Web Development

Website Development Cost in Dubai (2026): The Real Numbers, Line by Line

SKIMBOX Team

A website in Dubai runs from AED 3,500 to over AED 500,000, and the gap is mostly things nobody puts in the quote. Here is the full breakdown, including the AED line items most agencies leave out.

Website Development Cost in Dubai (2026): The Real Numbers, Line by Line

A website in Dubai costs anywhere from AED 3,500 to over AED 500,000, and most of the gap is things that never appear in the headline quote [1][2]. This is not a generic "it depends" article. It is the line-by-line breakdown, including the costs Dubai agencies routinely leave out, so you can read any quote you receive and know exactly what is missing.

We build websites for UAE businesses out of our Dubai and Bengaluru teams, and the number one thing clients tell us is that they were quoted one figure and paid another. Almost always, the difference was VAT, the .ae domain, Arabic, content, or a licence nobody mentioned. We will cover all of them. If you also want help picking the agency itself, read our guide to choosing a web design company in Dubai alongside this one.

How much does a website cost in Dubai by type?

A Dubai brochure site starts at AED 3,500 to 8,000, an SME site with a CMS runs AED 8,000 to 18,000, a corporate bilingual site AED 15,000 to 55,000, and e-commerce or custom builds reach AED 110,000 or more [3][4][5]. Here is the full 2026 picture, triangulated across the main Dubai agency pricing pages:

Website typeAgency price (AED)Build time
Landing / one page1,500 to 20,0001 to 2 weeks
Brochure (up to 8 pages)3,500 to 8,0002 to 4 weeks
Small business + CMS8,000 to 18,0004 to 8 weeks
Corporate / bilingual (10 to 30 pages)15,000 to 55,0002 to 3 months
E-commerce15,000 to 110,000+2 to 4 months
Custom web app / SaaS35,000 to 300,000+3 to 6 months

Those are agency prices. Freelancers come in lower, from AED 1,000 to 10,000 for simpler projects, and website builders lower still. The number you should anchor on as a Dubai SME is the AED 12,000 to 55,000 band, which is what a real agency charges for a proper business or corporate site you own outright [4].

What does AED 500 actually leave out compared to AED 30,000?

The AED 500 site is a shared template with a generic layout, no real SEO foundation, few or no revisions, no Arabic, no custom integrations, and frequently no ownership of the code or domain [6]. The AED 30,000 site is custom-designed, CMS-managed, bilingual, SEO-ready, and yours to keep. Same word, different product.

Here is the delta, because buyers deserve to see it spelled out rather than handed two separate ranges:

  • Design: template everyone else also uses, versus a custom design built around your conversion path.
  • SEO: none, versus clean code, fast loading, proper headings, and structured data built in.
  • Ownership: often leased or locked, versus full ownership of code, files, domain, and hosting.
  • Arabic: not included, versus a properly built right-to-left version.
  • Support: a person who may vanish, versus a team and a maintenance contract.

Straight talk: the cheap site is not a smaller version of the expensive one. It is a different thing that solves a different problem. A AED 500 template is fine to test an idea this week. It is a poor foundation for a business that needs to rank and convert for the next three years, because you usually end up rebuilding, which means paying twice [6].

Freelancer, agency, or offshore: what is the real cost difference?

A freelancer costs AED 50 to 350 per hour, a Dubai agency AED 400 to 900 per hour blended, and an offshore team AED 100 to 250 per hour, which is 50 to 70 percent cheaper than a local agency [3][7]. The same 10-page corporate site is AED 60,000 to 150,000 from a Dubai agency and AED 15,000 to 40,000 offshore [7].

FactorDubai agencyOffshore team
Hourly rateAED 400 to 900AED 100 to 250
10-page corporate siteAED 60,000 to 150,000AED 15,000 to 40,000
E-commerce storeAED 80,000 to 200,000AED 25,000 to 70,000
Timezone and recourseLocalOften misaligned

The honest answer is that neither extreme is right for most Dubai businesses. Pure offshore saves money but costs you timezone overlap, Arabic fluency, and any real recourse if it goes wrong. A pure Dubai agency gives you accountability at a premium that often funds an offshore dev team anyway. A hybrid model, with a Dubai-accountable team and efficient offshore delivery, sits in the gap and gives you both. That is how we structure builds at SKIMBOX, with our Dubai and Bengaluru teams on the same project.

