Dubai now offers two very different pathways into property ownership — and each attracts a different type of buyer. One is built for residents trying to own a home with the lowest possible upfront burden. The other appeals to investors aiming for long-term residency through the property-linked Golden Visa. A close look at the numbers shows how the cost structures, entry requirements and financial outcomes differ between the First-Time Home Buyer (FTHB) Programme and buying a property worth Dh2 million to secure a 10-year Golden Visa.
FTHB Programme
The First-Time Home Buyer Programme, launched by the Dubai Land Department (DLD), supports UAE residents aged 18 and above who have never owned a freehold property in Dubai. It applies to homes priced up to Dh5 million and is designed for genuine end-users, not short-term investors.
sing an illustrative home priced at Dh1.5 million, the buyer’s key costs include:
Total estimated closing costs before any discounts come to about Dh100,000.
A mandatory one-year holding period ensures the programme benefits real occupants rather than flippers.
For many residents, the advantages are immediate:
For a Dh2 million property, key costs include:
Golden Visa applicants must also pay visa-related charges:
Total upfront outlay for a single applicant reaches about Dh2.136 million, including the property price and all fees.
While this threshold is significantly higher than the FTHB route, the Golden Visa provides long-term residency stability, no minimum stay requirement, and the ability to extend benefits to family members — all tied to a real estate asset that may appreciate over time.
Who benefits most from each option?
FTHB Programme buyers typically aim for affordability and long-term residence. Lower fees, instalment-friendly DLD payments, and reduced down payments significantly ease entry.
Golden Visa property investors, by contrast, are focused on residency, mobility, and asset diversification. The Dh2 million investment remains a government-encouraged route for securing a decade-long renewable residency, supporting Dubai’s push to attract global talent and foreign capital.
Both pathways reinforce Dubai’s real estate landscape in different ways: one boosts end-user ownership and stability; the other strengthens long-term investment and economic contribution.
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