It is not a simple process to rent in the UAE as it appears on the outside. The market is both big and fast and the money involved on either side of any transaction is a considerable amount. A landlord who is giving his property away with a value of millions of dirhams should know who’s moving in. It is important that a tenant signing a contract for a lease of AED 60,000 or above annually be safeguarded from arbitrary rent increases and against eviction at short notice. The UAE tenant screening and registration system is in place to safeguard both landlords and tenants, and in 2026, it is more digital, more enforced and more impactful than ever before.
The Regulatory Foundation
The framework has two components. The first is the Real Estate Regulatory Agency or RERA that is under the Dubai Land Department. RERA sets and applies legislation, licensing guidelines and standards for compliance, and registers off-plan projects, escrow accounts, registers brokers, registers tenancies on Ejari and handles dispute resolution mechanisms. The second one is the Ejari system. Dubai Land Department (DLD), under RERA, launched Ejari in 2010 to create transparency, standardization and legality of tenancy agreements throughout Dubai (as translated from Arabic meaning “my rent” from the name of the system).
Since its inception, Ejari has been required for all residential and commercial tenancy contracts in Dubai, and as of today, has now already registered more than 3.5 Million contracts. The rental contracts that were registered via the Ejari system in Q1 2026 amounted to an AED 32.2 billion market activity, with 118,385 new contracts and 135,607 renewals processed throughout the quarter. Those figures make clear that this is not a niche regulatory requirement. It is the central nervous system of one of the world’s busiest rental markets.
UAE Tenant Screening: What Landlords Are Expected to Do?
Before Ejari registration can happen, a landlord needs to go through the UAE tenant screening process to select a tenant. While RERA and Dubai’s tenancy law fail to provide any guidance on the screening standards a landlord must implement when entering into a tenancy contract, it is acknowledged as the landlord’s responsibility to undertake due diligence in this regard. Of course, this usually means collating documents such as Emirates ID and visa copy, employment proof (Employment letters, Salary certificates etc.) and rental history in a concise and organised form.
The Ejari system is an online database maintained by the government that documents the registration of all tenancy contracts in Dubai, and landlords can access the REST app or call RERA to confirm a tenant’s current and previous tenancy contracts, looking for any red flags such as overlapping contracts, illegal rentals, or frequent addresses changes. Further, although not stipulated in Dubai law, many landlords will request to have a credit score that will highlight any unpaid debts or bounced cheques by using a report from the Al Etihad Credit Bureau (AECB). A series of bounced cheques in the UAE is seen as a serious warning sign and has serious repercussions.

Why Ejari Registration Cannot Be Skipped?
Once a tenant is selected, Ejari registration is not optional. Without it, pursuing a defaulting tenant becomes far more difficult, as an Ejari-registered contract is recognised by Dubai courts and the Rental Dispute Settlement Committee. There are real world implications for failing to register. Tenants may not be allowed to link utilities, renew their residency visas, or dispute with the Rental Dispute Centre unless they have an Ejari certificate.
Registration itself has become virtually all online. This is typically done using the Dubai REST application, both parties login using UAE Pass, enter tenancy information, upload necessary documents and pay the Ejari fee electronically, the certificate is issued either same day or within 1 to 2 working days. According to legal experts, Ejari costs around AED 155 when completed through the Dubai REST app, and up to roughly AED 220 when processed through an authorised trustee or typing centre.
A notable 2026 update is the co-occupant disclosure rule. Starting in 2025 and fully active in 2026, tenants must declare all residents or co-occupants living in a leased property for a month or longer, and keep Ejari updated when those residents change, a rule designed to curb unlicensed co-living and overcrowding.
How Does the UAE Tenant Screening System Protect Both Sides?
For tenants, the most important protection in the framework is the RERA Rental Index. The DLD’s Smart Rental Index uses AI and real-time data from over 400,000 annual Ejari registrations to calculate the fair market rent for each building across 60-plus criteria, and at renewal time, landlords must use the RERA Rental Calculator to verify whether a rent increase is permissible and by how much. Landlords are required to provide 90 days’ written notice before any rent increase, and tenants can verify the validity of any increase using the official RERA calculator.
For landlords, the Ejari record creates a documented audit trail. A documented screening process acts as legal protection, proving due diligence in the event of disputes at the Rental Dispute Center, and cases often lean in favour of the tenant if the landlord appears careless. The Rental Dispute Settlement Centre provides mediation and arbitration as a faster, more affordable alternative to court proceedings, and it only recognises Ejari-registered leases as official evidence.
The UAE tenant screening system is not perfect, and it does not claim to be. However, it has created a rental market with more transparency, more accountability, and more legal protection than the informal, largely unregulated arrangement that existed before Ejari launched in 2010. For any resident navigating the UAE rental market in 2026, understanding this framework is not optional background knowledge. It is the foundation of every tenancy decision they make.
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