How to Get Clients as a Real Estate Agent in Dubai (2026 Guide)

20 March 2026
How to Get Clients as a Real Estate Agent in Dubai (2026 Guide)

How to Get Clients as a Real Estate Agent in Dubai (2026 Guide)

Getting licensed is only the first step. The real challenge in Dubai real estate is getting consistent clients. Many new agents struggle not because of the market, but because they do not have a clear strategy to generate leads and convert them into deals.

Why Most New Agents Struggle to Get Clients

  • No clear lead generation strategy
  • Relying only on their brokerage
  • Lack of market knowledge when speaking to clients
  • Expecting quick results after getting licensed

If you are still new to the process, you should first understand how to become a real estate agent in Dubai before focusing only on client acquisition.

How Real Estate Agents Actually Get Clients in Dubai

There is no single method. Successful agents usually combine multiple strategies:

  • Online listings on property platforms
  • Social media positioning and personal branding
  • Referrals from existing clients
  • Networking within communities and events
  • Cold outreach and follow-ups

The difference between agents who succeed and those who struggle is consistency and execution, not just knowledge of these methods.

Strategy 1: Build Your Personal Positioning

Clients do not choose agents randomly. They choose agents they trust. This means your online presence, communication style, and ability to explain the market clearly will directly impact your ability to generate leads.

Many new agents fail here because they focus only on posting listings without building credibility.

Strategy 2: Understand the Market Before Selling

Clients expect you to provide insights, not just listings. If you cannot explain pricing, location differences, or investment potential, it becomes difficult to build trust.

This is why many new agents struggle to close deals. Lack of knowledge is often the main issue. You can also refer to common mistakes new agents make to understand where most people go wrong.

Strategy 3: Follow Up Consistently

Most deals are not closed from the first interaction. Clients take time to decide, compare options, and evaluate opportunities. Agents who follow up consistently are far more likely to convert leads into actual transactions.

Strategy 4: Choose the Right Brokerage

Your brokerage plays a big role in how you get clients. Some brokerages provide leads, while others expect agents to generate their own. Commission structure and support also vary significantly.

If you are still deciding your entry strategy, read how to choose the right training institute to understand how your foundation affects your career.

Strategy 5: Understand the Numbers

Client acquisition is closely linked to income potential. If you do not understand how commissions work, you may struggle to set realistic expectations.

You can read how much real estate agents earn in Dubai to understand how deals translate into income.

What Most People Get Wrong About Getting Clients

  • Expecting leads immediately after getting licensed
  • Thinking posting listings is enough
  • Not investing time in learning the market
  • Giving up too early

In reality, client acquisition is a process that improves with experience, consistency, and proper guidance.

Why Proper Training Still Matters

Many people think training is only for passing the exam. In reality, training helps you understand compliance, communication, and how to handle real scenarios.

At DX Broker, the focus is not just certification but preparing you for the actual market. You can explore the full course here: RERA Certified Training Course.

If You Are Still Unsure Where to Start

If you are unsure how to get your first clients, how to position yourself, or how to enter the market correctly, you can contact DX Broker for a free consultation.

Final Thoughts

Getting clients in Dubai real estate is not about luck. It is about positioning, knowledge, consistency, and execution. The agents who succeed are the ones who understand this early and build the right foundation.

You can explore more insights in our latest real estate guides.

