Dubai’s New Co-Living & Shared Housing Law: What Property Investors Need to Know
Sheikh Mohammed has signed Law No. (4) of 2026 — Dubai’s first comprehensive framework regulating shared housing, co-living and multi-tenant residential properties. Fines up to AED 1,000,000. Occupancy limits per unit. Mandatory permits. Here’s the full investor breakdown.
Browse Investment Properties →What Is Dubai Law No. 4 of 2026?
Law No. (4) of 2026 is the first statute specifically designed to regulate shared residential accommodation in Dubai. Signed by His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum on 11 March 2026, it addresses a regulatory gap that had allowed uncontrolled subletting, overcrowding and substandard shared housing to proliferate across the emirate.
The law introduces mandatory licensing for all shared accommodation units, occupancy limits, safety standards, and a clear prohibition on residents subletting their allocated space to others. It is enforced by the relevant Dubai government authority and carries significant financial penalties.
For property investors operating or considering entering the Dubai rental market — particularly those targeting the professional shared housing or co-living segment — this law fundamentally changes what is legal, what is required, and what exposure you carry if you operate outside the new framework.
Law at a Glance
New Maximum Occupancy Rules by Unit Type
One of the most operationally significant changes is the introduction of hard occupancy caps by apartment type. If you are running or considering shared accommodation, these are the binding legal limits from the law’s effective date.
Studio apartments are capped at 2 residents. Many studios were being rented to 4–5 workers under the previous unregulated framework — this is now a violation.
One-bedroom units can house up to 4 residents — typically 2 per sleeping space. Exceeding 4 residents in a 1-bed is a violation under the new law.
Two-bedroom units have a maximum of 6 residents. At standard 2-per-room plus common area usage, this allows proper co-living configurations.
Three-bedroom units allow up to 9 residents — reflecting the larger living space and the possibility of more shared common areas in larger configurations.
8 Key Rules Under Dubai’s Shared Housing Law
Beyond occupancy limits, the law introduces several structural requirements for shared accommodation operators.
Mandatory Permit — No Exceptions
No property may be used for shared accommodation without obtaining an official permit from the relevant authority. This applies to all configurations — whether a landlord rents a unit room by room, or an operator manages multiple units as a co-living scheme. Operating without a permit from the law’s effective date is a primary offence.
Only Owners or Licensed Companies May Lease
A key anti-subletting measure: only the property owner, or a company licensed for shared accommodation management, may legally lease shared units to residents. Tenants are explicitly prohibited from subleasing their allocated space to third parties. This eliminates the informal subletting chains that have generated both overcrowding and disputes.
Safety Standards: Mandatory Compliance
Units used for shared accommodation must meet strict safety standards — proper ventilation, lighting, fire safety systems, and adequate sanitation facilities. Properties that are structurally unsuitable for multi-occupancy use (e.g., studio apartments in towers with inadequate fire escapes for the density) may not receive permits. Safety inspections are part of the permit application process.
Contracts Must Be Registered
All shared housing contracts must now be officially registered. This brings shared accommodation into the same Ejari registration framework that applies to standard tenancy agreements. Registered contracts protect both landlords (clear legal terms, eviction process) and tenants (proof of legal right to occupy), and enable the government to track occupancy data for future policy.
Urban Planning & Infrastructure Compliance
Permit approval depends on compliance with urban planning regulations and infrastructure capacity. This means that certain communities or building types may be effectively excluded from shared accommodation operations — particularly if local infrastructure (water, sewage, parking) cannot support the occupancy density. Check with the authority before purchasing a property specifically for co-living use.
No Subleasing by Residents
Tenants are prohibited from subletting or re-leasing their room or bed space to another person. This closes the informal subletting market that created unmanageable chains of occupancy — where a landlord rents to a primary tenant who then sublets to 6 others without the landlord’s knowledge or involvement. Violations by residents do not exempt landlords from liability if the property was being managed without proper oversight.
Inspection Rights & Authority Access
The regulatory authority has the right to inspect licensed shared accommodation properties for compliance. Landlords and operators must maintain records of residents, contracts and safety certifications in a form accessible to inspectors. Refusing access to inspectors or failing to maintain required records is itself a violation.
