Why one price never fits: the anatomy of the AED 200–1500 spread
Almost every smart home installation in the UAE lands somewhere between AED 200 and AED 1,500 per job, and the spread is not random. At the bottom sit installs that are essentially configuration work: a battery-powered video doorbell that sticks to a villa gatepost, a plug-in smart AC controller paired to an app, a mesh wifi node that just needs placement and setup. No drilling into structure, no electrical work, no building approvals — an hour of a technician's time, mostly spent on the software side.
At the top of the range are jobs that quietly become two trades in one. A motorised curtain track needs a power point behind the pelmet, which means an electrician before the curtain fitter. A wired doorbell on a villa gate fifty metres from the router needs cabling or a wifi bridge before the camera goes up. A smart thermostat on a ducted AC system means opening the existing thermostat, identifying the wiring standard, and sometimes discovering the system is not compatible at all. Each of these adds labour hours, materials and occasionally a second visit.
The single most useful mental model: you are not paying for the device to be attached to the wall. You are paying for power, connectivity and permission to be sorted out around it. When a quote looks surprisingly high, one of those three is usually the reason. When it looks suspiciously low, one of them has usually been ignored and will surface later as an extra charge.
Hardware versus labour: the split your quote should always show
The most common way people overpay is by accepting a single bundled number. A quote that says a smart lock 'supplied and installed' for one lump sum hides the markup on the hardware, which in the UAE can be substantial — the same lock model can cost noticeably more through an installer's supply price than it would if you bought it yourself online or from an electronics retailer in Dubai or Sharjah.
Ask every vendor to split the quote into device cost and installation labour. Install-only pricing for most single devices — a lock, a doorbell, a thermostat — typically sits in the AED 200–450 band. If the bundled quote is far above device retail plus that band, you are paying a convenience premium and should at least know you are paying it. Sometimes the premium is worth it: the installer warranties the whole job, sources a model they know works with UAE door profiles and AC systems, and will not blame your hardware if something fails.
The reverse trap also exists. Buying your own device to save money and then discovering it does not fit — a smart lock that will not mount on a UAE-standard aluminium villa door, a thermostat built for a wiring standard your AC does not use — turns a saving into a return-shipping exercise. The sensible middle path is to choose the device yourself but send the exact model to the installer before purchase and ask them to confirm compatibility in writing, even just over chat.
Concrete walls and mesh wifi: the budget line nobody plans for
UAE construction is unkind to wifi. Most villas and towers are built from concrete block with cement render, often with steel reinforcement, and a single router in the living room will not reliably reach a doorbell at the gate, a camera in the maid's room corridor, or a lock on a door two concrete walls away. Smart devices that drop offline are the number one source of buyer's remorse in this category, and the fix is almost always network coverage, not the device.
A proper installer starts with a walk-through signal check before quoting, because the network work can cost more than the devices it supports. A three-node mesh setup, placed and configured, generally runs AED 300–800 depending on whether nodes can use wired backhaul. Here is a genuinely money-saving detail: many UAE villas built in the last fifteen years are pre-wired with ethernet points feeding back to a central patch panel, usually in a hallway cupboard. If yours is, wired backhaul between mesh nodes is nearly free to activate and dramatically better than wireless hops through concrete.
Budget the network first and the gadgets second. A household that spends AED 800–1,200 getting coverage right and then adds devices over time ends up happier and cheaper than one that spends the same on devices that spend half their life showing an offline icon.
Smart locks in rentals: consent first, hardware second
The majority of UAE residents rent, and a smart lock is a modification to a door the landlord owns. Get written consent — an email or a message thread is enough in practice — before anyone drills. Most landlords say yes when you commit to two things: the original lock and cylinder will be kept safely and refitted at handover, and any holes from a different mounting footprint will be made good. Skipping this step risks a deduction from your security deposit that can exceed the entire cost of the install.
In apartment towers there is a second gatekeeper: building management. Entrance doors in towers are usually fire-rated, and some managements prohibit any modification to them, full stop. Retrofit smart locks that clamp over the existing thumb-turn on the inside of the door — no drilling, no cylinder change — exist precisely for this situation, and a good installer will steer tenants toward them. Fitting one is quick work, typically at the lower end of the AED 200–450 install-only band.
Reversibility has a price worth paying. A tenant choosing between a AED 250–400 retrofit unit and a AED 700–1,000 full replacement lock should weigh not just today's cost but the exit cost: the retrofit comes off in ten minutes when you move; the replacement means a refit visit, possible touch-up work, and a device that may not suit your next door at all.