What does Arabic add to the cost?

A properly built Arabic right-to-left version adds 15 to 30 percent to the build, roughly AED 3,000 to 20,000 depending on content volume [8]. It is the single biggest Dubai-specific cost driver, and it is real work, not a toggle. RTL means mirrored layouts, Arabic typography and font rendering, and testing every page in both directions on mobile.

Common mistake: treating Arabic as a free checkbox or a Google Translate job. Cheap shops do this and the result reads wrong to native speakers, which kills trust with exactly the local audience you added Arabic to reach. In regulated sectors like government, legal, financial, and healthcare, Arabic content is often legally required, so it is not optional anyway. Our Arabic-first website guide covers how to do it properly.

The Dubai line items most quotes leave out

This is the section other cost guides skip, and it is where buyers get surprised. Beyond the build, going live in Dubai has costs that are easy to miss:

  • 5 percent VAT. Website development is a taxable service, and any agency over AED 375,000 turnover must add 5 percent. On a AED 30,000 build that is AED 1,500. Ask whether the quote is VAT-inclusive [9].
  • The .ae domain. AED 150 to 400 a year, more than a .com, regulated by TDRA, and often left out of the quote [3].
  • An e-commerce trade licence, if you sell online. An E-trader licence starts at about AED 1,070 a year for UAE and GCC nationals; a mainland or free-zone e-commerce licence runs AED 5,525 to 25,000 or more [10]. This is not part of the build, but you cannot legally sell without it.
  • Content and copywriting, commonly AED 500 to 1,500 per page, billed separately on content-heavy sites [4].
  • Payment gateway transaction fees, roughly 2.49 to 2.9 percent plus a per-transaction AED amount, which erode margin every sale [11]. We compare the providers in our UAE payment gateway guide.
  • Annual maintenance, 15 to 20 percent of build cost per year, which is mandatory in practice for security and updates.

Quick math: a "AED 25,000" e-commerce quote can become AED 25,000 plus AED 1,250 VAT plus AED 300 .ae domain plus AED 5,750 licence plus AED 3,000 content plus AED 4,000 a year maintenance. The build was honest. The one-time going-live number was about 40 percent higher, before the annual maintenance on top. Budget for the whole thing, not just the invoice.

One more cost almost no Dubai guide mentions: migration. If you already have a site and you are moving platforms, say WordPress to Shopify or an old custom build to Webflow, you pay to move the content, rebuild the structure, and preserve your SEO with proper redirects. That runs AED 5,000 to 20,000 depending on how many pages and products you have. Skip the redirects to save money and you lose the Google rankings you spent years earning, which is far more expensive than the migration. If you are weighing platforms before you build, our WordPress versus Webflow versus Next.js guide and the Shopify versus WooCommerce comparison will save you a rebuild later.

What does it cost over three years?

The build is only year one. Over three years, including hosting, domain, SSL, maintenance, and content, the realistic totals are [3]:

Build3-year total cost (AED)
Basic WordPress site18,000 to 34,000
Mid-tier Shopify store36,000 to 70,000
Large WooCommerce store60,000 to 120,000
Custom Next.js app120,000 to 300,000

Thinking in three-year totals, rather than the launch invoice, is the single most useful reframe for a Dubai web budget. It also makes the cheap-template trap obvious: a AED 500 site you rebuild in eighteen months is more expensive than a AED 12,000 site you keep for five years. For the running-cost side in detail, see our guide to what a website really costs to keep live in the UAE, and for the UAE-wide build view, the UAE website cost breakdown.

How this played out for three clients

Real situations from projects we have worked on. Names and details changed for privacy.

