-barrier route | Higher-value investors wanting long-term residency |
| Renewal frequency | More frequent | Less frequent |
A practical example: a buyer who purchases a AED 1.2 million apartment with a mortgage often assumes they qualify for the Golden Visa. In most cases they qualify for the 2-year visa, not the 10-year one, because the paid-up portion has not reached AED 2 million. They are not disadvantaged, but if they planned their residency timeline around a 10-year visa, they planned it wrong. If you are weighing the longer route, compare the Golden Visa route for property investors before you commit.
Do mortgaged or off-plan properties qualify?
The most common worry we hear is: “I have a mortgage, does that disqualify me?” The honest answer for 2026 is no, a mortgage does not automatically disqualify you from the 2-year visa.
What matters is your paid-up equity, not the headline price. The Dubai Land Department and GDRFA look at how much of the property you own outright. They then measure that against the threshold. The “no minimum value” wording is true for fully owned properties. It does not mean a mortgaged property of any equity level qualifies. The exact calculation follows current GDRFA and DLD policy, so confirm your position when you apply.
For completed mortgaged or instalment-based properties, the authorities have generally required proof that at least 50 percent of the property value, or a minimum of AED 375,000, has already been paid. Be ready to supply:
- A No Objection Certificate (NOC) from the bank or developer
- Confirmation of the total amount paid
- Details of the outstanding balance
- A formal mortgage statement
Off-plan is the other trap. “No minimum value” applies to completed, registered properties only. An off-plan unit does not support a visa until it is handed over and registered on the DLD title deed. Assume your off-plan purchase qualifies at signing and you may be wrong by two to four years, depending on the handover date.
Documents required for the Dubai property investor visa
Applicants applying for residency through property investment must generally submit:
- Title deed for a property in Dubai (other emirates and DIFC are not accepted)
- Valid passport copy with more than six months validity
- Emirates ID copy
- A digital passport-size photo meeting ICP specifications
- Valid UAE health insurance from any UAE insurer
- Certificate of Good Conduct from Dubai Police, addressed to the Dubai Land Department
- National ID documents for applicants from Iran, Pakistan, Iraq, Libya and Afghanistan
- Matching applicant name across the passport and the title deed
Medical insurance remains mandatory for every residency visa application connected to property. The photo must comply with the image standards issued by the Federal Authority for Identity, Citizenship, Customs and Port Security (ICP).
How to apply: process, timeline and fees
New 2026 rules — any property value qualifies
The AED 750,000 minimum is gone. Send us your title deed and passport,we'll confirm your eligibility before any fee is committed.

The visa is processed through the Dubai Land Department (the Taskeen service and the DLD Cube platform) and the permit is issued by the General Directorate of Residency and Foreigners Affairs (GDRFA).
The application steps
- Confirm eligibility: check that the property is registered in Dubai, the ownership structure meets the criteria, and the title deed is issued and accurate.
- Prepare documents: collect identity, property and supporting documents, including any mortgage NOC.
- Submit the application through the official DLD channel and pay the government and service fees.
- Complete medical fitness testing and Emirates ID biometrics.
- Receive the 2-year renewable residence permit once approved.
The Dubai Land Department lists a service time of roughly seven to 10 business days. In our own processing, a well-prepared application has moved from submission to approval in about two weeks. Timelines vary with document readiness and authority approvals. (Source: Dubai Land Department.)
Fees you should budget for
The Dubai Land Department lists the 2-year property investor visa fee at AED 10,212.50. Family sponsorship adds further fees. Indicative DLD-listed family residence permit fees:
| Permit | Listed Fee (AED) |
|---|---|
| 2-year property investor visa | 10,212.50 |
| Spouse (wife or husband) | 7,382.25 |
| Child under 18 | 6,482.25 |
| Son or daughter over 18 | 7,182.25 |
| Parents (1-year permit) | 8,882.25 + file-opening fees |
Treat these as indicative. Administrative charges, health insurance, medical testing and document attestation can change, so verify current fees with the relevant service centre before you apply.
What the new rules mean for mid-market investors
The timing matters. Dubai's property market recorded roughly AED 138.7 billion across about 44,150 transactions in the first quarter of 2026, with transaction value up 21.2 percent year on year, according to Springfield Properties market data reported by Zawya. Off-plan made up around 70 percent of activity, much of it in the affordable and emerging communities where these now-eligible mid-market units sit.
We have already processed applications under the revised criteria. One recent client owned a property that would not have cleared the old AED 750,000 floor but qualified under the new rules. Once their documents were ready, the application went from submission to visa approval in about two weeks. The change did not make them a bigger investor; it simply opened a residency route that the old threshold had closed.
If you also want to live in the property or move your family over, it is worth understanding your wider UAE residence visa options . This change also sits alongside the broader 2026 UAE visa rule changes , so it is worth checking how the pieces fit your plans.
Common mistakes to avoid (from our processing desk)
Four issues account for most of the avoidable delays we see on property investor visa applications.
- Confusing the two visas. Assuming a purchase qualifies for the 10-year Golden Visa when it only meets the 2-year route. Check the AED 2 million paid-up threshold before you plan around a decade-long permit.
- Counting on off-plan too early. An off-plan unit does not support a visa until it is completed and registered on the DLD title deed. Expect a wait tied to the handover schedule.
- Joint-ownership arithmetic. Co-owners cannot pool the full property value so that each qualifies. Each person's own share is assessed against the threshold.
- Name mismatches on the title deed. This is the single most preventable cause of delay. If your passport reads “Mohammed Ahmed Al Rashidi” and the title deed was registered as “M. A. Rashidi”, GDRFA will flag it. Correcting a title deed name needs a formal DLD amendment that can add two to six weeks plus a fee. We check name alignment between passport and title deed before any submission.
How Best Solution handles your application
Best Solution has worked from Business Bay, at the heart of Dubai's property and residency market, since 2014. We have completed more than 5,000 company formations, each with visa processing attached. Our General Manager, Vipin Kumar, brings over 12 years of UAE visa experience and a 99 percent approval rate. Our PRO specialist, Carol D Silva, runs the full GDRFA documentation chain.
We handle the whole visa process as one engagement, not a chain of referrals: DLD title deed checks, the GDRFA application, medical fitness, Emirates ID and stamping. If your property is worth AED 2 million or more, we also run the full Golden Visa application service. We are a RAKEZ Best Business Partner (2021, 2022 and 2025) and hold a 4.8 out of 5 Google rating from more than 200 reviews, many naming visa speed and accuracy.
Before you apply, send us two documents
Send us your title deed and passport and we will confirm your eligibility and flag any name-matching or equity issues before they become delays.
WhatsApp +971 52 233 0011 (24-hour response) for a same-day eligibility consultation, or request a free consultation. We confirm your eligibility before any application fee is committed.



















