Dubai’s residential real estate market recorded solid performance in the first quarter of 2026, with more than 44,000 property transactions completed between January and March, highlighting continued investor confidence and sustained market resilience.
According to market insights from Cavendish Maxwell, total residential sales reached approximately 44,100 transactions during the quarter, reflecting a 4.2% year-on-year increase. The growth was largely supported by strong demand in the off-plan segment, which accounted for nearly 73% of all transactions and recorded a 10.3% annual rise.
In contrast, ready-property sales declined by 9.2% during the same period, mainly due to limited inventory in established communities and increasing investor preference for flexible developer-led payment plans.
Although March recorded the lowest monthly activity of the quarter with around 12,700 transactions, analysts noted that it remains too early to link the dip directly to regional geopolitical developments, as transaction reporting timelines typically reflect deals finalized earlier.
Notably, ready-home sales in March dropped by 35% year-on-year, while off-plan activity remained stable with a slight 0.6% increase, reinforcing buyer confidence in future developments across Dubai’s expanding residential landscape.
Research from Knight Frank highlights that Dubai continues to attract international investors due to its lifestyle appeal, tax efficiency, and strong long-term capital appreciation prospects. Meanwhile, CBRE emphasized that population growth and corporate relocations are key drivers supporting sustained housing demand across ownership and rental segments.
Official figures released by the Dubai Land Department further confirm continued investor confidence, with transaction values remaining historically strong and new project launches witnessing steady absorption—particularly across emerging growth corridors such as Dubai South, Dubailand, and Dubai Creek Harbour.
Market fundamentals remain supported by the UAE’s expanding non-oil economy, investor-friendly residency initiatives like the UAE Golden Visa, and continued infrastructure investment aligned with long-term urban development strategies.
With off-plan properties continuing to anchor overall performance and international migration trends strengthening demand, analysts expect Dubai’s residential market to maintain strong momentum throughout 2026 despite regional uncertainties. 📈🏡
