Audit & Assurance · Specialised Audit & Certification
Real Estate Audit ( RERA )
Independent audit of project escrow accounts, construction-cost certification, and developer compliance under the UAE's real estate regulatory framework — for developers, escrow agent banks, and regulators who need a chartered accountant's opinion before funds move, units get sold off-plan, or a project is registered.
Chartered Accountants · Dubai · Since 1986
A Real Estate Audit in the UAE context is an independent examination — most commonly commissioned around a developer's escrow account for an off-plan project — that verifies buyer payments are being collected, held, and released strictly in accordance with the applicable real estate regulatory authority's rules and the project's registered payment plan. In Dubai this sits under the Real Estate Regulatory Agency (RERA), the regulatory arm of the Dubai Land Department (DLD), and Law No. 8 of 2007 concerning Escrow Accounts for Real Estate Development in the Emirate of Dubai, which requires every off-plan project to be funded through a dedicated escrow account with an accredited bank and audited by a RERA-registered auditor before construction-linked withdrawals are released. Abu Dhabi's Department of Municipalities and Transport (DMT) and other emirates operate broadly analogous escrow and developer-registration frameworks, and PNPC scopes to whichever authority governs the specific project.
The engagement typically covers three linked strands. First, escrow account compliance: confirming that unit-sale proceeds from buyers were deposited only into the registered escrow account (not diverted to the developer's general operating account), that withdrawals match the percentage of construction actually completed as certified by an independent engineering consultant, and that the escrow agent bank's records reconcile to the developer's own books. Second, construction-progress certification: cross-checking the physical completion percentage reported to the authority against the engineering consultant's certificate and the funds released, since escrow withdrawals in Dubai are typically capped and phased against verified construction milestones rather than released on a lump-sum or purely contractual basis. Third, developer and project registration compliance more broadly — confirming the project remains properly registered with the Oqood/DLD system, that unit-sale and transfer records reconcile to buyer payment ledgers, and that any project-level trust account obligations under the escrow law are being met.
This is not the developer's annual statutory financial statement audit, though the two often run in parallel for the same group. A real estate/escrow audit is narrower, more frequent, and addressed to a different reader: the escrow agent bank relies on it to authorise the next construction-linked withdrawal, and RERA/DLD relies on it as part of the project's ongoing regulatory oversight. Failure to submit the required periodic escrow audit report on time, or a report that flags unresolved non-compliance, can freeze the next withdrawal tranche and stall construction funding — which makes timeliness and defensibility of the report a genuinely operational, not just compliance, issue for the developer.
Because escrow release percentages, exact reporting formats, and the specific documents RERA and the escrow bank expect can change between project registration cycles, PNPC treats every engagement as project-specific: we confirm the current escrow account rules applicable to the project's registration date and emirate, obtain the actual escrow agreement and the authority's current reporting template, and build the audit programme around the project's registered payment plan rather than a generic checklist. The output is a signed audit report addressed to the escrow agent bank and, where required, filed with RERA/DLD, together with a construction-progress reconciliation schedule and a list of any exceptions requiring developer remediation before the next withdrawal is processed.
The escrow requirement is not confined to RERA-registered projects on Dubai Land Department land alone; master-developer free zones such as Dubai South, Meydan Free Zone, and other authority-governed communities that permit off-plan residential or mixed-use sales generally operate under the same Law No. 8 of 2007 escrow framework because the underlying trigger is the sale of units off-plan to the public, not the specific free zone licence itself. Financial free zones such as DIFC and ADGM are a different case: they do not typically host large-scale off-plan residential development in the way DLD-registered projects do, but where a DIFC- or ADGM-registered entity develops or holds real estate assets — including as a Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT) structure — the relevant escrow, disclosure, and audit obligations are assessed against that free zone's own real estate and collective investment rules rather than assumed to default to the DLD framework, and PNPC confirms which regime actually governs before scoping. A developer operating across both a DLD-registered project and a free-zone-adjacent development should not assume one escrow audit programme automatically satisfies both; each project's registering authority and escrow agreement stand on their own.
On tax, the FTA's VAT treatment intersects with the escrow audit in two distinct ways rather than one. First, at the transaction level, whether a specific unit sale is zero-rated (the first supply of new residential property within three years of completion), exempt (subsequent residential supplies), or standard-rated at 5% (commercial units, and residential supplies falling outside the zero-rating window) determines whether output VAT should have been charged and accounted for on that instalment — a distinct question from whether the instalment was correctly deposited into escrow. Second, at the cost level, input VAT recovery on construction costs paid out of the escrow account depends on whether those costs relate to taxable, zero-rated, or exempt supplies, which affects the developer's VAT return quite apart from the escrow reconciliation itself. PNPC does not treat these as automatically resolved by the escrow audit — where the VAT position is unclear or contested, we flag it to the client's VAT advisor rather than assume a blanket answer, because real estate VAT is one of the more fact-specific areas of UAE VAT law.
Corporate Tax registration status is also a live pre-condition PNPC checks before issuing an escrow report where the reporting template calls for it — a developer entity that is not correctly registered for UAE Corporate Tax, or whose registration lapses mid-project, can create a compliance gap that surfaces awkwardly during a bank or regulatory review even though it sits outside the strict scope of the escrow reconciliation itself.