One-Year Regularisation Grace Period
Existing operators have one year from the law’s effective date to regularise their status — applying for permits, meeting safety standards, adjusting occupancy to legal limits, and registering contracts. This is a generous timeline but should not be treated as optional. The authority has indicated that enforcement will be active after the compliance period ends, and that penalty doubling for repeat offences will apply from day one post-deadline.
Fines & Penalties Under Law No. 4 of 2026
The law introduces a tiered penalty structure with fines starting at AED 500 and reaching up to AED 500,000 — doubling to AED 1,000,000 for repeat offences within a 12-month period.
| Violation | Fine Range | Severity | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Operating shared accommodation without a permit | AED 50,000–500,000 | HIGH | Primary offence. Doubles to AED 1M on repeat. |
| Exceeding occupancy limits | AED 10,000–100,000 | HIGH | Per violation event. Each inspection is a separate potential fine. |
| Failing to register shared housing contracts | AED 5,000–50,000 | MEDIUM | Applies to each unregistered contract. |
| Subletting by a resident (tenant offense) | AED 1,000–10,000 | MEDIUM | Liability primarily on the subletting tenant, but landlord may also face scrutiny. |
| Failing to meet safety standards | AED 5,000–100,000 | HIGH | Depending on severity of non-compliance. Property closure orders possible. |
| Obstruction of inspectors | AED 10,000–50,000 | HIGH | Refusing access or providing false information. |
| Administrative/minor violations | AED 500–5,000 | LOW | Record-keeping failures, late filings, etc. |
What Law No. 4 Means for Dubai Property Investors
The law creates risks for non-compliant operators but significant opportunities for those who adapt or enter the market correctly from the start.
✅ Opportunity: Formalised Co-Living Market
The law creates a regulated co-living sector where professionally managed operators will thrive. Well-capitalised investors who obtain permits, meet safety standards and operate compliant multi-tenant residential units gain a competitive advantage over informal landlords who cannot or will not comply. As non-compliant supply is forced out, compliant supply commands premium pricing.
✅ Opportunity: Premium Yield Potential
Compliant co-living units — properly licensed, safety-certified, professionally managed — can command higher rents per bed than standard long-term lets. The Dubai professional rental market is deep, and compliant shared accommodation fills a genuine demand from young professionals, students and short-stay workers. Gross yields of 8–12% are achievable in well-located, properly managed co-living properties.
⚠️ Risk: Existing Non-Compliant Operations
Investors currently operating shared accommodation informally — without permits, with excess occupancy, or relying on tenant-to-tenant subletting — face immediate exposure. The one-year compliance period is time to act, not to wait. Properties that cannot meet permit requirements (safety standards, urban planning) may need to revert to standard single-family tenancy, reducing yield.
⚠️ Risk: Reduced Supply Pressure on Prices
The law may temporarily reduce the supply of affordable shared accommodation in Dubai, placing upward pressure on rents for compliant units — beneficial for landlords but a challenge for affordability. Monitor whether the authority introduces rent caps or social housing provisions alongside enforcement. This is a medium-term market dynamic, not an investor threat, but it will affect demand patterns by area.
Your Compliance Timeline
If you operate shared accommodation in Dubai, here is your action timeline.
Law Signed & Published
Law No. (4) of 2026 signed by HH Sheikh Mohammed on 11 March 2026. The 180-day clock begins on official gazette publication date.
Law Takes Effect
180 days after gazette publication, the law is enforceable. New operations must have permits. Existing operators enter the one-year compliance period.
Full Compliance Deadline
One year after effective date — all shared accommodation must be permitted, compliant and registered. Post-deadline, full penalty enforcement begins with no grace period.
Permit applications will involve inspections, documentation and authority processing time. Starting your compliance process now means you are compliant early — not scrambling at the deadline with thousands of other operators.
Investor Questions — Dubai Shared Housing Law
Navigate Dubai’s Shared Housing Law — Talk to Truhauz
Whether you’re an existing operator assessing compliance, an investor considering co-living as a yield strategy, or a landlord concerned about your current tenancy arrangements — Truhauz can connect you with the right legal and property management expertise for your specific situation.
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