Is It Worth Switching Banks for Your Mortgage in 2026? Full Cost Breakdown
With mortgage rates in the UAE now ranging between 3.99% and 5.75%, down significantly from the 6–7% highs many borrowers locked in during 2022–2023, thousands of Dubai homeowners are asking the same question: should I switch banks?
The answer isn’t simply yes or no. It depends on your remaining balance, your current rate, how many years remain on your loan, and crucially the true cost of making the switch. This guide breaks it all down so you can make a confident, informed decision.
1. Why Dubai homeowners are reconsidering their mortgages in 2026
The UAE Central Bank held its base rate at 3.65% at the start of 2026, following a 25-basis-point cut in December 2025. Since the UAE dirham is pegged to the US dollar, local mortgage rates move in step with US Federal Reserve decisions and after a period of elevated rates, borrowing costs have meaningfully declined.
Most UAE home loans are linked to EIBOR (Emirates Interbank Offered Rate), which fluctuates daily. Borrowers who took out mortgages in 2021–2023 when EIBOR was spiking are now finding themselves significantly overpaying compared to what’s available today.
3.99% – Lowest fixed rates available in early 2026
6–7% – Rates many borrowers locked in during 2022–23
AED 30B – Size of the UAE mortgage finance market
~20% – Share of UAE real estate transactions using mortgages (2024)
2. What does “switching banks” actually mean?
In the UAE, switching your mortgage from one bank to another is formally called a mortgage buyout or loan transfer. The new bank pays off your outstanding loan with your current lender, and you begin making repayments to the new bank under revised terms.
This process is regulated by UAE Central Bank Regulation No. 29/2011 and the Dubai mortgage framework under Law No. (14) of 2008. The switch must be registered with the Dubai Land Department (DLD), which cancels the outgoing bank’s mortgage record and registers a new one in favour of the incoming lender.
Common reasons to switch: securing a lower rate, moving from variable to fixed (or vice versa), switching to a Sharia-compliant product, consolidating debt, or accessing a lender with better features like offset accounts or flexible overpayment terms.
3. The complete cost breakdown
This is where most homeowners get tripped up. The headline rate difference looks attractive — but switching carries real upfront costs. Here’s what to expect in 2026:
| Fee Type | Typical Amount | Notes |
| Early Settlement Fee (ESF) | 1% of outstanding balance or AED 10,000 (whichever is lower) | Capped by CBUAE regulation. Fixed-rate borrowers almost always face this. |
| New bank arrangement / processing fee | 0% | Bank promotions on buyout cases |
| Property valuation fee | AED 2,500–3,500 | New lender requires an independent property valuation. |
| DLD mortgage registration fee | 0.25% of loan + AED 290 | Mandatory government fee for all mortgage registrations in Dubai. |
| Trustee office fees | AED 4,515 | Paid at the DLD-approved trustee office handling the transfer. |
| Life & property insurance | Varies by profile | New lender will require updated insurance; compare carefully. |
| Estimated total (AED 1M loan) | AED 20,000–30,000+ | Varies by bank, profile, and negotiation outcome. |
Many banks offer partial or full fee waivers during promotional periods. Always negotiate with the incoming lender before signing — a skilled mortgage advisor can often secure significant reductions.
4. The real savings potential: a worked example
Numbers bring this to life. Let’s walk through a realistic scenario.
Samira — Dubai Resident
Mortgage taken in 2022 · Outstanding balance: AED 1.2M · 15 years remaining
Current rate – 6.25%
Monthly EMI: ~AED 10,300
New rate – 3.99%
Monthly EMI: ~AED 8,850
Monthly saving: AED 1,450 | Total interest saving over term: AED 261,000+ | Estimated switching costs: ~AED 28,000 | Break-even point: ~19 months
In this scenario, switching clearly makes financial sense provided Samira stays in the property for at least two years after switching. If she sells within 12 months, the costs may not be recovered.
As a general rule: if your remaining balance is above AED 800,000, you have 5+ years remaining on your mortgage, and your current rate is at least 1% higher than today’s market, switching is very likely worth exploring.
5. When switching makes sense and when it doesn’t
Switch if…
- Your current rate is at least 1% above current market offerings
- You have AED 150,000+ outstanding
- You want to move from variable to fixed rate for predictability
- You want to switch to a Sharia-compliant product
- You plan to stay in the property for at least 2 years post-switch
- Your fixed-rate lock-in period is ending in the next 3–6 months
Avoid switching if…
- ✕The rate difference is less than 0.5% and your balance is small
- ✕You plan to sell the property within 12–18 months
- ✕Your early settlement fee wipes out 2+ years of savings
- ✕You are mid-way through a fixed-rate period with a heavy ESF clause
6. Pros and cons at a glance
Potential benefits
- Lower monthly repayments, freeing up cash flow
- Significant total interest savings over the loan term
- Access to better lender features (offset accounts, overpayments)
- Rate certainty by switching to a fixed product
- Sharia-compliant options now widely available
Things to watch out for
- Upfront fees can be AED 25,000–40,000 or more
- New credit check and income verification required
- Property must be revalued (costs and may affect LTV)
- Process takes 4–8 weeks on average
- Insurance policies need to be re-arranged
7. Step-by-step: how to switch your mortgage in Dubai
- Get a mortgage health check. Work with a broker to benchmark your current rate against the market and calculate your true break-even point after all fees.
- Request a settlement statement. Ask your current bank for an outstanding balance and early settlement fee calculation, valid for 30 days.
- Compare offers from multiple lenders. Don’t just approach one bank. A good broker can access exclusive rates not published to the public.
- Submit your application. The new bank will request income documents, 6 months of bank statements, a No Objection Certificate (NOC) from your developer (if applicable), and title deed.
- Property valuation. An independent valuer appointed by the new lender will assess your property, typically within 3–5 working days.
- Receive your new offer letter. Review all terms carefully, rate, tenure, fees, prepayment options. Negotiate where possible.
- DLD registration. The new mortgage is registered with the Dubai Land Department. The existing mortgage is simultaneously discharged.
- Begin new repayments. Your first EMI under the new arrangement is typically due 30 days after drawdown.
Start this process 3–6 months before your fixed-rate period expires to avoid reverting to a costly variable rate in the interim.
Ready to find out if switching saves you money?
At Amplus Mortgage Consultants, our advisors compare multiple UAE lenders, calculate your refinance viability, and structure the most cost-effective solution based on your goals. Amplus offers end-to-end mortgage advisory and refinancing support across the UAE.







