The UAE web development market in 2026 includes over 200 firms with verified client reviews on Clutch alone. Some of them are genuinely excellent. Others have become skilled at appearing excellent in pitch meetings while struggling with delivery, quality, or post-launch support when the relationship moves past the sales stage. The difference between those two categories becomes clear not in the portfolio presentation, but in how an agency responds to direct, specific questions about their process, capability, and commitments.
What follows is a structured set of questions organized by category, portfolio, and experience, technical capability, process, bilingual and UAE compliance, commercial terms, and post-launch support. Each question includes what a strong answer looks like and what response signals a red flag. Use this as your evaluation framework before signing any web development agreement in the UAE. For businesses also evaluating digital marketing integration, a capable web development company in UAE with integrated SEO and performance marketing services reduces project handoff complexity significantly.
Why These Questions Matter More Than a Portfolio Review
Category 1: Portfolio and Experience Questions
Can you share five live UAE client websites I can test myself, not screenshots?
Why this matters: Screenshots show what an agency designed. Live URLs show what they actually built and how it performs in the real world.
Strong answer: Immediate provision of 5+ live URLs with client names and industry context. No hesitation.
Red flag: "Our clients prefer confidentiality." "We can show you our portfolio site." "We're updating our case studies." Any delay or deflection on this request signals the agency does not want you to see their actual output performing in practice.
Do you have case studies with specific performance metrics, not just before/after visuals?
Why this matters: Aesthetics are subjective. Core Web Vitals scores, organic traffic growth, conversion rate improvement, and lead volume changes are objective and reveal whether the agency measures impact.
Strong answer: Published case studies citing specific numbers, "mobile PageSpeed score improved from 38 to 81," "organic sessions increased 140% in 6 months," "lead form conversions doubled after redesign."
Red flag: Case studies describing outcomes with adjectives rather than numbers. "The client was delighted." "The website performs much better." No data means no measurement culture.
Can I speak directly to a UAE client reference in my industry?
Why this matters: Published reviews are selected by the agency. A direct conversation with a past client in your sector reveals timeline adherence, communication quality, and how problems were handled, things no published testimonial covers honestly.
Strong answer: Two or three UAE client contacts offered without hesitation, with permission to ask about timeline, quality, and post-launch experience specifically.
Red flag: Only written testimonials offered. Reference calls that must be arranged through the agency with the agency on the call. Inability to provide a client in a similar industry or business size.
Category 2: Technical Capability Questions
What Core Web Vitals scores do your recently launched client sites achieve on mobile?
Why this matters: Core Web Vitals directly affect Google search rankings and conversion rates. An agency building to 2026 standards tracks these scores on every project they deliver.
Strong answer: Specific PageSpeed Insights scores for named recent projects. Explanation of how they optimize LCP, CLS, and INP specifically, by name, with a technical approach described.
Red flag: "We build fast websites." "Our sites are fully optimized." No specific scores cited. Inability to explain what Core Web Vitals are or how they are measured.
How do you handle Arabic right-to-left layout, and who does the Arabic typography work?
Why this matters: Arabic text runs 20–30% longer than English, requires RTL layout engineering, and demands native Arabic typographic judgment, not just a CSS flip. This question instantly separates agencies with genuine bilingual capability from those that will figure it out on your budget.
Strong answer: Named Arabic specialist on staff or verified partner. Explanation of how RTL is engineered separately from LTR, not as a mirrored version. Specific mention of Arabic text expansion handling in design and development.
Red flag: "We use a translation plugin." "We mirror the English layout." "Our developer handles both." Arabic typography and RTL engineering are specialist skills, generalist answers confirm generalist capability.
Which technology stack do you recommend for my project, and why?
Why this matters: A professional agency recommends the platform that fits your requirements, not their preferred technology. An agency that always recommends the same stack regardless of the brief is optimizing for their own workflow, not your outcomes.
Strong answer: Platform recommendation linked to your specific requirements, content volume, e-commerce needs, scalability plans, team's technical ability to manage the CMS post-launch, and budget.
Red flag: Immediate recommendation before asking about your requirements. "We specialize in [platform], so we always recommend it." Platform evangelism without business justification.
Category 3: Process and Delivery Questions
Who specifically will work on my project, by name and role?
Why this matters: Senior portfolio work shown in the pitch does not guarantee senior execution on your brief. Agencies frequently present senior work and deliver junior execution without this question being asked explicitly.
Strong answer: Named project manager, lead designer, lead developer, and QA resource identified by name. LinkedIn profiles or portfolio links are offered. Clear explanation of who leads decisions at each stage.
Red flag: "Our team will handle it." "We have a team of experienced developers." "Depends on availability when we start." Anonymized teams are a signal that the people pitching are not the people building.
What is your process for handling scope changes during development?
Why this matters: Scope changes are inevitable. How an agency handles them, transparently with defined change order processes versus silently expanding or refusing, determines whether your final cost matches your initial agreement.
Strong answer: Defined change request process with written approval before any work begins on additions. Clear pricing mechanism for changes, either fixed rates per type of change or an agreed hourly rate. No penalty for raising scope changes, just transparent pricing.
Red flag: "We're flexible." "We'll figure it out as we go." No defined process means no cost predictability, and disputes when the invoice arrives higher than expected.
Category 4: Commercial Terms Questions
Who owns the source code when the project is complete?
Why this matters: Source code ownership determines whether you can take your website to a different agency in the future without starting from scratch. Some agencies retain source code ownership as a lock-in mechanism.
Strong answer: "You own all source code, design files, and digital assets upon final payment. This is stated explicitly in our contract. We will provide all editable source files, AI, PSD, Figma, and repository access at project closure."
