Rent vs Buy Calculator (Dubai)

CBUAE-verifiedUpdated 2 June 2026Reviewed by a UAE-qualified accountant

Renting feels like "dead money" — but buying ties up a big deposit and ~7% in fees you never get back. This calculator settles the argument with maths: it compares the true cost of renting against buying over your time horizon, factoring appreciation, rent growth, mortgage interest and the return you'd earn by investing your deposit instead.

Your scenario

AED
AED

Rent for an equivalent home you'd otherwise pay.

%
%
yrs

The horizon matters most — buying rarely wins over short stays.

%
%
%

The opportunity cost of tying cash up in a deposit.

Advanced assumptions
%

Service charge + maintenance, % of price.

%

DLD + agency etc. (~7%).

%
yrs
Over 7 years
Buying is cheaper
by about AED 364,797
If you buy
AED 8,668/mo
mortgage payment
If you rent
AED 10,000/mo
today's rent
Over 7 years
Upfront cash to buy (deposit + fees)AED 540,000
Total rent you'd payAED 919,495
Total mortgage paidAED 728,096
— of which interestAED 435,088
Ownership costs (service + upkeep)AED 168,000
Home value when you sellAED 2,459,748
Net sale proceeds (after loan + costs)AED 1,103,561
Forgone investment on your cashAED 219,834

An estimate based on your assumptions, not a forecast. It uses the standard "invest-the-difference" method: the renter keeps the deposit invested, and the longer you stay, the more buying tends to win.

How the rent vs buy decision really works

The instinct that rent is "wasted" and buying is always smarter misses half the picture. Buying has large costs that never come back — roughly 7% of the price in transaction fees, the mortgage interest you pay, and the service charges and maintenance of ownership. Against that, a buyer builds equity and may gain from price appreciation. A renter avoids all those costs but earns nothing from property — though they can invest the deposit they didn't spend.

Time horizon is everything

The single biggest factor is how long you stay. Because the upfront fees are so high, a short stay almost always favours renting — you sell before appreciation and equity can outrun those costs. The longer you own, the more buying pulls ahead. For most Dubai scenarios the tipping point lands somewhere around four to seven years, but it shifts with every assumption.

What moves the answer

  • Price growth vs rent growth: faster appreciation favours buying; faster rent rises also favour buying (your rent alternative gets more expensive).
  • Investment return: if you could earn a high return elsewhere, tying cash up in a deposit costs you more — favouring renting.
  • Mortgage rate: a higher rate means more interest, weakening the case for buying.
  • Ownership costs: Dubai service charges can be significant and tilt the maths toward renting if they're high.

An honest estimate, not a forecast

No one knows future prices, rents or returns. Treat this as a structured way to test your assumptions — try a pessimistic and an optimistic case and see whether the verdict holds. When you're ready to look at buying seriously, check what you could borrow with the eligibility calculator and the full purchase costs.

Frequently asked questions

Is it better to rent or buy in Dubai?
It depends mostly on how long you stay. Buying carries big upfront costs (≈7% in fees plus your deposit), so you need several years of ownership and price growth to come out ahead of renting and investing the difference. The calculator above works out the break-even for your numbers.
How many years until buying beats renting in Dubai?
Commonly around 4–7 years, but it swings with the rate, rent level, price growth and what you could earn by investing your deposit instead. Use the "how long you’ll stay" field to find the tipping point for your scenario.
Why does the calculator include an investment return?
Because the cash you put into a deposit and fees could otherwise be invested. Ignoring that opportunity cost flatters buying. The model assumes a renter keeps that capital invested, which is the fair way to compare.
Does buying build equity that renting doesn’t?
Yes — part of each mortgage payment repays the loan and, with price growth, you may sell for more than you paid. The calculator credits you the net sale proceeds (after the remaining loan and selling costs), which is what makes buying competitive over longer horizons.

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