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How Long Does It Take to Get a Real Estate License in Dubai?
How Long Does It Take to Get a Real Estate License in Dubai?
23 May 2026
If you already have a UAE residency visa and Emirates ID, you can go from zero to holding a broker card in as little as 2 to 3 days. If you still need a visa, add a few weeks for processing. This guide breaks down the timeline stage by stage so you know exactly what to expect and where the delays usually happen.
The Fast Track: 2 to 3 Days
This is the fastest realistic timeline, and it applies if you already have your visa and Emirates ID sorted. Here is how the days break down:
Day 1 and 2: Complete the training. The RERA broker training course is a 2-day program running from 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM each day. It covers the full official curriculum including legal frameworks, transaction processes, government platforms, and RERA exam preparation.
Day 2: Take the RERA exam. You can schedule the exam immediately after completing training. The exam is 1 hour long, multiple-choice, and requires 70% to pass. Results are usually available the same day. For tips on how to prepare, read our RERA exam preparation guide.
Day 3 : Apply for your broker card. After passing the exam, you submit your application through the DLD's Trakheesi system. Processing typically takes 1 business days. Once approved, your broker card (BRN) is active and you can legally start working.
That is the full process: training, exam, card. Two to three days from start to finish when there are no visa delays.
The Realistic Timeline: 2 to 3 Weeks
Most people who contact us are not yet UAE residents. They are either planning to move to Dubai, are on a visit visa exploring the opportunity, or are switching careers from another industry. In these cases, the timeline is longer because of the visa process.
Here is what a realistic timeline looks like:
Week 1: Complete the training. You do not need a visa or Emirates ID to attend the training. You can do this on a tourist visa. At DX Broker Training, courses run in English, Arabic, and Chinese, with sessions available throughout the month.
Week 1 to 2: Find a brokerage and process your visa. After training, you interview with real estate companies. Once you accept a position, the brokerage sponsors your residency visa. Visa processing typically takes 1 week, depending on the company and your documentation. This is usually the longest part of the entire process.
Week 2 to 3: Receive your Emirates ID. After visa stamping, your Emirates ID is processed. You need this to register for the RERA exam.
Week 3: Take the RERA exam. Once you have your Emirates ID, schedule and take the exam. If some time has passed since your training, remember that DX Broker Training gives every student 1 year of free revision classes. You can rejoin any upcoming session to refresh your knowledge before the test.
Week 3: Receive your broker card. After passing, apply through Trakheesi. Card processing takes 1 to 2 business days. You are now licensed.
What Causes Delays?
In our experience training thousands of students, the delays almost never come from the training or the exam. They come from everything around it. Here are the most common bottlenecks:
Visa processing
This is the number one delay. If your brokerage is slow with paperwork, or if there are issues with your documentation (missing attestation, expired passport, medical test delays), the visa can take longer than expected. Some tips to speed this up:

Have your passport with at least 6 months validity
Get your educational certificates attested in advance (even though education is not required for the license, some companies request it for the visa)
Complete your medical fitness test as soon as possible after arriving
Ask the brokerage for a clear timeline and follow up regularly

Good Conduct Certificate
You need this when applying for your broker card. It takes a few days to process through Dubai Police. Apply for it early, ideally while your visa is being processed, so it is ready when you need it. Do not wait until after passing the exam to start this step.
Choosing a brokerage
Some people finish training and then spend weeks evaluating different companies. While it is important to choose the right brokerage, do not let indecision extend your timeline unnecessarily. If you are unsure what to look for, read our article on how to choose the right training and brokerage path.
Exam scheduling gaps
In peak periods, exam slots can fill up. Register for the exam as soon as you have your Emirates ID. Do not wait until you "feel ready." If you completed proper training, you are ready. And if you want extra preparation, use the free revision classes before your exam date.
Can I Speed Up the Process?
Yes. Here is the fastest approach we recommend:

Step 1: Complete the training now, even before you have a visa. This removes the biggest educational requirement from your timeline and gives you knowledge to ace brokerage interviews.
Step 2: Interview with brokerages during or immediately after training. Some students secure a job offer before even finishing the course.
Step 3: Apply for your Good Conduct Certificate as early as possible. Do not wait.
Step 4: Register for the exam the moment you receive your Emirates ID.
Step 5: Submit your broker card application the same day you pass the exam.

By running steps in parallel instead of doing them one after another, you can cut weeks off the total timeline.
Timeline Comparison: Dubai vs Other Markets
For context, here is how Dubai compares to other major real estate markets:

Dubai: 2 to 3 days (with visa) or 2 to 3 weeks (including visa processing)
United Kingdom: No mandatory license for estate agents, but voluntary qualifications take 3 to 12 months
United States: Varies by state. Typically 2 to 6 months including pre-licensing courses (60 to 180 hours), exam, and background checks
Australia: 3 to 6 months depending on the state's Certificate of Registration requirements