When a real estate (RERA) audit applies
You are a Dubai-based developer selling units off-plan and RERA/DLD requires a registered escrow account with periodic auditor certification before construction-linked withdrawals are released
Your project's escrow agent bank requires an independent audit report confirming the completion percentage before authorising the next tranche of fund release
You are registering a new off-plan project with DLD/RERA and need to appoint a RERA-registered auditor as part of the escrow account set-up
A prior period's escrow reconciliation shows a variance between buyer payments collected and funds recorded in the escrow account that needs independent investigation before the next withdrawal request
You are consolidating multiple project escrow accounts across a developer group and want independent assurance each is being administered separately and correctly
An escrow agent bank, RERA, or DLD has raised a query about a specific withdrawal or completion certificate and you need an independent report to respond
You are acquiring or investing in a real estate development company and need audited confirmation that ongoing projects' escrow accounts are compliant, as part of transaction due diligence
Your project has reached practical completion and you need a final escrow account closure audit before the account can be released and any surplus returned to the developer
You are developing under a master-developer-run free zone community (e.g. Dubai South, Meydan) that permits off-plan sales andneeds an escrow audit under the same RERA/DLD-aligned framework — PNPC confirms whether the free zone defaults to DLD rules or has its own escrow governance before scoping
Your project's escrow reporting cycle is falling due and you need the audit diarised against the registered payment plan so the report reaches the bank and RERA/DLD ahead of the next withdrawal deadline, not reactively after it
You are refinancing or restructuring project-level construction finance and the new lender requires an independent escrow position report as a condition of the facility
A prospective REIT sponsor or fund manager needs independent confirmation that the underlying development's escrow account is compliant before the asset is contributed to the fund structure
When this is not the right engagement
You need the developer entity's annual statutory financial statement audit — that is a separate general purpose audit under IFRS, even though findings from the real estate audit often feed into it
Your project is fully cash-funded with no off-plan sales and no escrow account requirement — RERA's escrow audit obligation is specifically triggered by off-plan unit sales
You need general property management, facilities management, or owners' association (OA) service charge audit work — that is a related but distinct engagement governed by different rules
You are looking for a property valuation for financing, sale, or insurance purposes — that is a valuation engagement, not an audit
You need help actually registering a new project with DLD/RERA or opening the escrow account itself — that is a registration/advisory task, though PNPC can support both alongside the audit
The requirement is a one-off buyer-facing sales progress update with no independent assurance — that is a marketing or investor-relations document, not an audit report
You cannot provide the escrow bank statements, buyer payment ledger, and engineering consultant's completion certificate — without these there is no basis to independently verify the escrow position
You want a report that will guarantee the bank releases funds regardless of actual construction progress — an independent audit reports what the evidence shows and cannot be steered to a predetermined release percentage
You need a DIFC- or ADGM-registered real estate fund or REIT's routine fund-level financial audit — that sits with the free zone's own collective investment and fund audit rules, distinct from a DLD/RERA project escrow audit
The engagement is really about verifying a contractor's or consultant's own invoices for a payment dispute unrelated to escrow compliance — that is a contract or construction-cost verification, not an escrow audit
Real estate (RERA) escrow audit vs. related UAE real estate assurance and reporting engagements
| Feature | Real Estate / RERA Escrow Audit | Developer's Annual Statutory Audit | Owners' Association (Strata) Service Charge Audit | Property Valuation Report | Financial Due Diligence (Real Estate M&A) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary purpose | Verify escrow account compliance and construction-linked fund release against buyer payments and completion percentage | Opinion on whether the developer entity's full-year financial statements are fairly presented | Verify owners' association service charges collected and spent match the approved budget | Estimate the market value of a specific property or portfolio | Assess the financial position and risk of a target real estate business or project ahead of a transaction |
| Governing authority | RERA/DLD (Dubai) under Law No. 8 of 2007 on Escrow Accounts, or the equivalent emirate-level authority (e.g. DMT in Abu Dhabi) | UAE Commercial Companies Law and free zone/mainland licensing regulations | RERA/DLD jointly-owned property rules and the community's constitution | No single mandatory authority; driven by lender, insurer, or transaction requirement | No single mandatory authority; driven by buyer/investor requirement |
| Typical commissioning party | Developer (as a registration/withdrawal condition) or the escrow agent bank | Shareholders/board of the developer entity | Owners' association or management company | Bank, insurer, court, or transacting party | Buyer, investor, or lender in a proposed transaction |
| Frequency | Periodic per escrow agreement — typically ahead of each construction-linked withdrawal tranche, and at project completion | Annual | Annual, alongside the OA's budget cycle | As required, often one-off | One-off, scoped to the transaction timetable |
| Output | Signed escrow/construction-progress audit report addressed to the bank and, where required, RERA/DLD | Auditor's report and opinion on the developer's full financial statements | Service charge audit report to owners and the management company | Valuation report with methodology and estimated value | Due diligence report covering financial position, risk, and deal-relevant findings |
| Reliance by third parties | Escrow bank relies on it to authorise fund release; RERA/DLD relies on it for regulatory oversight | Regulators, banks, investors, tax authorities | Unit owners and the community management company | Lender, insurer, or transacting counterparty | Buyer/investor and their financiers |
| Basis of reporting | Escrow agreement terms, RERA/DLD escrow rules, and construction-progress certification from the project's engineering consultant | IFRS | Community constitution, RERA jointly-owned property rules, approved OA budget | Recognised valuation standards (e.g. RICS-aligned methodology) | Agreed scope with the buyer/investor, often IFRS-based with adjustments |
| Applicable to free zone off-plan projects? | Yes, where the free zone community permits off-plan sales under an equivalent escrow governance framework | N/A — statutory audit applies to the entity regardless of project location | N/A — OA audits apply post-handover, once units are owned and occupied | N/A — valuation is engagement-specific, not tied to escrow status | Only if the target entity itself is a developer with active off-plan projects |
| Relationship to Oqood/DLD interim registration | Directly reconciles sold units recorded through Oqood against actual escrow deposits | Not directly linked to Oqood; entity-level financial statements only | Not applicable — OA relates to completed, handed-over units | Not applicable | May review Oqood records as part of confirming the target's registered sales pipeline |
A single developer group commonly needs a real estate/escrow audit for each active off-plan project alongside its own annual statutory audit — the two are separate, complementary engagements addressed to different readers and reporting on different things.
