SEO in Dubai costs AED 1,500 to 50,000 a month, and most growing SMEs land between AED 3,000 and 8,000 for a retainer that produces measurable organic growth in three to six months [1][2]. The wide range is real, not vague: a local restaurant and a national real-estate portal are buying very different things. This guide breaks down what each tier actually delivers, what Arabic really costs, and the penalty bill that cheap SEO hides but never mentions.
We run SEO and digital marketing programmes for UAE businesses out of our Dubai and Bengaluru teams, and we also get hired to clean up after the cheap providers that penalised a client's site. So this is the pricing reality from both sides. For how to choose a good agency in the first place, see our guide to picking an SEO company in Dubai.
How much does SEO cost in Dubai per month?
Here are the canonical 2026 retainer tiers, synthesised across the major Dubai pricing guides [1][2][3]:
| Tier | Who it suits | AED/month |
|---|---|---|
| Basic / Local | Single-location SMB, startup | 1,500 to 3,500 |
| Standard / SME | Growing SME, multi-service | 4,000 to 12,000 |
| Premium / Competitive | Real estate, finance, medical, e-commerce | 12,000 to 25,000 |
| Enterprise / Pan-UAE | Large, bilingual, multi-location | 25,000 to 50,000+ |
The sweet spot for a growing SME is AED 3,000 to 8,000 a month [1]. The single biggest cost driver is competition in your industry. Real estate, finance, legal, and medical keywords are the most expensive in the UAE because everyone is fighting for the same first page. A flower shop in one neighbourhood and a property portal targeting all of Dubai are simply not the same job.
Quick math: at AED 500 a month, an agency can afford to spend two or three hours on your account [4]. Meaningful SEO needs 15 to 40 hours a month. That single ratio explains why the cheapest tiers cannot work, no matter what the sales page promises.
What you actually get at each price
Price maps to scope of work, not magic. Here is the honest mapping [1][3]:
- Under AED 1,500: automated tools, AI-spun blogs, spam links. Avoid.
- AED 1,500 to 3,500: local SEO, Google Business Profile, on-page basics, 20 to 30 keywords, one city.
- AED 4,000 to 12,000: technical SEO, 4 to 12 content pieces a month, 5 to 10 quality links, 100-plus keywords tracked, an account manager.
- AED 12,000 to 25,000: Arabic plus English, 10 to 25 high-authority links a month, conversion work, a senior strategist, custom dashboards.
- AED 25,000 to 50,000+: embedded team, PR-driven links, multi-language, high-value transactional keywords.
For a deeper look at the cheapest tier, our local SEO Dubai guide covers what AED 1,500 to 5,000 buys at the map-pack level.
Cost by SEO type
Not all SEO is the same job, and the type you need changes the price as much as the tier. Here is how the main types price in 2026 [2][3]:
| SEO type | AED/month | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Local SEO | 1,500 to 5,000 | One city, map pack, single Google Business Profile |
| Standard / national | 4,000 to 12,000 | Broader keywords, technical work, content programme |
| E-commerce SEO | 3,000 to 20,000 | Product and category pages, faceted navigation at scale |
| International SEO | 10,000 to 50,000 | Multiple markets, languages, hreflang, content per region |
Two line items sit underneath all of these. Content runs AED 300 to 1,500 per article, and a full content programme is AED 3,000 to 12,000 a month. Link building is AED 2,000 to 8,000 a month ongoing, and it is usually the most expensive single part of a competitive campaign because real authority links are slow and manual to earn [3]. The further you move from local to international, the more of both you need, which is the real reason the ceiling climbs so high.
What return SEO actually delivers
SEO is a compounding investment, not an instant one. Low-competition local keywords can move in two to three months, meaningful traffic typically takes four to six months, and strong rankings in a competitive niche take 9 to 12 months [1][2]. Anyone promising page one in 30 to 60 days is signalling risky tactics, not skill.
The payback comes from durability. A worked Dubai example: a business paying AED 5,000 a month that generates five extra qualified leads worth AED 20,000 is already running a four-to-one return, and unlike ads, the visibility keeps working after the spend stops [9]. Over a year, organic usually delivers a lower cost per lead than paid, which is why most UAE businesses run both: ads for immediate demand, SEO for the compounding base. The point is to judge SEO over 12 months, not 30 days.
The cheap-SEO trap: the AED 90,000 bill nobody quotes
This is the section the pricing pages selling cheap packages leave out. Recovering from a Google penalty commonly costs AED 55,000 to 92,000, plus six to eighteen months of lost rankings and revenue [5]. A penalty from black-hat shortcuts, keyword stuffing, private blog networks, and bought links, can wipe 50 to 95 percent of your traffic within days.
Straight talk: the AED 1,000-a-month "deal" is the most expensive SEO you can buy, because the recovery costs roughly ten times what you saved, and that is before counting the revenue you lost while your rankings were gone. For most businesses, doing nothing is genuinely safer than buying SEO at this price, because cheap SEO can damage a site that was previously fine.
Two related traps live in the same neighbourhood:
- Pay-on-results SEO sounds risk-free but pushes agencies toward black-hat tactics and zero-volume keywords that "rank" but drive no business. Only a small share of agencies offer it, for good reason [6].
- Guaranteed rankings are a red flag, not a feature. Nobody controls Google's algorithm, and Google bans guaranteed-ranking claims [7]. A promise of page one in 30 to 60 days signals risk, not confidence.
Arabic is a second programme, not a cheap add-on
Bilingual SEO runs AED 5,000 to 15,000 a month, and adding proper Arabic to an English campaign costs roughly AED 3,000 to 8,000 a month more [8][9]. The mistake buyers make is treating Arabic as a AED 500 translation add-on.
