What if everything you assumed about your renewal was wrong? What if the increase your landlord quoted was never legally enforceable to begin with? What if staying put, negotiating your cheques, and checking one number before signing could have saved you thousands? While the regional situation has unsettled markets and prompted many to pause, Dubai's leasing market has moved without hesitation. The Dubai Land Department recorded 22,444 leasing transactions in the first two weeks of March 2026 alone, a number that does not pause for headlines. The data inside those numbers tells every Dubai tenant exactly where they stand. This blog breaks down what it reveals about renewals, rental competition and cheque flexibility, so that when your landlord contacts you about a renewal, you are already prepared.
Between March 1st and March 12th 2026, the Dubai Land Department recorded 22,444 total leasing transactions across the city. Out of those, 14,929 were renewals, and only 7,515 were fresh contracts.
Not once in that entire 12-day window did new leases outnumber renewals. Searching for a better deal in a city this competitive costs time, money, and stress that most tenants underestimate. When the regional situation adds noise to everyday decisions, staying put feels safer than starting over. Landlords understand this, and it shapes the dynamic when they enter a renewal conversation.
A new tenant enters a lease negotiation without an existing relationship or rental history with the landlord. That is where the conversation starts. A renewal works differently. Your landlord is working from your existing rent upward. The gap between renewal and new-lease pricing is clearly visible in the DLD data from this period.
March 4th and 5th are excluded as commercial contracts distorted the averages on those days. On every comparable residential day across the full 12-day period, renewals came in below new leases. Moving resets your rent to today's market rate. Staying keeps you on the right side of that gap.
The Dubai rental market does not move at a flat pace. During this period, daily volumes swung sharply by day of the week. Here is what the DLD recorded across all 12 days:
March 4th logged the highest single-day total at 2,643 deals. March 8th, a Sunday, recorded just 539, a drop of over 79% from the busiest weekday. New leases peaked at 856 on March 12th and bottomed at 151 on March 1st. Renewals hit 1,873 on March 4th and dropped to 250 on March 1st. The day you choose to act is not a small detail. It directly determines how many options are available to you.

A few years ago, most Dubai landlords wanted the full year upfront because it gave them security and a predictable cash flow. What changed is the supply. New developments came to market, professionally managed buildings became common, and tenants gained options to compare. Landlords who hold firm on cheque count now risk losing a reliable tenant to the building next door. Many new developments today offer quarterly or monthly payment terms as standard, and anyone searching for property to rent in Dubai will quickly notice this.
Paying in 12 cheques instead of 1 or 2 means you are not locking up a large chunk of cash upfront. The rent stays the same, but your financial breathing room changes completely. At renewal time, this is one of the least-used negotiation points available to tenants. A landlord who wants to keep a reliable tenant may agree to split one cheque into four without changing the price. The alternative for them is to find someone new, which would cost them a month or two of rental income.
Many tenants hear a figure from their landlord at renewal and assume they have no choice but to accept it. That assumption is often the most expensive part of the process. RERA's rental index sets a legal ceiling on how much rent can be raised, tied directly to how your current rate compares to the going price for your specific area and unit size. If your rent is already at or above that level, your landlord cannot raise it. If it falls below, the increase your landlord can apply depends on how far below market your rent actually sits.
Before entering any renewal conversation, pull the actual RERA index number for your unit type and size. If your rent is near the permitted level, anything quoted above the cap is not legally enforceable, and you have every right to push back. If it is well below, use that information to plan ahead rather than being caught off guard when the notice lands.
Most tenants search on weekends. The daily transaction data covered earlier points in a different direction. Mid-week consistently recorded the highest volumes, while weekends saw sharp declines. The units available mid-week are very likely gone before Sunday arrives.
Acting mid-week, even just to confirm interest with an agent, keeps you ahead of everyone browsing on Friday morning. Every day you delay narrows the pool of options.
Check the RERA index before doing anything else. If your rent is at or near the permitted level, staying is almost always the smarter decision. Renewals start from your existing rent. New leases start from whatever the market is charging today. That difference alone is worth staying for. Working with an experienced brokerage helps here because one data point from someone with live access to listings can change how you negotiate.
Before you decide, run through these:
Talk to an advisor before committing, as the difference between the best and worst timing can be significant.

The steps are straightforward. Confirm where your rent sits relative to the RERA permitted level, review your payment structure options, and understand your 90-day notice position. Landlords are required by law to give 90 days' notice before raising rent or deciding not to renew, so know where you stand on that timeline before anything gets signed.
If you have not spoken to an agent recently, one honest call can tell you whether your landlord's number is fair or above what the market supports. And if you want to move out of frustration rather than a genuinely better deal, do the numbers first. The deposit, moving costs, and a higher starting rent almost always make the first year more expensive than staying and negotiating properly where you are.
Going into a renewal unprepared is not just a negotiation mistake. It is a financial one that plays out over the next twelve months. Most tenants assume the landlord holds all the cards, but the legal framework in Dubai protects renters far more than they realise. The market data is publicly available, and the RERA caps are enforceable. The gap between a tenant who negotiates well and one who does not usually comes down to one conversation had before the notice arrived. The tenants who walk out with better deals are not the ones who got lucky. They are the ones who showed up knowing more than their landlord expected.
Before you sign anything, speak with a betterhomes consultant to find out what your landlord can legally charge and what your unit is actually worth in today's market.
How much can a landlord increase rent in Dubai?
Rent increases range from 5% to 25%, depending on how far below the RERA market rate your current rent sits.
What is the RERA rental increase calculator?
It is a free Dubai government tool that shows the exact legal rent increase limit for your specific unit and area.