How a PNPC Global UAE real estate (RERA) audit engagement runs, start to finish
| # | Stage & What PNPC Does | Who Acts | Typical Output |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Scoping call — confirm the project, the applicable authority (RERA/DLD or equivalent), the escrow agent bank, and whether this is a periodic withdrawal audit, an annual escrow audit, or a project-completion closure audit | PNPC engagement partner and developer finance team | Confirmed scope matching the escrow agreement and registration requirement |
| 2 | Engagement letter issued, referencing the specific escrow agreement, RERA/DLD project registration number, and reporting template required by the bank/authority | PNPC | Signed engagement letter |
| 3 | Document request — escrow bank statements, buyer payment ledger, Oqood/DLD registration and unit-sale records, engineering consultant's completion certificate, and the project's approved payment plan | Developer finance and project teams | Complete evidence pack for the reporting period |
| 4 | Reconciliation of buyer payments recorded in the developer's ledger against deposits actually received into the escrow account, by unit and by instalment | PNPC audit team | Escrow reconciliation schedule flagging any unmatched or delayed deposits |
| 5 | Cross-check of the engineering consultant's certified construction-completion percentage against the withdrawal amount requested or already released | PNPC, corroborating with the consultant's certificate | Construction-progress-to-withdrawal reconciliation |
| 6 | Review of escrow account withdrawals against permitted categories under the escrow agreement (construction costs, marketing costs where permitted, developer's entitlement) to confirm no ineligible spend | PNPC audit team | Withdrawal-eligibility testing schedule |
| 7 | Verification of the escrow agent bank's own statement against the developer's internal escrow ledger to identify any timing or recording discrepancy | PNPC, with bank confirmation where required | Bank-to-book reconciliation |
| 8 | Investigation of any material variance — unmatched deposits, withdrawals ahead of certified completion, or payments routed outside the escrow account | PNPC audit team, with developer finance team responses | Documented exception register with evidence |
| 9 | Draft report prepared in the format required by the escrow agent bank and/or RERA/DLD, with the exception register and management's response to each item | PNPC | Draft real estate/escrow audit report |
| 10 | Management representation on completeness of records and disclosure sought before the report is finalised | Developer's authorised signatory | Signed management representation letter |
| 11 | Partner review and sign-off, given the report's direct bearing on fund release and regulatory standing | PNPC second-partner reviewer | Finalised, signed audit report |
| 12 | Report issued to the escrow agent bank and, where the reporting cycle requires it, filed with RERA/DLD in the authority's specified format | PNPC, with developer's authorisation | Submitted report accepted by the bank/authority |
| 13 | Next-cycle scheduling — the following withdrawal tranche's audit is diarised against the project's payment-plan milestones so evidence requests go out ahead of the next deadline | PNPC and developer finance team jointly | Standing engagement calendar for the project |
| 14 | Catch-up scoping (where applicable) — for a project with no prior escrow audit history, reconstruct the reconciliation from inception or the last reliable point, flagging any genuinely unavailable evidence | PNPC, with extended developer finance team involvement | Reconstructed opening escrow position with documented evidence gaps |
| 15 | Handover audit (where applicable) — for a mid-construction developer or project transfer, produce a clean, independently verified handover position for the incoming developer and RERA/DLD | PNPC, outgoing and incoming developer teams | Point-in-time handover escrow and completion-position report |
A straightforward periodic escrow audit for an active project with clean records typically runs 1-3 weeks from engagement letter to signed report; the critical-path item is usually obtaining the escrow bank's statement and the engineering consultant's completion certificate promptly, both of which sit outside PNPC's direct control. Project-completion closure audits, or engagements uncovering material exceptions, run longer.
