11 Mar 2010 The National
 

Property law gives landlords power to evict tenants and raise rents

  • Text size
  •  
  •  

ABU DHABI // A new property law in the capital will make it easier for landords to evict low-paying tenants, in effect weakening the existing rent cap.

And for the first time, judges will settle rent disputes under the umbrella of the Ministry of Justice.

The new legislation will be fully implemented by November. The five per cent rent cap will remain, but landlords will now be able to evict tenants at the end of the lease period, after giving two months' notice for residential property and three months for commercial property, and take on new tenants at a renegotiated rent.

The new law removes the automatic right of tenants to renew leases for five years with a maximum five per cent rent increase each year.

Property analysts were divided yesterday on the effect on rents of the new law; some said it would benefit landlords and property investors by effectively establishing a "floor" for rents, but others said downward pressure on rents in Abu Dhabi would continue as more units came on to the market and Dubai rents remained more competitive.

Rents more than doubled in the capital between 2006 and 2008, and barely decreased during the economic downturn because of a lack of accommodation on the market.

Many landlords were unable to remove tenants or, because of the mandatory five per cent cap, raise rent in line with the market.

David Nunn of the law firm Simmons and Simmons said: "The rent cap is not being touched but the automatic right of renewal of the leases is being removed. Before, you knew you could call unilaterally for an extension after the term of the lease, for up to five years, even if the landlord wanted you to leave.

"Some landlords actually preferred to keep a building empty in the hope of reselling it, rather than be stuck with a tenant for years."

The new law will also bring the existing Abu Dhabi Rental Disputes Resolution Committee and its appeal arm under the authority of the Ministry of Justice, and add a third level, the cassation committee.

Karim Nassir, a partner from the law firm Habib al Mulla, said: "The chairman of the rent, appeal and cassation committees should be a judge, whereas they used to be appointed by the Executive Council.

"The employees now are part of the Department of Justice. This is the place where it should be. Now the committees are chaired by a judge so we have a legal professional on the committee."

Tenants, however, were more concerned about the effect on rents. Graham Bentley, 34, from Dunstable in the UK, who rents a villa with his family in the Officer's City district of Abu Dhabi, said: "It sounds like a nightmare. Tenants are going to have a lot less protection."

Mr Bentley admitted the existing law was too harsh on property owners, but said the tide had now shifted too much. "If the market pushes rents up the way it has done in the past but rents are capped at five per cent, then landlords will just throw out the existing tenants at the end of their contract and get someone in for more money," he said.

"Most people in Abu Dhabi already think they are paying over the odds for where they are living. Lots of people are already moving to Dubai because of high rents."

Tenants who are about to reach the end of their lease will be able to stay until November this year if they have not lived there for five years, according to the law. Landlords will not be able to ask them to leave.

"Many tenancy contracts have been signed under law 20 of 2006, which would expire today," Mr Nassir said. "Everything has been postponed to November 2010."

A landlord could still evict a tenant before then, however, provided the Rental Disputes Resolution Committee agreed on the basis that the occupancy "causes serious harm to the landlord", the law says, and provided the tenant had already been living there for two years.

Ziad Bushnaq, from the brokerage Cornerstone said: "Abu Dhabi landlords should rather think about decreasing rents as they will face more competition very soon."

Mark Orman, a property lawyer with Trowers and Hamlins, said the change would make it easier for landlords to redevelop rundown buildings. "A lot of the properties here are quite old and in a bad state of repair," he said. "For landlords who wish to redevelop them, it can be quite a complicated process. This change will make it much easier to improve the quality of apartments in Abu Dhabi."

