According to Mercer’s latest Cost of Living City Ranking (June 2025), Dubai ranks 15th globally, making it the most expensive city in the Middle East. Despite rising housing costs, Dubai remains significantly more affordable than major global business hubs like Hong Kong, Singapore, and New York.
For many expats moving to the UAE, one of the biggest surprises isn’t the heat or the skyline, it’s the rent. In most Western countries, paying rent monthly is the norm. So when new arrivals ask whether they can pay rent monthly in Dubai, the answer often feels confusing at first.
Average Costs by Property Type (Annual averages across the city)
Studio: AED 40,000 – AED 60,000/year
1-Bedroom: AED 70,000 – AED 110,000/year
2-Bedroom: AED 115,000 – AED 170,000/year
3-Bedroom: AED 135,000 – AED 230,000/year
Understanding Dubai’s Traditional Rent Payment System
Dubai’s rental structure is rooted in long-standing local practices that differ significantly from monthly rental markets in Europe, North America, or Australia.
Why Monthly Rent Isn’t the Standard in Dubai?
Unlike many countries where rent is collected monthly via bank transfers, Dubai has historically relied on post-dated cheques.
This system exists because:
UAE rental laws and market norms developed around cheque-based payments
Post-dated cheques have been the default for decades
Landlords prefer fewer, larger payments for certainty and convenience
The banking and cheque-clearing infrastructure supports this approach
As a result, paying rent monthly in Dubai has never been the default, even though salaries are usually paid monthly.
Standard Rent Payment Schedules in Dubai
Most residential leases in Dubai fall into one of these common payment structures:
1 cheque – Full annual rent paid upfront
2 cheques – Bi-annual payments (every 6 months)
4 cheques – Quarterly payments (every 3 months)
12 cheques – Monthly cheques (rare and landlord-dependent)
While 12 cheques do technically represent monthly rent, they are uncommon and usually offered only at a landlord’s discretion.
Edited by Jason Lee






