Dubai's process is one of the fastest in the world for getting professionally licensed and earning commissions. The 2-day training plus same-week exam model means you can go from decision to licensed agent faster than almost anywhere else. This is one of the reasons Dubai attracts real estate professionals from around the world. For more on this, read our guide on how foreigners become real estate agents in Dubai.
What About License Renewal? How Long Does That Take?
Your broker card is valid for one year. Renewal requires completing a continuing professional development course and passing the renewal exam. The renewal course at DX Broker Training covers updated market trends and policy changes. The renewal process itself takes a few hours (course plus exam), and the card reissuance is processed within the same day.
Do not let your card expire. Brokerages face fines of up to AED 50,000 for allowing agents to work on expired cards.
Ready to Start the Clock?
The fastest path starts with training. You do not need a visa, Emirates ID, or job offer to begin. Complete the course, build your knowledge, and let the rest of the process run in parallel.
Check upcoming session dates on our courses page, or message us on WhatsApp at +971 58 855 9703 to ask any questions before enrolling.
For the full process explained step by step, read our complete broker license guide. For costs, check the RERA course price breakdown.
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Can Foreigners Work as Real Estate Agents in Dubai?
Can Foreigners Work as Real Estate Agents in Dubai?
22 May 2026
Yes. In fact, the majority of licensed real estate agents in Dubai are foreigners. Dubai's property market was built by expats, and the government actively welcomes international professionals into the industry. There is no nationality restriction on who can become a licensed broker.
That said, there are specific steps and requirements you need to follow. This guide covers exactly what expats need to know before entering the market, including the real requirements, the common myths, and what actually matters when starting out.
Dubai's Real Estate Market Runs on Expats
Here is the reality most people do not realise until they arrive: Dubai's population is roughly 85% expatriate. The buyers are international. The sellers are international. The landlords, the tenants, and the agents are overwhelmingly international. Of the approximately 39,776 active licensed brokers in Dubai, the vast majority are from countries like India, Pakistan, the Philippines, the UK, Russia, China, and across the Middle East and Africa.
This diversity is actually one of your biggest advantages as a foreign agent. Clients in Dubai often prefer working with someone who speaks their language, understands their culture, and knows what matters to buyers from their home country. A Russian buyer looking at properties in JBR wants an agent who understands their expectations. A Chinese investor evaluating off-plan projects wants someone who can explain the process in Mandarin. If you bring a specific language or cultural background, you already have a niche that most competitors cannot fill.
What Do Foreigners Need to Become Real Estate Agents in Dubai?
The requirements are the same for everyone, whether you are Emirati or from another country. There is no separate process or additional barrier for foreign nationals.

Age: You must be at least 21 years old
Training: Complete a real estate broker training course at an approved institute
Exam: Pass the RERA licensing exam administered by the Dubai Land Department (DLD)
Visa: Hold a valid UAE residency visa and Emirates ID (required for the exam and license, not for the training itself)
Clean record: Obtain a Good Conduct Certificate from Dubai Police
Employment: Be registered under a licensed real estate brokerage company

That is the full list. No university degree required. No minimum years of experience. No nationality restrictions. No Arabic language requirement. The process is identical regardless of where you are from.
The Visa Question: How Expats Actually Get Started
The most common question we hear from foreign nationals is about the visa. Here is how it actually works in practice.
You do NOT need a visa to attend the training. You can come to Dubai on a tourist visa, complete the 2-day course, and go back to your home country if needed. The training itself has no visa requirement.
You DO need a UAE residency visa and Emirates ID to take the RERA exam and to get your broker card. In most cases, this is handled through your employer. Here is the typical path:
Path 1: Get hired first, then train. Some people find a brokerage company willing to hire them, the company sponsors their visa, and then they attend the training and take the exam. This works if you already have connections or experience in real estate from another country.
Path 2: Train first, then find a job. This is the path we recommend. Complete the training so you actually understand the Dubai market, RERA regulations, and how transactions work. Then go into interviews with real knowledge. Brokerages are far more likely to sponsor your visa when you can demonstrate you are already trained and ready to work. We covered this in detail in our guide on how to get a real estate broker license in Dubai.
Path 3: Already a UAE resident. If you already live in Dubai with a residency visa (through a spouse, another job, or a freelance visa), you can pursue your broker license directly. You will need a No Objection Certificate (NOC) from your current sponsor if your visa is not under the brokerage.
If you need help with the visa process, contact us and we can guide you through your options.
What Qualifications Do You Actually Need?
This is where a lot of outdated information causes confusion. Many websites and older guides still list a high school diploma or university degree as a requirement for the broker license. That is no longer the case.
Your education level may affect the job title options available on your Emirates ID, but it does not prevent you from getting your broker card and practicing real estate. We have trained thousands of students from all educational backgrounds, and the licensing process is the same for everyone.
The only qualification that matters is passing the RERA exam. And to pass the exam, you need proper training. That is the one step you cannot skip. For a full breakdown of what the training covers and how to prepare, read our complete RERA course guide.
How Long Does It Take for a Foreigner to Get Licensed?
The timeline depends on your visa situation:
If you already have a UAE visa and Emirates ID: The entire process from training to holding your broker card can take as little as 3 to 5 days. Training is 2 days, the exam can be taken immediately after, and the broker card processing takes 1 to 3 business days.
If you need a new visa: Add the visa processing time, which varies depending on the type of visa and the brokerage handling it. This can range from 2 to 6 weeks. The training and exam are still fast once the visa is sorted.
The smart approach is to complete the training as soon as possible, even before your visa is ready. That way, the moment your Emirates ID arrives, you can schedule the exam and get your card quickly. Our students get 1 year of free revision classes, so even if there is a gap between training and your exam date, you can refresh your knowledge at no extra cost.
Languages and the Dubai Market
You do not need to speak Arabic to become a real estate agent in Dubai. English is the primary business language in Dubai's property market. Most contracts, negotiations, and platform interfaces are in English.
However, speaking additional languages is a significant competitive advantage. Dubai's buyer pool is extremely diverse:

Russian-speaking buyers are heavily active in areas like JBR, Dubai Marina, and Business Bay
Chinese investors focus on off-plan projects and commercial opportunities
Indian and Pakistani buyers dominate the mid-market segment
European buyers tend toward premium and lifestyle properties
Arabic-speaking clients from the GCC and Levant often prefer dealing in their native language

If you speak any of these languages, you already have a built-in client base that most agents cannot reach. DX Broker Training offers courses in English, Arabic, and Chinese (Mandarin) to serve this diverse market. See our training schedule for available language options.
Common Myths Foreigners Believe About Dubai Real Estate
"You need connections to succeed." Not true. Dubai is one of the most meritocratic real estate markets in the world. People buy and sell based on value, not relationships. A new agent who knows the market and provides excellent service will outperform a connected agent who does not.
"The market is saturated." There are nearly 40,000 licensed brokers, yes. But Dubai recorded over AED 528 billion in property transactions in 2024. The market is large enough to support agents who are competent and active. The agents who fail are usually the ones who entered without proper training or chose the wrong brokerage.
"You need to invest your own money." You do not need capital to start. Your brokerage provides the office, the systems, the marketing platforms, and often the leads. Your investment is the training fee (AED 2,400) and the exam fee (AED 784.67). That is it.
"Foreigners cannot own a brokerage." Wrong. As of recent reforms, foreign nationals can own 100% of a real estate brokerage company in Dubai. If your goal is to eventually run your own firm, the broker license is your first step, and we can help guide you through the ORN setup.
How Much Does It Cost for a Foreigner to Get Started?
The licensing costs are identical for everyone:

Broker training: AED 2,400
RERA exam fee: AED 784.67
Broker card issuance: approximately AED 500
Good Conduct Certificate: approximately AED 220

Total: around AED 3,900. For a full cost breakdown with details on what each fee covers, read our RERA course price guide.
Visa costs are separate and vary depending on your sponsor. If a brokerage hires you, they typically cover visa sponsorship as part of the employment package.
What About Earning Potential?
This is usually the reason people consider Dubai in the first place. Real estate agents in Dubai work on commission, and the numbers can be significant:

Standard commission on sales: 2% of the property value
Off-plan and commercial deals: 3% to 7% depending on the developer
Rental commission: 5% (typically one month's rent for annual contracts)
Agent's share: 50% to 70% of the commission, with the rest going to the brokerage

A single sale of a AED 2 million apartment at 2% commission means AED 40,000 gross. At a 60% split with your brokerage, that is AED 24,000 in your pocket from one transaction. Top agents close multiple deals per month.
There is no salary cap, no fixed income ceiling, and no limit on how many transactions you can handle. Your earnings are directly proportional to your effort, knowledge, and ability to serve clients well.
How to Get Started as a Foreign National
If you have read this far, the next step is simple:
Step 1: Enroll in the RERA broker training course. You do not need a visa for this. Available in English, Arabic, and Chinese.
Step 2: Complete the 2-day training and prepare for the exam. Use the 1 year of free revision classes if you need more time before taking the test.
Step 3: Take the RERA exam (1 hour, multiple-choice, 70% to pass). One free retake included.
Step 4: Secure a position with a licensed brokerage. Your training certificate and market knowledge will set you apart in interviews.
Step 5: Get your broker card and start earning. We support you through the entire process, from BRN registration to your first year of working, with free consultation on any real estate matter.
For a detailed walkthrough, read our guide on becoming a real estate broker in Dubai or contact us on WhatsApp at +971 58 855 9703.
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How to Pass the RERA Exam in Dubai
How to Pass the RERA Exam in Dubai
21 May 2026
The RERA exam is the one thing standing between you and your broker card. Pass it, and you can legally work as a real estate agent in Dubai. Fail it, and you pay the exam fee again and wait to retake. After training thousands of students at DX Broker Training, we know exactly what separates the people who pass on their first attempt from those who do not. This guide covers the exam format, what topics to focus on, the mistakes that catch people off guard, and how to walk in prepared.
RERA Exam Format: What to Expect on Test Day
Before you can prepare properly, you need to know what you are preparing for. Here is the exam structure:

Duration: 1 hour
Format: Multiple-choice questions
Pass mark: 70% correct answers
Language: Available in English, Arabic & 30+ other languages
Results: Usually available the same day or within 24 hours
Retake: If you do not pass on the first attempt, you get one free retake

