Whether you're launching a brokerage, setting up a property management firm, or navigating the complex path to a developer license — GulfBC guides you through every regulatory step in Dubai and Iran with precision and full legal compliance.
Every individual and firm buying, selling, renting, or listing property in Dubai must be licensed by RERA. Operating without a valid RERA license is a criminal offence under UAE law — fines, blacklisting, and criminal prosecution apply.
From trade name to first legal transaction — GulfBC completes this in parallel tracks, cutting the typical timeline to 3–5 weeks.
GulfBC prepares, translates, and submits all documentation to DLD and DET on your behalf.
Dubai's developer registration is one of the most regulated and capital-intensive business licenses in the UAE. Since a wave of reforms following the 2008 crisis, and tightened further through 2023–2025, RERA applies rigorous financial and operational scrutiny to all new developer applicants.
Developer registration in Dubai involves multiple government authorities and typically takes 2–4 months when documents and capital are fully prepared. GulfBC manages every submission.
Managing other people's properties commercially in Dubai — including leasing, rent collection, maintenance coordination, and tenant management — requires a specific DED license and a significant bank guarantee. This is a high-barrier, high-trust category regulated directly under Local Order No. 2 of 2003.
GulfBC guides you through every step — from trade license to bank guarantee procurement and RERA staff registration.
In Iran, operating as a real estate agent or establishing a brokerage office requires a business license issued by the Real Estate Brokers' Union (Real Estate Brokers' Union). Per the updated regulations of 2023, all applicants must complete a vocational training course before the union processes any application. The entire process — from application to license issuance — typically takes 1–2 months.
GulfBC's local Iran team manages every step — from training enrollment to police clearance to final license issuance.
Iran faces a structural housing deficit estimated at over 5 million units, and the government's National Housing Mobilisation Programme has placed construction at the centre of national policy. For investors — particularly Iranians based abroad — development in Iran offers access to low land and labour costs, abundant local materials, and a deeply undersupplied market.
Real estate development in Iran typically takes 3–6 months from company registration to first building permit. GulfBC's local team manages all government submissions in Persian.
Iran's housing market presents a structural opportunity unlike most markets — driven by deep undersupply, affordable land and labour, and a government actively seeking investment in residential construction.
GulfBC has physical teams in both Dubai and Iran — professionals who live and work inside these regulatory systems every day, not consultants reading rulebooks from afar.
Whether you're launching a brokerage in Dubai, navigating RERA's developer requirements, or setting up a licensed agency in Iran — GulfBC handles every step with precision and full legal compliance.