The UAE Golden Visa for property investors: Buy a completed freehold property in Dubai worth AED 2 million or more, apply through the Dubai Land Department and the ICA, and you’ll receive a 10-year renewable UAE residency visa. It covers your spouse, children, and domestic staff. Off-plan properties don’t qualify until handover. The full process typically takes 3–6 weeks from the date your title deed is registered.

When Dubai introduced the Golden Visa in 2019, the minimum property value was AED 5 million. The 2022 amendment brought that down to AED 2 million, and the number of property-based Golden Visa applications nearly tripled in the following 12 months. It’s now one of the primary reasons buyers particularly from Europe, South Asia, and GCC countries choose Dubai over other international property markets.

The appeal is simple: you get 10 years of UAE residency attached to an asset you already own. There’s no minimum time you have to spend in the country. No employer needs to sponsor you. Your children including adult children are covered. And if the visa expires, you just renew it.

What trips people up is the detail. Not every AED 2M property qualifies. Off-plan purchases don’t count until the title deed is in your name. Mortgaged properties have a specific rule around equity. And some buyers don’t realise they can combine multiple properties to cross the threshold. This guide covers all of it.

We put this ranking together after talking to investors who’ve bought across multiple communities and comparing Q1 2026 transaction data across unit types. We looked at four things: what it costs to get in, what it rents for, how much it’s grown in price, and how quickly you could sell if you needed to. We also note Golden Visa eligibility thresholds throughout, since that’s become a deciding factor for a growing number of buyers.

What the Golden Visa Actually Gives You

Before getting into the property rules, it’s worth being clear on what you’re actually getting. The UAE Golden Visa is a long-term residency visa — not citizenship, not a passport. You stay a resident of your home country. What you get is the legal right to live, work, and do business in the UAE for 10 years without needing anyone to sponsor you.

10-Year Renewable Residency

The visa runs for a full decade and renews as long as you hold the qualifying property. No annual renewals, no employer paperwork.

Family Coverage Included

Spouse, children of any age (including adult unmarried children), and domestic workers are all covered under the same visa.

No Minimum Stay Requirement

Unlike standard UAE residency visas, you can stay outside the UAE for as long as you want without the visa being cancelled.

Right to Work and Do Business

You can be employed, run a business, or freelance in the UAE — without a separate work permit or employer sponsor.

Access to UAE Services

UAE bank accounts, driving licences, school enrolments, health insurance — all become accessible with a valid UAE residence visa.

Stability for Long-Term Planning

Many buyers use the Golden Visa as a legal base for business, asset protection, and tax residency planning. Ten years is long enough to build around.

Golden Visa vs. Standard UAE Residency: What's the Difference?

If you already own property in Dubai worth less than AED 2M, you may have a standard property residency visa (2-year renewable). A lot of buyers don’t realise how significantly different the Golden Visa is. Here’s the honest comparison:

Why investors like it

  • 2-year validity (renewable)
  • Requires UAE property ownership at any value
  • Cannot stay outside UAE for more than 6 consecutive months or visa cancels
  • Dependants sponsored on a separate process
  • Property must remain owned throughout visa period
  • Annual renewal paperwork

Golden Visa (Property Route)

  • 10-year validity (renewable)
  • Requires AED 2M+ completed freehold property
  • No minimum UAE stay requirement — travel freely
  • Spouse, children, and domestic staff included automatically
  • Property must remain owned throughout visa period
  • Renews every 10 years

The no-minimum-stay rule is the one that matters most to most buyers. Standard residency visa holders who spend more than 6 months abroad find their visa cancelled, which means their Emirates ID becomes invalid, their UAE bank accounts get frozen, and they have to restart the entire process. The Golden Visa removes that risk completely.

Exactly Who Qualifies Through Property

The property investment route to the Golden Visa has one main rule and a few conditions around it. Here’s the full picture:

The main rule

You must own a completed freehold property in Dubai with a purchase value of AED 2 million or more. The AED 2M is measured at the time of purchase — it’s the price you paid, not the current market value. So if you bought at AED 2.1M and the property has since dropped in market value to AED 1.9M, you still qualify.

If you used a mortgage

You can still qualify with a mortgaged property, but the equity you’ve actually paid down must reach AED 2M. Banks issue a letter confirming the paid equity on request — this is submitted as part of the application. If you bought a AED 3M property with a 30% down payment (AED 900,000 down), you’d need to pay off an additional AED 1.1M in principal before qualifying.