Red flag: "We retain the code, but you have usage rights." "Our proprietary framework means we hold the code." Any answer that does not confirm full client ownership of all deliverables on final payment.
What is the payment structure, and what triggers each milestone payment?
Why this matters: A milestone-based payment structure aligns the agency's financial incentive with your deliverable milestones. Front-loaded payment structures that take 70–80% upfront remove the agency's financial accountability for timely delivery.
Strong answer: Structured across 3–4 milestones tied to defined deliverables, typically deposit on signing, payment on design approval, payment on development completion, and final payment on launch. Each milestone payment is triggered by your explicit sign-off on the corresponding deliverable.
Red flag: More than 50% upfront before any deliverable is produced. Milestone payments not tied to client-approved deliverables. "We need the full amount to begin."
Category 5: Post-Launch Support Questions
What does your post-launch support SLA look like in writing?
Why this matters: "We are always available" is a marketing statement, not a contractual commitment. A real SLA defines response times for different issue severities and financial consequences for missing them.
Strong answer: Written SLA with tiered response times, critical issues (site down, payment failure) within 1–2 hours; high-priority issues within 4–8 hours; standard requests within 1–2 business days. Defined escalation contact. Penalty or credit mechanism for missed response times.
Red flag: "Just message us anytime." "We respond quickly." "Our support team is always on." Vague availability claims without defined timescales or accountability mechanisms.
What is included in post-launch support, and what costs extra?
Why this matters: Many agencies include a 30-day bug fix period post-launch and then charge for everything else. Understanding exactly where the included support ends and billable support begins prevents unexpected invoices six weeks after launch.
Strong answer: Clear delineation between included post-launch period (bug fixes, environment-specific issues discovered after launch) and billable services (content updates, feature additions, design changes, platform upgrades). Monthly retainer options explained with specific scope and price.
Red flag: "We handle everything after launch." Vague answer with no distinction between included and billable. No written scope for ongoing support before you sign the initial contract.
The Quick Scoring Table: Evaluate Any UAE Web Development Agency
| Question Category | Strong Signal | Red Flag |
|---|---|---|
| Live UAE portfolio | 5+ URLs provided immediately | Screenshots only or delays |
| Performance metrics | Specific PageSpeed scores cited | Adjectives without numbers |
| Client references | Direct contact offered | Written testimonials only |
| Arabic capability | Named the specialist, RTL explained | Generalist answer, "translation plugin" |
| Named project team | Specific names and roles given | "Our team will handle it" |
| Source code ownership | Full ownership confirmed in writing | Usage rights, proprietary framework |
| Payment structure | Milestone-based, max 30% upfront | 70%+ upfront, no milestone tie |
| Post-launch SLA | Written, tiered, with accountability | Verbal availability promises |
Frequently Asked Questions
How many agencies should I evaluate before choosing one in the UAE?
Three to five agencies are the practical range for most UAE businesses, enough to compare meaningfully without consuming disproportionate evaluation time. Request proposals from at least three, apply the question framework to each, and score them against the same criteria. Agencies that perform consistently well across all question categories, not just the ones they were obviously prepared for, are the ones worth taking to the contract stage. Evaluating fewer than three limits your comparison baseline; evaluating more than six typically produces diminishing returns and proposal fatigue.
What is a reasonable response time to expect when evaluating UAE web development agencies?
A professional UAE web development agency should respond to an initial project inquiry within 24 business hours. A detailed proposal following a briefing call should arrive within 5–7 business days for standard project scopes. Agencies that take more than two weeks to produce a proposal for a straightforward project are demonstrating their capacity and prioritization standards, both of which predict how they will behave during the actual project. Agencies that respond within hours with a detailed quote before asking any discovery questions are generating generic proposals, not analyzing your specific requirements.
Should I ask to see an agency's team on a video call before signing?
Yes — and specifically ask for the project manager and lead developer who will work on your project to be on the call, not just the business development or sales contact. This single step reveals whether the people building your website match the seniority and communication quality of the people pitching your business. It also gives you a direct sense of how the agency communicates technically, whether they explain their approach clearly and specifically, or speak in generalities that sound good but commit to nothing.
Is it reasonable to ask for a small paid test project before committing to a full engagement?
Yes, for larger engagements, and professional agencies accept this readily. A paid test project (a single landing page, a design for one section, or a technical audit of your current site) gives you direct evidence of an agency's work quality, communication process, and timeline adherence before you commit AED 50,000 or more to a full project. Agencies that refuse small test projects entirely, or that significantly overcharge relative to the scope, are worth evaluating more carefully. Agencies that accept test projects with professional process and clear deliverables demonstrate exactly the working relationship you should expect on the full project.
What should I do if an agency's proposal seems significantly cheaper than all others?
Investigate the scope before assuming you found a bargain. Significantly cheaper proposals almost always indicate one of three things: the scope excludes something the others include (bilingual development, post-launch support, QA testing, or content strategy), the team is significantly more junior than the agency's presentation suggests, or the agency is buying the project at a loss to get the reference and will recover margin through change orders during development. Request a detailed line-item breakdown from the cheap proposal and compare it scope item by scope item against the more expensive ones; the gap usually becomes clear immediately.
Can I negotiate with a UAE web development agency on price?
Yes, within reason. Scope is more negotiable than rate. Removing deliverables (reducing the number of pages, deferring bilingual implementation to phase two, reducing revision rounds) is a more productive negotiation approach than simply asking for a lower price on the same scope, which typically results in a junior team assignment or hidden cuts to QA and testing. If the budget is genuinely constrained, a professional agency will help you identify what can be phased to keep the core project within budget while maintaining quality on the most commercially important elements. An agency that matches any budget without adjusting scope is not reducing its costs, they are reducing its delivery.