All 7 UAE emirates: 0% personal income tax. Federal corporate tax 9% above AED 375K profits. Gratuity rules are federal (Labour Law). Variation is in property transfer (Dubai 4% buyer + 4% seller; Abu Dhabi 2%), utility tariffs (DEWA vs ADDC vs SEWA), and visa/business setup costs.
What is federal (same in every emirate)
Personal income tax: 0% on wages, savings, pensions.
Corporate tax: 9% on profits above AED 375,000 (June 2023+).
VAT: 5% federal (since 2018).
End-of-service gratuity: 21 days basic salary per year for first 5 years, 30 days after - Federal Labour Law 1980/2021.
Wages Protection System (WPS) mandatory for all UAE employers.
What varies by emirate
Dubai - 4% transfer fee + 4% seller. DEWA rates (highest among emirates). Premium property prices. Most expat-friendly.
Abu Dhabi - 2% transfer fee. ADDC utility tariffs. Capital city. More government roles.
Sharjah - 2% transfer fee. SEWA utilities. Family-friendly, affordable. No alcohol license.
Ajman - Affordable property. Free zones (Ajman Free Zone) competitive.
End-of-service gratuity is calculated on last basic salary (not total compensation): 21 days of basic per year for first 5 years, then 30 days per year for each subsequent year. Capped at 2 years of total salary. Resign-vs-terminate affects payment in some cases. Dubai gratuity calculator and same for any emirate apply identical math.
Property buying costs by emirate
Dubai: 4% transfer (split equally between buyer and seller in practice, though buyer often pays both = 8%), 2% real estate agency fee, AED 4,000 admin. Abu Dhabi: 2% transfer fee, lower mortgage registration. Sharjah: 2% transfer fee, more affordable property. On AED 1.5M purchase, Dubai total ~AED 150K, Abu Dhabi ~AED 75K, Sharjah ~AED 60K closing costs.
No. Personal income tax is 0% in all 7 UAE emirates - this is federal policy and uniform. The only differences are in property fees, utility tariffs (DEWA vs ADDC vs SEWA), and visa/business setup costs.
Does Abu Dhabi or Dubai have lower property transfer fees?
Abu Dhabi at 2% transfer fee is lower than Dubai's 4%. On AED 1.5M, that's AED 30,000 vs AED 60,000 difference. However Dubai's rental yields are typically higher (~7%) vs Abu Dhabi (~5%).
Is UAE gratuity calculated differently in different emirates?
No. UAE Labour Law (Federal Decree-Law 33 of 2021) sets the gratuity rule federally: 21 days/year basic salary for first 5 years, 30 days after, capped at 2 years total. Applies in every emirate identically.
Will UAE introduce personal income tax in 2026?
No formal plan as of Budget 2026. Federal corporate tax (9%) was introduced June 2023 - personal tax has been politically denied repeatedly. UAE remains one of the few major economies with 0% personal income tax.
Key takeaways
Total housing cost should be at most 28% of gross income (or 25% of NET income) for sustainability.
15-year vs 30-year: 15-year saves 60-70% in total interest but commits to a 30-50% higher monthly payment.
Refinance when the new rate is at least 0.5-0.75pp lower AND you'll stay 24-48+ months to recoup closing costs.
Avoid stretching to lender maximum - keep 3-6 months of housing reserves separate from down payment.
Property tax + insurance can add 20-40% to the monthly P&I payment in high-tax US states.
Mortgage interest deductibility varies sharply by country - check before assuming a tax benefit.
By audience: what to focus on
Different reader types need different angles on this topic. Pick the one closest to your situation.
Salaried employees
Maximise tax-advantaged retirement contributions (EPF/401(k)/SIPP/RRSP). Check whether your country prefers the old vs new regime, employer-match thresholds, and salary-sacrifice options. Use the calculators below with your CTC / gross income.
Freelancers / self-employed
You bear higher self-employment tax + lose the employer match, but get access to higher contribution limits (Solo 401k, SEP-IRA, NPS Tier-I). Track business expenses meticulously. Quarterly estimated tax payments avoid underpayment penalty.
NRIs / expats
Tax residency rules (183-day, tie-breaker), double-taxation treaties, foreign tax credits all come into play. NRI restrictions on PPF (no new accounts) but expanded options on NPS. Cross-border income often needs specialist advice.
Retirees / pre-retirees
Sequence-of-returns risk in early retirement is the largest threat. Glide-path asset allocation, Roth-conversion analysis in low-income years, Required Minimum Distribution planning, and Medicare/healthcare gap funding (US) are the big items.
Quick reference: 12 specific scenarios
Scan the question list, expand only the rows that match your situation.