Priya's boutique e-commerce (Dubai Marina). Priya budgeted AED 25,000 from an agency quote. What she had not budgeted was the AED 5,750 e-commerce licence, the 5 percent VAT, and the Arabic version she decided she needed for her Khaleeji customers. Real going-live cost was closer to AED 38,000. "Nobody told me the licence and VAT were on top," she says. "Ask for the all-in number, not the build number."

Ahmed's law firm (DIFC). Ahmed was quoted AED 9,000 by a freelancer and AED 32,000 by an agency for a bilingual corporate site. He went cheap, the Arabic came back as raw Google Translate, and a DIFC client noticed. He paid an agency to redo it. "The Arabic was the whole point," he says. "Paying twice for it was the expensive lesson."

A logistics startup (Jebel Ali). They wanted a full custom platform quoted at AED 180,000. We scoped an MVP instead: the core booking flow, one integration, English first, for AED 70,000. It validated the model in ten weeks, and they reinvested revenue into version two. Their founder's tip: "Build the smallest thing that earns money first. We saved about AED 110,000 and learned more."

How SKIMBOX prices a website

We quote from the lowest credible figure, itemise every line so there are no surprise invoices, and tell you the all-in Dubai cost including VAT, domain, and any licence, not just the build. You own the code, files, domain, and hosting in writing. Our Dubai and Bengaluru model gives you local accountability at a cost that sits below a pure Dubai agency. If you want a transparent, scope-first proposal, see our web development services, our digital commerce solutions for online stores, or contact us.

References

[1] We Are Tenet - Website design cost in Dubai (2026). wearetenet.com/blog/website-design-cost-in-dubai [2] Coding Clave - Web development cost Dubai 2026, real rates and component pricing. codingclave.com/blog/web-development-cost-dubai-2026 [3] Hikmah AI Agency - Website development cost Dubai 2026, running costs and 3-year TCO. hikmahaiagency.com/blog/website-development-cost-dubai-2026 [4] Upscape - Website design costs in Dubai by type and component. upscapetech.com/website-design-costs-in-dubai [5] Element8 - Website development cost Dubai, by site type. element8.ae/blogs/website-development-cost-dubai [6] Dot IT - Why cheap websites cost more in the long run. dotit.ae [7] Freelancers UAE - Freelance web development rates per hour and Dubai premium. freelancers-uae.com/freelance-rates-per-hour [8] Codingclave / Mirajit - Arabic RTL bilingual website cost in the UAE. codingclave.com/blog/web-development-cost-dubai-2026 [9] JAXA Auditors - Understanding VAT on digital services in the UAE. jaxaauditors.com/blog/understanding-vat-on-digital-services-in-the-uae-a-guide-for-businesses [10] Emirabiz - UAE e-commerce licence types and costs (E-trader, mainland, free zone). emirabiz.com/uae-e-commerce [11] Innovatrix Infotech - UAE payment gateways 2026, fees compared. innovatrixinfotech.com/blog/uae-payment-gateways-2026 [12] TDRA - Registering a .ae domain name. tdra.gov.ae/en/aeda/services/registering-a-domain-name [13] SKIMBOX - Internal project experience pricing and building websites for UAE clients across retail, legal, e-commerce, and logistics, 2026. skimbox.co

Frequently asked questions

  • How much does a website cost in Dubai in 2026?

    A professional business website in Dubai starts around AED 3,500 to 8,000 for a brochure site and runs to AED 15,000 to 55,000 for a corporate or bilingual site. E-commerce and custom web apps reach AED 110,000 or more. The realistic sweet spot for an agency-built SME site is AED 12,000 to 55,000.

  • What is the cheapest a website can cost in Dubai?

    Website builders start at about AED 30 per month and template starter packages from roughly AED 499 to 1,650. These work as a quick placeholder but trade away customisation, real SEO, and often ownership. For a genuine 5 to 8 page business site, the credible floor is AED 3,500 to 8,000.

  • How much does a basic brochure website cost in Dubai?