If you own multiple properties

Multiple completed freehold properties can be combined. If you own two apartments worth AED 1.1M and AED 1M respectively, the combined AED 2.1M qualifies. Each property needs a current DLD valuation certificate.

Who counts as a dependant?

The visa covers your spouse, children of any age who are unmarried, and domestic workers (housekeepers, nannies, drivers). Adult married children do not qualify as dependants but can apply for their own Golden Visa through their own means.

One thing worth noting on joint ownership
If two people jointly own a property worth AED 2M (each owning 50%), neither individual’s share reaches the threshold. For a joint purchase to qualify both owners, the property itself needs to be worth AED 4M+ — or each co-owner needs to hold properties worth AED 2M individually across their portfolio.

Which Properties Count and Which Don't

This is where a lot of buyers get tripped up. Not every property in Dubai qualifies, and the rules are specific.

Property Type Qualification Table
Property Type Qualifies? Notes
Completed freehold property (ready) Yes Title deed issued, AED 2M+ purchase price, in designated freehold zone
Off-plan property (under construction) Not yet Only qualifies once the DLD issues the title deed at handover
Mortgaged property Conditionally Paid equity must reach AED 2M; bank letter required
Leasehold property No Must be freehold ownership, not leasehold
Commercial property No The property route applies to residential freehold only
Multiple properties combined Yes Combined value must reach AED 2M; each needs DLD valuation certificate
Property gifted or inherited Conditionally Needs to be registered in your name with DLD; original transfer value must meet threshold
Completed freehold property (ready)
Yes
Notes
Title deed issued, AED 2M+ purchase price, in designated freehold zone
Off-plan property (under construction)
Not yet
Notes
Only qualifies once the DLD issues the title deed at handover
Mortgaged property
Conditionally
Notes
Paid equity must reach AED 2M; bank letter required
Leasehold property
No
Notes
Must be freehold ownership, not leasehold
Commercial property
No
Notes
The property route applies to residential freehold only
Multiple properties combined
Yes
Notes
Combined value must reach AED 2M; each needs DLD valuation certificate
Property gifted or inherited
Conditionally
Notes
Needs to be registered in your name with DLD; original transfer value must meet threshold
The off-plan timing catches people out
We regularly speak to investors who bought off-plan at AED 2.2M and assumed they already qualified for the Golden Visa. They don’t — not until the title deed is issued. If you’re buying off-plan specifically for the Golden Visa, build the handover timeline into your planning. Some developers at 50% payment milestone can issue an NOC for a 2-year interim visa, but that’s a different product entirely.

The Application Process, Step by Step

The process isn’t complicated, but it has a specific sequence. Here’s how it actually works:

Golden Visa Application Process
1
Day 1
Ensure Your Title Deed is Registered with the DLD
Your property must have a current title deed in your name from the Dubai Land Department. If you've recently completed a purchase, confirm the DLD has issued the deed — not just the sale agreement. This is your starting document for everything else.
2
Days 2–5
Get a DLD Eligibility Certificate
Log into the Dubai REST app (Dubai Land Department's official platform) or visit a DLD service centre to request a Golden Visa eligibility certificate. They'll confirm your property meets the AED 2M threshold. This takes 3–5 business days and costs around AED 100–200. This certificate is what formally opens the Golden Visa application.
3
Days 5–10
Submit the ICA Application
Apply through the Federal Authority for Identity, Citizenship, Customs and Port Security (ICA) — either via the GDRFA Dubai app, the ICA Smart Services portal, or in person at a typing centre. You'll need: passport copy, Emirates ID (if you already have residency), DLD eligibility certificate, passport photos, and the application fee. Dependants are added at this stage too.
4
Days 10–15
Medical Test and Emirates ID
Once the ICA application is approved, you'll receive a notification to complete the medical fitness test at a government-approved centre (blood test and chest X-ray). After passing, apply for your Emirates ID at an ICA office or authorised centre. Biometrics are taken at this point.
5
Days 15–30
Visa Stamping and Emirates ID Delivery
The Golden Visa is stamped in your passport and your Emirates ID is mailed to your registered UAE address. Total timeline from DLD eligibility certificate to visa in hand is typically 3–6 weeks in straightforward cases. Complex applications (multiple properties, mortgage equity) can take 6–10 weeks.
Using a PRO service speeds things up considerably
Most buyers in Dubai use a PRO (Public Relations Officer) service — either through their real estate agent or a specialist typing centre — to handle the DLD and ICA paperwork. It typically costs AED 2,000–5,000 and reduces the process from 6 weeks to around 3. Well worth it if your time is limited or you’re applying from outside the UAE.

