You cannot legally sell, lease, or manage property in Dubai without a RERA license. RERA — the Real Estate Regulatory Agency — is the regulatory arm of the Dubai Land Department (DLD), and every real estate professional in Dubai must be registered through their system.
This guide walks you through the entire process, from prerequisites to your first day as a licensed agent.
Prerequisites Before You Start
Before you can begin the RERA licensing process, you need:
- UAE residency visa — Either an employment visa (sponsored by a brokerage), an investor visa, a freelancer visa, or a Golden Visa. Tourist visas do not qualify.
- Emirates ID — Valid and active.
- Brokerage affiliation — You must be either employed by a registered brokerage or hold your own real estate trade license. Solo agents without a brokerage must set up a company first.
- Good conduct certificate — A police clearance certificate from your home country or the UAE (requirements vary).
- Passport copies — Current passport with at least 6 months validity.
Step 1: Complete the DREI Training Course
DREI stands for Dubai Real Estate Institute, and their certified training program is mandatory for all new real estate professionals in Dubai. The course covers:
- UAE real estate laws and regulations
- RERA guidelines and compliance requirements
- Property valuation basics
- Tenancy law (Law No. 26 of 2007 and amendments)
- Off-plan property regulations
- Ethical standards and professional conduct
- Transaction processes (sale, lease, property management)
The course is typically 4-5 days of classroom instruction. DREI offers several certified training course options:
| Course | Duration | Cost (approx) |
|---|---|---|
| Certified Training for Real Estate Brokers | 4 days | AED 3,000-4,000 |
| Certified Training for Real Estate Agents | 4 days | AED 3,000-4,000 |
| Certified Training for Property Managers | 4 days | AED 3,000-4,000 |
| Advanced courses (valuations, development) | 2-3 days | AED 2,000-5,000 |
Training is available in English and Arabic. Some providers also offer courses in other languages. The course can be completed in person at DREI-approved training centers in Dubai.
Step 2: Pass the RERA Exam
After completing the DREI course, you must pass the RERA certification exam. The exam is:
- Format: Multiple choice, typically 50-100 questions
- Duration: 2-3 hours
- Language: English or Arabic
- Passing score: Generally 70%+
- Fee: AED 500-1,000
- Location: DREI testing center or authorized examination centers
Exam preparation tips:
- Pay attention during the DREI course — exam questions are drawn directly from course material
- Study UAE real estate laws, particularly Law No. 7 of 2006 (Property Registration Law), Law No. 8 of 2007 (Escrow Accounts Law), and Law No. 26 of 2007 (Tenancy Law)
- Understand RERA complaint procedures and disciplinary actions
- Know the key RERA forms and their purposes (Form A, Form B, Form F, Form I)
- Review property calculation methods — service charges, commission structures, and DLD fees
Pass rates are high (85%+) for candidates who complete the DREI course and study the material. If you fail, you can retake the exam after a waiting period (typically 2 weeks) with an additional fee.
Step 3: Apply for RERA Registration
After passing the exam, submit your RERA registration application through the Dubai REST app or the DLD website (dubailand.gov.ae). You will need:
- DREI course completion certificate
- RERA exam pass certificate
- Emirates ID copy
- Passport copy
- Passport-size photo
- Letter from your sponsoring brokerage confirming employment
- Brokerage trade license copy
- RERA registration fee (AED 510)
Processing typically takes 3-7 business days. Upon approval, you receive your Broker Registration Number (BRN) — this is your unique identifier as a licensed real estate professional in Dubai.
Step 4: Get Your BRN Card
Your BRN card is your license to operate. It must be displayed on all marketing materials, business cards, portal listings, and client communications. The card contains:
- Your full name
- Your photo
- Your BRN number
- Your brokerage name
- Validity dates
- QR code for verification
Always include your BRN in portal listings, WhatsApp business profile, email signature, and any advertising. This is not optional — it is a RERA requirement, and non-compliance results in fines.
Total Cost Breakdown
| Item | Cost (AED) |
|---|---|
| DREI training course | 3,000-5,000 |
| RERA exam fee | 500-1,000 |
| RERA registration (BRN card) | 510 |
| DLD system access | 1,000-2,000 |
| Good conduct certificate | 200-500 |
| Total (agent joining existing brokerage) | 5,210-8,510 |
If you are setting up your own brokerage, add AED 15,000-30,000+ for the trade license (DED or free zone), office lease, and company setup fees.
Annual Renewal
RERA licenses must be renewed annually. Renewal requirements include:
- Continuing professional development (CPD) credits — DREI offers renewal courses
- Valid Emirates ID and residency visa
- Active brokerage trade license
- Renewal fee: approximately AED 510 + CPD course fees (AED 1,000-2,000)
- No pending RERA complaints or sanctions
Do not let your license lapse. Operating without a valid RERA license carries fines of AED 50,000+ and potential criminal charges.
Once You Are Licensed: Building Your Business
Getting the license is step one. Building a successful practice requires:
- Portal presence — List on Bayut and PropertyFinder to generate leads
- CRM setup — Choose a CRM system to manage your pipeline
- Lead response system — Implement AI-powered lead response to capture every opportunity
- Social media strategy — Build your online presence and personal brand
- Area specialization — Choose 2-3 areas to specialize in and build deep knowledge
- Network building — Connect with other agents, developers, and property managers
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