Strategy

Build vs Buy: When a UAE SME Should Build an Internal Tool in 2026

SKIMBOX Team

Most UAE SMEs should buy SaaS, not build. Here is the honest decision framework, real pricing for Zoho, HubSpot, Monday and Notion, and when building actually pays.

Build vs Buy: When a UAE SME Should Build an Internal Tool in 2026

Most Dubai dev shops will happily quote you AED 80,000 to build a custom CRM. We are a Dubai dev shop, and we tell most clients not to build. Not because we do not want the work, but because nine times out of ten the math does not survive a 3-year horizon. The honest version of this conversation is rare in UAE consulting, so here it is.

Build vs buy is not a philosophical question. It is a total cost of ownership question, and the answer for most UAE SMEs is the same: buy the SaaS, customise it lightly with Zapier or an API, and put the AED 60,000 you would have spent on a custom build into growth instead.

The real question is 3-year TCO

A custom internal tool looks cheap when you only count the build invoice. Look at year three and the picture changes. Custom software needs ongoing maintenance at 18 to 25 percent of build cost per year. Hosting adds AED 4,000 to AED 12,000 annually for a small ops tool. If the developer who built it leaves, you pay a premium to bring someone new up to speed. None of this is in the original quote.

SaaS has the opposite shape. The first year looks expensive because the licence costs hit immediately. By year three the line flattens and you have spent zero on bug fixes, infrastructure upgrades, or finding a replacement engineer. The vendor is paying for all of that.

Here is what a 15-person UAE SME running a mid-sized ops tool actually pays.

PathYear 1Year 2Year 33-year total
Zoho One (15 seats, annual)AED 81,500AED 81,500AED 81,500AED 244,500
HubSpot Starter (15 seats)AED 33,000AED 33,000AED 33,000AED 99,000
Monday Pro (15 seats)AED 41,800AED 41,800AED 41,800AED 125,400
Custom build AED 60,000 + maintenanceAED 75,000AED 22,000AED 22,000AED 119,000
Notion + Airtable hybridAED 22,000AED 22,000AED 22,000AED 66,000

On paper, the custom build beats Zoho One by AED 125,000 over three years. In practice, the custom build carries risk the SaaS does not. If the agency vanishes or the dependencies break, you pay again to rescue it. The SaaS just keeps working.

When to buy (this is most cases)

Buy the SaaS when any of these is true. Your workflow is normal (CRM, project management, accounting, support tickets, HR). You have fewer than 50 people. You cannot name a specific business process that gives you an edge. Nobody on your team can comfortably maintain a Next.js app at 2am. You are growing fast and need to ship something in 30 days, not 90.

For UAE SMEs under 25 people, our default recommendation is Zoho One. It covers CRM, accounting, projects, HR, support, mail, and twenty other apps for USD 37 per user per month on the annual all-employee plan. The UI is dated but the coverage is unmatched, and the UAE reseller network around Zoho is mature enough to handle implementation in two or three weeks. For a slicker experience with less coverage, HubSpot Starter at USD 15 per seat is the cleanest CRM on the market. For pure project and ops work, Monday at USD 12 to 19 per seat is the easiest to roll out.

Notion and Airtable belong in a different bucket. They are the cheapest credible starting points. A 12-person UAE SME can run docs, light CRM, simple ops, and a project tracker on Notion Business at USD 20 per user and Airtable Team at USD 20 per user. Total annual spend under AED 90,000 with room to grow. Most companies should start here and only graduate to Zoho or HubSpot when a specific workflow breaks.

One UAE distribution client came to us last year wanting a custom inventory and CRM platform. Budget AED 95,000. We told them to buy Zoho Inventory plus Zoho CRM, spend three weeks on configuration, and invest the remaining AED 70,000 in a sales hire. Two quarters later their revenue was up 22 percent. The custom build would still have been in QA.

When to build (this is the rare case)

Build when off-the-shelf SaaS covers less than 60 percent of your workflow. Build when the process is part of your competitive moat. Build when SaaS licence costs are climbing past AED 80,000 a year for a tool your team only half-uses. Build when compliance or data residency rules out the SaaS options entirely.

A Dubai logistics client we worked with had a routing workflow nobody else in their niche could match. They had tried Monday, Zoho Projects, and a freight-specific SaaS. None handled their hybrid sea-and-land routing logic. We built them a custom platform on Next.js and Supabase for AED 110,000. Three years later it still runs, has paid for itself five times over, and is now part of why their customers stay. That is what building looks like when it works.

