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REAL ESTATE

UAE Residents Keen to Buy Despite Record Dubai Prices

UAE residents continue to show strong intent to buy homes even as expectations around future pricing shift slightly. New findings from Property Finder’s Market Pulse, covering September and October 2025, show home-buying appetite staying resilient across demographics and income groups.

Across both months, 69% of respondents said they plan to purchase a property within the next six months. September recorded 70% intent, followed by 68% in October. The October sample, at 3,313 respondents, was notably larger than September’s 2,987, giving a deeper read into sentiment across emirates.

Price expectations moved, but only marginally. In September, 39% expected prices to fall, 33% anticipated increases, and 28% foresaw stability. By October, expectations shifted to 40%, 31%, and 29%, respectively. Residents are not delaying purchases in anticipation of a sharp correction, suggesting affordability concerns are calibrated rather than speculative.

“UAE buyers are approaching the property market with thoughtfulness and confidence,” said Cherif Sleiman, Chief Revenue Officer at Property Finder. “They continue to move ahead with their plans, highlighting trust in the long-term stability of the UAE real estate sector.”

Record-breaking activity

The strong buying sentiment aligns with a property market experiencing one of its busiest years. A new market report from fäm Properties confirms that Dubai is on track to end 2025 at an all-time high for both transaction volume and value.

November alone recorded 19,019 property deals, up 30.9% year on year. This pushed total 2025 transactions to 197,263, surpassing the previous annual record of 180,900 set in 2024 — with a month still remaining. Annual sales value hit Dh624.1 billion, far exceeding the Dh522.1 billion logged in 2024. November contributed Dh64.7 billion, a 49.6% YoY jump, signalling broad-based momentum.

“This isn’t momentum — this is market maturity meeting global demand,” said Firas Al Msaddi, CEO of fäm Properties. “When a market grows this aggressively and stays stable, it’s not speculation, it’s migration plus capital allocation. We’ve seen a 20% value growth on what was a record year in 2024 with one month still to go.”

Dubai’s performance reflects deeper fundamentals: strong population growth, high investor inflows, and a shift toward higher-ticket purchases. The average price per square foot rose 16.1% to Dh1,755, underlining both demand strength and asset revaluation.

Where buyers are spending

Certain communities led the surge in activity, driven by new supply, mid-income demand, and infrastructure improvements.

Top-performing areas in November 2025 included:

  • Jumeirah Village Circle: 1,426 transactions worth Dh1.9 billion
  • Wadi Al Safa 5: 1,133 transactions worth Dh1.8 billion
  • Business Bay: 1,055 transactions worth Dh3.6 billion
  • Dubai South: 903 transactions worth Dh2.1 billion
  • Mina Rashid: 899 transactions worth Dh3.1 billion

High-end deals also dominated headlines. The most expensive apartment sold was a Dh203 million unit in Jumeirah Residences Asora Bay, while the priciest villa was a Dh110 million home on Palm Jumeirah. This reinforces the depth of Dubai’s luxury segment and its ability to absorb large-ticket transactions.

First sales still outpace resales

Developers maintained a strong lead in November:

  • First-sale transactions: 13,374 deals worth Dh41.4 billion
  • Resale transactions: 5,645 deals worth Dh23.3 billion

Properties priced between Dh1–2 million formed the largest share at 37%, followed by homes under Dh1 million at 24.85%. Larger segments — including units priced above Dh5 million — made up 8.67% of sales, showing consistent demand across price brackets.

Apartments drove the bulk of activity, with 15,905 sales worth Dh32.1 billion, while villas recorded 2,078 transactions totalling Dh13.2 billion. Commercial properties surged 79.7% YoY to 647 sales, and plots reached Dh17.1 billion in value.

Calculated decision-making

For many UAE residents, the data shows a clear picture: sentiment remains positive, buyers are actively planning purchases, and developers are delivering supply that the market continues to absorb at scale. Even with minor price expectation shifts, both local and international demand are keeping Dubai in a period of exceptional performance.

Story by Gulf News

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REAL ESTATE

UAE to add 390,000 new homes by 2030 — What it means for prices, rents

 The UAE is set to add around 390,000 new homes by 2030, marking one of the largest residential expansion cycles in recent years, according to a new industry report. The first-ever Alpen GCC Real Estate 2026 report by Alpen Capital shows the country’s residential stock rising from approximately 1.08 million units to about 1.47 million units by the end of the decade.

Dubai is expected to account for the majority of this pipeline, with apartment-led mixed-use communities continuing to dominate new launches, while Abu Dhabi focuses more on premium villas and waterfront neighbourhoods.

Across the GCC, residential supply is expected to increase from approximately 6.26 million units in 2025 to 7.28 million units by 2030, with Saudi Arabia and the UAE accounting for the bulk of the supply.

