Every Dubai listing here is DLD-verified before it reaches you — from off-plan launches to ready-to-move handovers.
Off-Plan
Branded Tower
Build Quality
1% Monthly Plan
Investor Friendly
Branded LuxuryDubai levies no personal income tax and no capital gains tax on residential real estate.
Property investment of AED 2M+ qualifies for a 10-year UAE Golden Visa.
5–9% average yields vs. 2–4% in London, New York or Singapore.
An all-time record — Dubai real estate demand has never been stronger.
Dubai has become the single most searched overseas property market for Indian buyers, and the reasons are structural, not hype. The emirate levies no personal income tax, no capital gains tax, and no annual property tax on residential real estate. For an Indian investor comparing a ₹2 crore flat in an Indian metro against an equivalent AED apartment in Dubai, the total cost of ownership over ten years differs dramatically once taxes, maintenance economics and rental yields are accounted for.
Rental yields in Dubai average 5–9% gross depending on community and configuration — against the 2–3.5% typical of premium Indian metros. Communities like Jumeirah Village Circle, Al Furjan and Dubai South sit at the higher end of that range, while established districts like Downtown and the Marina trade yield for stronger long-term capital preservation. This is why a large share of our NRI clients structure a two-market portfolio: an Indian asset for family use and long-horizon appreciation, and a Dubai asset for income.
The buying process is simpler than most first-time buyers expect. Dubai operates a freehold system for foreign buyers in designated zones, meaning you own the title outright — not a leasehold, not a company structure. A typical off-plan purchase involves a booking amount, a Sale and Purchase Agreement, staged payments linked to construction milestones, and final registration with the Dubai Land Department. Most of it can be completed remotely from India with a Power of Attorney; several of our clients have bought without ever visiting before handover.
Financing and remittance work within India's LRS framework, which allows resident Indians to remit up to USD 250,000 per financial year per person. A family of four can therefore legally remit up to USD 1 million annually — enough for a substantial Dubai purchase when structured across a payment plan. NRIs earning abroad face no such ceiling on their foreign earnings. Developers' 1% monthly payment plans (pioneered by Danube) and post-handover plans (common with Emaar and Damac) make cash-flow planning far easier than a traditional mortgage-heavy purchase.
Then there is the residency angle: property investment of AED 2 million or more qualifies for the UAE's 10-year Golden Visa, covering spouse and children, with no minimum stay requirement. For families with children studying abroad or business interests in the GCC, this alone often justifies the purchase. Combined with Dubai's record AED 917 billion in 2025 real estate transactions and a regulator (RERA Dubai + DLD) that enforces escrow protection on every off-plan dirham, the market's fundamentals are among the most NRI-friendly in the world.
Our Dubai desk works your time zone — whether you're calling from Mumbai, London, Singapore or New York. We compare developers on delivery history, payment plan quality and resale liquidity, not commission. Book a consultation and get a shortlist built around your budget, not a sales target.
Yes. Indian residents can buy Dubai property using LRS remittances (up to USD 250,000 per person per financial year), and NRIs can buy freely using foreign earnings. Freehold zones give full ownership title to foreign buyers.
Entry-level studios in communities like Dubai South and Al Furjan start around AED 600–750K (roughly ₹1.4–1.75 Cr). Golden Visa eligibility begins at AED 2M.
Off-plan payments in Dubai are legally protected through DLD-regulated escrow accounts — developers can only draw funds against certified construction progress. This is one of the strictest escrow regimes globally.
Yes — rental income can be remitted to India. It is taxable in India per your residency status, with credit available under the India-UAE DTAA. We recommend confirming specifics with a cross-border tax advisor.
WhatsApp, call, or drop an enquiry. Our multi-timezone desk replies within hours, not days.