DLD/RERA project registration certificate and Oqood registration details
Escrow agreement between the developer and the escrow agent bank
Approved project payment plan showing instalment percentages tied to construction milestones
Developer's RERA registration and trade licence
Prior periods' escrow audit reports, if any, for the same project
Escrow account bank statements for the reporting period
Escrow agent bank's own withdrawal authorisation records
List of all withdrawals made from the escrow account during the period, with supporting invoices
Any correspondence with the escrow agent bank regarding delayed or disputed transactions
Unit-by-unit sales ledger showing buyer names, unit numbers, sale price, and payment schedule
Individual buyer payment receipts and instalment tracking records
Sale and purchase agreements (SPAs) for units sold during the period
Any cancelled or resold unit records with corresponding refund or reallocation documentation
Independent engineering consultant's certified construction-completion percentage for the reporting period
Contractor payment certificates supporting construction cost claims
Bill of quantities or cost-to-complete schedule for the project
Any variation orders affecting the approved construction budget
Developer entity's trial balance and general ledger extracts relating to the project
UAE VAT registration certificate (TRN) where the developer is VAT-registered, given the specific VAT treatment applicable to real estate supplies
UAE Corporate Tax registration details for the developer entity
Insurance policies covering the construction project
Authority, registrar, free zone, bank, or property records relevant to the real estate audit.
Current licence, certificate, permit, title, or filing status evidence where applicable.
Open queries, rejected applications, expired records, or pending amendments that may affect scope.
Master-developer or free zone authority confirmation of the governing escrow framework applicable to the specific community (e.g. Dubai South, Meydan) where the project sits outside a standard DLD/RERA mainland registration
Documentation confirming which authority's escrow rules and reporting template apply, obtained directly from the registering body rather than assumed by analogy to DLD
Any REIT or fund-level disclosure documentation where the project forms part of a fund structure holding an interest in the development
Handover documentation and independent completion-position report where a project or developer entity is being transferred mid-construction
Outgoing and incoming engineering consultant certificates and any bridging assessment where the certifying consultant has changed during the reporting period
Foreign-currency buyer payment records and the bank's currency conversion confirmation where buyers pay in a currency other than AED
Quantity surveyor cost-to-complete schedule, where a QS is appointed separately from the certifying engineering consultant
Ongoing real estate (RERA) escrow audit lifecycle for a UAE off-plan development project
| Phase | Triggered By | PNPC Guidance | Risk If Ignored |
|---|---|---|---|
| Project registration and auditor appointment | Developer registers a new off-plan project with DLD/RERA and opens the escrow account | Confirm the escrow agreement's audit and reporting cadence upfront, and establish a clean baseline reconciliation from the first buyer deposit | A misaligned audit cadence agreed late can delay the first construction-linked withdrawal |
| Periodic withdrawal audit | Each construction-linked withdrawal tranche due under the payment plan | Keep buyer payment ledgers and escrow bank reconciliations current between cycles so each audit is faster | Delayed or rejected audit reports stall fund release and can hold up construction progress |
| Sales-pace variance | Actual unit sales run materially ahead of or behind the registered payment plan assumptions | Flag pace variances early so the escrow reconciliation and withdrawal eligibility calculation reflect actual, not projected, collections | A withdrawal request based on stale sales assumptions can be challenged by the escrow bank |
| Construction delay or scope change | Contractor delay, variation order, or a change in the certified completion percentage | Re-verify the engineering consultant's certificate against the revised programme before the next withdrawal audit | Withdrawals released against an outdated completion percentage create an unauthorised-spend exception |
| Unit cancellation or resale | A buyer defaults, cancels, or the developer resells a unit | Trace the refund or reallocation through the escrow account and reconcile it against the original buyer's payment history | Untracked cancellations distort the escrow reconciliation and can misstate funds available for construction |
| Bank or escrow agent change | Developer changes escrow agent bank or the bank revises its reporting template | Confirm the new bank's required format and reporting frequency, carrying forward the established baseline reconciliation | Reporting to an outdated template risks the new bank rejecting the audit report |
| Regulatory query or inspection | RERA/DLD raises a query on a specific project or requests a spot audit | Respond with the underlying reconciliation and evidence trail rather than a summary assertion | An unsupported response can trigger a deeper regulatory review of the project |
| Project completion and escrow closure | Practical completion certified and units ready for handover | Commission the final closure audit promptly so the escrow account can be released and any surplus returned in line with the escrow agreement | A delayed closure audit holds up release of the developer's own entitlement from the escrow account |
| Post-handover retention obligations | Escrow agreement requires a retention amount held back after completion for defect liability | Track the retention release conditions and timeline separately from the main construction withdrawal schedule | Retention funds released early, or not tracked, can leave the developer unable to fund defect-liability works |
| Developer or project transfer | Project or developer entity is sold or transferred mid-construction to a new developer | Commission a handover-position audit at the point of transfer so the incoming developer and RERA/DLD have a clean, independently verified baseline | An unaudited handover leaves the incoming developer unable to confirm what escrow position and completion progress they are actually inheriting |
| Engineering consultant change | The project's certifying engineering consultant is replaced mid-construction | Bridge the outgoing consultant's last certificate against the incoming consultant's opening assessment before the next withdrawal audit relies on the new certification | An unexplained jump or drop in certified completion percentage around a consultant handover can be challenged by the escrow bank |
Developers running multiple concurrent off-plan projects benefit from a single standing engagement covering all active escrow accounts, so reconciliation discipline and reporting cadence stay consistent across the portfolio rather than being rebuilt project by project.
