HomeToolsBroker Split Calculator
DUBAI REAL ESTATE · FREE TOOL

Broker Split Calculator
UAE

Calculate how commission is split between brokerage and agent for any Dubai real estate transaction. Model any split ratio, dual-agency deals, VAT, and rental commissions — so agents and managers know exactly what each deal is worth.

Agency/Agent Split
5% VAT Included
Sales & Rentals
Free Tool

Commission Split Calculator — Dubai

Property Value / Annual Rent (AED)
Commission Rate (%)
Agent Split (%)
Dual Agency? (Two Agencies Involved)
DUBAI COMMISSION SPLITS · 2026

Typical Agent/Brokerage Split Ratios Dubai

50/50
Junior Agent
Agency 50% | Agent 50%
60/40
Mid-Tier Agent
Agency 40% | Agent 60%
70/30
Senior Agent
Agency 30% | Agent 70%
80/20
Top Producer
Agency 20% | Agent 80%
SPLIT GUIDE

How Commission Splits Work in Dubai Real Estate

In Dubai real estate, every commission earned by an agent is shared with their brokerage according to an agreed ratio. This split is defined in the agent’s contract or independent contractor agreement — it must be understood before accepting any position.

New agents typically start on 50/50 — the agency retains half of gross commission. As performance and volume grow, agents negotiate better splits. Top producers at major Dubai brokerages can achieve 75–85% splits after demonstrating consistent deal flow.

A critical point: VAT (5%) is NOT part of the split calculation. VAT is collected from the client and remitted to the UAE Federal Tax Authority. Only the base commission (before VAT) is divided between agent and agency.

Desk Fee vs Split Model

Some Dubai brokerages offer a “desk fee” or “100% commission” model where agents pay a fixed monthly fee (AED 2,000–5,000) and keep 100% of commission earned. This works well for high-volume agents who don’t need brokerage leads or marketing support.

INCOME EXAMPLES

Agent Take-Home by Deal Size & Split

Deal Value2% Comm.50% Split60% Split70% Split
AED 800KAED 16,000AED 8,000AED 9,600AED 11,200
AED 1.2MAED 24,000AED 12,000AED 14,400AED 16,800
AED 2MAED 40,000AED 20,000AED 24,000AED 28,000
AED 3.5MAED 70,000AED 35,000AED 42,000AED 49,000
AED 5MAED 100,000AED 50,000AED 60,000AED 70,000

*Figures show agent’s share of base commission (excl. VAT). VAT is a pass-through collected from client.

DEAL STRUCTURES

Commission Split Scenarios Dubai Agents Face

🤝

Single Agency

One agency represents the transaction. Full 2% commission goes to one brokerage. Agency then splits with their listing/selling agent per contract. Most profitable per deal for the agent’s agency.

🔄

Dual Agency / Co-Broke

Two agencies involved — one for buyer, one for seller. 2% split 50/50 between agencies (1% each). Each agency then splits their 1% with their respective agent internally.

📋

Internal Split

Two agents within the same agency close a deal together — one had the listing, one brought the buyer. Agency typically splits the commission between both agents (e.g., 60/40 listing/buying split).

💰

Referral Fee

Agent refers client to another agent and receives 25–35% of the referring agent’s commission share. Common when an agent can’t service a particular area, property type, or is capacity-constrained.

🏗️

Off-Plan Commission

Developer pays agent commission (3–6% of sale price) directly. Buyer pays 0% commission. Agent receives their split from the developer commission. Often higher base commission but split with agency still applies.

🏠

Rental Commission

Standard rental commission is 5% of annual rent. If both tenant and landlord have separate agents, it may be split 50/50 (2.5% each). Agent’s portion is then split with their brokerage per contract.

FAQ · DUBAI BROKER SPLITS

Frequently Asked Questions — Agent Splits Dubai

Dubai commission splits typically range from 50/50 for new agents to 80/20 for senior top producers. Most established Dubai brokerages offer: Year 1 — 50% to agent. After 12 months strong performance — 60%. Senior/proven agents — 70%. Team leaders and top producers — 75–80%. Some brokerages offer tiered splits based on annual volume — e.g., 60% up to AED 30M in sales, 70% from AED 30–60M, 75% above AED 60M.

Co-broking occurs when buyer and seller have separate agents from different agencies. The 2% total commission is split between the two agencies — typically 50/50 (1% each). Each agency then pays their own agent per their internal split agreement. For example: Agency A earns 1% (AED 20,000 on a AED 2M deal), and pays their agent 60% = AED 12,000. Agency B earns 1% (AED 20,000) and pays their agent 60% = AED 12,000. Each agent earns AED 12,000 vs AED 24,000 in a single-agency deal.

No. VAT (5%) is NOT included in the split calculation. The 5% VAT on commission is collected from the client by the brokerage and remitted to the UAE Federal Tax Authority. The split is calculated on the base commission only (before VAT). Example: 2% commission on AED 1M = AED 20,000 base + AED 1,000 VAT. Agent on 60% split receives 60% of AED 20,000 = AED 12,000. The AED 1,000 VAT goes entirely to the FTA via the brokerage.

Yes, through the “desk fee” or “100% commission” model. Some Dubai brokerages (particularly those catering to experienced, high-volume agents) charge a flat monthly desk fee (typically AED 2,000–5,000/month) in exchange for letting the agent keep 100% of their earned commission. This model works best for agents with their own established client base and lead flow who don’t depend on brokerage-provided leads or marketing infrastructure.

DUBAI REAL ESTATE ADVISORY

Building or Growing a Dubai Real Estate Business?

AgentAdvisor.ae helps Dubai brokerages build CRM systems, streamline operations, manage agent performance, and scale. Talk to a specialist with 12+ years in UAE real estate.

STAY INFORMED

Stay Ahead in Dubai Real Estate

Get expert insights, market updates, smart tools, and CRM frameworks delivered directly to your inbox.

No spam. Unsubscribe anytime. UAE real estate insights only.

13
Free Tools
50+
Agencies Advised
12+
Years UAE Experience
100%
UAE Focused
Scroll to Top