Airbnb Fees and Other Platform Commissions in Dubai: What Property Owners Actually Receive

By abir
June 24, 2026

When a guest books your Dubai apartment for five nights at AED 800 per night, the first number you see is AED 4,000. That figure is real. But it is not what lands in your bank account.

Between that gross booking total and your actual payout, a number of deductions take place. Some are platform charges. Some are taxes. Some are operational. Understanding what each one is – and why it exists – is the difference between managing a holiday home in Dubai with clear expectations and being surprised every time a payment arrives.

This article explains how booking platform fees work in Dubai, what else affects your net income, and why being listed on these platforms still makes strong commercial sense for property owners in the UAE.

Gross Booking vs Net Income: The Number That Actually Matters

Most owners focus on the gross booking amount – the total a guest pays when they confirm a reservation. But by the time that booking converts to a payout, several things have already been deducted.

A typical booking on a platform like Airbnb or Booking.com may involve some or all of the following:

  • Platform commission – the fee the booking platform takes for distributing your listing, processing the payment, and managing the booking flow
  • VAT – applicable in the UAE at the standard rate
  • Tourism fee – collected by the platform on behalf of Dubai’s tourism authorities in some cases
  • Cleaning fee – often collected from the guest and passed through, but worth confirming how this is handled in your specific setup
  • Management fee – the fee paid to your holiday home management company for operating the property

Not all of these apply to every booking, and the exact structure depends on the platform and how your property is set up. But the core principle holds: gross income and net income are not the same number, and the gap between them is predictable once you understand what each line item represents.

What Airbnb and Other Platforms Charge in Dubai

Each booking platform has its own fee structure. Some charge the host directly. Others split the charge between host and guest. Understanding which model applies to your Dubai property is the starting point for calculating real returns.

The table below covers the main platforms used for holiday homes in Dubai, with estimated commission ranges and what to watch for on each:

Platform Type Estimated Commission / Fee Notes
Airbnb Short-term rental platform Around 15.5% Strong guest traffic, brand trust, reviews, and host protection through Airbnb AirCover, subject to Airbnb’s terms.
Booking.com Hotel / apartment platform Around 15% to 18% Exact commission depends on the property agreement. Genius discounts, visibility programs, and other promotions may increase the effective cost.
Expedia / Hotels.com Travel platform Around 15% to 20% Exact percentage depends on the Expedia agreement and booking model. Good for wider travel exposure.
Agoda Travel platform Around 15% to 20% Commission depends on the property and agreement. Promotions or ranking tools may increase the final cost.
Vrbo Vacation rental platform Around 8% total Usually a lower commission structure, but the exact setup should always be checked.
Blueground Corporate / mid-term partner Around 15% to 16% Should be treated separately from standard booking platforms – used for mid-term and corporate-style bookings.
Direct Booking Direct guest booking 0% platform commission No platform commission, but direct bookings still require proper guest screening, a contract, payment collection, and a refundable damage deposit.
Property Finder / Bayut / Dubizzle Lead generation / listing portals No booking commission These are listing and advertising platforms, not standard booking platforms. They do not process reservations directly.

These figures are a reference, not a fixed rule. The actual commission on any given booking depends on the platform, your specific property agreement, and any promotions or visibility tools in use. Your holiday home manager will confirm the exact rates that apply to your property.

The key thing to understand is that platform commission is not a hidden cost. It is a distribution cost – the price of having your property visible to the travellers who are actively looking for somewhere to stay in Dubai.

Why Listing on These Platforms Still Makes Sense

It is easy to look at a commission percentage and ask whether it is worth paying. But the fee covers far more than simply taking an online reservation. These platforms fund a much larger ecosystem that your property relies on.

Here is what Airbnb, Booking.com, and similar platforms actually provide:

Traffic and reach

These platforms attract hundreds of millions of searches every year from travellers actively looking for accommodation. A well-optimised listing puts your Dubai property in front of local staycation guests, regional travellers from across the GCC, and international visitors – without any advertising spend from you.

Guest trust

Guests book through platforms they recognise because they trust the payment process, the review system, and the support structure behind it. That trust transfers to your listing. A first-time visitor to Dubai looking for an apartment is far more likely to book through a platform they know than through an unknown website.

Reviews and credibility

A consistent review score on Airbnb or Booking.com is one of the most valuable assets a holiday home can build over time. Reviews accumulate slowly and are difficult to replicate outside of a platform. They signal reliability to every future guest who views your listing.

Secure payment handling

These platforms handle the full payment transaction – collection, fraud protection, chargeback risk, and disbursement. For property owners, that removes a significant operational and financial burden. You receive a payout; the platform handles everything upstream.

Filling vacant nights

An empty night generates no income. The primary function of being listed across multiple platforms is to reduce vacancy. Even after a 15% commission, a night that would have otherwise been empty produces net income. This matters most during shoulder periods and slower seasons, when direct demand is lower.

Access to different types of guests

Different platforms attract different travellers. Airbnb has strong reach with leisure guests and shorter stays. Booking.com performs well with urban and business travellers visiting Dubai. Agoda brings strong inbound demand from Asian markets, which matters given the volume of Asia-Pacific travel into the UAE. Being listed across multiple platforms means your property is visible to a broader mix of potential guests – not just those who happen to search in one place.

Dispute and damage processes

Platforms like Airbnb offer host protection programmes that provide a degree of coverage in the event of guest-related damage. These processes have their limitations and are not a substitute for proper insurance – but they do provide a structured route for raising claims that would not exist outside the platform.

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The Right Way to Think About Platform Fees in Dubai

Platform fees are not the problem. Unclear numbers are the problem.

A Dubai property owner who understands that 15% goes to the platform, VAT applies at the standard UAE rate, the management fee sits at a known percentage, and the cleaning charge is collected separately – that owner has a clear picture of what each booking actually returns. The numbers are not a surprise; they are a calculation.

The difficulty arises when owners are shown gross revenue projections without any of this context. A headline figure looks attractive. The net figure, once all costs are applied, tells the real story. Any honest conversation about holiday home income in Dubai should start from net, not gross.

The goal is not to avoid booking platforms – it is to use them correctly. For a Dubai holiday home, that means being present on the right channels for your property and guest profile, pricing in a way that accounts for all costs, and receiving clear reporting on what each booking actually delivers. That combination – the right platforms, the right pricing, and full transparency on net income – is what turns a Dubai property into a reliable source of returns over time.

If you own a property in Dubai and want a clear picture of what your net income looks like after all platform fees and costs, we are happy to walk you through the numbers. At Monty Holiday Home, we are a boutique holiday property management operator in Dubai – and transparency on net income is part of how we work with every owner from day one.

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