Requesting a withdrawal before the engineering consultant's certificate for the corresponding completion percentage has actually been issued, rather than sequencing the request to follow certification
Treating marketing, sales-office, or general overhead spend as automatically escrow-eligible without checking the specific escrow agreement's permitted-category wording
Assuming a free zone off-plan project defaults to standard DLD escrow rules without confirming which authority actually governs that specific community
Making an emergency withdrawal ahead of certified progress and expecting the next audit to retrospectively validate it, rather than raising the exception with the bank and RERA/DLD proactively
Recording a unit sale in the internal sales ledger before the corresponding buyer payment has actually cleared into the registered escrow account, creating an apparent (but usually explainable) timing variance
Letting the buyer payment ledger and the Oqood-registered sales record drift out of sync, so the two sources disagree on which units are genuinely sold and paid for
Not tracking unit cancellations, defaults, and resales through the escrow account in real time, which distorts the reconciliation and the funds genuinely available to support construction
Translating foreign-currency buyer payments to AED inconsistently between the sales ledger and the escrow bank's own conversion records
Not confirming the escrow agent bank's or RERA/DLD's current reporting template before drafting begins, leading to a report that is rejected on format rather than substance
Waiting until practical completion is certified before commissioning the closure audit, delaying release of the developer's own entitlement from the escrow account
Changing escrow agent bank or engineering consultant without formally bridging the transition, leaving a gap in the certification or reconciliation trail that the next audit has to reconstruct
Treating the periodic withdrawal audit and the annual cumulative escrow audit as interchangeable, when the authority or bank actually expects the fuller annual filing
What exactly is a real estate audit in the UAE context, and who needs one?
In practice it almost always refers to the independent audit of a developer's escrow account for an off-plan real estate project, required under Dubai's Law No. 8 of 2007 on Escrow Accounts (and equivalent rules in other emirates) whenever a developer sells units off-plan. The audit confirms buyer payments are collected and held in the registered escrow account and that construction-linked withdrawals match certified completion progress.
Which authority regulates escrow accounts for off-plan developments in the UAE?
In Dubai, the Real Estate Regulatory Agency (RERA), the regulatory arm of the Dubai Land Department (DLD), regulates escrow accounts under Law No. 8 of 2007. Other emirates operate their own equivalent frameworks — for example Abu Dhabi through the Department of Municipalities and Transport (DMT) — and the exact rules, registration process, and reporting template differ by emirate.
Why does a developer need an escrow account at all?
The escrow account requirement exists to protect off-plan buyers by ensuring their instalment payments are ring-fenced for the specific project they bought into, rather than commingled with the developer's general funds or diverted to another project, and released only in step with verified construction progress.
How often does the escrow account need to be audited?
Frequency is set by the specific escrow agreement and the authority's rules, but in practice audits are typically required ahead of each construction-linked withdrawal tranche, on a periodic basis throughout construction, and again at project completion when the escrow account is closed.
What does the auditor actually check in an escrow audit?
The core checks are: buyer payments recorded in the developer's ledger reconcile to actual deposits into the escrow account; withdrawals match the construction-completion percentage certified by the project's engineering consultant; withdrawn funds were spent only on permitted categories under the escrow agreement; and the escrow bank's own statement reconciles to the developer's internal records.
What happens if the escrow audit finds a discrepancy?
Material discrepancies — unmatched deposits, withdrawals ahead of certified completion, or spend outside permitted categories — are documented as exceptions in the report, with management's response sought before the report is finalised. Depending on severity, this can delay or restrict the next withdrawal until the exception is resolved.
Can escrow funds be used for anything other than construction costs?
Only for the categories permitted under the specific escrow agreement, which typically centre on construction costs tied to certified progress, but some agreements permit limited marketing or overhead allocations within defined caps — we test actual withdrawals against exactly what the agreement permits, not a general assumption about what escrow funds can cover.
How is the construction-completion percentage verified?
It is certified by an independent engineering consultant appointed to the project, and the audit cross-checks the withdrawal amount requested against that certified percentage rather than the developer's own internal progress estimate.
Is the real estate escrow audit the same as the developer's annual statutory audit?
No. The annual statutory audit covers the developer entity's complete financial statements under IFRS for licence renewal and shareholder purposes. The escrow audit is narrower, project-specific, and addressed to the escrow bank and regulator, focused solely on buyer payments, escrow account compliance, and construction-linked withdrawals.
What documents does PNPC need to start an escrow audit?
The escrow agreement, DLD/RERA project registration certificate, escrow bank statements for the period, the buyer payment ledger, sale and purchase agreements for units sold, the engineering consultant's completion certificate, and a list of withdrawals made with supporting invoices.
How long does a periodic escrow audit typically take?
For an active project with clean, current records, a straightforward periodic withdrawal audit typically runs one to three weeks from engagement letter to signed report. The critical-path item is usually obtaining the escrow bank's statement and the engineering consultant's certificate promptly, both outside the auditor's direct control.
