OVERVIEW
A market finding its footing
Dubai’s residential market entered 2026 under conditions that tested the strength of its recent growth cycle. After two years of exceptional momentum, the first quarter was shaped by three important forces: the seasonal slowdown associated with Ramadan, heightened regional geopolitical tensions, and natural moderation following record transaction levels in 2025. Despite these headwinds, the market remained resilient. Transaction volumes declined 17% quarter-on-quarter, yet total transaction value softened by only 1%. More importantly, on a year-on-year basis, total transaction value increased by approximately 5.1%, rising from AED 134.34 billion in Q1 2025 to AED 140.8 billion in Q1 2026, while transaction volumes remained broadly stable compared with the same period last year. This distinction matters. Q1 2026 was not defined by broad deterioration in market fundamentals. It reflected a market entering a more selective phase following an extended period of rapid expansion.
CONTEXT
Resilience requires context
The quarterly moderation must be viewed carefully. Regional geopolitical tensions intensified during the latter part of the quarter and effectively slowed market activity during March. At the same time, Ramadan seasonality naturally reduced transaction velocity across parts of the market. However, the overall quarterly performance highlights the exceptional momentum generated during January and February, as well as the depth of demand underpinning Dubai’s residential sector. Residential real estate reacts differently from liquid financial markets. Unlike equities or commodities, where geopolitical developments can immediately impact pricing and sentiment, residential transactions often reflect decisions initiated weeks or months earlier. Within Dubai’s off-plan market, reservation timelines, financing arrangements, payment structures, and due diligence processes all create a lag between market sentiment and recorded transactions. As a result, Q1 2026 may not yet fully reflect the behavioural impact of ongoing regional uncertainty. If geopolitical tensions persist, the effects are more likely to become visible during Q2 and Q3 2026, particularly through slower transaction velocity, longer buyer decision-making cycles, increased negotiation in certain secondary market segments, and greater pricing sensitivity within communities facing elevated future supply. At the same time, Dubai continues to benefit from its positioning as a globally connected and politically stable destination for international capital. Historically, periods of uncertainty have often reinforced Dubai’s appeal among global investors seeking wealth preservation, lifestyle quality, and long-term economic stability. This is why the next phase of the market should not simply be viewed as a slowdown. It should be viewed as a period where asset quality, location strength, and supply dynamics become increasingly important.
STRUCTURAL SIGNAL
End-user demand continues to strengthen
One of the clearest structural signals in Q1 2026 was the continued expansion of end-user participation. Mortgage-backed transactions accounted for 69% of financing activity, compared with 31% cash transactions, reflecting growing ownership confidence and the increasing maturity of Dubai’s residential market. Dubai’s market is no longer supported solely by investor-driven demand or short-term capital flows. A growing share of residential activity is now being driven by long-term residents choosing ownership as Dubai continues strengthening its position as a global city for business, lifestyle, and long-term residency. The leasing market reinforces the same trend. Dubai recorded 142,413 rental transactions during Q1 2026, with renewals accounting for 65% of all rental contracts. That level of renewal activity points to a tenant base that is increasingly stable and long-term oriented. Residents are not only relocating to Dubai — they are choosing to remain and establish longer-term roots.
PRIMARY MARKET
New capital continues to drive off-plan
The off-plan market remained the dominant engine of Dubai’s residential sector during Q1 2026. The primary market accounted for 67% of all residential transactions, recording 30,115 transactions worth AED 73.42 billion. Notably, 93% of off-plan activity was driven by initial sales, with only 7% coming from resales. This remains one of the strongest indicators in the data. It confirms that Dubai’s residential market continues to attract genuine new capital rather than being driven primarily by speculative resale activity. Initial sales reflect fresh buyer commitment entering the market and indicate that both local and international demand remain active across the residential sector. Emaar, DAMAC, Binghatti, Sobha Group, and Ellington Properties led off-plan transaction activity during the quarter. While off-plan demand remains strong, market performance is becoming increasingly dependent on developer credibility, location quality, pricing discipline, and long-term product differentiation.
LUXURY SEGMENT
Prime residential continues to outperform
Dubai’s prime residential sector remained the strongest-performing segment of the market during Q1 2026. Across every major luxury category, the market recorded significant year-on-year growth. The quarter’s highest-value apartment transaction was recorded at Aman Residences Dubai for AED 422 million, followed by another Aman transaction at AED 356 million. In the villa segment, Amali Island recorded a transaction valued at AED 220 million. Prime communities including Jumeirah Bay Island, Palm Jumeirah, La Mer, Dubai Water Canal, and Bluewaters Island continued to command some of the city’s highest price-per-square-foot levels due to scarcity, waterfront positioning, lifestyle appeal, and limited future supply. Despite broader geopolitical uncertainty, activity within the prime segment accelerated rather than slowed, reinforcing Dubai’s growing role as a defensive global capital destination during periods of international instability.
SUPPLY PIPELINE
Supply dynamics demand attention
Q1 2026 further reinforced the growing segmentation within Dubai’s residential market. Performance is increasingly diverging between prime and non-prime communities, supply-constrained and supply-heavy locations, branded and non-branded developments, and end-user-driven versus investor-dominated submarkets. As of March 2026, Dubai’s residential pipeline included 424,670 units scheduled for delivery between 2026 and 2032 across 1,477 projects. The largest delivery years are expected to be 2027 (139,939 units), 2028 (108,945 units), and 2026 itself (75,999 units). Supply concentration remains particularly high in JVC, Business Bay, Arjan, Dubai Hills Estate, and Sobha Hartland II. This does not automatically imply market weakness. However, it increases the importance of absorption rates, infrastructure expansion, rental demand, developer reputation, and pricing discipline in determining future performance across individual communities. By contrast, supply-constrained prime locations and globally branded residential developments are likely to maintain stronger pricing resilience due to scarcity dynamics and sustained international demand.
OUTLOOK
What to watch in Q2 and Q3 2026
The coming quarters will provide greater clarity on whether Q1 represented a temporary moderation or the beginning of a more disciplined phase within Dubai’s residential cycle. Morgan’s International Realty will be closely monitoring transaction velocity across both primary and secondary markets, absorption rates within newly launched projects, buyer behaviour in supply-heavy communities, the continued expansion of mortgage-backed end-user demand, and pricing resilience within prime residential segments. Q1 2026 may ultimately be remembered as the quarter where Dubai’s residential market began transitioning from a momentum-driven cycle into a more selective, quality-focused phase. The market is no longer defined purely by speed of growth. It is increasingly defined by the quality and resilience of the assets attracting capital. Dubai’s residential sector remains supported by strong long-term fundamentals: continued international capital inflows, population growth, expanding end-user participation, and Dubai’s increasing relevance as a global wealth destination. The next phase of the cycle is unlikely to reward all assets equally. Performance will increasingly depend on location quality, supply dynamics, branding, developer credibility, and long-term scarcity. For investors, this means selectivity is becoming increasingly important. For developers, it reinforces the importance of differentiation and disciplined project positioning. For the market overall, it reflects a clear sign of maturity.