The exam is administered by the Dubai Land Department (DLD) and covers the full RERA-approved curriculum. It is not designed to trick you. Every question is based on material covered during the official training. If you have completed proper training and reviewed the key topics, you should not have trouble reaching 70%.
What Topics Does the RERA Exam Cover?
The exam draws from 9 core modules of the official training curriculum. Not all modules carry equal weight. Based on patterns we have observed from training thousands of students, here are the areas that tend to appear most heavily:
High-weight topics (focus your study time here)
Sales processes and agreements are consistently one of the heaviest areas. You need to understand the 4 sales transaction models (cash buyer with mortgage-free property, cash buyer with mortgaged property, mortgage buyer with mortgage-free property, mortgage buyer with mortgaged property), listing agreements, the property transfer process, and how escrow accounts work. If you can walk through a transaction from start to finish, you are in good shape.
Legal framework and compliance comes up frequently. Questions on the Land Register, trust accounts, broker regulations, landlord and tenant law, Powers of Attorney, and AML/CTF rules appear regularly. Do not skip this module thinking it is just theory. It is tested heavily.
Leasing and rental procedures are another consistent area. Know the elements of a lease agreement, how Ejari registration works, the difference between short-term and long-term leases, and how the Rental Dispute Center (RDC) handles conflicts.
Code of ethics questions test whether you understand the rules brokers must follow. What gets you fined. What gets your card revoked. What the penalties are for non-compliance. These are straightforward if you paid attention during training, but they catch people who did not take ethics seriously.
Medium-weight topics
Market players and regulators covers the roles of DLD, RERA, and the RDC. Understand what each organisation does and how they interact. Know the different property ownership types (freehold, leasehold, usufruct) and the key systems RERA maintains.
Jointly owned property questions focus on the Mollak system, service charges, owners associations, and the laws governing shared property in Dubai. Most properties in Dubai fall under this category, so it shows up on the exam.
The business of being a broker includes questions about the Trakheesi system, broker card categories, brokerage ranking systems, and the process for setting up a brokerage (ORN).
Lower-weight but still tested
Dubai real estate fundamentals covers the history and development of the market. These tend to be the easier questions. Basic knowledge about key developments and why Dubai attracts investors.
Practical skills like CMA (Comparative Market Analysis), lead generation, and financial concepts may appear but usually carry less weight than the legal and transactional modules.
7 Tips to Pass the RERA Exam on Your First Try
1. Do not skip the training
This sounds obvious but some people still try to self-study using YouTube, outdated PDFs, or AI tools like ChatGPT. The problem is that Dubai's regulations change regularly, and the exam is based on the current official curriculum, not what was accurate two years ago. AI tools are trained on older data and may give you answers that were correct in 2023 but are wrong today. The training is specifically designed around what the exam actually tests. We covered this in detail in our guide on getting your broker license.
2. Focus on the transaction models
The 4 sales models (cash/mortgage buyer with mortgage-free/mortgaged property) are the backbone of the exam. If you understand how each one works step by step, you can answer a large chunk of the questions confidently. Draw them out on paper until you can explain each flow without looking at your notes.
3. Know the numbers
Specific numbers come up in questions: penalty amounts for non-compliance (up to AED 50,000), commission percentages, the RERA exam fee (AED 784.67), broker card costs, and key thresholds in the law. Do not memorise every number, but know the important ones. If a number was emphasised during training, it will likely appear on the exam.
4. Understand the platforms, not just the names
Questions about Dubai REST and Dubai Broker are not just "what is Dubai REST?" They test whether you understand what you actually do on these platforms. What steps happen on Dubai REST during a property transfer? What functions does the Dubai Broker platform serve? If your training included hands-on platform demos, this will be straightforward.
5. Read every question carefully
Many exam mistakes come from rushing. With 1 hour on the clock, you have enough time to read each question twice. Watch out for words like "except," "not," and "all of the above." These small words completely change the answer, and under pressure, it is easy to miss them.
6. Answer everything, even if you are unsure
There is no penalty for wrong answers. If you are stuck on a question, eliminate the options you know are wrong and make your best guess from what remains. A 50/50 guess is better than leaving it blank. Flag uncertain questions and come back to them if you have time at the end.
7. Use revision classes if you need more time
If there is a gap between your training and your exam date, your knowledge will fade. That is normal. At DX Broker Training, every student gets 1 year of free revision classes. You can sit in on any upcoming session to refresh your memory before the exam. There is no reason to go into the test feeling underprepared when you have access to free refresher sessions.
Common Mistakes That Cause People to Fail
Relying on memory alone without reviewing. The training covers a lot in 2 days. If you take the exam a week or more later without reviewing your notes, you will have forgotten details that seemed clear during the course. Spend at least a few hours the night before going through the key topics.
Ignoring the legal module. Some people focus heavily on the practical and transactional content and treat the legal module as boring theory they can skim. Legal questions make up a significant portion of the exam. Skipping this section is one of the most common reasons people fail.
Overthinking questions. The RERA exam tests knowledge, not trick questions. If a question seems straightforward, it probably is. Do not second-guess yourself into changing correct answers.
Poor time management. One hour is enough time, but not if you spend 5 minutes on one difficult question. Move through the exam at a steady pace. Answer the questions you are confident about first, then go back to the ones that need more thought.
Studying from unofficial sources. WhatsApp group notes, random forum posts, and social media tips are unreliable. The exam is based on the official RERA curriculum, and that curriculum is what gets covered in approved training. Unofficial materials may contain outdated or incorrect information that costs you marks.
What Happens If You Do Not Pass?
It is not the end of the world. At DX Broker Training, you get one free retake if you do not pass on the first attempt. After that, you can retake the exam by paying the exam fee again (AED 784.67).
More importantly, you can attend our revision classes before your retake. Come back, sit through the training again, focus on the areas where you were weak, and go into the second attempt with better preparation. Most students who fail on the first try pass on the retake after a focused review.
If you failed, ask yourself honestly: did I review the material before the exam? Did I understand the transaction models? Did I study the legal module? The answer is usually no to at least one of these, and fixing that one gap is usually enough to pass.
How to Register for the RERA Exam
When you enroll in the broker training course at DX Broker Training, the RERA exam registration (AED 784.67) is automatically included as an option during enrollment. You can choose to schedule the exam immediately after your training or at a later date that suits you.
You will need a valid Emirates ID to sit for the exam. If you do not have one yet, complete the training first and schedule the exam once your ID is ready. Your training certificate does not expire, and with 1 year of free revision classes, you can always refresh before your test date.
For the full licensing process from training to broker card, read our complete RERA course guide. And if you want to understand the total cost involved, check our RERA course price breakdown.
Questions? Reach us on WhatsApp at +971 58 855 9703.
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Real Estate Agent Salary in Dubai
Real Estate Agent Salary in Dubai
20 May 2026

