Dubai’s real estate market posted AED 114 billion in transactions in Q1 2026 alone, according to Zawya. Behind every one of those transactions is at least one person whose job made it happen. Real estate jobs in Dubai are among the most accessible, highest-earning, and also most competitive roles in the city. However, the industry looks very different depending on which role you step into. Here is what those roles are, what they pay, and how you get started.
The Main Roles in Dubai Real Estate
Real estate jobs in Dubai fall into four broad categories.
The most conspicuous are sales agents and property consultants. They find buyers, match them with properties, show them around, negotiate and close deals. Moreover, Dubai real estate agents can expect to make an average of AED 13,167 per year as base pay, and commissions can top AED 181,661 annually, according to Glassdoor.
The money making machine is the commission structure. Most brokerages reward agents 50 to 70 percent of the transaction costs on transactions that have closed. In addition, a lot of companies provide an option where your base salary is reduced and your commission is increased, or where you don’t get a base salary but instead have a higher commission split.
Moreover, property managers take care of managing property for the owners, their landlord-tenant relations, tenant issues, coordinating maintenance and collecting rents for property owners. The salary for them is in the range of AED 5000 to 15000 per month depending on the volume of portfolio and also their experience.
Real estate administrators take care of listings, including on platforms like Property Finder, Dubizzle and Bayut, maintain CRM systems and arrange property views, assisting real estate agents in their work. The salary for admins in the Dubai real estate varies from AED 3,000 to AED 8,000 per month, according to Indeed, depending on their experience and the size of the company they work for.
The more specialized are the valuation analysts and the investment advisors. They evaluate properties, do market research, and provide advice for institutional and/or high net worth clients. Moreover, these positions will demand qualifications and experience along with a salary of AED 10,000 to AED 25,000 per month.

Which Real Estate Jobs Are Reserved for Emiratis
The UAE’s Emiratisation programme, known as Nafis, sets specific targets for private sector companies. Real estate companies with 50 or more employees must meet annual Emiratisation quotas or face financial penalties. Roles typically prioritised for Emirati nationals include senior management positions, government liaison roles, and community relations functions. That said, real estate jobs in Dubai are broadly open to all nationalities at the agent and also consultant level. The RERA licensing requirement applies equally to everyone.
How to Get Your RERA Licence
If you want to work legally as a real estate agent in Dubai, you need a RERA broker card. You cannot skip this step. According to Driven Properties, the process involves five steps.
First, you complete the Certified Training for Real Estate Brokers course at the Dubai Real Estate Institute, known as DREI. According to DIAC, the course runs for four days and costs AED 3,000. It covers UAE real estate law, ethics, contracts, Ejari processes, and also compliance. It is available in person at the DLD office in Deira or online.
Second, you pass the RERA exam. It is multiple choice and tests the content covered in the DREI course.
Third, you collect your documents: Emirates ID, passport copy, residency visa, police clearance certificate, and your training completion certificate.
Fourth, you apply for your broker card through the DLD’s Trakheesi system.
Fifth, you register under a licensed brokerage. Because, you cannot operate independently. Every agent must be employed by or sponsored through a RERA-registered company. Many brokerages sponsor your license as part of onboarding. License renewal costs approximately AED 510 annually.

Real Estate Jobs If You Have No Experience
Many Dubai real estate firms actively hire freshers. According to Indeed, listings regularly state “full training provided” and “no experience needed,” particularly for off-plan sales roles. Some offer a base salary of AED 3,000 to AED 5,000 while you build your pipeline.
Others offer commission-only from day one with full marketing and lead support. If you are new to the industry, look for companies that offer structured onboarding, CRM access, and marketing support also. Entering on commission-only terms without those resources makes the first three to six months significantly harder.
Real estate jobs in Dubai are genuinely open. And the market is large enough and also active enough to absorb new entrants who are willing to learn the rules, get licensed, and work consistently.
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