The no-code middle ground

Most teams who think they need a custom build actually need a no-code prototype first. Airtable plus Softr replaces about 70 percent of small ops tools. Retool puts a clean internal admin panel on top of any existing database. Glide is excellent for field teams. Notion alone is enough for the first 18 months of most operations work.

The order we recommend: Notion or Airtable free tier, then a paid Airtable Team plan at USD 20 per seat, then Retool plus your existing SaaS APIs, then and only then a custom Next.js build. Each step is reversible. The custom build is not.

The anti-patterns that bury SMEs

The "we built it ourselves to save money" trap is the most common. An SME spends AED 60,000 to avoid AED 25,000 a year of SaaS licences. Two years later, the original developer is gone, the tool needs an urgent security patch, and the rescue invoice is AED 70,000. They have now spent more than the SaaS would have cost and still have a fragile tool.

The "let us add one more feature" trap is the close runner-up. A small admin tool grows tentacles until it is a 12-module monster nobody can fully test. Build costs balloon. Maintenance becomes a full-time job. Most internal tools that started as 4-week builds and ended up in 18-month rescue mode followed this exact path.

The "ownership matters" trap is the proudest one. Founders insist on owning the code without being able to articulate what that ownership gets them. If the tool is back-office admin, ownership is a vanity argument. If it is the product your customers touch every day, ownership is real. Be honest about which one you have.

The decision rule

If you cannot finish this sentence with a concrete answer, buy: "We are building this because off-the-shelf SaaS specifically fails at ___, and this gap is costing us ___ in revenue or efficiency every month."

If you can finish it, build. If you cannot, the SaaS is sitting there ready to go, the integration takes a fortnight, and the AED 60,000 you saved is better spent on a salesperson, a marketer, or three months of product runway. That is the unglamorous answer, and it is the right one for most UAE SMEs in 2026.

One last test before signing a build contract. Run your top three workflows through a Zapier or Make automation connecting your existing SaaS to a small Retool dashboard. Budget AED 8,000 to AED 20,000 and two to three weeks. If that closes the gap, you never needed the full build. If it does not, you now have hard evidence to justify the bigger investment, and the agency quoting you AED 110,000 will take you more seriously because you have done the work to know exactly what you need.

Frequently asked questions

  • How much does it cost to build a custom internal tool in the UAE in 2026?

    The floor is around AED 15,000 for a small internal tool on Next.js and Supabase built by a Dubai agency in three to four weeks. A more typical mid-sized internal ops tool with roles, dashboards, and a few integrations lands around AED 60,000. Anything with workflow engines, approvals, and a mobile companion sits in the AED 90,000 to AED 180,000 range.

  • Zoho One vs HubSpot vs Monday: which one should a UAE SME pick?

    Zoho One at around USD 37 per user per month annual is the broadest suite (CRM, books, desk, projects, HR, mail) and the strongest value for sub-50 person UAE SMEs. HubSpot Starter at USD 15 per seat is the cleanest if you only need CRM and marketing. Monday at USD 12 to 19 per seat is the best pure work-management tool. If you are below 20 people and need everything, Zoho usually wins.

  • When should an SME actually build instead of buy?

    When off-the-shelf SaaS fits less than 60 percent of your workflow, you have a process that is genuinely a competitive moat, or the SaaS licence cost is climbing past AED 80,000 a year for a tool you only half-use. Outside those three cases, buy.

  • What is the real maintenance cost of a custom internal tool?

    Plan for 18 to 25 percent of the build cost every year, every year. A tool that cost AED 60,000 to build will need AED 11,000 to AED 15,000 of annual maintenance to stay alive (bug fixes, dependency updates, small feature additions). Skip that budget and the tool decays in 18 months.

  • What is the do-nothing risk if we keep using spreadsheets?

    Spreadsheets cost zero upfront but bleed time. A 10-person UAE SME running operations on shared spreadsheets typically loses 4 to 7 hours per person per week to reconciliation, double-entry, and version chaos. At AED 80 per hour blended cost, that is AED 165,000 to AED 290,000 of lost time annually. Doing nothing is usually the most expensive option.

  • Can no-code tools like Retool, Airtable, or Glide replace a custom build?

