Dubai Flexi Rent Turns Annual Leases Into Monthly Payments
Dubai Land Department has launched Flexi Rent with property companies, giving tenants monthly instalment options, card payments and redesigned schedules while the pilot tracks contract uptake and payment compliance.

DLD Moves Rent Relief Into Payment Terms
Dubai Land Department has introduced Flexi Rent, a scheme designed to let tenants pay annual rent through monthly instalments instead of relying only on larger cheque payments.
The initiative is being run with several property companies.
The first named group includes Deyaar and Wasl, alongside Dubai Investment Real Estate and Driven Properties.
Khalid Al Shaibani, director of DLD’s rental affairs department, said participating companies can split instalments, grant grace periods and reshape payment schedules.
The policy is not a rent cap.
It changes the payment mechanics around new and renewed tenancy contracts, with rent remaining the same whether a tenant pays monthly or through one or two cheques.
Card Payments And Waived Cheque Fees Change The Tenant Process
Flexi Rent also opens a card-payment route.
Rent can be paid by debit or credit card when the tenant and landlord agree to that arrangement.
Officials said bounced-cheque fees will be waived under the initiative.
The scheme also includes rental incentives, discounts and promotional packages for new tenants, giving landlords and tenants several ways to adjust the cost burden without changing the headline rent.
The next group named by DLD includes SBK Real Estate, Al Showaib and Rocky Real Estate.
SRG Properties and Modern Real Estate are also part of the scheme.
DLD also named Harbor Real Estate and Dubai World Real Estate.
Al Shaibani said more companies are expected to join, and he linked the pilot to additional affordable-rental initiatives that are expected soon.
The Pilot Will Be Measured By Contracts And Compliance
DLD is treating Flexi Rent as a monitored pilot rather than a simple announcement.
The partnership includes tracking results through key performance indicators.
Those indicators include how many rental units are covered, how many tenancy contracts use the Flexi Rent model, occupancy rates, tenant payment compliance, the use of flexible payment options and the number of incentives offered to new tenants.
That measurement layer gives the scheme a market test.
If tenants use the instalment structure and landlords keep joining, DLD can point to contract uptake and payment behavior rather than only affordability language.
Dubai’s Rental Market Remains The Pressure Point
DLD figures put Dubai’s rental scale at almost 1.2 million tenancy contracts last year.
CBRE data cited in the same report said overall rents rose about 4.1 per cent year on year in the first quarter, with apartment rents rising while villa costs were stable.
Those figures explain why payment design is becoming a policy issue.
A tenant who can handle monthly cash flow may still struggle with a small number of larger cheques, while a landlord has to decide whether instalments and card payments reduce risk or simply change the collection process.
The Flexi Rent launch follows other measures aimed at supporting the property market, including a first-time buyers initiative and a smart rental index launched last year.
The government has also updated visa rules to support demand and attract overseas buyers.
For tenants, the unresolved point is adoption.
Flexi Rent now has partner companies, card-payment options and a pilot measurement framework, but DLD still has to show how many leases move into the monthly-payment model.
















