Refinancing your UAE mortgage (buyout): is it worth it?

CBUAE-sourcedUpdated 2 June 2026Reviewed by a UAE-qualified accountant

If you took your mortgage a few years ago, you may be paying more than you need to. A buyout (refinancing) moves your loan to a better rate — and thanks to a Central Bank fee cap, it's usually cheaper to switch than people think.

What a buyout actually is

In the UAE, refinancing is commonly called a buyout: a new bank pays off your current mortgage, and you carry on with them on a new loan — typically at a lower rate, or borrowing a bit more to release equity. Your old mortgage is settled and a new one is registered against the property.

The early-settlement fee is capped — and it's small

The biggest myth about switching is that exit penalties make it pointless. In fact, the Central Bank caps the early-settlement fee at the lower of 1% of your outstanding balance or AED 10,000. On a AED 1.5M balance, 1% would be AED 15,000 — but the cap means you pay no more than AED 10,000. That changes the maths in your favour.

The full cost of switching

When you weigh up a buyout, count all the costs:

  • Early-settlement fee to your old bank (capped, as above).
  • New bank arrangement/processing fee — often 0.5–1% of the loan + VAT (some waive it to win your business).
  • Valuation fee — the new bank values the property (~AED 2,500–3,500).
  • Mortgage re-registration at the DLD — 0.25% of the new loan + AED 290.

How to know if it pays off

The rule of thumb: refinancing is worth it when the interest you'll save over the time you plan to keep the loan is comfortably more than those switching costs. On a large balance, even a 1% rate reduction often covers the costs within a year or two — everything after that is saving. Model your current rate versus a new rate in the mortgage calculator to see the difference in your monthly payment.

Releasing equity

If your property has gained value or you've paid down a chunk, a buyout can also let you borrow more against it — within the Central Bank Loan-to-Value cap for your situation. Banks will usually ask what the funds are for. Remember the same affordability rules apply: the new, larger loan still has to fit inside your 50% Debt Burden Ratio after the stress test.

Check the new numbers first

Before you approach a bank, run the new rate and any extra borrowing through the eligibility calculator — it confirms the new monthly payment and whether the larger loan still fits the Central Bank rules.

Try the tool

Put these rules to work on your own numbers.

Mortgage Eligibility Calculator

Frequently asked questions

What is a mortgage buyout in the UAE?
A buyout (refinancing) is when another bank pays off your existing mortgage and you continue on a new loan with them — usually to get a lower rate, or to release equity. Your old mortgage is settled and a new one is registered.
What is the early settlement fee on a UAE mortgage?
The Central Bank caps the early-settlement fee at the lower of 1% of the outstanding balance or AED 10,000. So if you owe AED 1.5M, the fee is capped at AED 10,000 (not 1% = AED 15,000). This makes switching far cheaper than many people assume.
Is it worth refinancing my mortgage?
It is worth it when the interest you save over the time you’ll keep the loan is comfortably more than the switching costs (early-settlement fee, new bank fees, valuation and re-registration). Even a 1% rate cut on a large balance often pays back the costs within a year or two.
Can I release equity when I refinance?
Often yes — if your property has risen in value or you’ve paid down the loan, you may be able to borrow more against it, within the Central Bank LTV cap. Banks may ask what the released funds are for.

← All guides