Saudi Arabia’s residential supply is estimated to grow by 499,000 units between 2025 and 2030, reaching 3.45 million by 2030. Giga projects in Riyadh and Jeddah are expected to fuel this growth.

Sustained growth

According to the report, the GCC’s real estate landscape has undergone a transformation, driven by national agendas to diversify and build a resilient economy. “Dubai has led this transformation, establishing itself as a global metropolis fuelled by foreign ownership, massive infrastructure investments and ambitious strategies,” said Sameena Ahmad, Managing Director, Alpen Capital.

“Over the next few years, the region’s real estate industry is expected to witness a steady supply across the residential, commercial, hospitality and retail segments, largely supported by continued government spending and investments in building a world-class infrastructure,” she added.

But what does this mean for rents?

A supply increase of this scale typically shifts the balance between landlords and tenants. The report stated that supply growth in the GCC is becoming more “structured” and increasingly aligned with demand rather than speculative expansion. That could reduce the risk of sharp, sudden corrections.

However, with nearly 390,000 additional homes entering the UAE market over five years, rental growth is likely to moderate if deliveries outpace new household formation.

The study highlights that population growth, expatriate inflows and urbanisation remain strong demand drivers.

The UAE’s population, according to Worldometer, has surpassed 11 million in 2025. There isa continued inflow of expatriates and high-net-worth individuals supporting both mid-tier and luxury segments

If those inflows remain steady, the additional supply may ease pressure without triggering a widespread rent correction. But in sub-markets where deliveries cluster heavily, tenants could gain greater negotiating power. Will property prices grow or drop

The report from Alpen stated that supply across the GCC is entering a more disciplined phase, with greater emphasis on mixed-use developments, asset quality and long-term livability.

“Over the coming years, we expect supply–demand dynamics across the GCC to become more balanced. Large-scale developments are being phased more strategically, with a clear emphasis on quality, mixed-use formats, and demand-led execution. We are witnessing that development trends are shifting towards master-planned, sustainable, and technology-enabled communities focused on long-term liveability,” said Sharmin Karanjia, Executive Director, Alpen Capital.

“While certain sub-markets may experience short-term oversupply pressures, well-located and high-quality projects are likely to continue seeing strong absorption and pricing support,” she said.

“Going forward, as major development zones reach operational maturity, investors will have a broad base of high-quality assets maintaining interest from both regional and international buyers”, said Sharmin.

What’s next?

High disposable incomes, steady population growth, expatriate inflows, and a favourable tax environment will remain key demand drivers across the region.

The report stated that future development pipelines will feature mixed-use projects, enhanced asset quality, sustainability, and the integration of residential, commercial and lifestyle components.

Saudi Arabia and the UAE are expected to account for the majority of the upcoming supply, while other GCC markets pursue more targeted and selective growth strategies.

In the commercial segment, office supply across the GCC is estimated to expand from 33.3 million sqm in 2025 to 42.4 million sqm by 2030, with over 65 per cent of new supply delivered in Saudi Arabia and the UAE, as per the existing pipeline.

GN

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REAL ESTATE

Buying Property in Saudi Arabia: What to Know in 2026

Foreigners, for the first time, are allowed to buy property in Saudi Arabia from January 2026, marking one of the most significant shifts in the Kingdom’s real estate policy in decades. The new law, approved in July 2025, permits non-Saudis to own property within designated zones, opening the door to expats, regional investors and international buyers who until now could only rent or access limited ownership structures.

Who moves first when ownership opens

Early demand is expected to come from expats already living and working in the Kingdom. High-income professionals in Riyadh and Jeddah face sustained rental pressure and now see a realistic path to ownership.

“The earliest beneficiaries are likely to be well-established expats already living and working in Saudi Arabia, particularly higher-income professionals in Riyadh and Jeddah who are facing sustained rental pressure and now have a viable path to ownership,” said Arran Summerhill, COO and co-founder of Holo.

This group already understands local neighbourhoods, employment conditions and regulatory expectations, lowering the friction that often slows first-time buyers in new markets. Rental pressures have been strong enough to prompt authorities to introduce a five-year rent cap in Riyadh, highlighting how tight the residential market has become.

A second wave is likely to include regional and international investors, particularly from the GCC, seeking early exposure to Saudi Arabia’s long-term growth under Vision 2030. These buyers are expected to move carefully, prioritising regulatory clarity, asset quality and long-term fundamentals over short-term gains.

A third segment includes Muslim buyers globally, where ownership in the Kingdom carries both financial and personal significance. “From our perspective, having been active in the Saudi market for over two years, early demand patterns point clearly toward capitalised, intentional buyers who value process certainty and asset quality over speed,” Summerhill said.

No rush, but steady uptake

Despite the scale of the policy shift, expectations of a sudden buying surge may be misplaced. The Saudi framework is more controlled, with ownership opening within designated zones rather than across wide swathes of the market.

