Dubai’s property market is beginning to show early signs of weakening nearly three weeks into the US-Israeli war on Iran, with data from analysts showing tanking transaction volumes and some real estate agents pointing to price reductions.
Real-estate transaction volumes in the UAE fell 37 per cent year-on-year in the first 12 days of March, and 49pc month-on-month, Goldman Sachs analysts estimated in a note published this week. Some properties are already being offered at big discounts, with price cuts of 12-15pc, according to some real estate agents and messages on social media that Reuters reviewed. For instance, a seller was looking for a “quick sale” for a property close to the Burj Khalifa – the world’s tallest building – a message shared by an agent read.
The seller was looking for $650,000, down about 12pc from a previous price of $735,000 “due to the current situation”. An off-plan flat in Dubai’s coveted Palm Jumeirah was also being offered at a 15% discount to its original price to around $2 million, according to a message reviewed by Reuters on a WhatsApp group created a week into the war.
The UAE’s real estate boom has mirrored Dubai’s rise, but there were already concerns that the market was headed for a slowdown after five years of rising prices. The conflict is the biggest test to date for the market, where demand was fuelled by an influx of wealthy migrants attracted by the UAE’s tax-free regime.
Shares in property developers have fallen, with Emaar Properties, the developer behind Burj Khalifa, down more than 26pc on the Dubai bourse since the war began. Goldman Sachs said the total value of completed transactions so far this month was down by half compared with February – a much bigger drop than during the 2024 Dubai floods or a previous Iran-Israeli conflict last June – although it said the median transacted price was only down 3pc on a year earlier.
Analysts at Citi say the war introduced “considerable risk” for Dubai’s future population growth expectations as it could deter home-buyers and property investors. They now assume 1pc population growth in Dubai this year, and 2-2.5pc annually between 2027 and 2031, against 4pc in recent years.
They said that in their bearish case for Dubai, property prices would drop by an average of 7pc annually between this year and 2028.
However, executives on the ground are not panicking, saying market activity has not stopped.
“I believe everyone is very different in how they assess risk and how they perceive risk. But the data tells a very clear story, right? Transactions haven’t stopped,” said Imran Sheikh, founder and chairman at real estate investment firm BlackOak.
“We have one client from Africa who has said, if you see any opportunities over the next month, please go ahead,” Sheikh said.