This is the question everyone researches before committing to a real estate career in Dubai: how much will I actually make? The short answer is that there is no fixed salary. Most real estate agents in Dubai work on a commission-only model, which means your income is directly tied to the deals you close. That is both the opportunity and the risk.
This guide gives you an honest breakdown of what agents actually earn at different stages, how commission structures work, what affects your income, and why the numbers you see on job sites rarely tell the full story.
There Is No "Salary" for Most Real Estate Agents in Dubai
The first thing to understand is that the traditional concept of a monthly salary does not apply to most real estate roles in Dubai. Unlike office jobs where you get a fixed paycheck, real estate agents earn commissions on the transactions they close.
Most brokerages in Dubai operate on one of three compensation models:

Pure commission: No base salary. You earn only when you close deals. This is the most common structure for experienced agents and offers the highest earning potential.
Small retainer plus commission: A modest monthly payment of AED 1,000 to 5,000 during your first few months while you build your pipeline, plus commission on deals. This is common for new agents joining established firms.
Fixed salary plus commission: Less common in Dubai. Usually offered by larger corporate firms, but the commission percentages are significantly lower.

This is why salary data on sites like Glassdoor and Indeed can be misleading. They report averages that mix base-salary roles with commission-only roles, producing numbers that do not reflect what most agents actually take home.
What Do Real Estate Agents Actually Earn in Dubai?
Here is a realistic breakdown based on experience level and deal type:
New agents (first 6 to 12 months)
Your first year is the hardest. You are building your client base, learning the market, and figuring out how to convert leads into deals. Realistically, most new agents who are actively working and learning earn between AED 8,000 and AED 15,000 per month in their first year. Some earn less while they build momentum. Some close a lucky deal early and earn more.
The agents who struggle in year one are usually the ones who came in without proper training, chose a brokerage that does not support new agents, or expected deals to fall into their lap without effort. The agents who succeed are the ones who came in prepared, understood the market from day one, and put in consistent work. That is why we always recommend completing training before joining a brokerage.
Experienced agents (1 to 3 years)
Once you have a track record and a network of clients, your income increases significantly. Agents with 1 to 3 years of experience who are consistent and active typically earn between AED 20,000 and AED 50,000 per month. At this stage, you have repeat clients, referrals coming in, and a much better understanding of how to close deals efficiently.
Top performers and luxury specialists
The top tier of Dubai's real estate agents earn well into seven figures annually. Agents specialising in luxury properties, large commercial deals, or off-plan projects with strong developer relationships regularly earn AED 80,000 to AED 200,000 or more per month. Some of the highest-performing agents in Dubai earn over AED 1,000,000 per year.
And here is the part that makes Dubai unique: all of this is tax-free. There is no income tax in the UAE. What you earn is what you keep. An agent making AED 50,000 per month in Dubai takes home significantly more than someone earning the equivalent in London, New York, or Sydney after taxes.
How Commission Works in Dubai
Your income depends on the commission rates, the property values, and your split with the brokerage. Here is how it breaks down:
Commission rates by transaction type

