CBD revises LTV framework — what residents, expats, and non-residents need to know
Commercial Bank of Dubai (CBD) has overhauled its LTV framework, effective 13 April 2026. UAE national LTVs are unchanged, but expats and non-residents see new ceilings — and land financing is off the menu entirely.
What changed
The revision splits across three borrower categories:
- UAE Nationals: LTVs unchanged for both completed and off-plan properties.
- Expat residents: Revised LTVs for completed properties. Off-plan financing now aligned strictly to handover-stage payments under the applicable LTV.
- Non-residents: New maximum LTVs for completed Dubai properties. Abu Dhabi non-resident LTVs unchanged.
- Land financing: Suspended across all segments.
- Segment-specific caps: Where a lower LTV already applied for a particular segment or sourcing channel, that lower cap continues.
Who this affects
The biggest impact is on non-resident buyers in Dubai. CBD has historically been one of the more accessible lenders for overseas buyers, so a tightening here narrows an already small pool of options. Expat residents see a moderate adjustment — most will still find competitive financing, but the negotiation room shrinks.
Land financing being suspended is the sleeper headline. It removes one route plot-buyers used for villa-construction projects.
What to do next
If you have a CBD application in progress, get clarity on whether your sanctioned LTV is locked in. If you are still bank-shopping as a non-resident, two or three other UAE banks remain very competitive on Dubai completed properties. We can introduce you directly.
Need to talk it through? Mortgease's advisory team can help you map this against your specific situation — free, no obligation.
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