Dubai’s Knowledge and Human Development Authority (KHDA) has officially confirmed that there will be no increase in private school fees for the 2026-27 academic year. The announcement, made under the directives of Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Crown Prince of Dubai, follows the approval of a AED 1.5 billion economic incentives package for the emirate’s private education sector — bringing total government economic support announced in recent months to AED 2.5 billion.
The fee freeze applies to all private educational institutions licensed by KHDA. For families with children in Dubai’s private schools — which serve the vast majority of the emirate’s 200,000+ school-age children, given that most are from expatriate families — the decision provides direct financial relief at a time when global cost-of-living pressures remain elevated.
What the KHDA Package Covers
Beyond the tuition fee freeze, private educational institutions will benefit from a comprehensive support package that addresses the operational cost pressures many schools have cited in previous fee review submissions:
- Licence renewal fees: Schools will be permitted to defer or pay in instalments rather than in full at renewal
- Fines: Existing regulatory fines from KHDA will be eligible for deferral
- Guarantee insurance: Partial or full exemptions from guarantee insurance requirements for cancelled contracts
- Contractual penalties: Temporary suspension of contractual penalty clauses
- Rent increases: Freeze on scheduled rent increases at lease renewal for school facilities
- Rental payment deferrals: Schools facing cashflow pressure can defer rental payments
What Parents Should Still Check
While tuition fees are frozen, the KHDA freeze does not automatically apply to all charges. Parents should verify directly with their school whether the following costs are changing for 2026-27:
- School transport fees: Bus and transport charges are separate from tuition and may be adjusted
- Uniform and books: Mandatory school materials are not covered by the tuition freeze
- Activity and trip fees: Extracurricular and educational trip charges remain at school discretion
- Registration fees: Re-registration and new student fees may vary
Why This Matters for Dubai’s Families
Education is consistently the second-largest household expense for Dubai families after rent, with international school fees ranging from AED 25,000 to AED 90,000 per child per year at top institutions. For a family with two school-age children, a freeze at current rates saves what could have been an increase of AED 2,500–9,000 per year — a meaningful amount even for high-earning expatriate households.
The decision also signals the Dubai government’s awareness of the cost-of-living pressures that affect expatriate retention — a key consideration for a city where 90% of the population is non-national and where competition from Singapore, London and other hubs for professional talent is intensifying.
KHDA School Inspections to Resume in 2026-27
Alongside the fee freeze announcement, KHDA confirmed that school inspections will resume in the 2026-27 academic year, with schools given no more than 24 hours’ notice before an inspection visit. Inspections had been modified during the Iran-war period of heightened regional uncertainty. Their resumption signals a return to normal quality-assurance operations — and is a reminder that the fee freeze does not come without expectation of educational quality maintenance.
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