Dubai has more than 430 listed web design companies, and the same brief can come back priced anywhere from AED 1,650 to over AED 500,000 [1][2]. That spread is not a mistake. It is the whole problem. The word "website" covers a one-page template you lease by the month and a custom platform a team of engineers builds over four months, and both get sold as "your new website".
This guide is about telling them apart. We build websites and apps for UAE businesses out of our Dubai and Bengaluru teams, so we see the quotes clients bring us from other agencies, and we see what goes wrong six months later. Most of it is avoidable. The trick is knowing what to check before you sign, not after.
How much does a web design company in Dubai actually cost?
Most Dubai business websites cost between AED 8,000 and AED 18,000 with an agency, brochure sites start around AED 3,500, and large e-commerce or custom builds run to AED 110,000 or more [1][3]. Freelancers and fixed-price packages start lower, from about AED 1,650 for a five-to-seven-page template site with the basics [4].
Here is the realistic 2026 picture by build type, triangulated across several Dubai agency pricing pages:
| Website type | Typical agency price (AED) | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Landing / one page | 1,500 to 20,000 | 3 to 10 days |
| Brochure (up to 8 pages) | 3,500 to 8,000 | 2 to 4 weeks |
| Small business + CMS | 8,000 to 18,000 | 4 to 8 weeks |
| Corporate / bilingual | 15,000 to 55,000 | 2 to 3 months |
| E-commerce | 15,000 to 110,000+ | 2 to 4 months |
| Custom web app | 35,000 to 300,000+ | 3 to 6 months |
Agency hourly rates in Dubai run roughly AED 200 to 600, a senior Dubai freelancer AED 200 to 350, and a junior remote freelancer AED 30 to 80 [3]. The gap is real, but the cheapest hourly rate rarely produces the cheapest project once you count management time and rework.
Quick math: a AED 12,000 website that brings in two new clients a month at AED 3,000 each pays for itself in the first week of its second month. The right question is never "what is the cheapest quote", it is "what will this site earn back". For the full breakdown by feature and the line items most agencies leave out of the quote, see our Dubai website cost guide and the UAE-wide pricing breakdown.
How do you choose a web design agency in Dubai without getting burned?
Verify legal registration, demand live portfolio links, confirm who actually builds the site, and get ownership in writing before you compare prices. Those four checks filter out most of the agencies that cause problems, and they take an afternoon.
1. Verify the agency is really licensed and local
A real Dubai mainland agency holds a DET trade licence under activity code 6201.96 for web design and development, plus a physical office on an Ejari tenancy contract [5]. Ask for the licence number and the office address. A Dubai freelance permit costs only around AED 7,500 a year, so "we're licensed" on its own is not a quality signal [6]. The absence of any licence, an address that is only a free-zone mailbox, or a request to pay into a personal bank account are the markers to walk away from.
2. Ask for three live sites, opened on your phone
Anyone can show polished screens in a slide deck. Ask for three live URLs and open them on your own phone while you are sitting with them [7]. Check the load speed, check the mobile layout, and if you need Arabic, check whether they have actually shipped a right-to-left site. Mockups prove nothing. Live sites prove they can finish.
3. Find out who actually builds it
Many Dubai agencies pitch with a senior team and then hand the real work to junior staff or an offshore team [8]. That is not automatically bad, but you should know. Ask who specifically writes your code, where they physically sit, and whether you can meet them. Where the development team sits affects your timezone overlap, your communication, and your data-residency position under UAE law.
Straight talk: a lot of the cheapest quotes in Dubai are an offshore development shop behind a free-zone sales office. You are paying a local premium for a project manager and recourse. Make sure you actually get both, because if you do not, you have the offshore price with none of the offshore savings.
4. Confirm who owns the domain, hosting, and code
This is the single most overlooked check and the one that causes the most pain later. The default rule is simple and brutal: whoever registers the domain owns it [9]. If the agency buys your domain in its own account, it owns your domain unless your contract says otherwise.
Who owns the website when an agency builds it?
You should own the domain, hosting account, source code, design files, and content the moment the final invoice is paid, but only if your contract says so [9][10]. Without an explicit transfer clause, the agency can keep your domain, your code, and your logins, and some do exactly that as a way to keep you paying.
Three traps to close before you sign:
- The hosting hostage trap. The agency registers your domain and hosting in its own name, so you cannot move or edit your site without going through them. It is one of the most common post-project disputes in the Dubai market. Insist that both the domain and the hosting account sit in your company's name from day one [11].
- The monthly lease. If you pay a monthly fee for "development and management" instead of a lump sum, you are usually leasing the site, not owning it. Stop paying and you lose access to "your" website [9]. Read the contract for what happens if you leave.
- The reused template sold as custom. A lot of "custom" work is a purchased theme with the colours changed. Ask what is bespoke versus templated, and ask for the design files. Under UAE law, copyright in original work vests automatically with the creator under Federal Decree-Law No. 38 of 2021, but contract terms, not the default law, decide what transfers to you [12].
Common mistake: treating ownership as something to sort out at the end. By the end, you have nothing to bargain with. The time to get domain, hosting, code, design files, and all logins assigned to you in writing is before the deposit leaves your account.
What are the warning signs of a bad agency?
The reliable red flags are a single lump-sum price with no breakdown, a sales process that only asks about colours and fonts, no documented build process, a promise of a full custom site in 24 to 48 hours, no live portfolio, and a long contract with no exit clause [2][7]. Any one of them is a reason to ask harder questions.
A few more that come up repeatedly in Dubai:
- Hosting priced far above the real AED 40 to 500 per month, which usually means a 300 to 500 percent resale markup [13].
