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What Is Oqood in Dubai? (Off-Plan Registration Explained for Agents)

If you work in Dubai real estate — especially off-plan sales — you'll encounter Oqood constantly. It's the registration system that protects off-plan buyers, and understanding it is essential for every agent.

What Is Oqood?

Oqood (Arabic for "contracts") is Dubai's off-plan property registration system, operated by the Dubai Land Department (DLD). It was introduced to bring transparency and legal protection to off-plan property purchases.

When a buyer purchases an off-plan property (a unit that hasn't been built yet or is under construction), the Sale and Purchase Agreement (SPA) is registered through Oqood. This creates an official, government-recognized record of the buyer's interest in the property.

What Oqood Is NOT:

  • It's not a title deed — title deeds are issued after the property is completed and handed over
  • It's not a replacement for DLD transfer — that happens at completion
  • It's not optional — off-plan SPAs must be registered through Oqood

Why Oqood Exists

Before Oqood, off-plan purchases were riskier:

  • No centralized record of who owned what off-plan
  • Developers could potentially sell the same unit twice
  • Buyers had limited proof of ownership during construction
  • Resale of off-plan units was harder to track

Oqood solved these problems by creating a government-backed registry for off-plan contracts.

How Oqood Registration Works

For New Purchases (Primary Market):

  1. Buyer signs the SPA with the developer
  2. Developer submits the SPA to DLD for Oqood registration
  3. DLD registers the contract and issues an Oqood certificate
  4. The buyer's interest in the property is now officially recorded

In most cases, the developer handles the Oqood registration as part of the purchase process. The buyer pays the registration fee.

For Off-Plan Resales (Secondary Market):

  1. Original buyer (seller) and new buyer agree on terms
  2. Seller obtains NOC from the developer for the assignment
  3. The original Oqood is cancelled
  4. A new Oqood is registered in the new buyer's name
  5. DLD records the transfer

This is where agents come in — facilitating off-plan resales requires knowledge of the Oqood transfer process.

Oqood Fees

Fee Amount
Oqood registration (new SPA) 4% of property value
Admin fees AED 580
Innovation fee 0.25% of property value

The 4% DLD fee is the same as for completed property transfers. It's typically paid by the buyer, though developer promotions sometimes waive or absorb this fee as a sales incentive.

Fee Waiver Promotions:

During launch events, some developers absorb the 4% DLD fee to attract buyers. As an agent, always clarify who pays the Oqood fee — it's a significant amount and miscommunication causes problems.

Oqood vs. Title Deed: The Key Difference

Oqood Certificate Title Deed
When issued At off-plan purchase After handover/completion
What it represents Interest in an unbuilt property Ownership of a completed property
Issued by DLD (Oqood system) DLD
Can you sell with it? Yes (off-plan resale with NOC) Yes (standard resale transfer)
Can you mortgage against it? Limited options Full mortgage options
Government protection Yes — registered interest Yes — full ownership

The transition from Oqood to title deed happens when the developer completes the project and hands over units. The developer applies to DLD to convert Oqood registrations into title deeds.

What Agents Need to Know

1. Off-Plan Resale Restrictions

Not all off-plan properties can be resold freely. Some developers require:

  • A minimum percentage of the purchase price to be paid (often 30-40%) before allowing resale
  • A specific holding period
  • Developer NOC (with a fee)

Know the developer's resale policy before advising clients on off-plan investments.

2. Assignment vs. Transfer

Off-plan resales are technically "assignments" — the original buyer assigns their SPA rights to the new buyer. This is different from a standard property transfer.

The process:

  • Original buyer gets NOC from developer
  • Assignment agreement is signed
  • Old Oqood is cancelled, new Oqood is issued
  • DLD fees apply

3. Developer Completion Delays

If a developer doesn't complete on time, the buyer still has Oqood protection — their interest is registered. Buyers can escalate to RERA's dispute resolution.

4. Mortgage on Off-Plan

Some banks offer mortgages on off-plan properties (typically at higher stages of construction — 50%+ completion). The mortgage is registered alongside the Oqood.

5. Common Mistakes Agents Make

  • Not checking Oqood status before facilitating a resale — verify the Oqood is active and in the seller's name
  • Underestimating developer NOC timelines — some developers take 2-4 weeks to issue a resale NOC
  • Forgetting DLD fees on resales — the new buyer pays 4% again. Budget for this.
  • Not verifying payment milestones — if the seller hasn't met the minimum payment threshold, the developer won't approve the resale

6. How to Check Oqood Status

Oqood status can be verified through:

  • The Dubai REST app (for registered parties)
  • DLD customer service
  • The developer's sales/admin team

Always verify before listing an off-plan resale. An inactive or disputed Oqood means no sale.

Off-Plan as a Business for Agents

Off-plan sales are a major part of Dubai's market — representing over 60% of transaction volume in recent years. Understanding Oqood isn't just paperwork knowledge; it's core to a significant revenue stream.

The agents who succeed in off-plan:

  • Know the developer landscape (who delivers on time, who doesn't)
  • Understand payment plans and can compare them
  • Can explain Oqood protection to nervous first-time buyers
  • Track which projects are approaching resale eligibility
  • Use DLD sold data to show clients real secondary market prices for similar projects

Dealing with off-plan clients and need to understand Oqood better? The ActivateOS coach can walk you through registration, resale processes, and developer-specific requirements — free, no signup.

Ask the coach → activateos.io/chat


Originally published at activateos.io/blog

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