In early June 2026, the Abu Dhabi Real Estate Centre (ADREC) issued a circular temporarily reducing the emirate's annual rent-increase cap from 5% to 0% for residential, commercial and industrial properties. For as long as the measure is in force, tenancy renewals must be registered at a 0% increase — landlords cannot raise the rent on renewal, and the measure runs until further notice with no announced end date. It is not retrospective: contracts already renewed and registered before the circular keep their existing terms.
Who should read this
Abu Dhabi landlords and property owners planning renewal increases, residential and commercial tenants due for renewal, and property managers, developers and investors who model rental yields. Anyone with an Abu Dhabi tenancy renewal falling due while the measure is in force should confirm the registered increase is 0%.
Directly affected
Key facts
- ADREC has temporarily reduced the annual rent-increase cap from 5% to 0% for residential, commercial and industrial properties across Abu Dhabi, announced early June 2026 by circular.
- The 0% cap applies to tenancy renewals processed from the circular date and runs until further notice — no end date has been announced.
- The measure is not retrospective: contracts renewed and registered before the announcement remain valid on their existing terms.
- It replaces the 5% cap that had operated through the rental index since 2016.
- It responds to demand persistently outstripping supply, which pushed new-lease prices up roughly 15% across Abu Dhabi and about 23% in investment zones year-on-year.
- The freeze is administered by ADREC and the Department of Municipalities and Transport (DMT); it is an Abu Dhabi emirate-level measure, not a federal or Dubai one.
Executive summary
ADREC has temporarily set Abu Dhabi's annual rent-increase cap at 0%. Since 2016, the emirate had allowed rents to rise on renewal by up to 5% a year, governed by the official rental index. The new circular removes that headroom for now: every residential, commercial and industrial tenancy renewed while the measure is in force must be registered at the same rent as the expiring contract. The trigger is affordability. New-lease asking rents rose roughly 15% across the emirate and around 23% in investment zones over the year, as demand consistently outpaced supply.
The scope of the freeze matters as much as the headline. It bites on renewals processed from the circular date onward. It does not reach back into contracts already renewed and registered on 5% (or any other agreed figure) before the announcement — those remain valid on their existing terms. There is no fixed expiry; the cap applies "until further notice," so the safe planning assumption is that it continues until ADREC or the DMT says otherwise.
What changed
The operative change is a single number in the rental index: the maximum permitted annual increase on renewal moves from 5% to 0%. Nothing else in the tenancy framework is repealed. Contracts are still concluded and registered in the ordinary way, notice requirements for non-renewal or eviction are unchanged, and the Abu Dhabi Rental Disputes Committee remains the forum for rent and tenancy disputes. What has gone, temporarily, is a landlord's ability to lift the rent at renewal — the index now returns 0% for the increase calculation.
This is an Abu Dhabi emirate-level measure administered by ADREC and the DMT. It is distinct from Dubai's regime, where increases are governed by the RERA rental index and Decree No. 43 of 2013 and are calculated by reference to how far a rent sits below market. It is also separate from the free-zone financial centres: ADGM and DIFC operate their own leasing rules for their districts and are not governed by the emirate rental index. There is no federal rent cap; residential rent control in the UAE is set emirate by emirate, and this change is confined to Abu Dhabi.
Practical implications
For landlords, the immediate consequence is that a renewal falling due now cannot carry an increase, regardless of how far the contract rent sits below current market. A gap that a landlord might previously have closed at 5% a year must, for now, stay open. Where a renewal was already completed and registered before the circular, the agreed increase stands — the freeze does not unwind it, and a tenant cannot demand a refund or a reset to 0% on a contract that was validly renewed earlier. Timing around the circular date is therefore decisive, and the registration record is the evidence that fixes which side of the line a contract falls.
For tenants, a renewal processed while the measure is in force should show no increase. If a landlord issues a renewal notice seeking a higher rent, or conditions renewal on an uplift, that is inconsistent with the current cap and is a matter for the Rental Disputes Committee. Tenants should keep the expiring contract, the renewal notice and the registration confirmation, which together establish both the prior rent and the date the renewal was processed. A freeze on increases does not by itself extend a tenancy or override a properly served non-renewal notice; it governs the rent figure on renewal, not whether the relationship continues.
For investors, developers and property managers, the measure compresses near-term rental-growth assumptions to zero on renewals and should be reflected in yield models, service-charge planning and acquisition underwriting. Because there is no announced end date, forecasts that assume a quick return to 5% carry real risk. Portfolio holders should identify which tenancies renew during the freeze and model the revenue effect of holding those rents flat, while noting that vacant units re-let on new leases are a separate question from the renewal cap addressed here.
Action points
- Identify every Abu Dhabi tenancy renewing while the measure is in force and confirm each renewal is registered at a 0% increase.
- Check the registration date of any recent renewal against the circular date to establish whether an agreed increase is preserved or must be reset to 0%.
- Landlords: pause and re-issue any renewal notice that assumed a 5% or market uplift, and revisit budgets built on rental growth for the period of the freeze.
- Tenants: retain the expiring contract, renewal notice and Tawtheeq registration, and raise any non-compliant increase with the Abu Dhabi Rental Disputes Committee.
- Investors and managers: update yield, valuation and service-charge models to reflect flat renewal rents with no fixed end date, and flag exposure on tenancies renewing in the coming cycle.
- Take advice before treating a pre-announcement increase as enforceable or challengeable — the outcome turns on the precise renewal and registration dates.
Directly affected: Abu Dhabi residential, commercial and industrial landlords and property owners; tenants due for renewal; and property managers, developers and investors relying on rental-yield assumptions.
Disputes and enforcement
Rent and tenancy disputes in Abu Dhabi are heard by the Rental Disputes Committee, not the ordinary civil courts. While the cap is in force, the live disputes are likely to concern renewals registered at an increase that should have been 0%, and disagreements over whether a contract was validly renewed before the circular. The registered contract and its processing date are usually decisive evidence. If you are a landlord holding a pre-announcement renewal, or a tenant facing an increase you believe is non-compliant, take advice before filing or responding — the merits turn on dates and registration, not on the headline of the freeze.
Sources and authorities
ADREC — Abu Dhabi Real Estate Centre, circular temporarily updating the annual rental-increase cap from 5% to 0% (announced early June 2026). Administered with the Department of Municipalities and Transport (DMT).
https://adrec.gov.ae/en/news/press-release-26---rental-freeze-update
Original-source date: 3 June 2026 · Captured: 2026-06-05T08:11+00:00Z
Instrument details
Instrument: ADREC circular / decision temporarily updating the annual rental-increase cap.
Issuing authority: Abu Dhabi Real Estate Centre (ADREC), with the Department of Municipalities and Transport (DMT).
Emirate: Abu Dhabi (emirate-level measure; not federal, Dubai, DIFC or ADGM).
Announced: Early June 2026 (source dated 3 June 2026).
Effect: Annual rent-increase cap reduced from 5% to 0% for residential, commercial and industrial tenancy renewals.
Scope: Applies to renewals processed from the circular date; not retrospective — earlier renewed and registered contracts keep their existing terms.
Duration: Temporary, until further notice — no end date announced.
Supersedes (for now): The 5% cap operating through the Abu Dhabi rental index since 2016.
This update is based on a public regulator publication and reviewed under the firm's editorial quality gate. General information only — it does not constitute legal advice, and the position may change while the measure remains "until further notice." For advice on a specific tenancy, renewal or dispute, please contact us. Last updated: 2 July 2026.