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What Is Form U in Dubai Real Estate? (Commission Agreement Explained)

What Is Form U in Dubai Real Estate? (Commission Agreement Explained)

Most Dubai agents know Form A and Form B well — they're the standard seller and buyer agreements for secondary market transactions. Form U is less discussed, but it fills an important gap: formalizing commission arrangements that don't fit neatly into the Form A or Form B framework.

If you work with off-plan properties, developer sales, or non-standard commission structures, Form U is a document you need to understand.


What Is Form U?

Form U is the Commission Agreement — a RERA-recognized form that documents the agreed commission between an agent (or brokerage) and their client when the standard Form A or Form B framework doesn't fully apply.

While Form A covers the seller-agent relationship and Form B covers the buyer-agent relationship in secondary market deals, Form U provides a flexible mechanism to document commission obligations in contexts where those standard forms don't capture the arrangement.

In practice, Form U is most commonly associated with:

  • Off-plan / new development sales where developer-set commission structures apply
  • Situations where commission terms need to be separately documented from the main listing or buyer agreement
  • Non-standard commission arrangements between agent and client

When Is Form U Needed?

Off-Plan and Developer Sales

Dubai's off-plan market operates differently from the secondary market. Developers set their own commission rates (typically 3-5% for agents, sometimes higher on specific launches), and agents are paid directly by the developer rather than the buyer.

In this context:

  • There's no Form A (the developer isn't using a RERA listing agreement in the same way)
  • There's no standard Form B commission obligation from the buyer (buyers typically don't pay agent commission on off-plan)
  • Form U can document the commission arrangement between the agent and the client (or between the developer and the agent)

Not every off-plan transaction uses Form U — many developers have their own proprietary agency agreements — but Form U provides a RERA-recognized alternative when a formal commission document is needed.

Separate Commission Documentation

Sometimes an agent has an existing relationship with a client and needs to separately document a commission arrangement for a specific transaction, separate from or supplementary to Form A or Form B.

Form U serves as a standalone commission agreement in these cases.

Non-Standard Arrangements

Joint ventures, co-investments where the agent has a financial stake, or complex multi-party transactions may require commission documentation that Form A/B don't accommodate. Form U provides the flexibility.


Key Terms in Form U

1. Parties

The agent/brokerage (RERA-licensed) and the client. Both must be clearly identified with full legal names and ID numbers.

2. Property or Transaction Scope

What is the commission agreement covering? A specific property, a developer project, or a broader arrangement? Define the scope clearly to avoid ambiguity.

3. Commission Rate

The agreed commission, expressed as:

  • A percentage of the purchase price or transaction value
  • A fixed amount
  • A percentage of the developer's selling price (for off-plan)

Be precise. "Standard commission" is not precise enough.

4. Who Pays

Is commission paid by the buyer, the seller, the developer, or shared? In off-plan deals, it's almost always the developer. In secondary market variations, it depends on the arrangement.

5. Payment Trigger and Timeline

When is commission due? At signing of purchase agreement? At transfer? At handover (for off-plan)? For off-plan deals with extended construction periods, the payment trigger matters a lot.

6. Validity Period

How long does this commission agreement remain in force? For a specific transaction, it runs until completion or expiry. For broader arrangements, define the term.


Form U vs. Form A vs. Form B

Understanding where Form U fits relative to the standard forms:

Form A Form B Form U
Primary use Seller-agent listing Buyer-agent agreement Commission agreement (flexible)
Market Secondary Secondary Secondary + off-plan
Commission direction Seller pays agent Buyer pays agent (or seller-side) Variable
Exclusivity Yes (optional) Sometimes Not primary purpose
Standard? Yes, very common Common Situational

The key difference: Form A and Form B are relationship agreements that include commission terms. Form U is primarily a commission agreement that may stand alone or supplement other agreements.


Off-Plan Commission Context

Dubai's off-plan market is massive — a significant portion of total transactions in any given year. Understanding how commission works here is essential:

Developer-set commissions: Developers set their own commission rates for registered agents. These rates vary by developer, project, and sometimes by launch phase. Major developers like Emaar, DAMAC, Aldar, and Nakheel have their own agent registration systems and commission structures.