What happens at project completion — does the escrow account just close automatically?
No. A final closure audit is typically required to confirm all construction costs have been properly accounted for and any retention obligations under the escrow agreement are understood, before the escrow agent bank releases remaining funds — including any surplus due to the developer.
Does UAE VAT apply to escrow-funded construction payments and unit sales?
VAT treatment of real estate supplies in the UAE depends on the nature of the property — residential supplies are generally exempt or zero-rated in specific circumstances (such as the first supply of new residential property within three years of completion), while commercial property supplies are generally standard-rated at 5% — so the specific VAT position needs to be confirmed for the project rather than assumed, and we flag it to the client's VAT advisor where escrow-funded transactions are in scope.
Is UAE Corporate Tax relevant to a real estate escrow audit?
The escrow audit itself is not a Corporate Tax filing, but the developer entity is subject to UAE Corporate Tax under Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022 (0% up to AED 375,000 taxable income, 9% above, for financial years starting on or after 1 June 2023), and project-level revenue recognition and cost allocation reviewed during the escrow audit can be relevant context for the developer's Corporate Tax position.
What if the developer group operates several off-plan projects across different emirates?
Each project's escrow account is audited separately against the specific rules of its own registering authority (RERA/DLD for Dubai projects, the equivalent authority for other emirates), since escrow rules, reporting templates, and completion-certification processes differ by jurisdiction even within the UAE.
Can PNPC also verify that unit cancellations and resales are handled correctly through the escrow account?
Yes — unit cancellations, defaults, and resales are traced through the escrow account and reconciled against the original buyer's payment history and any refund or reallocation, since untracked cancellations can distort the escrow position and the funds genuinely available to support construction.
What if the escrow agent bank rejects the audit report format after it is issued?
We treat that as a scoping gap to correct quickly — confirming the bank's exact required format, wording, and supporting schedules, then amending and reissuing the report. This is why we confirm the escrow bank's specific reporting template at the scoping stage before drafting begins.
Does PNPC coordinate the escrow audit with the developer's own statutory auditor if a different firm holds that appointment?
Yes — the escrow audit can be performed by PNPC even where a different firm holds the developer entity's annual statutory audit appointment, and with the client's consent we share relevant reconciliation workpapers to avoid duplicated effort and keep figures consistent across both reports.
Can the escrow audit be used as part of a buyer's or investor's due diligence on the developer?
Yes, with the developer's consent — audited escrow compliance history is a meaningful data point for a prospective investor or acquirer assessing a developer's project portfolio, and we can align the reporting date and format to match the specific due diligence questions being raised.
What if the developer's records are incomplete or the escrow reconciliation cannot be fully evidenced?
We assess this at scoping — some gaps close quickly with supplementary bank confirmations or consultant certificates, but genuinely incomplete records may need remediation before a meaningful opinion can be issued, and we would rather flag this honestly upfront than issue a report that does not hold up with the escrow bank or RERA.
Why choose PNPC Global for a UAE real estate escrow audit over a general audit firm?
PNPC Global has run audit and assurance engagements since 1986 across India and the UAE, and our UAE audit practice scopes every escrow audit around the specific project's registered payment plan and the specific escrow bank's reporting requirements rather than applying a generic checklist — which is what keeps reports being accepted first time rather than bounced for format or scope mismatches.
Does PNPC provide recommendations on escrow account controls, or just report findings?
Both — the report documents reconciliation results and any exceptions, and we also flag practical control improvements, such as tightening how buyer payment postings are matched to escrow bank deposits, so the next audit cycle runs faster and cleaner.
Does the escrow audit requirement apply to free zone developers, or only DLD-registered mainland projects?
Where a free zone community permits off-plan sales to the public — for example within master-developer-run zones such as Dubai South or Meydan — the underlying trigger for the escrow requirement is the off-plan sale itself, so an equivalent escrow governance framework typically applies even though the licensing authority differs from a standard DLD/RERA mainland project. Financial free zones such as DIFC and ADGM operate under their own real estate and fund rules rather than the DLD escrow framework.
Can a Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT) holding UAE property assets need an escrow-style audit?
A REIT itself is typically subject to its own fund-level audit and disclosure rules under the relevant free zone's collective investment framework (commonly DIFC or ADGM), which is distinct from a DLD/RERA project escrow audit. Where the REIT holds an interest in an underlying off-plan development, the development-level escrow audit still applies to that project independently of the REIT's own fund audit.
What is the relationship between the escrow audit and the project's Oqood interim registration?
Oqood is DLD's interim property registration system that records off-plan unit sales before the title deed is issued at handover. The escrow audit cross-checks that units recorded as sold in the developer's ledger and reported through Oqood correspond to actual buyer payments received into the escrow account — a mismatch between Oqood-registered sales and escrow deposits is exactly the kind of variance the audit is designed to surface.
Does a change in the project's engineering consultant mid-construction affect the escrow audit?
Yes — where the certifying engineering consultant changes partway through the project, we confirm the new consultant's certification methodology is consistent with (or a properly bridged transition from) the outgoing consultant's, since the withdrawal audit relies on that certified completion percentage being reliable and comparable period to period.
