When you take out a mortgage in the UAE, one of the most consequential decisions you will make separate from which bank, which property, or which loan amount is whether to choose a fixed interest rate or a variable rate.
Get this decision right and it can save you tens of thousands of dirhams over your loan’s lifetime. Get it wrong and you may end up paying more than necessary, or locked into a structure that does not serve your financial goals.
This guide explains how both rate types work, compares real numbers, and helps you understand which is the better choice for your specific situation.
How UAE Mortgage Rates Work
Unlike some other countries where fixed rates can be locked in for 25–30 years, UAE mortgage rates typically have a much shorter initial fixed period after which the rate reverts to a variable structure.
Fixed Rate
A fixed rate means your interest rate and therefore your monthly repayment is locked in for a defined period. In the UAE, fixed periods are typically:
- 1 year fixed
- 3 years fixed
- 5 years fixed (most popular)
After the fixed period ends, your mortgage automatically reverts to a variable rate usually expressed as a margin above EIBOR (the Emirates Interbank Offered Rate).
Variable Rate (EIBOR-Linked)
A variable rate mortgage has no fixed period. The interest rate is calculated as: EIBOR + bank margin. As EIBOR moves up or down (it is reviewed periodically), your rate and monthly payment adjusts accordingly.
Current EIBOR rates in 2026 are the product of both global interest rate movements and UAE monetary policy, which is closely linked to US Federal Reserve decisions given the AED-USD peg. This means UAE mortgage rates are meaningfully influenced by what happens in the US economy.
Real Numbers: How the Two Rates Compare
Let us use a concrete example. Assume a mortgage of AED 1,500,000 over 25 years. Current indicative rates in the market:
- Fixed rate (5-year): Approximately 4.49%–4.99% per annum
- Variable rate (EIBOR + margin): Approximately 4.25%–5.25% depending on current EIBOR and bank margin
At 4.75% fixed: Monthly repayment ≈ AED 8,550. Predictable for 5 years. Total paid over 5 years ≈ AED 513,000.
At 4.50% variable: Monthly repayment ≈ AED 8,300 initially. But if EIBOR rises by 0.5%, your payment increases to approx AED 8,660 per month.
The fixed rate buyer pays a small premium for certainty. The variable rate buyer saves money if rates hold or fall but pays more if rates rise.
The difference between a 4.50% and a 4.99% rate on a AED 1.5 million mortgage over 25 years is approximately AED 200,000 in total interest paid. This is not a trivial decision.
The Case for Fixed Rate
A fixed-rate mortgage makes the most sense when:
- You value certainty: Knowing your exact monthly payment for 3–5 years makes budgeting and financial planning significantly easier particularly important if you have other financial commitments or a family to consider.
- Rates are expected to rise: If market forecasts suggest interest rates are likely to increase during your fixed period, locking in today’s rate protects you from higher payments later.
- You are a first-time buyer: The predictability of a fixed rate removes one variable from an already complex financial transaction. Most first-time buyers benefit from the stability a fixed rate provides.
- Your income is not highly elastic: If your salary is fixed and you have limited capacity to absorb higher monthly payments, variable rate risk may not be appropriate for your profile.
The Case for Variable Rate
A variable rate mortgage makes more sense when:
- Rates are expected to fall: If the economic environment suggests EIBOR will decrease during your loan period for example, following central bank rate cuts a variable rate means your payments automatically reduce without any action on your part.
- You plan to sell or refinance within 2–3 years: Fixed-rate mortgages typically carry early settlement fees (up to 1% of the outstanding balance or AED 10,000, whichever is lower). If you are likely to sell or refinance within a short window, a variable rate avoids locking in unnecessarily.
- You have high income flexibility: If your income is growing and you have surplus cash flow that can absorb modest rate movements, the potential savings from a variable rate may outweigh the risk.
The Hybrid Strategy: Fixed First, Variable Later
Most experienced UAE mortgage holders use a hybrid approach: take a fixed rate for the initial period (typically 3–5 years) and then refinance either to a new fixed rate or to the most competitive variable rate available at that time.
This strategy gives you certainty during the period when you are most exposed (early years of ownership, when the loan balance is highest) and flexibility later, when you have built equity and can negotiate from a position of strength.
It also means you are never truly ‘stuck’ in a rate that no longer serves you. With Benchmark Brokers managing your refinancing, switching to a better rate at the end of your fixed period is a straightforward process.
Islamic Mortgages: A Third Option
For buyers preferring a Sharia-compliant structure, Islamic mortgages typically structured as diminishing musharaka or ijara products — offer a profit rate rather than an interest rate. These are available in both fixed and variable profit rate structures and are offered by most major UAE banks.
The financial mechanics are different from conventional mortgages, but the practical outcome a monthly payment that reduces your outstanding balance over time is similar. Benchmark Brokers can compare Islamic and conventional products side by side to help you find the most competitive structure for your profile.
So Which Should You Choose?
The honest answer is: it depends on your personal circumstances, your risk tolerance, your financial plans, and the current rate environment. There is no single right answer for every buyer.
What we recommend at Benchmark Brokers is a personalised rate analysis looking at your specific loan amount, tenure, income profile, and financial goals and comparing fixed vs variable options across all lenders in the market, not just one bank’s offerings.
With 125+ mortgage products available, the difference between choosing the right rate structure and the wrong one can easily run into hundreds of thousands of dirhams over the life of your loan. This decision deserves expert guidance.
Not sure whether fixed or variable is right for you? Benchmark Brokers will run a personalised rate analysis across all UAE lenders completely free. Book your consultation at benchmarkbrokers.ae