Video doorbells: a tower job and a villa job are different trades
In a villa, a video doorbell is mostly a power-and-signal problem. The natural position is the gate or the boundary wall, which is often the worst wifi spot on the property and may have no power nearby. A battery model avoids the wiring but adds a recurring chore of recharging every few weeks in summer heat that also shortens battery life. A wired unit is the better long-term answer, but if there is no existing bell wiring to the gate, cabling and a wifi extender push a simple AED 250–400 job toward AED 500–800.
In a tower, the problem is permission, not power. The corridor outside your apartment is common area, and a camera pointing into it films your neighbours. Many owners associations and building managements restrict or ban corridor-facing cameras; others allow them if the field of view is angled tightly at your own door. Ask building management in writing before buying anything. Where cameras are refused, a smart peephole camera that replaces the existing viewer from inside the door is usually acceptable, since it captures the same view a resident is already entitled to.
Price accordingly: a straightforward tower doorbell or peephole install is light work and should sit near the bottom of the market range, while a villa install with cabling belongs in the middle. If a vendor quotes villa-complexity money for a tower job, that is a quote worth challenging — comparing two or three vendor ranges side by side in the tamam app makes this kind of mispricing obvious quickly.
Smart ACs and thermostats: the only installs that pay you back
Cooling dominates UAE electricity bills — in the summer months it is typically the largest single share of a household's DEWA, ADDC or SEWA consumption, often more than half. That makes AC control the one smart home category with a genuine payback story rather than just convenience. Scheduling the AC to ease off while the house is empty and pre-cool before you return, or holding bedrooms a degree or two higher overnight, produces savings you can see on the next bill, especially for anyone on higher consumption slabs.
The right hardware depends entirely on your AC type, and this is where buyers waste the most money. Ductless split units — the wall-mounted type common in older buildings and many Sharjah, Ajman and northern-emirates apartments — take inexpensive smart IR controllers that a technician can pair in under an hour, usually AED 200–400 per room installed. Central ducted systems use wall thermostats, and here compatibility is a minefield: many popular imported smart thermostats are built for the 24-volt wiring standard, while a large share of UAE ducted and chilled-water systems run higher-voltage thermostats. The wrong purchase is not just incompatible, it is a burnt-out device.
Apartments in district-cooled towers add one more wrinkle: the chiller is centralised and billed separately, so a smart thermostat controls your comfort and your cooling charges but interacts with the building's fan-coil units, not a compressor you own. A competent installer identifies your system type from a photo of the existing thermostat before quoting. If a vendor quotes without asking what kind of AC you have, treat that as a red flag rather than confidence.
Motorised curtains and blinds: where quotes inflate the most
Curtain and blind motors carry the widest and least transparent pricing in the smart home market, because the job blends three variables most customers cannot easily benchmark: the motor, the track, and the power. A retrofit motor that drives your existing track is the budget route; a new motorised track cut to size is the premium route; and either may need an electrician to add a concealed power point behind the pelmet, since battery-powered motors trade convenience now for recharging later.
Installers know that floor-to-ceiling curtains in a marina-view apartment are an emotional purchase, and quotes inflate to match. Anchor yourself with structure: install-only labour for a single window generally falls within the broad AED 400–1,500 band depending on track length, curtain weight and access height, with the hardware quoted separately. Blackout curtains in UAE bedrooms are heavy, and motor torque ratings matter — an undersized motor straining against thick blackout fabric fails early, which is how a cheap quote becomes an expensive second install.
Two questions strip most of the padding out of a curtain quote. First: is the price per window or per track, and what exact track length does it assume. Second: does it include the electrical point, and if not, what is that line item. Vendors who answer both crisply tend to be the ones who have done the job many times.
How to compare three quotes like an analyst
Never judge a smart home quote by its total. Judge it by its lines. A comparable quote states the device model and its price, the labour per device, any electrical or network work as separate items, the number of visits assumed, and what the warranty covers — device, workmanship, or both. A total with no lines is not a cheap quote or an expensive one; it is an unreadable one.
Cross-vendor comparison is where the real savings live, because pricing discipline in this trade comes from competition, not regulation. The same four-device install can come back with totals differing by AED 400–800 between vendors, usually because one is marking up hardware heavily while another marks up labour. This is exactly the comparison the tamam app is built for: it lists multiple verified vendors against your job with transparent AED price ranges rather than a single fixed rate, and booking, payment and tracking stay in-app, so the quote you compared is the record you hold if anything is disputed later.
