If you invest in Dubai real estate, you might jot down luxury apartments or villas for sale, or explore rental-ready properties. You may carefully search homes in areas like Dubai Marina, Jumeirah Village Circle, or Downtown Dubai.
But do you also prepare a checklist of compliance requirements? You may assume it’s simple because Dubai offers a low- or no-tax environment. No! It’s far trickier on the U.S. side than you think.
So don’t just skim through the property. Instead, you must understand the compliance, tax, and reporting obligations. That’s why, definitely, you can consider reading this blog before Dubai property investment as a U.S. expat.
Dubai Real Estate Investment for US Citizens: What You Must Care About
No matter, if you’re investing in Dubai’s freehold, offplan, commercial, or industrial properties, you should have knowledge with certain things as follows:
USD Strength
The Arab Emirates Dirham (AED) has been pegged to the United States Dollar (USD) at roughly 1 USD = 3.67 AED since 1997. In the Dubai real estate property management, the pegged amount ensures
- Price stability to save you from regional volatility and speculative attacks on the currency rate
- Effective implications of the Monterey policy so you can smoothly invest even in inflation
- Trade and investment certainty to strengthen your investment confidence
Most importantly, the currency foreign exchange rate is legitimately managed by the Central Bank of the UAE. It ensures transparency and effective risk management for U.S expats.
Tax Obligations
Though Dubai offers tax-free policies for property investors, U.S citizens have to meet certain compliance requirements as follows:
*Important form filling requirements
Form | When it’s triggered |
If your foreign financial assets exceed $200K at any time during a year. | |
Your all worldwide income has to be reported regardless of the source location. | |
If your foreign bank accounts exceed $10K at any time during a year. | |
Exempt up to $130K in your foreign earned income, and if you pass Physical Presence Test and Bona Fide Residence Test. |
FATCA Compliance
When you invest in real estate in Dubai, you may not report it. But the money flowing around it is subject to reporting. That’s why the U.S. government has fully implemented automatic information exchange. And, the U.A.E government requires financial institutions to collect and share data under FATCA regulations. So let’s understand it better!
What is FATCA?
The Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) is a U.S. regulated legitimate reporting system. Under FATCA, foreign banks and certain foreign entities report financial accounts held by U.S. citizens and taxpayers. FATCA has nothing to do with your Dubai property registries, but with financial information.
It means if you have a UAE bank account, the IRS (Internal Revenue Service) has to know about it. Don’t worry, this isn’t a deal breaker for you. Instead, it is designed to prevent tax evasion in your offshore income and assets.
Who is affected by FATCA?
FATCA matters for you if
- You’re a U.S citizen but living in Dubai
- You’re a U.S green card holder but living in Dubai
- You’re a foreign entity but holding substantial U.S ownership
What gets reported under FATCA reporting obligations?
As soon as your luxurious real estate property in Dubai becomes a source of revenue generation, FATCA becomes real. You must fill out Form 8938 while meeting the IRS’s reporting threshold.
Therefore, the common reporting process includes:
- Mortgage linked accounts through which loan repayment is processed
- Rental income that is paid into your UAE account
- An Escrow account through which funds are held or transferred
- Income from the sale of property that is paid into your UAE account
What are the consequences of failing to meet FATCA?
The primary consequences come with operational frictions, such as
- Account onboarding delays
- Extra documents requests than usual
- Transactions are held due to incomplete due diligence
That’s not all. Further, these consequences can be dragged into implying
- Penalties: IRS levies $10,000 per account violation and an additional penalty up to $50,000 while a continued failure meets after intimation.
- Withholding tax: Up to 40% penalty can be levied on a tax-attributed non-disclosed asset.
No Property Tax
Yes, it’s absolutely true! You’re not imposing any traditional tax while buying or selling a property of Dubai real estate. And, you’re absolutely not asked to pay any kind of tax on rental income, earning from Dubai property.
However, while you’re dealing with Dubai property investment, you must be aware of certain property related fees, likely
- To DLD, you need to pay a typical 4% of the property purchase price and AED 4,000 – AED 10,000, whichever is closer to the property value. This is taken as a property registration fee.
- As a property owner, you can be charged from AED 10 to AED 30 per sq. ft for ongoing service and property maintenance fees.
- If you mortgage the loan for financing a Dubai property purchase, you pay 0.25% of the loan amount, along with an additional amount of AED 290.
- Also, you need to pay the NOC developer fee, ranging from AED 500 to AED 5,000 with an additional agent fee as 2% of the property value and VAT.
*Remember, you must report earnings from your Dubai property including rental income and capital gains under worldwide income and FATCA.
Simplified Checklist for the U.S Expats investing in Dubai Real Estate
- Complete your UAE bank onboarding accurately, through which payments and settlements have to be done.
- Keep your official documents organized and tidy, including sale deeds, rental contacts, source of funds, and bank trials.
- Review your total income from foreign asset investments, including Dubai real estate. File the required tax forms timely and when required to avoid compliance penalties and legal consequences.
- Avoid investing in PFIC (Passive Foreign Investment Company) funds as they can trigger high tax rates and complicated reporting requirements when meeting penalties.
Final Thought!
Investing in a Dubai real estate property from offplan, leased, or rental designated areas as a U.S expat is still within your reach. While the UAE legal frameworks are clear, transparent, and less complex, the U.S side is a little trickier and more complicated.
Don’t worry about it. You can contact GlobeNest Properties to get guidance on property investment, legal requirements, and more. Assess every corner of it before making a commitment!