Free Tool · Dubai

Palm Jumeirah Rent Increase Calculator

Find out exactly how much your landlord can legally raise your rent in Palm Jumeirah, Dubai under RERA Decree No. 43 of 2013. Based on Palm Jumeirah market rents of AED 85,000–850,000 (2025 index). Free, instant, no signup.

Check your Palm Jumeirah rent increase

The calculator below is pre-set to Palm Jumeirah. Pick your property type, bedrooms, and enter your current annual rent.

AED
AED

Average market rent in Palm Jumeirah (2025)

These are the RERA rental index averages for Palm Jumeirah. Your allowed rent increase depends on how far your current rent sits below these figures — that is the comparison Decree 43/2013 uses.

Apartment — Palm Jumeirah

Bedrooms Average annual rent (AED)
Studio AED 85,000
1 Bedroom AED 130,000
2 Bedrooms AED 200,000
3 Bedrooms AED 320,000

Villa — Palm Jumeirah

Bedrooms Average annual rent (AED)
3 Bedrooms AED 450,000
4 Bedrooms AED 600,000
5 Bedrooms AED 850,000

Source: DLD, 2025 rental index.

How much can a landlord increase rent in Palm Jumeirah?

Dubai rent increases are capped by Decree No. 43 of 2013. The legal maximum depends on how far your current rent is below the Palm Jumeirah market average above:

Your rent vs. market averageMax legal increase
Up to 10% below market0% (no increase)
11% – 20% below marketUp to 5%
21% – 30% below marketUp to 10%
31% – 40% below marketUp to 15%
More than 40% below marketUp to 20%

Even if an increase is within these limits, your landlord must give you 90 days written notice before renewal. If they miss that window, the increase is void and your contract renews at the existing rent — regardless of the Palm Jumeirah market rate.

Landlord's Palm Jumeirah increase is illegal?

Generate a formal, bilingual legal notice citing Decree 43/2013 and your RERA calculation — ready to send to your landlord or file at the RDC.

Generate a legal notice

RentShield provides general information about UAE tenancy laws and is not a substitute for professional legal advice. For complex legal matters, consult a qualified UAE lawyer. Laws and regulations may change — always verify current requirements with official government sources.