Beware the lowball. A quote dramatically under the field usually excludes something — the mesh node your concrete walls will demand, the power point the curtain motor needs, the second visit when the ordered track arrives. Ask the cheapest vendor directly what happens if extra work is discovered on site, and get the answer in writing. The honest ones will tell you; the others just became easy to eliminate.
Total cost of ownership: hubs, subscriptions and batteries
The install price is the entry fee, not the whole cost. Cameras and video doorbells frequently push cloud storage subscriptions that add a recurring monthly charge per device; over three years, subscriptions on two or three cameras can quietly exceed what you paid for the installation itself. Models with local storage on a memory card or a home hub avoid this, at the cost of slightly more setup work — a trade-off worth making deliberately rather than discovering on your card statement.
Ecosystem choices compound. Devices scattered across four different apps become a chore nobody in the household uses, which is the slow-motion version of wasting the entire budget. Deciding early which voice assistant and ecosystem the home standardises on — and telling your installer so every device purchased matches it — costs nothing and is worth more than any single haggled discount. Battery-powered devices add a maintenance rhythm too: UAE summer heat drains outdoor batteries faster than the spec sheets written for milder climates suggest.
Finally, price in the relationship. Smart homes grow — the lock this year, curtains next year, cameras when the toddler arrives — and a technician who already knows your wiring, your wifi layout and your building's rules quotes faster and works cleaner on every return visit. Same-vendor rebooking through tamam keeps that continuity a tap away instead of a lost phone number.
what it costs
Almost all single-job smart home installs in the UAE fall between AED 200 and AED 1,500, with position in that range driven by wiring, network work and access rather than by the gadget itself. Typical market ranges for common jobs:
| job | typical range |
|---|---|
| Smart lock, install only (retrofit or replacement) | AED 200–450 |
| Video doorbell, tower apartment (no wiring) | AED 200–400 |
| Video doorbell, villa with cabling or extender | AED 400–800 |
| Smart AC controller or thermostat, per unit installed | AED 200–500 |
| Mesh wifi setup, 2–3 nodes placed and configured | AED 300–800 |
| Motorised curtain or blind, per window, install only | AED 400–1,500 |
| New concealed power point (electrician add-on) | AED 150–350 |
| Multi-device starter setup, one visit (3–5 devices) | AED 800–1,500 |
These are market ranges, not quotes — your final price comes from comparing itemised quotes from verified vendors in the tamam app against your specific doors, walls and wiring.
What a smart home install visit actually looks like
Every job in this category is an at-home visit, and the shape is consistent. The technician arrives with drills, mounting hardware, a network tester and usually a laptop or tablet for device configuration; you supply the devices unless the quote includes supply. A single-device job — one lock, one doorbell, one thermostat — typically takes 45 minutes to two hours. A multi-device setup with mesh wifi runs half a day. Anything involving new electrical points or curtain tracks may split into two visits: assessment and electrical first, mounting and configuration second.
Prepare three things before the doorbell rings. First, access: security or watchman clearance in towers, gate access in villa communities, and a parking arrangement — tower visitor parking approvals can eat half an hour of a booked slot. Second, your wifi name and password, plus the phone that will own the device accounts, charged and present; installs stall more often on forgotten passwords than on hardware. Third, any written permissions — landlord consent for locks, building management approval for cameras — so the technician is never asked to gamble on your behalf. Booking through tamam, you can confirm timing and these details with the vendor over whatsapp before the visit, and payment and job tracking stay in the app rather than in cash-and-promises territory.
how it plays out emirate by emirate
dubai
Dubai has the widest spread of housing types and therefore the widest spread of install jobs: district-cooled towers in the Marina and Downtown where thermostats meet fan-coil units, and villa communities where developers pre-wired ethernet to a patch panel — worth checking before paying for wireless mesh. Tower residents face the strictest owners-association rules on corridor cameras and fire-rated door modifications, so get building management approval in writing first. DEWA's slab tariff structure means heavy summer consumers see the fastest payback on smart AC scheduling, and vendor availability is the deepest in the country, which keeps quotes competitive if you actually compare them.
