Dubai's real estate market is showing increasing signs of a structural shift towards a more mature and sustainable phase, with a gradual transition from a cycle of rapid growth and short-term speculation, to a market driven by long-term investment and real demand for ownership, according to specialised real estate analysis and reports based on official data approved by the Dubai Land Department.
This shift is supported by continued strong momentum in real estate transactions, rising resident ownership rates, and the market's ability to maintain high levels of activity, despite geopolitical tensions in the region over the past months.
Real estate transactions in Dubai recorded about AED 252 billion during the first quarter of 2026, with an annual growth of 31%, continuing the record performance achieved by the emirate during 2025, when the value of real estate transactions exceeded AED 917 billion.
At the same time, price growth showed a more balanced trend, compared to previous years, after the real estate price index increased by about 9.8% during 2025, which analysts consider healthy growth, reflecting market stability, and reducing the risk of excessive increases.
The active investor base has also expanded to more than 193,000 investors, reflecting the continued influx of local and international capital into the emirate's real estate sector.
Residents are emerging as one of the key drivers of the market, accounting for more than half of all real estate investments by value over the past year, in a sign of growing long-term ownership trends and a decline in reliance on quick speculation.
It is estimated that the average time period during which a tenant moves to own a property in Dubai has shrunk to around 4.8 years, reflecting a change in residents' behaviour and increased attachment to residency and long-term investment within the emirate.
Although the market was temporarily affected by regional tensions at the start of the year, Dubai has shown a rapid ability to regain momentum. After recording real estate sales worth AED 84 billion in February, trades fell to AED 56 billion in March, as the anticipation escalated, before rising again in April by 23%, reaching about AED 69 billion.
Observers believe that the rapid recovery of the market reflects the strength of the economic and regulatory fundamentals of Dubai's real estate sector, as well as the continued real demand from end-users and investors alike.
At the corporate level, the UAE's largest real estate developers have strong operational and financial resilience, supported by escrow accounts, recurring revenue streams, and large portfolios of long-term projects, reducing the impact of short-term fluctuations on market sentiment.
The sector's prospects for the coming period are partly related to the course of geopolitical developments in the region, but estimates indicate that there is a delayed demand, which may return strongly to the market, in the event of an improvement in regional conditions, which may give the real estate sector an additional boost in the coming stages.
This transformation reinforces Dubai's position as one of the world's most stable and attractive real estate markets for investment, supported by a sophisticated regulatory structure, continuous population and investment flows, and a resilient economic environment, capable of adapting to global changes.