- Unrealistic timelines for complex work, or the opposite, vague timelines with no milestones.
- No client references beyond a Google rating, which is easy to manufacture.
- Scope drift left undefined, which is the primary reason projects blow past their estimate, and rush jobs that quietly add a 20 to 50 percent premium [3].
The 12 questions to ask before you sign
Print these. Ask all of them. The answers, not the pitch, tell you who you are dealing with.
- Show me three live sites you built, not mockups, and let me open them now.
- What is your DET licence number and activity code, and where is your office?
- Who specifically builds my site, in-house or offshore, and can I meet them?
- Is the domain registered in my name and my account?
- On final payment, do I own the code, design files, content, and all logins, in writing?
- What is included, and what is explicitly not included, in this quote?
- How many revision rounds per stage, and what is the hourly rate for out-of-scope work?
- Is post-launch support included or billed, and what is your response time for a critical bug?
- What CMS will you use, and what does ongoing maintenance and security need?
- How do you handle technical SEO, Core Web Vitals, and page speed during the build?
- If I need Arabic, is it built properly with real RTL, or just translated?
- What happens to my files and database if we end the relationship?
Does the agency understand Arabic and the UAE market?
For most Dubai businesses serving local audiences, Arabic is not optional. Many UAE consumers, especially Emirati and Khaleeji buyers, prefer to deal in Arabic, and in regulated sectors like government, legal, financial, and healthcare, Arabic content is often legally required [14]. Proper right-to-left design means restructured navigation, dedicated RTL styling, and Arabic fonts like Cairo or Tajawal, not Google-translated text dropped into an English layout. Cheap template shops routinely get this wrong, which is one of the clearest ways to separate a real agency from a reseller. If bilingual matters to you, read our Arabic-first website guide before you brief anyone.
How this played out for three clients
These are real situations from projects we have worked on. Names and a few details are changed for privacy.
Layla's clinic group (Jumeirah). Layla came to us holding a AED 45,000 quote for a six-page site. The quote was a single lump sum with no breakdown. When we itemised what she actually needed, a bilingual six-page site with an appointment form and DHA-compliant content, it came to under AED 16,000. Her advice now: "Make them show you the line items. The lump sum was hiding a template I could have bought myself."
Marcus's furniture brand (Business Bay). Marcus had a working Shopify store built by a freelancer who then left the UAE. He could not access his own domain because it was registered in the freelancer's personal account. Recovering it took six weeks. We rebuilt on a clean setup with everything in his company's name. "Get the domain in your name on day one," he says. "Everything else is fixable. That was not, easily."
A Sharjah logistics firm. They had been quoted AED 9,000 by an offshore shop with a Dubai mailbox and AED 24,000 by a local agency. They picked the cheap one, the site shipped three months late with broken Arabic, and they paid the local agency to redo it. Their total spend was higher than if they had started with the right team. The tip from their operations lead: "Cheap twice is expensive. Ask where the developers actually sit."
How SKIMBOX approaches a web project
We start every build with a written, itemised scope, so you can see exactly what you are paying for and what you are not. The domain, hosting, code, design files, and logins are yours, assigned to your company in writing, from the start. Our Dubai and Bengaluru teams handle English and Arabic builds, bake technical SEO and Core Web Vitals into the build rather than selling them later, and price from the lowest credible figure with no surprise invoices. If you want a transparent proposal, see our web development services and UI/UX design services, or contact us and we will come back with a scope-first quote.
References
[1] We Are Tenet - Website design cost in Dubai (2026). wearetenet.com/blog/website-design-cost-in-dubai [2] Unified Infotech - Top Dubai web design agencies and how to choose. unifiedinfotech.net/blog/top-dubai-web-design-agencies [3] Hikmah AI Agency - Website development cost Dubai 2026, hourly rates and TCO. hikmahaiagency.com/blog/website-development-cost-dubai-2026 [4] Sheikh Hassaan - Best web design option in Dubai: agency, freelancer or package. sheikhhassaan.com/insights/best-web-design-option-in-dubai-agency-freelancer-or-package [5] Shuraa - DED/DET licence activities list in the UAE (activity code 6201.96). shuraa.com/ded-license-activities-list-in-uae [6] Dahhan Biz - How to get a GoFreelance Dubai permit, 2026 guide. dahhanbiz.com/blogs/how-to-get-a-gofreelance-dubai-permit-2026-guide-for-freelancers [7] Webcastle - How to choose a web design agency in Dubai without getting scammed. webcastle.ae/blog/how-to-choose-a-web-design-agency-in-dubai-without-getting-scammed [8] Kreativa Group - Questions to ask a web design agency before you hire. kreativagroup.com/post/questions-to-ask-a-web-design-agency-before-you-hire [9] Tulip Tree Marketing - Do you own your website? The truth about website ownership. tuliptreemarketing.com/2025/01/do-you-own-your-website-the-truth-about-website-ownership [10] OneUpWeb - Website ownership explained. oneupweb.com/blog/website-ownership [11] Upscape - Website design costs in Dubai, ownership and credentials. upscapetech.com/website-design-costs-in-dubai [12] UAE Ahead - Intellectual property law in the UAE (Federal Decree-Law No. 38 of 2021). uaeahead.com/intellectual-property-law-uae-guide [13] The Yash Media - Web design agency for UAE businesses, complete guide 2026. theyashmedia.com/post/web-design-agency-for-uae-businesses-complete-guide-2026 [14] Go-Globe - Arabic website localisation and UAE legal requirements. go-globe.com/website-localization-arabic-website [15] SKIMBOX - Internal project experience building and rescuing websites for UAE clients across retail, healthcare, real estate, and logistics, 2026. skimbox.co



