In the UAE you can choose between a conventional mortgage and Islamic home finance. Both get you the keys; they just structure the deal differently. Here is how they compare — in plain terms.
The core difference: no interest
A conventional mortgage lends you money and charges interest. Islamic finance avoids interest (riba), which isn't permitted under Sharia. Instead, the bank takes part in the transaction itself and earns an agreed profit, not interest. The end result feels similar — regular monthly payments — but the legal mechanics differ.
The common structures
- Ijara (lease-to-own): the bank buys the property and leases it to you; your payments cover rent plus a portion of the price, and ownership transfers to you at the end.
- Murabaha (cost-plus sale): the bank buys the property and sells it to you at an agreed marked-up price, which you repay in instalments.
- Diminishing Musharaka (declining partnership): you and the bank co-own the property; you gradually buy out the bank's share while paying rent on the portion you don't yet own.
What stays the same
Don't assume Islamic finance bends the borrowing limits — it doesn't. The Central Bank's rules apply identically: the same Loan-to-Value caps (so the same minimum deposit), the 50% Debt Burden Ratio, the 2–4% stress test, and the 25-year maximum term. Your borrowing capacity is calculated the same way.
How to compare the two
- Compare total cost — the bank's profit rate versus a conventional interest rate, over the full term.
- Check the fees and early-settlement terms on both.
- Look at flexibility — overpayments, portability, and what happens if you sell.
- Decide on principle too — for many buyers, Sharia compliance is the deciding factor regardless of small cost differences.
Work out your numbers
Because the affordability rules are identical, the eligibility calculator works for both: enter the profit rate (in place of an interest rate) to see what you could finance and what your monthly payment would be. Then compare offers from Islamic and conventional lenders side by side.