    For most internal ops use cases, yes. Retool is excellent for internal admin panels on top of your existing database. Airtable plus Softr replaces 70 percent of small ops tools. Glide is great for field-team mobile apps. Bubble works for full apps but gets messy past 8 to 10 screens. Try a no-code prototype first; only graduate to custom code if it fails specific stress tests.

  • What about white-label SaaS? Is that a third path?

    It is the most under-used option in the UAE. Many SaaS vendors will let a partner agency white-label or deeply customise their platform under your brand for a setup fee plus a per-seat licence. You get a polished product without the build cost. Works best for trainers, consultancies, and franchise networks who need a branded portal but not a unique workflow.

  • What is the 'we built it ourselves to save money' trap?

    An SME pays AED 60,000 to build a custom tool to avoid AED 25,000 a year of SaaS licences. Two years in, the developer who built it has left, the tool needs urgent updates, and they spend AED 70,000 on a rescue project. The SaaS would have cost them AED 50,000 across the same two years. The trap is treating the build as a one-time cost when it is really a 5-year commitment.

  • What is the 3-year total cost of ownership comparison?

    Rough math for a mid-sized UAE SME tool. SaaS (Zoho One for 15 users): around AED 245,000 over 3 years. Custom build (AED 60,000 build plus 20 percent annual maintenance plus AED 8,000 hosting per year): around AED 120,000 over 3 years. Custom looks cheaper on paper. The catch is risk: the SaaS works on day one, the custom build can collapse if the developer disappears.

  • When does SaaS lock-in become genuinely painful?

    When you cannot export your data cleanly, when the vendor raises prices 40 percent at renewal, when a critical feature you depend on gets deprecated, or when you have customised so heavily that switching costs more than building from scratch. Audit your SaaS exit plan once a year; do not wait for the renewal email.

  • Can I customise SaaS via API and Zapier instead of building from scratch?

    This is the right move for most UAE SMEs. Zapier or Make plus the SaaS API plus a small custom dashboard (built in Retool or Next.js, AED 8,000 to AED 20,000) covers 80 percent of the cases where teams think they need a full custom build. Try the integration path before commissioning a ground-up tool.

  • Does building give us ownership advantages worth the cost?

    Ownership matters only if the tool is part of your competitive moat. If it is back-office admin or a CRM, ownership is a vanity argument. If it is the product your customers experience, or a workflow no competitor has, then yes, ownership pays. Be honest about which side of that line you are on.

  • Is SaaS or custom software more secure for a UAE SME?

    Major SaaS vendors (Zoho, HubSpot, Monday, Microsoft, Google) invest more in security than any SME can match. Their datacentres, SOC 2 audits, and patch cycles are out of reach for a 12-person company. Custom builds are only more secure if you have a dedicated devops engineer, which most SMEs do not.

  • Who fixes a custom internal tool at 2am when it breaks?

    Whoever you are paying a retainer to. If you have no retainer, nobody. This is the single most overlooked cost of building. Either budget AED 3,000 to AED 8,000 a month for an agency support retainer or hire a developer in-house. With SaaS, support is included in the licence.

  • How much does an in-house developer cost in Dubai in 2026?

    A solid mid-level full-stack developer in Dubai earns AED 12,000 to AED 22,000 per month, plus visa, end-of-service, and equipment. All-in cost lands around AED 18,000 to AED 30,000 monthly. You only need one if you have multiple custom systems to maintain or are actively building product.

  • Can we negotiate SaaS contracts in the UAE?

    Yes, especially on annual commitments above USD 5,000 per year. Zoho, HubSpot, and Monday all discount 10 to 25 percent for annual prepay, multi-year, or above 25 seats. Always ask before renewal. UAE resellers sometimes offer better deals than buying direct because they bundle local implementation hours.

  • What is the 1/3/9 rule for SaaS adoption?

    A practical rule used by Dubai operations teams: a SaaS tool that saves one hour per user per day easily justifies a USD 9 per user per month price. The real cost of a wasted hour at UAE blended rates is around AED 80, which is roughly USD 22. Anything cheaper than the hourly cost saved is a clear yes.

  • How do we decide build for moat or buy for speed?

    Three questions. Does this workflow give us a real edge competitors do not have? Are we willing to fund it for five years? Can we point to revenue or retention impact directly tied to owning it? If you cannot answer yes to all three, buy. Build only when the answer is unambiguously yes on every count.

SKIMBOX Team

Tech Consultancy

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