Blog | 17 Feb 2026

Maid Visa Dubai 2026: Employer Document Checklist & How to Avoid Rejection

Written By: IMDAD

Maid Visa Document Verification In Dubai - Imdadh Center

Why Getting This Right Matters More Than Ever in 2026

Sponsoring a domestic worker in Dubai is not as straightforward as many employers assume. Domestic worker sponsorship applications can be delayed or returned if documents are incomplete or inconsistent, particularly where sponsor file, accommodation, identity, or immigration requirements are not met.

The financial and emotional cost of a rejected application is real. You may have already paid recruitment agency fees. Your worker may have already traveled to Dubai on an entry permit. A rejection at this stage doesn't just delay things — it can trigger overstay fines, require the worker to exit and re-enter the country, and in some cases, invalidate the sponsorship entirely.

This guide is written specifically for employers in Dubai who are in the pre-application stage. Whether you're hiring a live-in maid for the first time or re-sponsoring a worker after a gap, this post covers exactly what documents you need, the five rejection traps that catch employers off guard, and what a proper pre-submission audit looks like before you file anything with MOHRE.

Who Qualifies as an Eligible Employer?

In Dubai, sponsor-side immigration processing for domestic worker sponsorship is handled through GDRFA Dubai service channels such as Amer, while domestic worker employment is governed by the UAE domestic workers framework. Not every Dubai resident can legally hire a domestic worker, and this is one of the first things MOHRE checks.

UAE Nationals can sponsor domestic workers with relatively straightforward requirements, provided they hold a valid Emirates ID and their family book is in order. Expatriate residents must meet a higher bar. You need a valid UAE residence visa, an active Emirates ID, and — critically — a verifiable income that meets the salary threshold discussed later in this post. MOHRE also looks at your family size, the size of your accommodation, and in some cases, your profession or employer category.
There is also a worker-to-employer ratio limit. You cannot sponsor an unlimited number of domestic workers. The number you are permitted depends on your household size, income level, and the nature of your needs. MOHRE has the right to request justification if you are applying for multiple domestic worker visas within a short period. 

The Complete Employer Document Checklist

This is the part most employers search for and rarely find in one place. For Dubai sponsors, the core immigration-side checklist is tied to GDRFA/Amer requirements for opening and using a sponsor file, alongside the domestic worker employment documents required under the applicable UAE domestic worker framework.

Employer Identity Documents

Submit a clear copy of the sponsor’s passport as required by the relevant GDRFA/Amer service. If the service channel requests additional passport pages, provide them exactly as instructed on the service card or by Amer. If your passport has recently been renewed, make sure the copy is from the new passport and that your residence visa stamp is visible. Expired passports, even with a valid residence visa, are not acceptable.

Your Emirates ID must also be valid. A card that is within 30 days of expiry at the time of application may cause delays, as some processing timelines extend beyond that window. It's always advisable to renew your Emirates ID before filing if it is close to expiry.

Proof of Accommodation

This is where many employer applications stumble. MOHRE requires a valid Ejari-registered tenancy contract. A signed but unregistered tenancy agreement is not sufficient. An attested Ejari lease contract or Dubai Land Department ownership document is required for sponsor file registration in Dubai. All address- related documents should be consistent across the application to reduce the risk of delay or additional document requests. If you have recently moved and your Emirates ID still shows your old address, you will need to update it before submission.

For villa or apartment owners, a title deed copy is acceptable in place of an Ejari. However, the property must be registered under your name or under the name of your spouse if you are filing as a family unit.

Financial Documentation

Recent bank statements may be requested by the processing channel or in practice to evidence financial capacity, but applicants should confirm the exact current requirement with Amer/GDRFA or the specific service card before submission. These statements should be official — printed and stamped by the bank, or downloaded from your online banking portal in a format that clearly shows the bank's letterhead. Handwritten or informally shared statements are rejected without exception.

Your salary certificate is equally important. This is a letter from your employer — on company letterhead, signed and stamped by HR or management — confirming your monthly salary in AED. Freelancers and business owners who do not receive a formal salary certificate may submit trade license documents and audited financials instead, though this route often requires additional supporting paperwork.