Secondary market sales (resale): Typically 2% of the property value, paid by the seller
Off-plan sales: 3% to 7% depending on the developer, project, and exclusivity agreements. Off-plan typically offers the highest commission rates in the market
Commercial property: 2% to 5% depending on deal size and complexity
Rentals: 5% of the annual rent, which is usually equivalent to one month's rent for standard annual contracts

Your split with the brokerage
The commission does not all go to you. It is split between you and the brokerage company you work under. Typical splits in Dubai range from 50/50 to 70/30 in the agent's favour. Some brokerages offer even higher splits to experienced agents who bring their own leads.
For example: you sell a AED 3,000,000 apartment at 2% commission. The total commission is AED 60,000. At a 60/40 split, you take home AED 36,000 from a single transaction. Close two or three of these a month and your annual income is in the range of AED 800,000 to AED 1,300,000.
Rental commissions add up
Many new agents start with rentals because they close faster and require less capital from the client. A typical rental in Dubai might be AED 80,000 per year. At 5% commission, that is AED 4,000 per deal. It sounds smaller than a sales commission, but rental deals close much faster. An active leasing agent can close 5 to 10 rental deals per month, earning AED 20,000 to AED 40,000 monthly from rentals alone.
What Actually Affects How Much You Earn
The biggest factor is not your brokerage, your nationality, or your education. It is your knowledge, effort, and ability to serve clients well. Here are the variables that actually move the needle:
Your market knowledge
Clients can tell within minutes whether you know what you are talking about. An agent who understands pricing trends, transaction processes, and legal requirements closes more deals than one who is guessing. This is why proper training matters from day one. If you understand how the Dubai Land Department systems work, how to read a CMA, and how to handle the 4 transaction models, you will outperform agents who skipped training and learned through trial and error.
Your niche
Agents who specialise tend to earn more than generalists. Some focus on a specific area (Downtown, Marina, Palm Jumeirah). Others specialise in a property type (off-plan, commercial, luxury). Others carve a niche by language: an agent who speaks Mandarin, Russian, or French fluently has access to buyer pools that English-only agents cannot reach. DX Broker Training offers courses in English, Arabic, and Chinese specifically because multilingual agents have a competitive edge in this market.
Your brokerage
The company you work under matters more than most people realise. A good brokerage provides leads, CRM tools, marketing support, and mentorship. A bad brokerage takes a high commission split and gives you nothing but a desk. Choosing the right brokerage is one of the most important decisions you make as a new agent.
Your consistency
Real estate is not a job where you can work hard for a week and coast for a month. The agents who earn consistently are the ones who prospect consistently, follow up with leads consistently, and show properties consistently. There is no shortcut to this. The market rewards effort.
The Dubai Advantage: Tax-Free Earnings
This is worth emphasising because it changes the math completely. The UAE has no income tax. No national insurance. No capital gains tax on your earnings. Compare that to other major real estate markets:

An agent earning AED 500,000 in Dubai keeps AED 500,000
An agent earning the equivalent in London (roughly GBP 100,000) keeps about GBP 65,000 after income tax and national insurance
An agent earning the equivalent in New York (roughly USD 136,000) keeps about USD 90,000 after federal and state taxes