What's the difference between a fixed and variable rate mortgage?
Fixed-rate loans lock the interest rate for the full term (15, 25, 30 years in most markets). Variable rates (tracker, ARM, floating) move with a benchmark like SOFR, Bank Rate, or the bank's MCLR/EBLR. Fixed is right when you want predictability or expect rates to rise; variable is right when you expect rates to fall or stay flat.
How much house can I afford on my salary?
The conservative rule: total housing cost (PITI + HOA) should be at most 28% of gross monthly income. Total debt service (housing + auto + student + minimum credit card) at most 36-43% of gross. On $100,000 gross income, that's roughly $2,300/month housing - supporting a $350,000-400,000 mortgage at current rates.
Should I take a 15-year or 30-year mortgage?
A 15-year mortgage typically has a 0.5-0.75 percentage point lower rate but a 30-50% higher monthly payment than 30-year. Total interest paid over the life of the loan is about one-third as much. The 15-year is mathematically optimal IF you can comfortably afford the higher payment without crowding out retirement savings or emergency fund.
What is PMI / mortgage insurance and how do I avoid it?
Lenders charge mortgage insurance when your down payment is less than 20% of the purchase price. Cost: 0.5-1.5% of loan balance per year ($80-300/month on a $300k loan). Cancels automatically at 78% loan-to-value. To avoid: put 20% down, use a piggyback 80-10-10 loan, or use VA loans (if eligible).
What does PITI mean and what's included?
PITI = Principal + Interest + Taxes + Insurance. The four core components of a US-style mortgage monthly payment. Principal and interest come from the amortisation schedule. Property taxes and homeowners insurance are usually escrowed monthly into the lender's account.
How is mortgage interest amortised?
In the early years of a mortgage, almost all of the monthly payment goes to interest; almost none to principal. The split shifts gradually over the loan term so that by year 20-22 of a 30-year mortgage, most of each payment is principal. This means extra payments early in the loan have a much bigger impact than extra payments late.
Can I deduct mortgage interest on my taxes?
US: itemised deduction available on the first $750,000 of mortgage principal (post-TCJA limit). Only valuable if your total itemised deductions exceed the standard deduction. UK: no mortgage interest relief on owner-occupied homes. India: Section 24(b) allows Rs 2 lakh deduction on self-occupied home loan interest under the old regime.
Refinance when the new rate is at least 0.5-0.75 percentage points below your current rate AND you'll stay in the home long enough to recoup closing costs (typically 24-48 months). Cash-out refinances let you pull equity out as cash but reset the amortisation clock.
How is my credit score affected by taking a mortgage?
Initially the hard inquiry drops your score 5-10 points. Once the mortgage shows on your credit report, on-time payments improve your score over 6-12 months. The age of credit, mix of credit, and lower revolving utilisation (because the mortgage is installment debt, not revolving) all help.
What is an offset mortgage?
Common in the UK and Australia. An offset mortgage links your savings account to your mortgage so the savings balance reduces the interest charged on the mortgage. You don't earn interest on the savings, but you save mortgage interest at the (usually higher) mortgage rate. Tax-efficient because the savings benefit is not taxable as interest income.
How does mortgage rate work in India (MCLR, EBLR)?
Most floating-rate home loans in India are now linked to EBLR (External Benchmark Lending Rate) tied to the RBI repo rate. Loans before October 2019 are typically MCLR-based. EBLR-linked loans reprice within 1-3 months of an RBI repo rate change.
What happens if I can't pay my mortgage?
First step: contact the lender. Most offer forbearance, payment deferral, or loan modification in genuine hardship cases. Missing payments trigger late fees (within 15 days), credit score damage (after 30 days), default notice (after 60-90 days), and foreclosure proceedings (after 120+ days).
Related topics readers also search for
Common adjacent queries on this topic. Each calculator and explainer linked below covers one or more of these specifically.
home loan EMI calculatormortgage affordability rule of thumb15 year vs 30 year mortgage comparisonrefinance breakeven calculationPMI cancellation rulesPITI breakdown explainedmortgage prepayment savings calculatorHELOC vs home equity loanARM vs fixed rateFHA loan requirementsloan to value ratio mortgage
More calculators you may need
Plug your own numbers into the relevant calculator for a personalised version of the math discussed above.
Numbers on this page are sourced from official government / regulator websites and refreshed automatically every Sunday by our build pipeline. Hover any number with a dotted underline to see its source and as-of date.
Methodology: each calculator linked from this post documents its formula. Live market data (FX, treasury yields, mortgage rates) is pulled from public APIs (exchangerate.host, FRED, BoE, ECB, BoC, CoinGecko, stooq).