Margin in Dubai property comes from two places: entering at the right phase price and exiting with a realistic estimate of what buyers will pay. Most of the margin is made at purchase, not at sale.
Margin is the profit as a percentage of total revenue or sale proceeds — what’s left after every cost is accounted for. On a typical flip play where an investor buys at launch at AED 1,800/sqft and exits two years later at AED 2,100/sqft, the gross margin looks like 17%. Net of 4% DLD at entry, 2% agent at exit, 5% NOC and trustee fees in aggregate, and service charges across the hold, the real margin closer to 8-10%.
The margin most overlooked is the one created by developer incentives at launch — a 4% DLD waiver effectively adds 4% to the margin on the exit, a furniture package can add another 1-2% depending on valuation. Phase-1 pricing plus waivers is where the real upside lives on off-plan deals in Dubai.
A client last year bought phase 1 with full 4% waiver and 2-year post-handover plan. His effective net margin on a 14% price appreciation came in around 19%.
Discipline on entry. Discipline on exit. That’s the margin.
Related: ROI, ROC, Launch Price, Registration Fee Waiver.
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