Registered agent requirement: To receive developer commission on off-plan sales, agents must typically be registered with that specific developer. This is separate from RERA licensing.

Commission payment timing: Developer commission is often paid:

  • On SPA (Sales Purchase Agreement) signing by buyer
  • In tranches linked to construction milestones
  • On handover (for some developers)

This delayed or tranche-based payment is very different from secondary market commission (typically paid at DLD transfer). Agents need to manage cash flow accordingly.

No Form A/B on developer primary sales: The developer's SPA is the sale contract. Form A/B are for resale/secondary transactions. This is where Form U (or the developer's own agency agreement) fills the gap.


Common Scenarios Where Form U Adds Value

Scenario 1: Large investor, multiple off-plan purchases
A client buys five units across two developer projects. The agent wants a single documented commission arrangement covering the entire portfolio acquisition. Form U provides this.

Scenario 2: Developer resale during construction
A buyer purchased off-plan two years ago and now wants to sell before handover (resale of off-plan unit). This is a hybrid transaction — secondary market but involving an unbuilt property. Commission documentation may not fit neatly into Form A. Form U fills the gap.

Scenario 3: International client with complex ownership structure
A client buying through a company or trust structure. Standard Form B may not capture the commission obligation cleanly. Form U provides a cleaner document trail.

Scenario 4: Consulting or advisory fees
An agent providing real estate advisory services (market analysis, portfolio review, investment strategy) for a fee, separate from transaction commission. Form U or similar documentation formalizes this.


Practical Tips for Using Form U

Always tie Form U to specific scope. Vague commission agreements are dispute magnets. Define the property, the transaction, the rate, and the trigger with precision.

Don't use Form U as a workaround for Form A/B. If you're doing a standard secondary market sale, use Form A and/or Form B. Don't substitute Form U for the purpose of avoiding registration requirements or RERA disclosure obligations.

Get brokerage-level signatures. Like other RERA forms, Form U should be signed at the brokerage level — not just individual agents — to be properly documented.

Understand developer requirements first. For off-plan commission, many developers have their own agency registration and commission agreements that may supersede or run alongside Form U. Know what the developer requires before adding Form U.

Document changes. If commission terms change during a transaction (price adjustments on off-plan, renegotiation on secondary), document the change formally rather than just noting it in an email.


The Bigger Picture: Commission Documentation in Dubai

Dubai's RERA framework takes commission documentation seriously. The dispute resolution center handles commission disputes regularly, and documented agreements are what win those disputes.

The hierarchy of commission documentation:

  1. Form A — seller's commission obligation to listing agent
  2. Form B — buyer's commission obligation to buyer's agent
  3. Form I — inter-agent referral split
  4. Form U — flexible commission agreement for non-standard scenarios
  5. Developer agency agreement — off-plan commission from developer to agent

Knowing which document applies to which scenario is a core competency for Dubai agents. It's not just compliance — it's how you protect your income.


Form U at a Glance

Detail Notes
What it is Commission agreement (flexible)
Primary use Off-plan, non-standard arrangements
Who signs RERA-licensed brokerage + client
Commission direction Variable (client or developer pays)
vs. Form A Form A is listing agreement; Form U is commission-focused
vs. Form B Form B is buyer representation; Form U is commission-specific
When to use When Form A/B don't cleanly apply

Bottom Line

Form U is the flexible commission documentation tool in Dubai's RERA toolkit. It's not the go-to for standard secondary market deals — that's Form A and Form B territory. But when you're working in off-plan, handling complex client arrangements, or documenting commission outside the standard framework, Form U is what keeps your entitlement in writing.

Know when to use it. Know how to structure it. And like all RERA forms, make sure it's signed, documented, and filed before the commission conversation gets complicated.


Still confused about Form U? The ActivateOS coach can walk you through it step by step — free, no signup needed.


Originally published at activateos.io/blog

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