“This is more likely to be a measured, selective uptake rather than a sudden surge,” Summerhill said. Resident expats with stable income streams are expected to lead during the first year, while international buyers observe how approvals, financing and resale rules function in practice.

Economic conditions support steady rather than speculative demand. The IMF forecasts Saudi Arabia’s real GDP growth at about 4.0% in 2026, driven largely by non-oil sectors. That backdrop supports household formation and long-term housing demand, rather than rapid trading activity.

Momentum could broaden in the second year if transaction processes smooth out and lenders become more comfortable offering mortgages to foreign buyers. Even then, demand is expected to remain fundamentals-led.

Riyadh first, Jeddah next

Geography will matter. Riyadh is widely expected to feel the earliest impact, combining job creation, income concentration, population growth and rental pressure. Residential momentum has already been strong, with villa prices rising more than 11% year on year in 2025 and transaction volumes increasing quarter on quarter.

Jeddah is likely to follow, appealing to lifestyle-driven buyers and international demand. Transaction volumes in the coastal city rose more than 10% year on year in 2025, while price growth remained more moderate, often making it an attractive entry point for foreign buyers.

Demand is expected to focus overwhelmingly on residential property, particularly homes within professionally managed communities. Commercial and mixed-use assets may draw institutional interest later, but individual expat buyers are likely to prioritise homes over income-producing assets in the early phase.

Designated zones matter

Foreign ownership will initially be limited to designated geographic zones overseen by the Real Estate General Authority. These zones act as a gateway, allowing Saudi Arabia to attract foreign capital while maintaining market stability and regulatory control.

Once the final list of zones and implementing regulations is confirmed, demand is expected to concentrate in a small number of locations offering transaction clarity, community standards and resale confidence. Broader expansion is likely to come gradually as the market matures.

Risks buyers should not ignore

Before making the purchase, the buyers should be aware of the process, as assumptions present the biggest risk. While the law creates a legal pathway, clarity around approvals, fees, ownership structures and resale rights will determine how smooth the experience is in practice.

Liquidity also deserves attention. Early-stage ownership markets tend to have thinner resale depth, making a longer-term holding horizon more realistic than quick exits. “This is where local execution experience matters,” Summerhill said, pointing to the importance of understanding how policy translates into transactions on the ground.

How it compares to the UAE

UAE citizens and expats are eligible to buy under the new framework, according to Zacky Sajjad, director of business development and client relations at Cavendish Maxwell. Ownership is permitted within approved areas, while certain locations, including Makkah and Madinah, remain subject to tighter restrictions.

“Saudi Arabia’s model is newer and more regulated,” Sajjad said. Buyers should expect greater emphasis on approvals, compliance checks and evolving guidance. The UAE, by contrast, offers a more mature and globally familiar investment environment.

Sajjad advises UAE-based buyers to approach Saudi Arabia with a long-term mindset. Due diligence remains critical, particularly around approved zones, resale rules, taxation, registration and financing availability.

A shift in how expats plan their lives

Ownership has the potential to reshape how expats think about living in the Kingdom. Property ownership shifts Saudi Arabia from a temporary posting to a place where longer-term wealth planning becomes viable.

This aligns with national goals. Saudi Arabia targets a 70% homeownership rate by 2030, with official data showing the figure reached about 65% by 2024. Foreign ownership adds market depth and supports a more institutionalised residential ecosystem.

“This reform should be viewed less as a short-term demand catalyst and more as a structural step in the long-term maturation of Saudi Arabia’s real estate market,” Summerhill said.

Saudi Arabia is expected to require more than 1.5 million new housing units by 2030, with nearly half of that demand concentrated in Riyadh. Clear zone definitions, consistent transaction processing and confidence in resale markets will matter a lot.

Handled carefully, foreign ownership could reposition Saudi Arabia as a credible long-term residential market for residents and international buyers alike, encouraging deeper settlement, capital formation and a more sustainable housing ecosystem over the next decade.

GN

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REAL ESTATE

Dubai Property Market 2025

Dubai, UAE: Dubai’s real estate sector remained firmly on a growth trajectory in 2025, supported by steady demand and expanding supply. Reflecting these dynamics, dubizzle, the UAE’s leading online marketplace, has released its Annual Dubai Property Market Report, delivering a data-driven assessment of the emirate’s real estate market performance in 2025.

dubizzle’s report showed sustained transactional activity and overall stability across core market segments, including off-plan sales and short-term rentals.