abu dhabi
Abu Dhabi's stock leans toward central ducted AC, in both island towers and the big master-planned villa communities off the mainland, so thermostat compatibility checks matter more here than anywhere else — photograph your existing thermostat before any vendor quotes. Electricity runs through ADDC, and government-led efficiency campaigns have made residents unusually receptive to consumption-cutting installs. In Al Ain, larger plots and older villas mean longer cable runs to gates and boundary walls, pushing doorbell and camera jobs toward the upper end of the range; confirm the vendor actually covers Al Ain rather than quoting from the capital and adding travel charges later.
sharjah
Sharjah's dense apartment stock, much of it older low- and mid-rise served by SEWA, is split-AC territory — which is good news for budgets, because smart IR controllers for splits are among the cheapest effective installs in the whole category. Older buildings can carry dated wiring, so any job needing a new power point may require an electrician's visit first; ask for that as a separate quote line. Sharjah households also tend to be larger and privacy-conscious, so position cameras thoughtfully and confirm any shared-corridor device with the building watchman or management before installation day, not during it.
ajman
Ajman's lower rents make it a value story: the same smart AC controller saves a similar dirham amount on cooling as it would in Dubai, but represents a bigger slice of household costs, so payback feels faster. The stock is a mix of corniche towers and modest low-rise blocks, mostly split-AC. Many technicians serving Ajman are based in Sharjah or Dubai, so call-out economics favour bundling — book the lock, the doorbell and the wifi work as one visit rather than three, and say up front that it is a multi-device job so the vendor prices the visit, not each item at full call-out rates.
ras al khaimah
RAK's smart home demand has a distinctive driver: holiday homes. Villas and apartments in the beach and lagoon communities increasingly run as licensed short-term rentals, and remote-access smart locks plus video doorbells are close to operational necessities for hosts managing check-ins from Dubai. That makes reliability worth paying for — a lock that jams with a guest outside costs more than any install ever will. Distances within the emirate are real, so confirm travel is included in the quote, and note that outdoor devices near the coast should be rated for salt-air exposure.
fujairah
The east coast is the hardest environment in the country for outdoor smart hardware: humidity and salt spray corrode connectors and housings faster than the desert side, so specify weather ratings for anything mounted outside and expect to replace outdoor batteries more often. Fujairah has fewer resident specialist installers than the big emirates, and some vendors travel over from Sharjah or Dubai, which makes scheduling flexibility and bundled multi-device visits the main lever for keeping costs near the low end of the range. Weekend homes along the coast follow the RAK pattern — remote locks and cameras for properties that sit empty midweek.
umm al quwain
Smart home work in Umm Al Quwain is villa retrofit work: big plots that want outdoor cameras and gate automation, wifi that must cross thick blockwork and reach the garden, and older wiring that sometimes needs an electrician before the gadget installer. Mesh networks and PoE camera runs matter more here than apartment-style doorbells. Installers travel from Sharjah and Dubai, so scope the whole system — hub, cameras, locks, AC control — into one visit with a written device list.
Before you book: the ten-minute preparation that saves real money
- Photograph your existing thermostat, door lock and main door edge, and send them with your booking request so quotes reflect reality.
- Get landlord consent for locks and building management approval for cameras in writing before purchasing hardware.
- Ask every vendor to split device cost and labour into separate quote lines.
- Check whether your villa or apartment has pre-wired ethernet points to a central panel before paying for wireless mesh.
- Confirm your AC type — split, ducted or district-cooled — and share it before any thermostat is bought.
- Bundle multiple devices into one visit and say so up front, so you pay one call-out, not several.
- Have your wifi password and the account-owner phone charged and present on install day.
- Ask what happens, and what it costs, if extra work is discovered on site — and get the answer in writing.
- Keep original locks, brackets and fittings in a labelled bag for handover day.
- Test every device from outside your home network before the technician leaves — remote access is the whole point.
mistakes to avoid
Buying hardware before checking compatibility
The imported thermostat that does not match UAE AC wiring, the lock that will not mount on an aluminium villa door, the curtain motor too weak for blackout fabric — all are avoidable with one photo sent to the installer before purchase. Devices bought abroad are also painful to return. Confirm fit first; the check is free.
Accepting a single bundled price
One lump-sum number hides where the margin sits — often a meaningful hardware markup on a single device. Insist on separate lines for device, labour, electrical work and network work. Vendors who quote in lines are also, reliably, the ones who have thought the job through.