What Does the Golden Visa Cost?

Beyond the property itself, here’s what to expect in visa-related fees. These are the government charges as of 2026 — they can change, so always confirm current rates at the time of application.

DLD Eligibility Certificate

AED 100–200

One-time, via Dubai REST app or DLD service centre

ICA Application Fee

AED 1,150

Per primary applicant; AED 1,150 per additional dependant

Medical Test

AED 320–400

Per person; varies by government health centre

Emirates ID

AED 370

10-year card; covers full visa duration

Visa Stamping Fee

AED 500–700

Applied when visa is stamped in passport

PRO Service (optional)

AED 2,000–5,000

Third-party processing; strongly recommended

Total cost for the primary applicant (excluding PRO service): approximately AED 2,500–3,500. Each dependant adds roughly AED 2,000–2,500 to that. For a family of four, you’re looking at around AED 9,000–14,000 in government and processing fees — which is a small number relative to a AED 2M+ property purchase.

Best Areas to Buy for Golden Visa Eligibility in 2026

The property needs to be in a designated freehold zone — which covers most of Dubai’s major residential communities. The practical question is: which areas give you the best combination of Golden Visa eligibility at the AED 2M threshold and solid investment fundamentals? Here’s where the threshold is easiest to reach right now:

Dubai Area Comparison Table
Area Smallest Unit That Typically Hits AED 2M Typical Price Range Also Good For
Downtown Dubai 1-Bedroom (high floor / Burj view) AED 2.0M – 3.5M Capital appreciation, prestige address
Dubai Marina 2-Bedroom AED 2.0M – 3.2M Rental yield, liquidity, short-term lets
Palm Jumeirah Studio (Shoreline / Crescent towers) AED 2.2M – 5M+ Brand value, long-term appreciation
Business Bay (canal view) 2-Bedroom AED 2.0M – 3.0M Balanced yield and growth, corporate tenants
Dubai Hills Estate 2-Bedroom AED 2.0M – 3.2M Family living, strong community infrastructure
Dubai Creek Harbour 2-Bedroom (ready units) AED 1.9M – 2.8M Off-plan growth potential once more units complete
Downtown Dubai
Smallest Unit (Hits AED 2M) 1-Bedroom (high floor / Burj view)
Typical Price Range AED 2.0M – 3.5M
Also Good For Capital appreciation, prestige address
Dubai Marina
Smallest Unit (Hits AED 2M) 2-Bedroom
Typical Price Range AED 2.0M – 3.2M
Also Good For Rental yield, liquidity, short-term lets
Palm Jumeirah
Smallest Unit (Hits AED 2M) Studio (Shoreline / Crescent towers)
Typical Price Range AED 2.2M – 5M+
Also Good For Brand value, long-term appreciation
Business Bay (canal view)
Smallest Unit (Hits AED 2M) 2-Bedroom
Typical Price Range AED 2.0M – 3.0M
Also Good For Balanced yield and growth, corporate tenants
Dubai Hills Estate
Smallest Unit (Hits AED 2M) 2-Bedroom
Typical Price Range AED 2.0M – 3.2M
Also Good For Family living, strong community infrastructure
Dubai Creek Harbour
Smallest Unit (Hits AED 2M) 2-Bedroom (ready units)
Typical Price Range AED 1.9M – 2.8M
Also Good For Off-plan growth potential once more units complete

If the Golden Visa is your primary reason for buying, Downtown Dubai and Dubai Marina are the most practical choices — there’s a large volume of units at or just above AED 2M, which means you have real options rather than overpaying just to hit the threshold. For more on each area’s investment case, read our Best Areas to Buy Apartment in Dubai 2026 guide.

We'll help you find a qualifying property at the right price

If you’re buying specifically for the Golden Visa, the last thing you want is to overpay just to cross the threshold. Our team knows exactly which buildings and unit types in Downtown, Marina, and Business Bay are priced at or just above AED 2M with strong fundamentals — so you get both the visa and a solid investment. We also help coordinate the DLD application and can refer you to a PRO service we trust.