Common mistake: translating your English pages with a tool and calling it Arabic SEO. Ranking in Arabic needs native Arabic copywriters doing cultural keyword research, because people search differently in Arabic than the literal translation of your English terms [9]. Machine-translated content reads wrong, misses the real search terms, and does not rank. This is why so many UAE sites have an English side that performs and an Arabic side that sits dead. Multilingual content roughly doubles production cost, and honest pricing reflects that.
Hourly, project, and per-keyword pricing
Not everything is a retainer. The other models, with 2026 Dubai figures [1][10]:
| Model | Rate | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Hourly (freelance) | AED 200 to 500/hr | Ad-hoc consulting |
| Hourly (senior consultant) | AED 400 to 800/hr | Strategy sessions |
| Technical audit (small site) | AED 2,500 to 5,000 | First project before a retainer |
| Technical audit (large site) | AED 5,000 to 12,000 | Pre-migration or recovery |
| Content (per article) | AED 300 to 1,500 | Building a content library |
| Link campaign (20 links) | AED 4,000 to 10,000 | Authority push |
Be wary of per-keyword pricing. It usually signals thin work and a list padded with zero-volume keywords that look like wins but mean nothing for revenue.
Freelancer, agency, or in-house?
For a small business with one narrow need, a freelancer at AED 1,500 to 8,000 a month is fine, roughly 30 to 40 percent cheaper than an agency, but you get one person's skill set [11]. An agency at AED 3,000 to 8,000-plus gives you strategy, content, technical, and links handled as a team.
In-house looks cheaper on paper until you do the real math. A junior SEO hire averages AED 4,000 to 6,400 a month, but a senior strategist who can actually run a competitive Dubai campaign costs AED 18,000 to 35,000 plus tools like Ahrefs or Semrush, a visa, and the single-point-of-failure risk if they leave [12]. For most SMEs, an agency retainer buys a broader skill set for less than one capable senior salary.
What AI changes about SEO pricing in 2026
AI Overviews have changed the game, but not in the way the "SEO is dead" headlines claim. They have cut click-through rates on top-ranking content, yet roughly 40 percent of the pages an AI Overview cites still rank in the top 10, and around 70 percent in the top 100. Without strong SEO foundations, AI engines have nothing reliable to cite [4]. So the work shifts from ranking to being cited, and competitive packages increasingly bundle that optimisation in.
The pricing effect is two-sided. AI tools have cut routine SEO labour like briefs, audits, and keyword research by 20 to 30 percent, which nudges floor prices down, while strategy and creative stay premium, so top-tier pricing holds firm [4]. The practical takeaway: a modern Dubai agency should already be optimising for AI citation, not just blue links. If yours cannot explain how it does that, it is charging 2026 prices for a 2020 playbook.
How this played out for three clients
Real situations from our work. Names and details changed for privacy.
A Dubai real-estate brokerage. They had been paying AED 1,200 a month to a provider promising page-one rankings, and their organic traffic collapsed after a Google update flagged the bought links. Cleanup and disavowal took nine months. "The cheap option cost us a year and a fortune in lost leads," the marketing head says. "We should have started at AED 8,000 with someone real."
A bilingual clinic group. Their English site ranked well; the Arabic side, machine-translated, ranked for nothing. We rebuilt the Arabic with a native specialist doing proper keyword research. "We thought Arabic was a translation line item," the founder says. "It was half our market sitting idle."
A B2B services SME. They were about to sign a 12-month lock-in with no exit clause. We advised a paid pilot first. The pilot showed the agency was strong, and they signed, on better terms. "The exit clause was the test," their director says. "A confident agency was happy to give us one."
How SKIMBOX prices SEO
We start with an audit, not a package, give you admin access to your own Search Console and Analytics on day one, and report against leads and revenue, not vanity traffic. We price Arabic as a real programme, never a token add-on, and we are happy to start with a paid pilot so you can see the work before any long commitment. See our SEO and digital marketing services and content marketing services, or contact us for a straight assessment of where your site stands.
References
[1] Hikmah AI Agency - SEO cost in Dubai 2026, tiers and project pricing. hikmahaiagency.com/blog/seo-cost-dubai-2026 [2] Global Media Insight - SEO cost Dubai, package pricing. globalmediainsight.com/blog/seo-cost-dubai [3] Digital Media Sapiens - SEO cost in Dubai guide, updated 2026. digitalmediasapiens.com/seo-cost-in-dubai-guide-updated-2026 [4] Digital Applied - SEO pricing 2026, what SEO services cost and hours per tier. digitalapplied.com/blog/seo-pricing-2026-what-seo-services-cost [5] Foxxr / search-industry data - Google penalty recovery cost and traffic-loss benchmarks. foxxr.com [6] WebFX / Victorious / SE Ranking - share of agencies offering pay-on-results SEO. webfx.com [7] HigherVisibility - why guaranteed rankings are a red flag. highervisibility.com [8] Miraj IT Consultancy - Arabic SEO UAE, bilingual content pricing 2026. mirajitconsultancy.com/blog/arabic-seo-uae-bilingual-content-wins-2026 [9] Bold-in - SEO packages Dubai, what you should actually pay, bilingual add-on. bold-in.com/seo-packages-dubai-price-guide-to-what-you-should-actually-pay [10] Orange Monke - SEO cost in Dubai, hourly and project rates. orangemonke.com/blogs/seo-cost-in-dubai [11] Bold-in / Dynamologic - freelancer vs agency Dubai. bold-in.com [12] Indeed UAE - SEO Specialist salaries Dubai, June 2026. ae.indeed.com/career/seo-specialist/salaries/Dubai [13] SKIMBOX - Internal experience running and remediating UAE SEO campaigns, 2026. skimbox.co