Worker-Side Documents

On the domestic worker's side, you will need:
  • A valid passport copy of the worker, with a minimum of 6 months' validity remaining at the time of application
  • A No Objection Certificate (NOC) from the worker's home country government or relevant authority — this is particularly required for nationalities where bilateral agreements are in place (Philippines, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, India, and others)
  • The worker must complete medical fitness procedures through an approved UAE medical fitness channel applicable to residence processing in Dubai; confirming the worker is free from communicable diseases and is physically fit for domestic work
  • Biometric enrollment should be completed through the authorised residency/identity process and service channel specified for the application; typing centres may facilitate the transaction, but they are not themselves the biometric authority.
  • Passport-sized photographs taken against a white background and meeting ICA specifications

Insurance Documentation

Employers must ensure mandatory health insurance and compliance with the current UAE domestic worker legal framework in force in 2026, rather than citing only Cabinet Decision No. 22 of 2019 as the governing basis. You must submit proof of a valid health insurance policy covering the worker before the residence visa can be stamped. This insurance must meet the Dubai Health Authority's (DHA) basic plan requirements.

The 5 Most Common Maid Visa Rejection Reasons (And How to Fix Them)

Understanding why applications get rejected is more useful than any checklist alone. Here are the five rejection reasons that appear most consistently in Dubai domestic worker visa processing — and what you can do to prevent each one.

1. Salary Below the Required Income Threshold 

This is the single most common reason employer applications are turned away. MOHRE uses income verification to ensure that sponsors can financially support a domestic worker. The generally applied minimum net salary threshold for expatriate employers sponsoring a maid in Dubai is AED 6,000 per month, though some sources indicate MOHRE may look at AED 6,000 to AED 10,000 depending on the number of dependents already on your visa.

The fix sounds simple — but the problem is rarely the salary itself. More often, it's the documentation of that salary that fails. Bank statements that show irregular deposits, gaps in income, or salary figures that don't match the salary certificate are treated as red flags. If you receive allowances in addition to your base salary, your salary certificate must explicitly list all components. A certificate that says "AED 5,500 basic" will result in rejection, even if your actual total package is well above threshold.

2. Invalid or Unregistered Housing Documents

Submitting a tenancy contract that has not been registered on the Ejari system is one of the easiest mistakes to make and one of the hardest to recover from mid-application. Accommodation documents are subject to verification, and an attested Ejari lease or Dubai Land Department ownership document is required for sponsor file registration in Dubai.

If your tenancy contract was recently renewed and your landlord has not yet updated the Ejari registration, your application will be flagged. The fix here is to ensure Ejari registration is confirmed — and to double-check that the registered address matches every other document in your file before submission.

3. Missing or Incomplete Biometrics

Biometric and identity-related steps must be completed through the designated residency and identity process for Dubai applications; applicants should follow the current Amer/GDRFA/ICP workflow for the relevant visa stage. Applications submitted without a valid biometrics reference number are automatically held pending biometric completion.

This is particularly problematic in cases where the worker has entered the UAE on a visit visa and the employer submits documents through a typing centre without first ensuring biometrics have been taken. The entry permit process and the biometrics step are separate — and both must be completed in the correct sequence.

4. Nationality Quota Issues

The UAE maintains bilateral recruitment agreements with specific sending countries, and the availability of domestic workers from certain nationalities is subject to government-to-government approval quotas. Nationality-specific recruitment conditions and availability can change based on bilateral arrangements and current approvals. Verify the worker’s nationality route with the authorised processing channel or licensed domestic worker centre before paying fees.

If the quota for a specific nationality is temporarily suspended or restricted — which does happen, sometimes with limited public notice — your application will be placed on hold or outright rejected, regardless of how complete your documents are. The solution is to verify the current approval status of your worker's nationality before initiating the process, rather than discovering the restriction after fees have been paid.

5. Lapsed or Non-Compliant Insurance

Insurance is not just a checkbox — it's a live requirement. Health insurance policies must be active at the point of visa stamping, not just at the point of application. If you purchased a policy early in the process and the visa took longer than expected to process, there is a real risk the policy start date passes the visa stamping date, creating a compliance gap.

