A decade ago, putting down an entire year's rent upfront was the norm and those tenants whose employers did not offer such advances were often forced to borrow from the bank.
Gradually, greater competition among landlords helped ease the burden on tenants and two to three cheques became the norm, with four cheques also common, albeit with renters often having to pay up to 10 per cent extra for the privilege of not paying a full year in advance.
"The market has seen some power return to tenants - they can start to dictate more terms and the amount of cheques is often one of those negotiation points," said Lukman Hajje, Propertyfinder Group CCO.
Few tenants ask to pay in more than four cheques and it is rare for a landlord to accept a request for six cheques, said Mark Towers, managing director of brokerage Edwards and Towers.
"We believe we are some way off a market where 12 cheques or payments are the norm and as the market improves landlords will try to reduce the amount of cheques again," said Towers.
A search of the nearly 24,500 Dubai apartments and villas advertised for rent on Propertyfinder.ae shows only about one in six specify the number of cheques required. Of those that do, 1,842 listings state tenants can pay in four cheques. A further 925 mention one cheque, 1,052 refer to two cheques and only 140 will permit 12. "As the labour force evolved and HR departments have started to lump housing benefit into salaries, we have seen more of a need for landlords to accept more cheques," said Towers.
"Ten years ago, employees would get a single rent payment form the employer but now it is added onto the salary and paid monthly. This puts a strain on tenants' finances and they have no choice but to search for landlords who will accept multiple cheques."
"Properties let on a single cheque two years ago are now let on a four-cheque basis," he said.
In developed markets worldwide, the norm is for tenants to pay rent monthly, preferably through a direct debit from their bank account, but landlords in the UAE have shown little willingness to adopt this method.
That's perhaps because tenants' large upfront payments provide landlords with a hefty lump sum, although switching to monthly installments would help mortgaged buy-to-let investors budget their cash flow more easily, and again, making it easier on the tenant.
"We don't believe more legislation is required to move towards a monthly payment structure," added Towers.
"It is more a matter of time for landlords to become accustomed to a new reality - a combination of economic factors has occurred over the past two to three years where companies are paying their employees differently and the new workforce is putting pressure on the landlords to adjust."
- business@khaleejtimes.com
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