Affection Plan vs Title Deed (and Site Plan)

Three documents get mixed up in Dubai property dealings: the title deed, the affection plan and the site plan. They are not interchangeable. The title deed says who owns the property; the affection plan says where it is and what may be built on it; the site plan shows the architectural layout.

Title deed Affection plan Site plan
Answers Who owns it Where it is, how big, what’s allowed How it is laid out / designed
Issued by DLD (electronic deed) DLD or Dubai Municipality Developer / architect, per approvals
Key content Owner, deed number, property, ownership type Boundaries, coordinates, zoning, setbacks, GFA Building footprint, internal layout
Used for Proving ownership Permits, valuation, mortgage, disputes, transactions Design and construction

Why the confusion matters

Because they look related, people sometimes assume the title deed is enough for a permit, or that an affection plan proves ownership. Neither is true. A bank assessing a mortgage wants the title deed for ownership and the affection plan for the property’s defined footprint. An authority assessing a build wants the affection plan’s zoning and GFA, not the deed. Bringing the wrong document is a common cause of delay.

How they work together

In practice the title deed and affection plan are read side by side: the deed identifies the owner and the property, and the plan confirms that property’s boundaries and the rules attached to it. Their references and areas should agree; where they do not, that discrepancy is dealt with before a transaction or a build proceeds. For the deed itself, see titledeed.ae.

A practical example

Take a buyer purchasing a villa in order to extend it. The title deed confirms the seller owns it — necessary, but it says nothing about whether the planned extension is permitted. That answer is on the affection plan: its zoning, setbacks and GFA decide what may be built. A buyer who checks only the deed can complete the purchase and then discover that the extension they bought the property for is not allowed. Reading both documents is what prevents that.

And the site plan

The architectural site plan, by contrast, shows how a building is laid out or designed. It is a design document, prepared by the developer or architect within the limits the affection plan sets. If the affection plan is the rulebook for the plot, the site plan is one proposed answer that has to stay within those rules — which is why it can never substitute for the affection plan in a permit or a transaction.

Not sure which document you actually need? Tell the desk what you’re doing — permit, mortgage, sale — and we’ll make sure you’re looking at the right ones.

Call the desk · +971 4 546 5719

Frequently asked questions

Does an affection plan prove ownership?
No — only the title deed proves ownership. The affection plan defines the property’s boundaries and building controls.

Is a site plan the same as an affection plan?
No — the site plan is the architectural layout; the affection plan is the legal map of boundaries, zoning and GFA.

Do I need both the deed and the plan for a mortgage?
Commonly yes — the deed for ownership and the affection plan for the defined footprint.

Which do I need for a building permit?
The affection plan — its zoning, setbacks and GFA govern what may be built.

affectionplan.ae is an independent guide published by Cendale Documents Clearing Services FZCO (Trade Licence 78065).