Additionally, some employers purchase health insurance policies that do not meet DHA's minimum coverage requirements for domestic workers. These policies are technically "active" but are rejected by the system during visa processing because they don't meet the mandated benefits threshold. Checking your policy against DHA's approved plan list before purchase — rather than after — saves significant time and money.

The 30-Day Grace Period & Daily Overstay Fine Structure

One of the most misunderstood aspects of the maid visa process involves what happens when a worker's entry permit or residence visa expires during the application process.

Grace periods and overstay treatment depend on visa category and current immigration rules. This grace period is not an extension of the visa — it is a buffer period only. If the worker is still in the UAE after the 30-day grace period has expired. Current UAE guidance points users to ICP/GDRFA fine channels, and recent 2026 reporting indicates a unified overstay fine of AED 50 per day. This should be cited as current guidance subject to official fine-check systems. 

To put that in concrete terms: a worker who remains in the UAE 60 days past their grace period's end would accrue AED 3,000 in overstay fines alone — before any exit permit fees or administrative charges are added. If an out-pass or exit permit is needed, recent 2026 sources place it around AED 250; avoid the broad AED 250–300 range unless an official fee card is cited.

For entry permit holders (workers who have arrived in the UAE ahead of their residence visa being stamped), the grace period structure is different. Check the exact validity on the issued entry permit and current service card, because validity and status-change rules can vary by service and date. 

If the residence visa process is not completed within that window, the entry permit lapses — and unlike residence visas, entry permits do not come with a 30-day grace period before fines begin.

This is why timeline management is not optional. Employers who submit documents late, respond slowly to MOHRE requests for additional information, or delay the biometrics step can inadvertently push their worker into overstay territory through administrative delay alone.

How Imdad's Pre-Submission Audit Protects Your Application

Most rejections are not random. They are predictable. A trained eye, reviewing documents before they are submitted, can catch the exact issues that MOHRE reviewers will flag — and fix them before any fee is paid or any clock starts running.

This is the purpose of Imdad HR's pre-submission audit service. Before your application file goes anywhere near the MOHRE portal, Imdad's team runs a structured check against each of the five rejection categories outlined above.

Here's what that looks like in practice:

Salary threshold verification doesn't just confirm the number on your salary certificate. The audit cross-references your salary certificate against your bank statements, checks that allowances are properly documented, and identifies any discrepancies between what's stated and what's deposited — the exact kind of inconsistency that triggers a reviewer's concern. 

Housing document validation includes checking the Ejari registration status live, confirming the registered address matches your Emirates ID, and identifying cases where a recent move has created an address mismatch that would otherwise go unnoticed until rejection. 

Biometrics sequencing is reviewed to ensure the worker's biometric data capture is correctly logged in the system before the application file is assembled. Imdad coordinates directly with GDRFA-approved typing centres to confirm this step is complete before any submission is initiated. 

Nationality quota status is checked at the start of the process, not the end. Imdad's team monitors active bilateral agreements and knows which nationalities are currently operating under restricted approval windows. If your worker's nationality is subject to a temporary hold, you'll know before paying recruitment fees — not after. 

Insurance compliance is verified against DHA's current approved plan list. If your existing policy doesn't meet the minimum benefit requirements, Imdad can recommend a compliant alternative before it becomes a blocking issue at the visa stamping stage.

The result of this audit is a clean, complete application file that goes to MOHRE ready for approval — not ready for a request for additional documents.

Step-by-Step: What the Application Process Looks Like

For employers going through this for the first time, here is an honest, sequential look at how the process flows from start to finish:

Step 1 — Employer eligibility check. Confirm that your income, accommodation, and visa status meet MOHRE's baseline eligibility criteria before anything else. 

Step 2 — Recruitment. Source your domestic worker either through a MOHRE-approved recruitment agency in Dubai or through a direct hire from the worker's home country. Ensure the NOC from the sending country is initiated early, as this can take weeks. 

Step 3 — Entry permit application. Apply for an entry permit For Dubai residents, use the current GDRFA Dubai/Amer channel or other officially designated Dubai processing channel shown on the service card for the relevant domestic worker Service. The entry permit allows the worker to travel to the UAE while the full visa process is completed. 

