UAE Central Bank Ends AED 5,000 Minimum Salary Rule for Personal Loans
In a major regulatory shift, the Central Bank of the UAE (CBUAE) has officially abolished the long-standing AED 5,000 minimum salary requirement for personal loans.
This change is part of the UAE’s strategic move to enhance financial inclusion, modernize credit assessments, and expand access to personal financing for lower-income residents.

1. Summary of the New Loan Regulation
What Changed?
Under the new CBUAE directive:
- The AED 5,000 salary threshold is abolished.
- Banks can now set their own minimum salary criteria based on internal risk analysis.
- The following regulations remain active:
- Debt Burden Ratio (DBR) cap: 50% of income
- Maximum loan tenure: 48 months
- Mandatory affordability assessment
- Salary transfer through WPS may still be required
Why This Matters
This reform brings the UAE in line with advanced global lending frameworks where creditworthiness matters more than a fixed salary number.
2. Who Benefits from the New UAE Lending Rules?
⭐ Low-Income Employees
Workers earning below AED 5,000, especially in blue-collar sectors, can now apply for personal loans legally and safely.
⭐ New Residents & Young Professionals
Fresh graduates and new arrivals — who previously didn’t meet the salary threshold — gain access to formal financing.
⭐ SMEs & Employers
Companies benefit from increased workforce stability and reduced reliance on informal loans.
⭐ Banks & Financial Institutions
Lenders can now expand their customer base and create innovative lending products for underserved groups.
3. Economic Impact: Opportunities & Risks
Opportunities
✔ Wider Financial Inclusion
A large segment of the UAE workforce becomes part of the formal credit ecosystem.
✔ Boost in Consumer Spending
More accessible loans increase demand for retail, hospitality, healthcare, and services.
✔ Stronger Banking Sector
Banks gain flexibility to implement sophisticated credit scoring models.
Risks & Challenges
⚠ Higher Default Probability
Low-income clients may experience repayment issues if borrowing is not managed responsibly.
⚠ Need for Stronger Credit Scoring
Banks must invest in better underwriting models to prevent risky lending.
⚠ Risk of Over-Indebtedness
Consumers may over-borrow due to easier access.
Affinitas DMCC advises both residents and employers to approach borrowing responsibly and understand the DBR limit.
What This Means for Businesses — Expert Insights from Affinitas DMCC
1. HR & Payroll Policy Adjustments
Businesses should update HR guides to reflect:
- WPS salary transfer requirements
- Employee financial wellness protocols
- Loan confirmation letters (for employees applying for credit)
2. Improved Employee Satisfaction & Retention
When staff can access fair loans, financial stress decreases — boosting productivity.
3. SME Impact
SMEs may experience:
- more stable workforce behavior
- improved cash flow among employees
- higher purchasing power across consumer markets
Why the UAE Removed the Salary Requirement (Strategic Context)
The policy aligns with the UAE’s long-term strategy:
🇦🇪 Financial Inclusion Vision
Bringing low-income workers into the formal banking environment.
🇦🇪 Digital Transformation in Banking
Risk-based digital underwriting → less reliance on static salary thresholds.
🇦🇪 Economic Expansion
More access to credit → more liquidity → stronger internal consumer economy.
How Affinitas DMCC Supports You
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- ✅ Corporate tax & compliance advisory
- ✅ Accounting & audit services
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