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Dubai property market hits record $149bn in 2025 as demand and prices strengthen

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Dubai real estate

The Dubai residential market closed 2025 against a backdrop of accelerating economic growth and low inflation, creating a stable foundation for real estate activity.

UAE real GDP expanded 3.9 per cent year-on-year in Q1 and 4.5 per cent in Q2, with growth forecast to exceed 5 per cent in 2026, while inflation remained contained at 1.3 per cent in 2025.

Louis Harding, CEO of betterhomes, said: “What defines 2025 is the quality of growth rather than just the pace. Economic expansion, low inflation and population growth are reinforcing each other, creating a more durable foundation for real estate activity.”

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Demand fundamentals strengthened further as Dubai’s population rose 5.4 per cent year-on-year to 4m, supported by 17.5m overnight visitors between January and November.

These inflows continued to translate directly into housing absorption, particularly in established, well-connected communities.

Dubai real estate growth

Dubai recorded its strongest residential year on record, with total sales value reaching AED 547bn ($149bn), up 28 per cent year-on-year, across 203,000 transactions, a 20 per cent increase in volume.

Liquidity remained concentrated in investable stock. Studios and one- to two-bedroom apartments accounted for 77 per cent of transactions, while 72 per cent of deals fell within the AED500,000–AED3m ($136,000–$817,000) range, reinforcing market depth and resale velocity.

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“This was not a narrow or speculative cycle,” Harding added. “Liquidity was broad, repeatable and focused on segments where both end-users and investors continue to transact with confidence.”

Off-plan activity dominated the year, accounting for 65 per cent of total transactions and 53 per cent of total value, driven primarily by apartments.

Apartment sales reached AED325bn ($88.5bn), up 29 per cent year-on-year, while villas and townhouses contributed AED221bn ($60.2bn), a 26 per cent annual increase.

Despite a rapidly expanding supply pipeline, average sale prices rose 12 per cent year-on-year to AED 1,673 per sq ft ($455), demonstrating the market’s capacity to absorb new supply without price erosion.

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Dubai rental market

Leasing activity accelerated sharply in 2025, with betterhomes leasing transactions rising more than 60 per cent year-on-year, supported by strong family-led demand. Despite higher volumes, rents held firm at an average of AED 207,000 per year ($56,300).

Rupert Simmonds, Director of Leasing at betterhomes, said: “Leasing momentum in 2025 came from people moving forward, not prices running ahead. Stable rents alongside higher transaction volumes reflect a market driven by families and long-term tenants making deliberate housing decisions.”

Buyer demand also strengthened, with buyer demand up 33 per cent year-on-year, while mortgages accounted for 52 per cent of transactions, overtaking cash. Investors remained the majority at 57 per cent of purchases for a fourth consecutive year.

India and the UK continued to lead buyer nationalities, while Dubai’s luxury segment deepened further, with average prime selling prices rising 26 per cent year-on-year to AED30m ($8.17m).

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Dubai’s 2025 performance points to a residential market supported by structural fundamentals rather than excess. With economic growth accelerating, population expanding, and pricing holding firm amid rising supply, the sector enters 2026 from a position of broad demand, strong liquidity, and structural resilience.

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