Dubai Real Estate
Market Report
An institutional-grade monthly analysis of the Dubai residential and commercial real estate market. May closes the post-disruption rebound chapter and opens a consolidation chapter — combined registered transactions fell ~27% in volume and ~25% in value month-over-month, settling at AED 51.7B across 13,798 properties. This is normalisation from an elevated April base, not a structural downturn: sellers are holding asking prices, buyers are negotiating, developers are launching with aggressive payment plans. Off-plan deepened to ~75.5% of residential activity, prime apartments softened, and prime villas plus value/mid-market communities held firm.
This report is prepared by Elite Merit Real Estate for informational purposes only. It does not constitute investment advice or a recommendation regarding any investment decision. Data is sourced from Dubai Land Department registered transaction exports, Property Monitor market intelligence (Dynamic Price Index, Sales Index, Rentals Index, segment, developer and commercial statistics), Elite Merit proprietary analysis, and supplemental research from AIQYA, Gulf News, DLD press releases, Property Monitor, Engel & Völkers, Dubai Chronicle, betterhomes and GlobalPropertyGuide.
Pricing uses AED per square foot as the primary equalising metric. Oqood = off-plan; Title Deed = ready. Gift transfers are excluded from pricing analysis. DLD area-list exports are de-duplicated using the "by Project" grouping; community rankings use parent-area rows only (see Methodology §17 for the full reconciliation note). The May mortgage total is inflated by two large land-collateral entries (~AED 7B); the Property Monitor Dynamic Price Index summary tile is not available as a discrete figure this month and price-level estimates are triangulated and labelled accordingly. Communities with fewer than ~20 transactions are flagged for statistical caution. May's MoM declines are measured against an elevated April rebound base and should be read as "rebound → normalisation," not as evidence of a structural downturn.
The full disclaimer, including risk factors and liability disclaimers, appears at the end of the report.
A Waiting Market — Pause, Not Reversal
May was a consolidation month. After April's sharp post-disruption rebound, the market did not accelerate — it paused. Combined registered transactions fell ~27% in volume and ~25% in value MoM, settling at AED 51.7B across 13,798 properties. This is not a downturn; it is normalisation from an elevated April base, and it has a clear character: a waiting market.
Off-Plan / Primary Market
Developers continue launching aggressively with 50/50 and post-handover payment plans. Azizi (1,601 reg.) and Binghatti (798) lead volume; Emaar, Nakheel, Meraas lead value. Off-plan now drives ~3 of every 4 residential registrations and 69% of residential value.
Secondary / Ready Market
Ready apartments contracted to ~24.5% of residential volume. Bank valuation tightening adds genuine friction — where banks value below the agreed price, buyers must cover the gap in cash or walk. Prime apartments are softening (JBI −8.81%, DIFC −2.74%, Marina −1.89%, Downtown −1.26%).
April vs May — The Normalisation
DLD area-list exports, "by Project" grouping (de-duplicated; see Methodology). Combined Cash + Mortgage + Gift across all property types (land, building/villa, units). Mortgage value is flagged: AED 14.6B (~83%) is land, inflated by two mega-collateral entries — Saih Aldahal (AED 3.93B) and Al Yufrah 1 (AED 3.06B).
| Metric | April 2026 | May 2026 | Change | Read |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cash Sales Value | AED 48.34B | AED 29.43B | −39.1% | Cooling from elevated April base |
| Cash Sales Volume | 14,064 | 10,475 | −25.5% | Buyer–seller standoff |
| Mortgage Value | AED 14.52B | AED 17.51B | +20.6% | Distorted by 2 land deals |
| Mortgage Volume | 4,080 | 2,586 | −36.6% | Bank valuations tightened |
| Gift Value | AED 6.35B | AED 4.80B | −24.4% | Wealth restructuring slowed |
| Gift Volume | 703 | 737 | +4.8% | Steady estate activity |
| Combined Value | AED 69.21B | AED 51.74B | −25.2% | Headline normalisation |
| Combined Volume | 18,847 | 13,798 | −26.8% | Headline normalisation |
Prices Held; Momentum Flattened
The Property Monitor Dynamic Price Index (PMDPI) headline tile is not provided as a discrete figure in this month's source set — the House Price Timeline appears as a trend chart only. Accordingly, this report does not quote a specific May-2026 PMDPI index number. Market-level estimates below are triangulated from the granular community Sales Index and cross-checked external sources.
| Measure | Value | Source / Scope |
|---|---|---|
| Citywide residential median | ~AED 1,720/sqft | DLD-derived (web research) |
| Apartment median (freehold) | AED 1,665/sqft | AIQYA Research (DLD dataset) |
| Apartment average (freehold) | AED 1,824/sqft | AIQYA Research |
| All-residential average (TD + Oqood) | AED 1,795/sqft | Property Monitor (§3.4) |
| Title Deed (ready) average | AED 1,656/sqft | Property Monitor |
| Oqood (off-plan) average | AED 1,839/sqft | Property Monitor |
Cycle Position
Dubai's residential cycle is in its 55th month of expansion (April +1). The rate of appreciation has clearly decelerated from the 2024–early-2025 pace, but the level remains near cyclical highs. This is the price-trend signature of consolidation: prices broadly held while volumes fell.