By Nathalie Gillet and Charlie Hamilton

© The National 2010

x DISCLAIMER

Zawya is a distributor (and not a publisher) of content supplied by third parties and subscribers. Any opinions, advice, statements, services, offers, or other information or content expressed or made available by those third parties, including information providers, subscribers or other users of the Service, are those of the respective author(s) or distributor(s) and not of the Company. The Company neither endorses nor is responsible for the accuracy or reliability of any opinion, advice or statement made on the Service by anyone other than authorized Service employee spokespersons while acting in their official capacities. The Company is not responsible for any infringement of intellectual property rights or breach of any applicable law or regulation, including regulation in relation to financial services or the distribution of financial products, defamation, data protection, telecommunications (including regulations relating to excessive use, spamming or other abusive activities) or obscene, offensive or illegal content). Under no circumstances will the Company be liable for any loss or damage caused by a member's reliance on information obtained through the Service. It is the responsibility of member to evaluate the accuracy, completeness or usefulness of any information, opinion, advice or other content available through the Service. Please seek the advice of professionals, as appropriate, regarding the evaluation of any specific information, opinion, advice or other content.

Read the full Member Agreement
http://www.zawya.com/legal/NewsLetter.cfm?name=disclaimer
Access to this article is subject to specific terms and condition.
 
 

Post a Comment

 
  • Comment Title (optional)
  • Express your views or tell us more about this article
  • First Name
  • Last Name
  • Email Address
  • Company Name (optional)
Leave this field empty
 
 

Community Comments (4)

 
Tunisia Property by Brad Hadden - 18-May-11
Hnn.. Property laws & market is going fine now a days..
 
Report Abuse | Email to a Friend | Reply to this Comment
 
 
Rent cap by A R - 14-Mar-10
What does it mean that the "rent cap of 5% will remain"? It will not remain of course, the landlord would ask for 50% or even 100% and if you tenant does not accept, they are evicted, simple as that. What cap?
 
Report Abuse | Email to a Friend | Reply to this Comment
 
 
Re: Rent cap by sara martin - 25-Oct-10
its mean suitable strategy to individual budget and situation to maximize the rerun on your investment.
 
Report Abuse | Email to a Friend
 
 
Re: Rent cap by - 17-Mar-10
It means the landlords can increase your rent 5% every year; however, if market rental rates increase substantially higher than that, the landlord has the option of evicting you and bringing in someone at the higher rent.
This law was passed mostly for landlords who have had their buildings fully rented out since the pre-boom period and were unable to charge their tenants the high market rates.
 
Report Abuse | Email to a Friend | Reply to this Comment
 
 
 
 
 
Hnn.. Property laws & market is going fine now a days..  
 
by Brad Hadden
More Comments by the Community
 
 
Zawya Comment Policy
 
  1. Zawya encourages you to add a comment to this discussion. You agree that when you add content to this discussion your comments will not:
    1.1   Contain any material which is libelous or defamatory of any person, is obscene, offensive, hateful or inflammatory or causes damage to the reputation of any person or organisation.
    1.2   Promote sexually explicit material, violence, discrimination based on race, sex, religion, nationality, disability, sexual orientation or age or any illegal activity.
    1.3   Be made in breach of any legal duty owed to a third party, such as a contractual duty or a duty of confidence.
    1.4   Be threatening, abuse or invade another's privacy, or cause annoyance, inconvenience or needless anxiety.
    1.5   Be used to impersonate any person, to misrepresent your identity or affiliation with any person, or be likely to deceive any person.
    1.6   Give the impression that they represent Zawya.
    1.7   Advocate, promote or assist any unlawful act such as (by way of example only) copyright infringement or computer misuse.
  2. The content posted on www.zawya.com is created by members of the public. The views expressed are theirs and unless specifically stated are not those of Zawya. Zawya reserves the right to review all comments prior to posting and edit or delete any contribution, but Zawya is not responsible for and can not be held liable for any content posted by members of the public on www.zawya.com.
  3. Zawya is not responsible for the availability or content of any third party sites that are accessible through www.zawya.com. Any links to third party websites from www.zawya.com do not amount to any endorsement of that site by Zawya and any use of that site by you is at your own risk.
  4. By submitting your comment, you hereby give Zawya the right, but not the obligation, to post, air, edit, exhibit, telecast, webcast, re-use, publish, reproduce, use, license, print, distribute or otherwise use your comments worldwide, in perpetuity.