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Web Design in Business Bay

Compare local web designer / web agency pros in Business Bay and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.

Typical price: AED 1,850–AED 55,200

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Web Design prices in Business Bay

Researched estimates for Business Bay (AED), adjusted for city size from national ranges. Updated 2026.
Job size Low Typical High
Landing page (1 page) Single-page site with contact form AED 1,850 AED 3,700 AED 7,350
Small business site (5 pages) Custom corporate brochure site AED 4,600 AED 9,200 AED 18,400
Business site with CMS (~10 pages) CMS-driven site with blog, optionally bilingual AED 9,200 AED 18,400 AED 36,800
Basic e-commerce store Store with UAE payment gateway and shipping setup AED 11,000 AED 23,000 AED 55,200

How to hire a web design pro in United Arab Emirates

  1. If you're selling online from Dubai, confirm your own licensing side: home-based sellers need at least an e-Trader licence (Dubai DED) — a website doesn't replace a trade licence
  2. Verify the agency itself holds a UAE trade licence and review live portfolio sites
  3. Contract with IP transfer, domain (.ae or .com) in your company's name, hosting access handed over
  4. Decide language scope — English-first is standard, Arabic adds RTL (right-to-left) design work that must be scoped explicitly
  5. Agree scope, revision rounds, CMS and payment-gateway setup in writing
  6. Pay 30-50% deposit, balance on launch

Web design itself is unlicensed in the UAE, but trading online requires the business to hold a licence — Dubai's e-Trader permit covers home-based sole sellers, while full e-commerce operations need a commercial licence. Arabic-language and RTL support is a scoping decision, not a default.

Budgeting first?

See the full breakdown of what drives web design prices — job sizes, unit rates, and how to save.

Web Design cost guide for United Arab Emirates

Frequently asked questions

Who owns the website after it's built?

You should. Insist that the domain is registered in YOUR name (not the designer's), you hold the hosting account credentials, and the contract transfers full rights to the design and code on final payment. Designer-owned domains are the single most common lock-in trap in this industry.

What questions should I ask before hiring a web designer?

Five that separate pros from dabblers: Can I see 3 live sites you built and still maintain? Who actually does the work — you or subcontractors? Will I own the domain, hosting and code? What's included in the price and what costs extra? What happens if I want changes after launch?

Do I need my website to be accessible?

Morally yes, legally increasingly so — several markets now enforce accessibility standards (WCAG) for business websites, and lawsuits and fines are real in some countries. Practically: proper headings, alt text, keyboard navigation and color contrast cost little at build time and a lot to retrofit. Ask your designer to build to WCAG 2.1 AA.

What are the ongoing costs after a website launches?

Domain renewal (a small annual fee), hosting (from a few dollars monthly for a brochure site), and optional maintenance. Maintenance retainers typically run 5-10% of the build cost per year and cover updates, backups and small edits. A static brochure site can genuinely run for years with near-zero maintenance.

What are red flags when hiring a web designer?

No contract, no portfolio of live sites, registering the domain in their own name, 'free' websites with mandatory monthly fees, 100% payment up front, and guaranteed #1 Google rankings. The domain-ownership trap is the costliest — walking away can mean losing your web address.

What does a business website cost in the UAE?

Freelancers charge roughly AED 150-450/hr; 5-page corporate sites commonly run AED 5,000-20,000 and e-commerce from AED 12,000. Free-zone agencies and freelancer-permit holders both operate legally — ask which licence the vendor holds.

Do I need an Arabic version of my UAE website?

Legally no for most private businesses — English-only is common in Dubai. Commercially, Arabic doubles your reachable audience and matters for government-adjacent work; budget RTL design properly rather than machine-translating an English layout.

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