Tag: property compliance Dubai

  • Dubai Issues New Law to Regulate Shared Housing with Fines up to Dh1 Million

    Dubai Issues New Law to Regulate Shared Housing with Fines up to Dh1 Million

    Dubai has introduced comprehensive legislation to regulate shared housing and establish clear standards for property owners, tenants, and management companies operating such units across the emirate.

    The new law governs how shared housing is managed and occupied throughout Dubai, applying to private development zones and free zones. It covers property owners who allocate units for shared housing, tenants living in those units, and companies licensed to lease and manage real estate on behalf of owners. Housing used for collective labour accommodation is not included under the law.

    Key Objectives

    The regulation aims to protect the rights of property owners and residents, ensure safe and healthy living conditions, prevent overcrowding and informal housing arrangements, address building and land-use violations, promote fair rental practices, and support stability in Dubai’s real estate market.

    Dubai Municipality will oversee shared housing across the emirate, setting policies and strategic plans, determining maximum occupancy levels, defining minimum space requirements per resident, specifying required shared facilities, and designating areas where shared housing is allowed based on urban planning factors such as population density, infrastructure capacity, and neighbourhood character.

    Digital Platform and Registry

    Dubai Municipality will operate a unified digital platform to process permits, store records, and allow authorities to access related data. Dubai Land Department will maintain an electronic registry for shared housing units linked to the municipality’s digital system, updating records when changes occur and setting required details for lease and management contracts.

    Contracts must include information such as landlord details, the number of residents, unit specifications, and space allocated per resident. The authority will also create and update a rent indicator for shared housing based on unit specifications.

    Permit Requirements

    Under the law, no person or company may designate a property as shared housing without a permit. Permits will be issued by Dubai Municipality based on rules set by its Director General in coordination with the Dubai Land Department and other authorities.

    Units must meet technical standards covering maximum occupancy limits, minimum space per resident, required shared facilities, and building and structural standards. Permits will remain valid for one year and can be renewed for similar periods, with owners also able to request a two-year permit. Renewal applications must be submitted at least 30 days before the permit expires.

    Leasing and Technical Standards

    Only property owners or authorised companies may lease shared housing units. Tenants are not allowed to sublease any part of the unit. Units can be leased directly by the property owner, through a company managing the unit for the owner, or through a company leasing the unit from the owner and subleasing it to residents.

    All properties must comply with safety and technical standards covering health, fire safety, sanitation, security, and electrical systems.

    Enforcement and Penalties

    Violations of the law can result in fines ranging from Dh500 to Dh500,000. Repeat violations within one year can lead to doubled fines, up to Dh1 million. The Dubai Land Department may also impose additional measures, including suspending activity for up to six months, cancelling permits, revoking commercial licences, disconnecting public services until violations are fixed, and ordering eviction from units that fail to meet permit rules.

    Dubai Rental Disputes Center will handle all disputes related to the law, resolving cases involving the rights and obligations of owners, tenants, and management companies according to its established procedures.

    Compliance Timeline

    Property owners and companies operating shared housing before the law takes effect must bring their units and operations into compliance within one year. The Director General of Dubai Municipality may grant a one-time extension if needed. The law will come into force 180 days after its publication in the Official Gazette.

    The new regulation follows Dubai’s recent building safety law, demonstrating the emirate’s commitment to establishing comprehensive quality and safety frameworks across its property sector as the market continues to record strong transaction volumes.

  • Dubai Issues New Building Safety Law with Mandatory Certificates

    Dubai Issues New Building Safety Law with Mandatory Certificates

    The new legislation applies universally across Dubai, covering structures in private development zones and free zones such as the Dubai International Financial Centre, regardless of construction date. Officials describe the measure as part of Dubai’s commitment to maintaining high construction standards and protecting residents, tenants, and investors.

    Mandatory Quality and Safety Certificates

    Under the law, all buildings must obtain a Quality and Safety Certificate following comprehensive inspection by a licensed engineering office. The certificate validity depends on building age: 10 years for structures under 40 years old, and five years for those aged 40 years or older.

    Dubai Municipality will lead implementation through a digital system managing safety requirements, maintaining a unified building database, and conducting regular inspections. The authority will establish sustainability standards, monitor maintenance practices, and regulate building materials across the emirate.

    Owner Obligations and Enforcement

    Building owners bear significant responsibility under the legislation. Owners of buildings less than 20 years old must perform regular maintenance and address any structural defects or safety risks. They must allow authority inspections and ensure repair work proceeds when required, even after certification.

    The law introduces strict penalties for non-compliance. Violators face fines between Dh100 and Dh1 million, with repeat violations within two years potentially incurring doubled penalties up to Dh2 million. Administrative measures may include suspended building permits, halted property transactions, or suspended lease certifications until violations are resolved.

    Tenant Protections and Compliance Timeline

    Buildings approved for demolition must follow tenant eviction rules under Law No. 26 of 2007. Displaced tenants receive priority to return after reconstruction at their original rental rates unless alternative terms are agreed.

    Building owners, contractors, and engineering offices have one year from the law’s effective date to comply. The chairman of Dubai’s Executive Council may extend this deadline if necessary. The law takes effect 60 days after publication in the Official Gazette.

    The legislation arrives as Dubai’s property market recorded Dh60.6 billion in February 2026 transactions, reinforcing the emirate’s focus on quality standards amid continued market expansion.