The take-home difference is massive. This is the primary reason agents from the UK, Europe, Australia, and North America relocate to Dubai. The same effort and skill level produces significantly more take-home income. If you are considering this move, read our guide on whether foreigners can work as real estate agents in Dubai.
How to Maximise Your Earnings From Day One
Get trained properly before you start. Every month you spend learning on the job is a month of missed commissions and avoidable mistakes. A 2-day RERA training course gives you the knowledge foundation that some agents take 6 months to build through trial and error. Do the math on what 6 months of lost earnings costs you versus AED 2,400 for training.
Start with rentals to build momentum. Rental deals close faster and teach you the mechanics of client management, viewings, and negotiations. Use them to build your confidence and cash flow while you develop your sales pipeline.
Choose a brokerage that invests in new agents. Look beyond the commission split. Ask about lead generation, marketing tools, CRM systems, and mentorship. A 50/50 split at a company that gives you 20 leads a month is worth more than a 70/30 split at a company that gives you nothing.
Use your post-training support. At DX Broker Training, every student gets 1 year of free consultation on any real estate matter. When you run into a complex deal, a client dispute, or a situation you have not encountered before, having experienced professionals to call makes a real difference. It can be the difference between losing a deal and closing it. Read more about this in our RERA course guide.
Is a Real Estate Career in Dubai Worth It?
The honest answer: yes, if you are willing to put in the work. Dubai is one of the few markets in the world where a real estate career offers genuinely uncapped, tax-free earning potential without requiring a university degree or years of experience to get started.
The investment to get licensed is minimal. Training costs AED 2,400, the exam fee is AED 784.67, and the broker card is approximately AED 500. Total: around AED 3,900. For a full cost breakdown, see our RERA course price guide.
The return on that investment, if you take the career seriously, can be life-changing. Whether you are starting fresh or switching from another industry, the path starts with getting your broker license. Visit our courses page or reach us on WhatsApp at +971 58 855 9703.
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How to Become a Real Estate Agent in Dubai in 2026: Real Cost, Process, and What Actually Matters
How to Become a Real Estate Agent in Dubai in 2026: Real Cost, Process, and What Actually Matters
26 March 2026


To become a real estate agent in Dubai, you must complete training with an official training institute approved by the Dubai Land Department (DLD), pass the RERA Broker exam, and obtain your broker card. The process is simple on paper, but success in this industry depends heavily on your knowledge and how well you understand the market.

The Reality Most People Don’t Tell You


Getting a license does not guarantee you a job.
Many new agents fail to close deals because they lack proper knowledge.
Without understanding compliance, agents risk serious penalties.
The exam is not the hardest part, performing in the market is.


According to Dubai Land Department, hundreds of brokers have been fined for non-compliance, with minimum penalties of AED 50,000 for issues such as incorrect advertising or documentation errors. This shows that lack of knowledge is one of the biggest risks in this industry.

Many people believe that once they pass the exam, closing deals will be easy. In reality, lack of knowledge is the number one reason why agents struggle to succeed.

Step 1: Complete RERA Training Properly

You are required to attend a certified training course before taking the exam. At DX Broker - Training and Services, the institute is officially certified by DLD, RERA and KHDA. They focus not only on passing the exam but also on preparing you for the real market.


Training fee: AED 2,400
2-day structured program
Practical case studies and real scenarios
1 year post-training consultation support


This includes guidance on contracts, compliance, client handling, and even support if you want to set up your own brokerage. You also have the option to return for revision classes and additional learning support.

Step 2: Take the RERA Exam

After completing training, your exam can be scheduled immediately or on any other day as per your convenience. The official exam fee is AED 784.67, including VAT.

Many people assume the exam is difficult or try to find shortcuts. The truth is, after proper training, the exam is manageable. However, passing the exam is not what makes you successful.

Dubai has a large number of licensed real estate agents, as reflected in the official DLD broker registry. This makes the market highly competitive.

Learning through mistakes in the market often costs far more than training. A single compliance mistake can lead to fines starting from AED 50,000, which is significantly higher than the cost of proper training.

Step 3: Apply for Your Broker Card

Once you pass the exam, you can apply for your broker license and start working under a registered brokerage.

You may still find outdated information online mentioning education certificate requirements. Always refer to the latest DLD guidelines, as older requirements no longer apply.

If You Are Unsure Where to Start

If you are confused about the process, unsure how to get licensed, or planning to set up your own brokerage, you can contact DX Broker for a free consultation to understand the correct steps before making any decision.

Final Thoughts

Becoming a real estate agent in Dubai is not just about passing an exam. It is about building the right foundation, avoiding costly mistakes, and understanding how the market actually works.

If you are serious about entering this industry, start with the right training here: RERA Certified Training Course.

You can explore more insights in our latest real estate guides.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take to become a real estate agent in Dubai?
You can complete the training in as fast as 2 days, and take the exam shortly after. However, becoming successful in the market depends on your knowledge and experience. You can refer to the full process in this step-by-step guide.

How much does it cost to become a real estate agent in Dubai?
The total cost includes training, exam, and licensing fees. The training fee is AED 2,400 and the official exam fee is AED 784.67. You can view the full breakdown in RERA course price guide.

Is RERA training mandatory in Dubai?
Yes, training is required before taking the RERA exam under Dubai Land Department (DLD). You can read more in this detailed explanation.

Can I pass the RERA exam without training?
While some may attempt shortcuts, lack of proper knowledge increases the risk of failure and compliance mistakes. Many agents face penalties due to incorrect practices, as shown in DLD enforcement updates.

What are the most common mistakes new agents make?
Common mistakes include lack of knowledge, misunderstanding compliance rules, and expecting quick results. You can read more in this guide on common mistakes.

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