How does the escrow audit treat off-plan sales made through a real estate broker or agent?
Broker-introduced sales are reconciled the same way as direct sales — the audit traces the buyer's payment from the sale and purchase agreement through to the escrow account deposit, regardless of whether a broker or agent facilitated the transaction, and any broker commission paid from project funds is tested against the escrow agreement's permitted spend categories.
What happens if a buyer pays in a currency other than AED?
Foreign-currency buyer payments are translated to AED at the rate and date basis used consistently in the developer's own records and confirmed against the escrow bank's currency conversion records where the deposit itself was converted on receipt, so the reconciliation is tested on a consistent basis rather than mixing translation methodologies.
Does PNPC verify the escrow agent bank's own regulatory standing, or only the account transactions?
The audit's scope is the transactional and reconciliation position of the specific escrow account, not an assessment of the escrow agent bank's own regulatory standing with the UAE Central Bank — the bank's eligibility to act as an escrow agent is established when RERA/DLD approves it for the project, and PNPC's testing starts from that approved relationship.
Can the escrow audit be relied on by a mortgage lender financing an individual buyer's unit purchase?
A buyer's mortgage lender typically relies on its own conveyancing and title checks rather than the project-level escrow audit directly, though a project with a clean escrow compliance history can support the lender's broader confidence in the development. The escrow audit itself is addressed to the escrow bank and RERA/DLD, not individual unit-level mortgage lenders.
What if the developer wants to release funds ahead of the certified completion percentage in a genuine emergency, such as a critical supplier payment?
Any withdrawal ahead of certified completion falls outside the standard escrow-eligibility test and needs to be raised with the escrow agent bank and, typically, RERA/DLD directly as an exception request — it is not something the audit can retrospectively bless, since our role is to report what the evidence shows, not to authorise departures from the agreed framework.
How does the escrow audit interact with the project's own quantity surveyor, if one is appointed separately from the engineering consultant?
Where a quantity surveyor is appointed to verify contractor payment certificates and cost-to-complete separately from the engineering consultant certifying overall physical progress, we corroborate both sources against each other and against the actual withdrawal requested, since the two roles test related but distinct things — cost incurred versus physical completion achieved.
Does PNPC's escrow audit cover the developer's marketing and sales-office spend?
Only to the extent the escrow agreement permits marketing costs as an eligible withdrawal category — where it does, we test that actual marketing spend drawn from escrow stayed within the agreement's defined cap and category; where the agreement does not permit marketing spend from escrow at all, any such withdrawal is reported as an exception regardless of how the developer has categorised it internally.
What is the difference between a periodic withdrawal audit and a full annual escrow audit?
A periodic withdrawal audit is scoped narrowly to authorise a specific tranche release against certified progress since the last withdrawal. An annual escrow audit takes a wider look across the full reporting year — cumulative reconciliation of all deposits, withdrawals, and the closing escrow balance — and is often the version filed with RERA/DLD as part of the project's ongoing regulatory record, distinct from each individual withdrawal-tranche sign-off.
Can PNPC help if the developer has never had an escrow audit done for a project that has been running for some time?
Yes — we scope a catch-up engagement that reconstructs the reconciliation from project inception (or from the last point at which records are reliable) to the current reporting date, flagging any period where evidence is genuinely unavailable, so the developer has a defensible current position even where historical documentation is incomplete.
Does the escrow audit report disclose commercially sensitive information to RERA/DLD that the developer would prefer to keep confidential?
The report discloses what the authority's reporting template requires — typically escrow position, withdrawal eligibility, and completion-progress reconciliation — rather than the developer's broader commercial or financial affairs; PNPC scopes the report strictly to the escrow-specific content the framework calls for.
What if PNPC identifies that the escrow agreement itself is poorly drafted or ambiguous about a withdrawal category?
We flag the ambiguity to the developer and recommend they seek clarification directly from the escrow agent bank (and, where relevant, legal counsel) before treating an ambiguous category as eligible — an audit can identify a drafting gap, but resolving it is a legal and commercial conversation between the developer and the bank, not something the auditor can decide unilaterally.
Does PNPC's escrow audit consider whether the project's insurance cover (e.g. contractor's all-risk) is adequate?
We confirm insurance policies covering the construction project are in place and current as part of the document checklist, but a substantive adequacy assessment of coverage levels is an insurance advisory question rather than an escrow reconciliation matter — we flag any obvious gap (a lapsed policy, cover that has not been renewed alongside a project extension) but do not opine on whether the sum insured is commercially sufficient.
How does PNPC handle a situation where the developer group's holding structure includes an offshore entity above the UAE project company?
The escrow audit itself is scoped to the specific project-holding entity that is party to the escrow agreement and registered with RERA/DLD, but where funds or guarantees flow between an offshore holding layer (for example a JAFZA Offshore or RAK ICC entity) and the project company, we trace those flows to confirm they do not create an unrecorded diversion of escrow-eligible funds.
What if the project is being sold or transferred to a new developer partway through construction?