    A basic brochure site of up to 8 pages costs roughly AED 3,500 to 8,000, with a 2 to 4 week build. That covers responsive design, a contact form, basic on-page SEO, and social links. Add a CMS so you can edit it yourself and you are closer to AED 8,000 to 18,000.

  • How much does a corporate website cost in Dubai?

    Most Dubai corporate sites cost AED 15,000 to 55,000 for 10 to 30 pages with branded design, a CMS, a blog, career or investor sections, and English plus Arabic. The price climbs with custom design, role-based access, and any ERP or CRM integration, which is one of the biggest single cost drivers.

  • How much does an e-commerce website cost in Dubai?

    An e-commerce site starts from about AED 15,000 for a basic Shopify or WooCommerce store and runs to AED 110,000 or more for a large custom catalogue. Cost scales with product count, regional payment gateways like Telr, PayTabs, and Tabby, and inventory or logistics integrations. A fully custom platform with Arabic and ERP can pass AED 200,000.

  • How much does a custom web app cost in Dubai?

    A custom web app or SaaS in Dubai starts around AED 35,000 for a focused build and runs to AED 300,000 or more for a multi-tenant platform with billing and integrations. An MVP that proves the core idea typically lands at AED 50,000 to 120,000 over 8 to 12 weeks before you invest further.

  • Why does the price range for a Dubai website vary so widely?

    Because the word website covers a leased one-page template and a custom platform a team builds over four months. Price scales with page count, custom versus template design, integrations, Arabic support, and the vendor tier. A AED 499 site and a AED 50,000 site are different products that share a name.

  • What does AED 500 leave out compared to AED 30,000?

    The AED 500 site is a shared template with a generic layout, no real SEO foundation, few or no revisions, no Arabic, no custom integrations, and often no ownership of the code or domain. The AED 30,000 site is a custom-designed, CMS-managed, bilingual, SEO-ready asset you own outright. You are paying for ownership, performance, and a team that is still there in a year.

  • Is it cheaper to use a freelancer or an agency in Dubai?

    A freelancer is cheaper up front, typically AED 1,000 to 10,000 or AED 50 to 250 per hour, versus an agency at AED 8,000 to 35,000. The agency premium buys a multi-discipline team, project management, QA, and continuity if one person leaves. For a simple site, a vetted freelancer is fine. For anything with integrations, an agency lowers your risk.

  • What hourly rate do web developers charge in Dubai?

    Freelancers in Dubai charge roughly AED 75 to 350 per hour depending on seniority, and agencies AED 400 to 900 per hour blended. Rates fall as you move from Dubai to Abu Dhabi to Sharjah, with up to a 25 percent spread. Offshore teams run AED 100 to 250 per hour, which is 50 to 70 percent cheaper than a Dubai agency.

  • Is offshore web development cheaper for a Dubai business?

    Yes, offshore teams are typically 50 to 70 percent cheaper, with a 10-page corporate site at AED 15,000 to 40,000 versus AED 60,000 to 150,000 from a Dubai agency. The trade-off is timezone, communication, Arabic fluency, and recourse. A hybrid model with a Dubai-accountable team and offshore delivery gets you both, which is how we run builds at SKIMBOX.

  • Do I have to pay 5 percent VAT on a website in Dubai?

    Yes, if the agency's taxable turnover is above AED 375,000 a year, website development is a taxable service and they must add 5 percent VAT to the invoice. On a AED 30,000 build that is AED 1,500 most SME buyers forget to budget. Ask whether the quote is VAT-inclusive before you compare prices.

  • Does a website count as a one-time or yearly cost in Dubai?

    The build is a one-time cost, but a live site has yearly running costs: hosting at AED 200 to 1,500 a year, a domain at AED 50 to 500 a year, SSL, and maintenance. Plan for ongoing costs from day one. Hosting and domain are recurring, not a single payment, which surprises a lot of first-time buyers.

  • How much is website hosting in Dubai per year?