Commenting on the latest market trends, the CEO of Bayut & dubizzle and CEO of Dubizzle Group MENA, Haider Ali Khan, said: “Dubai’s real estate market kept up its momentum throughout the year, with steady demand across the board. We’ve also seen the industry evolve, supported by stronger regulation, new partnerships and emerging innovations like real estate tokenisation, which are adding more confidence and depth to the market. In a fast-moving environment like this, having reliable information really makes a difference. At dubizzle, we focus on bringing verified listings and data-led insights to the table, so buyers, investors and renters can make decisions with clarity and confidence. With a strong pipeline of handovers and new launches ahead, the coming months should offer a clear view of how the next phase of the market takes shape.”

READY SALES: TOP AREAS AND MARKET TRENDS

Investor and buyer activity continued at a steady pace across Dubai’s most sought-after ready property locations.

  • Dubai Marina led the luxury apartment segment, while Jumeirah Village Circle (JVC) and International City emerged as the top-performing mid-tier and affordable apartment markets, respectively.
  • DAMAC Lagoons remained the top choice for luxury villas, while Al Furjan and DAMAC Hills 2 led the mid-tier and affordable segments.
  • Dubai Investment Park (DIP) recorded the highest increase in the villa segment, with the average price reaching AED 2.17M.
  • The per-square-foot price for villas in Dubai Investment Park (DIP) recorded the highest surge, reaching AED 773. Meanwhile, Dubai Silicon Oasis (DSO) saw the sharpest rise in per-square-foot price for apartments, reaching AED 1,501.
  • Town Square delivered the highest ROI for mid-tier apartments at 7.72%, while DAMAC Lagoons led the villa segment with a 10.46% return.

OFF-PLAN SEGMENT: DIVERSE OPTIONS AND GROWING INVESTOR INTEREST

Dubai’s off-plan property segment continued to drive growth in 2025, supported by a steady pipeline of new launches and substantial demand.

  • Off-plan apartments saw strong demand across established and emerging communities, led by luxury projects in Dubai Marina, Dubai Hills Estate and Dubai Creek Harbour, mid-tier developments in Business Bay, Jumeirah Village Circle and Al Furjan and affordable options in Dubai Investment Park, Dubai Land Residence Complex and Dubai South.
  • Off-plan villa interest remained concentrated in master-planned communities, with high-end projects in DAMAC Lagoons, The Valley by Emaar and Mohammed Bin Rashid City, mid-tier developments in Arabian Ranches 3, Mudon and Nad Al Sheba and affordable villa projects gaining traction in R. Hills, Chevalia Estate and Verona.

RENTAL MARKET: STEADY DEMAND, DIVERSE SUPPLY

The rental market in Dubai continued to grow steadily in 2025, fueled by active demand across various neighbourhoods.

  • Dubai Marina maintained its status as the preferred choice for luxury apartments, with JVC and International City emerging as the leading destinations in the mid-tier and affordable segments.
  • In International City, an affordable apartment community, average rents surged to AED 53k, marking the highest increase in the segment.
  • For villa rentals, Al Barsha led the luxury segment. On the other hand, Al Furjan and DAMAC Hills 2 dominated the mid-tier and affordable segments.
  • The rent of mid-tier villas in Arabian Ranches 3 surged 45.98% driven specifically by new inventory in Caya, reaching an average of AED 254k. The 4-bedroom villas led the gains, surging by 69%.

SHORT-TERM MARKET: EXPANDING INTEREST AND HEALTHY OCCUPANCY TRENDS

Dubai’s short-term rental market remained strong, driven by steady tourism, flexible living trends and rising demand for quality short-stay options.

  • The interest for luxury short-term rentals remained concentrated in prime locations, with significant monthly apartment demand in Dubai Marina, Downtown Dubai and Meydan City, while Palm Jumeirah, Dubai Hills Estate and DAMAC Hills led the segment for high-end villa short-term rentals; the demand for daily luxury apartments stayed anchored in Dubai Marina, Downtown Dubai and JBR.
  • JVC, Business Bay and Al Barsha experienced high demand for both monthly and daily apartments, while Arabian Ranches 3 and The Springs witnessed a strong short-term villa rental interest.
  • The interest for affordable vacation rentals continued to centre around established districts, with International City, Bur Dubai and Deira dominating the monthly apartment segment, DAMAC Hills 2 led the demand for affordable short-term villas and Bur Dubai, Deira and DSO emerged as key areas for daily rentals.

About dubizzle:

dubizzle, the well-known online classifieds giant in the UAE, is an integral part of homegrown unicorn, Dubizzle Group Holdings Limited. As the UAE’s largest classifieds site, dubizzle plays a pivotal role in connecting buyers and sellers across diverse categories such as properties, cars, jobs, and various goods.

The user-friendly platform, coupled with innovative features, has solidified dubizzle as the go-to destination for both buyers and sellers to effortlessly connect and transact. dubizzle takes pride in the unwavering commitment to values of transparency, authenticity and consumer protection, positioning dubizzle as a preeminent platform for ethical online commerce in the UAE.

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