Skipping the wifi survey
Concrete UAE walls kill more smart home projects than any hardware fault. A device installed at the edge of coverage works during the demo and drops offline the first weekend. Get signal checked at every device location before finalising the plan, and treat network spend as the foundation, not an optional extra.
Drilling first, asking permission later
A smart lock fitted without landlord consent or a corridor camera installed against building rules can cost a deposit deduction or a forced removal — either of which exceeds the install price. The written approval takes a day to get and removes the entire risk.
Taking the lowest quote at face value
A quote far under the field almost always excludes something the job will need: the mesh node, the power point, the second visit. Ask directly what is excluded and what discovered work costs. A realistic middle quote with clear lines nearly always ends up cheaper than the lowball plus its surprises.
Ignoring running costs at purchase time
Camera cloud subscriptions, hub-locked ecosystems and battery replacement schedules are the quiet second invoice. Over three years, subscriptions on a few cameras can outgrow the original install bill. Favour local storage where it fits your needs, and standardise on one ecosystem before the third device, not after the tenth.
frequently asked questions
Do I need my landlord's permission to install a smart lock?
Yes, in practice you do — the door and its lock belong to the landlord, and unapproved modifications risk deposit deductions at handover. Get consent in writing, keep the original lock and cylinder to refit when you leave, and in towers also check with building management, since fire-rated entrance doors are often protected from any modification. Retrofit locks that fit over the existing thumb-turn avoid most of these problems entirely.
Will an imported smart thermostat work with my UAE AC?
Often not, and this is the most expensive mistake in the category. Many popular imported thermostats are designed for 24-volt systems, while a large share of UAE ducted and chilled-water AC installations run higher-voltage thermostats. Photograph your existing thermostat and its wiring and send it to the installer before buying anything — the wrong pairing can destroy the device.
Can mesh wifi really fix dead zones through concrete walls?
Yes, if the nodes are placed properly — UAE concrete-block construction blocks wifi badly, and mesh works by shortening each hop rather than shouting through walls. Wired backhaul between nodes is far better than wireless hops, and many newer villas already have ethernet points wired to a central panel that can carry it. A good installer tests signal room by room before finalising node positions.
Are video doorbells allowed in apartment towers?
It depends on your building. The corridor is common area, and many owners associations restrict cameras that film it, while others allow tightly angled views of your own door only. Ask building management in writing before purchasing. Where cameras are refused, a smart peephole viewer that replaces the existing one from inside your door is usually an acceptable alternative.
Do smart AC controls actually reduce DEWA bills?
They can, because cooling is typically the largest share of a UAE summer electricity bill and the savings come from schedules people will not maintain manually — easing off when the home is empty, pre-cooling before return, and raising setpoints overnight. Households on higher consumption slabs see the effect fastest. The device does not save energy by existing; the schedule does.
Should I buy the devices myself or let the installer supply them?
Buying yourself is usually cheaper, since installer hardware markups on a single device can be substantial. The risk is compatibility — door profiles, AC wiring, track dimensions. The best of both: choose your model, send it to the installer for written confirmation it fits your setup, then buy. If the installer supplies, ask for the device and labour as separate quote lines.
How long does a typical installation take?
A single device — lock, doorbell, thermostat or AC controller — takes roughly 45 minutes to two hours including app pairing. A mesh wifi setup with testing adds one to two hours. Multi-device jobs run half a day, and anything needing new electrical points or made-to-measure curtain tracks usually becomes two visits.
What happens to my smart devices when I move out?
Most of them move with you, which is a reason to favour reversible hardware in rentals. Retrofit locks, IR controllers, mesh nodes and battery doorbells all uninstall cleanly; refit the original lock, patch any holes, and factory-reset every device so it can pair at the new home. Motorised curtain tracks are the exception — they are cut to the window and rarely worth relocating.
Do motorised curtains need special wiring?
Wired motors need a power point behind the pelmet, which most UAE homes do not have — budget AED 150–350 for an electrician to add one, and get it done before the track goes up. Battery motors avoid the wiring but need recharging every few months, more often for heavy blackout curtains. Ask for the electrical work as a separate line so you can price both routes.
Do I need a hub, or can everything run on wifi?
A small setup of three or four devices runs fine on wifi alone. Hubs earn their place in larger homes: battery devices like lock sensors and curtain motors last longer on low-power protocols that hubs speak, and automations keep working during internet outages. If you expect the system to grow, choosing a hub-based ecosystem early is cheaper than migrating devices later.
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