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Buying property in Dubai or the UAE is one of the biggest financial decisions you will make. And yet, most buyers spend more time choosing their apartment than they spend comparing mortgage banks , because the right lender can save you hundreds of thousands of dirhams over the life of your loan.
This guide does the comparison for you. We have reviewed the five most widely used mortgage banks in the UAE : Emirates NBD, Mashreq, Dubai Islamic Bank (DIB), First Abu Dhabi Bank (FAB), and RAK Bank. We assessed each on their 2026 rates, eligibility requirements, fees, and overall suitability for different buyer profiles.
Before comparing individual banks, it helps to understand the market conditions shaping their offers.
The table below summarises key rates and requirements across the five banks covered in this guide. All rates are indicative for salaried, salary-transfer borrowers on properties under AED 5 million. Actual rates depend on your income, nationality, LTV, and credit profile.
| Bank | Type | Fixed Rate | Variable | Min. Salary | Max LTV | Processing |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Emirates NBD | Conventional + Islamic | From 3.89% | EIBOR + 1.25% | AED 15,000 | 80% (residents) | Free (STL) |
| Mashreq | Conventional | From 4.10% | EIBOR + 1.45% | AED 12,000 | 75% (expats) | AED 2,625 valuation |
| Dubai Islamic Bank | Islamic only | From 3.99% | EIBOR + 1.00% | AED 10,000 | 80% (residents) | Free (STL) |
| FAB | Conventional + Islamic | From 3.99% | EIBOR + 1.50% | AED 15,000 | 80% (residents) | Free (STL) |
| RAK Bank | Conventional | From 3.89% | EIBOR + 1.50% | AED 8,000 | 80% (residents) | AED 3,150 valuation |
Sources: Bank published rate cards, Mortgease (May 2026), Mortigo Q1 2026 broker data, Ricadi Mortgages (March 2026). 3M EIBOR: 3.69% as of June 2026 per CBUAE. Rates are indicative and subject to eligibility. Always confirm directly with your chosen lender.
Emirates NBD is the UAE's largest bank by assets and one of the most recognised mortgage lenders in the country. It consistently ranks among the top two for competitive headline fixed rates for well-qualified borrowers, particularly those earning above AED 25,000 per month with salary transfer.
| Pros | Cons |
| Among the lowest headline fixed rates for premium profiles | AED 15,000 minimum salary may exclude lower-income earners |
| Full processing fee waiver with salary transfer | Best rates reserved for high-income, preferred-employer profiles |
| Both conventional and Islamic (Amlak) financing available | LTV capped at 75% for some expat nationalities |
| Broad product range covering ready, off-plan, and equity release | Valuation fee (AED 3,150) is among the higher end of the market |
| Strong digital banking infrastructure | |
| Widest acceptance of expat nationalities for non-resident mortgages |
| Best for: Salaried expats and UAE nationals earning AED 20,000+ per month who want to transfer their salary and secure one of the market's lowest headline fixed rates. |
Mashreq is a private UAE bank known for its digital-first mortgage process and strong appetite for non-resident and expat borrowers from a wide range of nationalities. It stands out as one of the few banks offering 65% LTV to non-residents, which is higher than the typical 50 to 60% the market offers.
| Pros | Cons |
| Highest LTV for non-residents (65%) in this comparison |
Fixed rates start slightly higher (4.10%) than Emirates NBD or DIB |
| Lower minimum salary (AED 12,000) broadens eligibility | Follow-on variable margin is higher than DIB |
| Strong digital mortgage platform with faster processing | Resident LTV capped at 75%, below the 80% Central Bank maximum some banks offer |
| Lowest valuation fee (AED 2,625) in the market | Less competitive for UAE nationals vs. expat-focused products |
| Good appetite for non-resident borrowers from diverse nationalities | |
| Commercial mortgage products available |
| Best for: Non-resident buyers, expats from diverse nationalities, and digitally-minded borrowers who want faster processing and lower upfront fees. |
Dubai Islamic Bank is the world's first licensed Islamic bank and the UAE's leading Sharia-compliant mortgage lender. For buyers who want Islamic home finance, whether for religious or financial reasons, DIB consistently offers the most competitive terms in the market, particularly on the follow-on variable margin.