Step 4 — Medical fitness test. Once the worker arrives in Dubai on the entry permit, they must undergo a medical fitness examination at a MOHRE or DHA-approved medical centre. Results are typically available within 48–72 hours. 

Step 5 — Biometrics capture. The worker's fingerprints and photograph are captured at an authorised typing centre and registered in the GDRFA system. 

Step 6 — Health insurance purchase. Purchase a DHA-compliant health insurance policy for the worker before proceeding to residence visa stamping. 

Step 7 — Residence visa application. In Dubai, immigration submission steps should be routed through the applicable GDRFA/Amer/ICP service channel, while employment-contract and domestic-worker service components may involve licensed domestic worker centres depending on the route used. 

Step 8 — Emirates ID registration. Once the residence visa is approved, the worker must register for an Emirates ID at an ICP-authorised typing centre. 

Step 9 — Labour contract registration. Domestic worker contracts must comply with the UAE domestic worker framework, and licensed domestic worker service centres may be involved depending on the hiring route. Avoid implying that every direct sponsorship case is processed ‘through the Tadbeer system’ in the same way.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. Renters are eligible to sponsor domestic workers, provided their Ejari-registered tenancy contract is valid and the address on the contract matches their Emirates ID. Apartment dwellers are subject to the same income and eligibility requirements as villa owners. What matters to MOHRE is not the type of accommodation, but whether the accommodation is legally documented and sufficient for the household size.

Tadbeer is MOHRE's network of licensed domestic worker service centres across the UAE. Employers have two routes: direct sponsorship (where you hold the visa under your own name) or Tadbeer-sponsored arrangements (where the Tadbeer centre acts as the formal sponsor on your behalf). Recent 2026 guidance indicates Tadbeer- related package pricing around AED 8,500 for some 2-year arrangements, while private sponsorship or broader first-year costs can be materially higher. Direct sponsorship gives you more control but places the full compliance responsibility on you.

From entry permit issuance to residence visa stamping, the processing time varies by service channel, document readiness, medical fitness, biometrics scheduling, and approvals. When all documents are in order and no complications arise. Medical fitness results, biometrics scheduling, and MOHRE processing queues are the main variables that affect the timeline. Applications submitted with incomplete or inconsistent documents can take significantly longer — or restart entirely if rejected.

The entry permit must not be allowed to lapse. If it does, the worker will begin accruing overstay fines at AED 50 per day from the day after expiry, without any grace period buffer. You should either ensure all steps are completed well within the entry permit validity window, or apply for an entry permit extension through GDRFA before it expires.

Yes. A change-of-employer (transfer of sponsorship) process exists through MOHRE, but it requires mutual agreement, a valid reason, and a clean compliance record. Outstanding fines, overstay issues, or unresolved disputes between the worker and the original employer can complicate or delay the transfer.

Yes. Under The worker’s salary must comply with the registered contract and any nationality-specific requirements or bilateral arrangements applicable in 2026, employers are obligated to pay their domestic worker a salary that is agreed upon in the registered employment contract. While there is no single fixed minimum wage for domestic workers across all nationalities, many sending countries' bilateral agreements set their own minimum salary floors. Filipino workers, for instance, are subject to the Philippines Overseas Employment Administration's (POEA) standard employment contract, which sets its own wage requirements. Always check the specific requirements for your worker's nationality.

Ready to Apply Without the Guesswork?

The maid visa process in Dubai has more moving parts than most employers expect when they start. Between document authenticity checks, salary verification, housing registration requirements, biometrics sequencing, nationality quota status, and insurance compliance — there are a dozen ways an application can stall before it even reaches the approval stage.

Getting it right the first time isn't just about convenience. It protects your worker from overstay exposure, it protects you from wasted recruitment fees, and it means the person you've hired to support your household can start work on schedule.

At Imdad HR, the pre-submission audit process is built around one objective: sending complete, clean applications to MOHRE — not chasing corrections after the fact. From verifying your Ejari registration and salary documentation to confirming nationality quota status and insurance compliance, every element is reviewed before a single dirham in government fees is committed.

If you're in the pre-application stage right now, the best move you can make is a document review before you submit. Contact Imdad HR today to schedule your pre-submission audit and take the uncertainty out of your domestic worker visa application.


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