How to Read Your Affection Plan

An affection plan packs a great deal into one sheet, and the value is in reading it correctly — then checking it against your title deed and your intentions before you rely on it. Here is the plan, field by field.

Field by field

Field How to read it
Plot / unit reference Must match your title deed exactly — a mismatch is a red flag to resolve first.
Area / dimensions The recorded size; compare it with the title deed area and with the site itself.
Boundaries The legal line of the plot — the reference for any boundary question.
Geographic coordinates Fixes the plot on the city map; cross-check that the location is right.
Zoning Permitted use — residential, commercial or mixed; governs what you may do.
Setbacks Required clear distances from each boundary before you may build.
Gross Floor Area (GFA) The cap on total built-up area across all floors.
Roads / access The frontage and access points to the plot.

A worked example

Suppose you are extending a villa. The plan is what tells you whether you can. Read the GFA first: it caps the total built-up area across all floors, so if existing construction already approaches the GFA shown, there may be little room to extend regardless of how much open plot remains. Then read the setbacks: even within an unused GFA allowance, you cannot build inside the required clear distance from each boundary — so a side setback can rule out a side extension that the GFA alone would have permitted. Only the two read together give you the real building envelope. (Figures are illustrative; your plan states the actual GFA and setbacks for your plot.)

Always read it against the title deed

The single most useful habit is to lay the affection plan beside the title deed. The plot or unit reference and the area should agree. Where they do not — a different area, or a boundary that does not match the site — that discrepancy is dealt with before a purchase, a build or a mortgage, not after. This cross-check is the main reason to look at a current plan rather than rely on an old one.

Confirm it is genuine

An affection plan is issued digitally and can be confirmed against the issuing authority’s record by its QR code or reference number. If a seller or developer hands you a plan, verify it rather than take it at face value — the same discipline that applies to a title deed.

A quick checklist

  • Plot/unit reference and area match the title deed.
  • Boundaries and coordinates match the site and the location.
  • Zoning permits your intended use.
  • Setbacks and GFA allow what you plan to build.
  • The plan is current and verified by QR code or reference number.

Want your affection plan read against your title deed, with any mismatch flagged? The desk does exactly that.

Call the desk · +971 4 546 5719

Frequently asked questions

What should I check first on an affection plan?
That the plot/unit reference and area match your title deed; a mismatch is the first thing to resolve.

How do I know what I can build?
Read the zoning, setbacks and GFA together — GFA caps total built-up area, setbacks constrain where it can go.

Why compare it with my title deed?
To catch any difference in area or boundaries before a purchase, build or mortgage — the common source of later disputes.

Can I trust a plan a seller gives me?
Verify it by its QR code or reference number against the authority record rather than taking it on trust.

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