| Pros | Cons |
| Lowest follow-on variable margin in this comparison (EIBOR + 1.00%) |
Islamic financing structures can be more complex to understand than conventional loans |
| 100% Sharia-compliant; no interest paid in any structure | Conventional mortgage option is not available; Islamic financing only |
| Processing fee waived with salary transfer | Product documentation and completion timelines can be slower vs. digital-first banks |
| AED 10,000 minimum salary; accessible to a wider range of borrowers | Self-employed borrowers face stricter documentation requirements |
| Strong long-term cost advantage due to low variable margin | |
| Well-established with strong regulatory standing |
| Best for: Buyers seeking Sharia-compliant home finance, and anyone focused on long-term cost minimisation: DIB's EIBOR + 1.00% follow-on margin is the lowest in this comparison, meaning significant savings over a 25-year term. |
First Abu Dhabi Bank is the UAE's largest bank by total assets and a strong performer in the mortgage market. It is particularly competitive for buyers who can transfer their salary, with both processing fees and competitive fixed rates on offer. FAB also has a dedicated non-resident mortgage desk.
| Pros | Cons |
| Processing fee waiver for first-time buyers with salary transfer |
AED 15,000 minimum salary requirement, the same as ENBD |
| Strong non-resident mortgage program; among the best for overseas buyers | Follow-on variable margin (EIBOR + 1.50%) is not the most competitive long-term |
| Competitive fixed rates from 3.99% for salary-transfer customers | Best fee waivers tied to promotional periods; verify current offers at time of application |
| Both conventional and Islamic (FAB Islamic) home finance | Higher valuation fee (AED 3,150) compared to Mashreq and DIB |
| Largest bank by assets, with strong financial stability | |
| Dedicated teams for UAE nationals, expats, and non-residents |
| Best for: First-time buyers with salary transfer who want to minimise upfront fees, and non-resident investors looking for a structured international mortgage program. |
RAK Bank (National Bank of Ras Al Khaimah) is a well-established UAE bank known for accessibility and competitive fixed-rate offers. It stands out most clearly as the bank with the lowest minimum salary requirement in this comparison: just AED 8,000 per month for UAE nationals, opening mortgage access to a segment of the market that other banks exclude.
RAK Bank also offers its distinctive Home in One product, which combines a home loan with a current account, charging interest only on the net balance (loan outstanding minus your account balance). For borrowers who maintain significant cash balances, this can meaningfully reduce effective interest costs.
| Pros | Cons |
| Lowest minimum salary for UAE nationals at AED 8,000; the most accessible bank in this comparison |
Follow-on variable margin (EIBOR + 1.50%) is among the higher end of this comparison |
| Competitive headline fixed rates from 3.89% | Valuation fee (AED 3,150) is higher than Mashreq and DIB |
| Home in One offset product reduces effective interest for cash-rich borrowers | Less competitive for premium high-income profiles vs. ENBD or FAB |
| Flexible underwriting for both salaried and self-employed | RAK Islamic finance options are less developed than dedicated Islamic banks like DIB |
| Non-resident mortgages available | |
| Good option for northern Emirates property purchases |
| Best for: UAE nationals with lower incomes between AED 8,000 to 15,000 per month), borrowers who maintain large cash balances and want to use RAK's Home in One offset product, and buyers in the northern Emirates. |
There is no single best mortgage bank in the UAE; the right lender depends on your income, nationality, residency status, property type, and whether Sharia compliance matters to you. Use this table as a starting guide:
| Profile | Why This Bank Works |
| Best headline fixed rate | Sharjah Islamic Bank (from 3.75%): Sharia-compliant mortgages for salaried borrowers with salary transfer |
| Best long-term variable rate | Dubai Islamic Bank (EIBOR + 1.00%), the lowest follow-on margin in this comparison; critical over a 25-year term |
| Islamic / Sharia-compliant | Dubai Islamic Bank: the UAE's leading Islamic bank with the most competitive Islamic mortgage product |
| Non-resident buyer | Mashreq (65% LTV for non-residents) or FAB (dedicated non-resident program) |
| Lower income (UAE nationals) | RAK Bank (minimum salary AED 8,000) or DIB (minimum salary AED 10,000) |
| First-time buyer, fee-conscious | FAB (processing fee waived with salary transfer) or DIB (free processing with salary transfer) |
| Abu Dhabi property | FAB |
| Fast pre-approval needed | Mashreq (digital-first platform) |
| Self-employed borrower | RAK Bank, known for more flexible underwriting for non-salaried applicants |