A developer or project transfer typically triggers its own escrow-position audit at the point of transfer, so the incoming developer and RERA/DLD have a clear, independently verified handover position — buyer payments received to date, funds remaining in escrow, and certified completion progress — before the new developer assumes responsibility for the remaining construction.
Does PNPC provide the escrow audit in both English and Arabic where the authority requires it?
Where RERA/DLD or the escrow agent bank's reporting template requires a bilingual submission, we prepare or arrange for the report to meet that requirement — this is confirmed at the scoping stage alongside the rest of the reporting template requirements, rather than assumed as a default for every engagement.
Can the escrow audit be scoped to also review the developer's compliance with advertising and marketing regulations for off-plan sales?
Advertising and marketing compliance for off-plan sales sits with RERA's separate marketing-permit and advertising rules rather than the escrow account reconciliation itself; PNPC can flag an obvious gap noticed in passing, but a dedicated marketing-compliance review is a distinct, separately scoped engagement.
How does PNPC treat a discrepancy between the unit sizes or specifications sold to buyers and what is actually being built?
A material discrepancy between the sold specification (as set out in the SPA and marketing material) and the as-built design is primarily a construction and legal matter between the developer and buyers, but where it affects unit pricing, refund exposure, or the completion-percentage certification, we flag it as relevant context in the escrow audit even though resolving it sits outside the audit's core scope.
PNPC Global vs. typical UAE real estate escrow audit providers
| Factor | PNPC Global | Typical Small Local Firm | Big-4/Large International Firm |
|---|---|---|---|
| Scoping precision | Confirms the specific escrow agreement, authority rules, and bank template before quoting | Often applies a generic escrow checklist regardless of project specifics | Thorough but with high minimum fees regardless of project size |
| Turnaround for periodic withdrawal audits | Diarised against the project's payment-plan milestones so evidence requests go out ahead of deadlines | Reactive scheduling, often starting only once the developer requests it | Can be slower due to internal review layers for smaller mandates |
| Multi-project portfolio coordination | Single coordinated engagement across a developer group's active projects with consistent methodology | Each project typically scoped and billed as an unrelated engagement | Available but at a materially higher fee structure |
| Cross-border India-UAE capability | Single firm handles both jurisdictions for group companies and cross-border developer structures | Rarely available | Available but typically at a much higher fee structure |
| Exception handling | Documented exception register with named owner and remediation deadline before next withdrawal | Raises observations without clear ownership or follow-up tracking | Formal exception log, generally with slower internal sign-off |
| Bank/authority format alignment | Reports built to the specific escrow bank's and authority's current template on request | May not proactively confirm the current required format | Generally accommodating but slower turnaround for smaller mandates |
| Cost structure | Scoped, transparent pricing suited to SME and mid-market developer projects | Can be inconsistent or ad hoc between projects | Often cost-prohibitive for smaller or mid-size developments |
| Continuity | Standing engagement calendar carried forward across the project's full construction cycle | Stops once each individual report is delivered | Available, but continuity support is typically a separate paid engagement |
| Free zone / non-standard project scoping | Confirms the correct governing escrow framework before assuming a default DLD template applies | Often applies a DLD-style checklist regardless of the actual registering authority | Capable but typically requires a separate specialist team for non-standard structures |
| Catch-up and handover engagements | Scoped honestly for the extra evidence-reconstruction effort involved, rather than under-quoted as a routine audit | May underestimate the effort needed for a first-time or handover audit | Available, but at materially higher fees for non-routine scope |
| Currency and cross-border buyer handling | Tests foreign-currency buyer payments on a consistent translation basis as standard practice | May not proactively check translation consistency between ledger and bank records | Capable, generally accommodating but slower for smaller mandates |
PNPC Global positions itself between the informality of very small local providers and the process-heavy overhead of the largest international firms — rigorous, RERA-aligned evidence standards at a cost and turnaround suited to UAE SME and mid-market developers.
- 01
Initial scoping call confirming the project's registering authority, escrow agreement terms, and reporting cadence
- 02
Reconciliation of buyer payments recorded in the developer's ledger against actual escrow account deposits
- 03
Cross-check of the engineering consultant's certified construction-completion percentage against withdrawal amounts
- 04
Testing of escrow withdrawals against permitted spend categories under the specific escrow agreement
- 05
Bank-to-book reconciliation between the escrow agent bank's statement and the developer's internal escrow ledger
- 06
Documented exception register with evidence and management's response for every material variance
- 07
Report formatted to the specific escrow bank's and authority's current reporting template
- 08
Unit cancellation, default, and resale tracing through the escrow account
- 09
Coordination with the developer's statutory auditor to share relevant workpapers and avoid duplicated effort
- 10
Standing engagement calendar diarised against the project's registered payment-plan milestones
- 11
Multi-project coordination for developer groups with several concurrent off-plan escrow accounts
- 12
Support for project-completion escrow closure audits and retention-release verification
- 13
Cross-border coordination for India-UAE developer group structures through a single advisory relationship
Talk to PNPC Global before your next escrow withdrawal deadline — we scope the reconciliation to your project's actual payment plan and your escrow bank's actual template, so the report is accepted the first time.
Jurisdiction
Free zone, mainland & offshore
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