    Shared hosting runs about AED 200 to 800 a year, cloud hosting AED 600 to 1,500 a year, and a VPS AED 1,500 to 6,000 a year. A standard business site is fine on shared or cloud hosting. If an agency quote includes hosting far above these numbers, ask what it covers or buy it yourself in your own name.

  • How much does a .ae domain cost in Dubai?

    A .ae domain costs roughly AED 150 to 400 a year, more than a .com at AED 40 to 100, and is regulated by TDRA. Foreigners can register one, though business documents may be requested. Budget the .ae separately because it is a recurring cost and is often left out of the build quote.

  • How much does website maintenance cost in Dubai?

    Basic maintenance plans run AED 100 to 800 a month, with the rule of thumb being 15 to 20 percent of the build cost per year. That covers uptime monitoring, SSL renewal, CMS and plugin updates, malware scans, and backups. Skipping maintenance is the false economy that leads to hacked or broken sites that cost more to fix.

  • What hidden costs should I budget for a Dubai website?

    The common surprises are 5 percent VAT, the .ae domain, content and copywriting at AED 500 to 5,000, an e-commerce trade licence if you sell online, Arabic as an add-on, payment gateway transaction fees, and annual maintenance. None are huge alone, but together they can add 20 to 40 percent to a bare build quote.

  • Do I need a trade licence to sell from a Dubai website?

    Yes. Selling online needs an e-commerce trade licence. An E-trader licence for UAE and GCC nationals starts at about AED 1,070 a year, while a mainland or free-zone e-commerce licence runs AED 5,525 to 25,000 or more. A brochure site that only markets an already-licensed business does not need a separate licence.

  • How much extra does an Arabic (bilingual) website cost?

    A properly built Arabic right-to-left version adds roughly 15 to 30 percent to the build, or about AED 3,000 to 20,000 depending on content volume. The cost is real because RTL means mirrored layouts, Arabic typography, and testing in both directions, not just translated text. In regulated sectors, Arabic content is often legally required.

  • Do I actually own my website or am I renting it?

    You own it only if your contract says so. Some Dubai agencies lease sites on a monthly fee, which means you lose access if you stop paying. Always confirm in writing that you own the source code, design files, domain, and hosting account at the end. Without that clause, you may be renting your own website.

  • How long does it take to build a website in Dubai?

    A landing page takes 1 to 2 weeks, a brochure site 2 to 4 weeks, a small business CMS site 4 to 8 weeks, and e-commerce or custom builds 2 to 4 months. Arabic localisation adds 2 to 3 weeks and any compliance review adds 4 to 6 weeks. The biggest delay is usually how fast you supply content and approvals.

  • How do I know if I am being overcharged for a website in Dubai?

    Never accept a single lump-sum number. Ask for an itemised scope covering pages, revision rounds, SEO, hosting, content, and ownership, then compare quotes on inclusions, not just the headline price. A transparent agency gives you the breakdown without being pushed. If they will not itemise, that itself is the answer.

  • What is the 3-year total cost of owning a Dubai website?

    Over 3 years, a basic WordPress site costs roughly AED 18,000 to 34,000 all in, a mid-tier Shopify store AED 36,000 to 70,000, a large WooCommerce store AED 60,000 to 120,000, and a custom Next.js app AED 120,000 to 300,000. The build is only the first year. Hosting, domain, maintenance, and content make up the rest.

  • Can I start small and add features later to save money?

    Yes, and it is one of the smartest budget moves in Dubai. Launch with core pages and the one feature that earns revenue, then add booking, payments, or Arabic in phases as the site proves itself. Phasing spreads cost and lets real usage decide what to build next. One founder cut roughly AED 49,500 by trimming non-essentials from version one.

  • How much does adding booking, CRM, or payments cost?

    Custom features add AED 2,000 to 40,000 or more depending on complexity. A payment gateway integration is roughly AED 3,000 to 8,000 per gateway, a booking system AED 4,000 to 10,000, and a CRM integration AED 4,000 to 20,000. Decide which features earn money before you pay to build them.

SKIMBOX Team

Tech Consultancy

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