Mistakes That Catch Buyers Off Guard

Most of these aren’t difficult problems — they’re just things people don’t think to ask about until after they’ve committed.

Assuming off-plan qualifies immediately

We’ve had buyers who signed an off-plan contract at AED 2.3M, paid a 20% deposit, and then called us asking how to start the Golden Visa application. It doesn’t work that way. The title deed needs to be issued first — which only happens at handover. If you need the Golden Visa now, buy ready.

Buying jointly without thinking about the threshold

Couples who buy together at AED 2.2M often assume both of them qualify. They don’t — each person’s share (AED 1.1M) sits below the threshold. One partner holds the visa; the other is a dependant on it. That’s usually fine, but it’s worth knowing in advance.

Not accounting for mortgage equity timing

If you’re buying with a mortgage, the bank needs to have received AED 2M in principal payments before you qualify. On a typical 20-year mortgage on a AED 2.5M property with 25% down, it takes roughly 8–10 years to pay down AED 2M in principal on the loan alone. The down payment counts — so a AED 700,000 down payment means you need AED 1.3M more from repayments.

Selling the qualifying property without a plan

If you sell, the visa gets cancelled. That’s fine if you’re reinvesting in another qualifying property — and the transition can be managed. But if you sell without already having a replacement property lined up, there’s a gap in your UAE residency status. For buyers using the Golden Visa for banking or business continuity, that gap can be disruptive.

Ignoring the DLD valuation requirement for older properties

Some buyers inherited or bought older properties that were worth AED 2M+ at original purchase but haven’t been formally re-valued by the DLD. The Golden Visa application uses the original purchase price on the title deed — but if the property was registered at a lower value (common with older transfers), you may need a new DLD valuation certificate to confirm current worth.

Questions We Get Asked a Lot

How much property do you need to buy to get the UAE Golden Visa?

AED 2 million minimum, in a completed freehold property. It can be one property or several properties combined, as long as the total paid value reaches AED 2M and you hold the title deeds. For mortgaged properties, the equity you’ve actually paid down (down payment plus principal repayments) must reach AED 2M.

Yes, but the equity you’ve paid to the lender must reach AED 2 million. So if you bought at AED 3M and put down AED 700,000, you’ve already paid AED 700,000 in equity — you’d need another AED 1.3M in mortgage repayments before you qualify. Your bank will provide a letter confirming your paid equity when you request it, and that letter goes into your Golden Visa application.

Not until handover. You need a title deed in your name, which only gets issued by the DLD when the property is completed and handed over. Some developers issue an NOC at the 50% payment milestone that allows a 2-year residency visa — but that’s not the same as the 10-year Golden Visa. If the Golden Visa is the goal and you can’t wait 2–4 years for handover, buy a ready property.

From the day your title deed is registered, expect 3–6 weeks for a smooth application: about 3–5 days for the DLD eligibility certificate, another week or two for ICA processing, then medical test, biometrics, and Emirates ID. Using a PRO service usually shaves a week or two off. Complex cases — multiple properties, mortgage equity confirmation — can run 6–10 weeks.

The primary investor gets the 10-year visa. It extends to a spouse, all children of any age who aren’t married, and domestic staff. Adult married children need to apply separately through their own means. Parents can sometimes be sponsored but it depends on circumstances — this is worth clarifying with a PRO or legal advisor before assuming they’re included.

Yes. If you own two or more completed freehold properties in Dubai whose combined purchase values add up to AED 2M+, you qualify. Each property needs its own DLD valuation certificate submitted with the application. This is a useful option for investors who bought several smaller units at lower price points before the Golden Visa threshold was reduced to AED 2M.

The visa becomes invalid and should be cancelled. If you’re selling and buying another qualifying property at the same time, you can transition without a gap — but you do need to time it carefully and keep your documents in order. If you let the visa lapse and then reapply later, it’s treated as a fresh application. Most people in this situation work with a PRO to manage the handover cleanly.

No — that’s one of the biggest advantages of the Golden Visa over standard UAE residency. Standard UAE residency visas get cancelled if you’re outside the country for more than 6 consecutive months. The Golden Visa has no such requirement. You can spend most of the year abroad and your UAE residency remains intact. You just need to keep the qualifying property in your name.