Variable-rate mortgages in the UAE are rarer on new originations than fixed starters, but after year 3-5 most borrowers end up on one anyway because the fix rolls off.
A variable rate moves with a benchmark — in the UAE, that’s EIBOR, the Emirates Interbank Offered Rate — plus a bank margin. EIBOR resets (1-month, 3-month, 6-month depending on product), and the bank re-prices the mortgage at each reset. During the 2022-2024 rate cycle, 3-month EIBOR moved from under 0.5% to above 5%, and variable-rate borrowers felt every basis point of it.
The margin on top of EIBOR is the negotiation you have once, at signing, and it sticks for the life of the loan. Typical UAE margins run 1.5% to 3.0% depending on LTV, borrower profile, and whether salary transfer is included. The difference between EIBOR + 1.5% and EIBOR + 2.5% on an AED 1.2M loan is roughly AED 12k a year — AED 300k over the life.
A client last year let his fix roll to a variable at EIBOR + 2.9% because he didn’t shop at expiry. Refinancing to a fresh fix at 4.85% saved him AED 36k across the next three years.
The margin is the permanent decision. Negotiate it once, hard.
Related: Fixed Rate, Interest Rate, Mortgage, Financing Cost.