Trend Read
In the Property Monitor community Sales Index (Section 14), the modal "last-month" change clusters around zero. Secondary-apartment communities skew slightly negative; a minority of mid-market and villa communities still post gains. The 12-month picture remains broadly double-digit positive — the cycle's underlying strength is intact.
Off-Plan Deepened to ~75.5%
Off-plan now drives roughly three of every four residential registrations and more than two-thirds of residential value. The ~11% Oqood price premium (down from ~23% in March) indicates buyers are paying a smaller relative premium for new launches than earlier in the cycle — consistent with developers leaning on 50/50 and post-handover payment plans to sustain absorption.
| Segment | Volume (TD) | Value (TD) | AED/sqft (TD) | Volume (Oqood) | Value (Oqood) | AED/sqft (Oqood) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | 2,329 | AED 6.85B | 1,656 | 7,168 | AED 15.10B | 1,839 |
| Apartment | 1,856 | AED 3.35B | 1,637 | 6,607 | AED 11.15B | 1,867 |
| Villa | 190 | AED 2.51B | 2,279 | 225 | AED 2.84B | 1,957 |
| Townhouse | 283 | AED 994M | 1,452 | 342 | AED 1.11B | 1,219 |
| Metric | Title Deed (Ready) | Oqood (Off-Plan) | Delta |
|---|---|---|---|
| Volume share | 2,329 (24.5%) | 7,168 (75.5%) | 3.1× Oqood |
| Total value | AED 6.85B | AED 15.10B | +120% Oqood |
| Avg transaction | AED 2,940,509 | AED 2,106,057 | −28% Oqood |
| Avg AED/sqft | 1,656 | 1,839 | +11% Oqood premium |
The Market's Centre of Gravity Sits Below AED 2M
Apartment segment shown because it is the liquidity engine (8,463 of 9,498 residential transactions; ~89%). Source: AIQYA Research (DLD-registered freehold apartment dataset, 7,859 transactions / AED 13.42B, May 1–30 2026), cross-referenced with Property Monitor.
Sub-AED 1M apartment segment. Under-AED-750K alone is 31.6% — entry-level demand is the largest single bucket of the month.
AED 1M–3M segment. The core of family / mid-investor stock. Median AED/sqft 1,587 (1M–2M) and 2,317 (2M–3M).
Over AED 3M segment. Includes ultra-luxury ticket records (top May apt sale AED 112.6M, Solaya at Jumeirah First).
| Ticket Band | Transactions | Share | Median AED/sqft |
|---|---|---|---|
| Under AED 750K | 2,483 | 31.6% | 1,542 |
| AED 750K–1M | 991 | 12.6% | 1,462 |
| AED 1M–2M | 2,655 | 33.8% | 1,587 |
| AED 2M–3M | 963 | 12.3% | 2,317 |
| AED 3M–5M | 483 | 6.1% | 2,737 |
| AED 5M+ | 284 | 3.6% | 3,564 |
Apartments, Villas & Townhouses — Side By Side
Three Title-Deed (ready) segments, switchable via tabs. Apartments are the liquidity engine, villas anchor wealth-shelter pricing, townhouses are the accessible family pathway.
| Community | Approx. Volume |
|---|---|
| Jumeirah Village Circle | 216 |
| Business Bay | 111 |
| Downtown Dubai | 77 |
| Arjan | 68 |
| Dubai South | 57 |
| Sobha Hartland | 52 |
| Jumeirah Lakes Towers | 50 |
| Discovery Gardens | 48 |
| Dubai Residence Complex | 46 |
| Dubai Production City | 38 |
| Palm Jumeirah | 37 |
| Al Furjan | 32 |
| Majan | 23 |
| DAMAC Hills | 23 |
| Jumeirah Village Triangle | 20 |
| Community | Approx. Volume |
|---|---|
| DAMAC Hills 2 | 53 |
| DAMAC Hills | 25 |
| Dubai Hills Estate | 20 |
| The Springs | 17 |
| Villanova | 13 |
| Mudon | 13 |
| Town Square | 12 |
| Arabian Ranches | 11 |
| District 11 (MBR City) | 8 |
| Rukan | 8 |
| Palm Jumeirah | 7 |
| Green Community DIP | 6 |
| District One (MBR City) | 5 |
| Serena | 5 |
The Textbook Signature of Consolidation
Property Monitor Sales Index, "Last month" column (April 2026 → May 2026), median AED/sqft per community. Mid-market and affordable communities still grind higher; prime and ultra-prime apartments soften. Asterisks flag small-sample prints.
| Community | AED/sqft | MoM |
|---|---|---|
| Majan Apartments | 1,031 | +6.43% |
| Jaddaf Waterfront | 1,647 | +5.52% |
| Barsha Heights | 1,327 | +3.92% |
| Al Khail Heights | 942 | +2.83% |
| Al Jaddaf | 2,675 | +2.37% |
| Jumeirah Heights | 1,677 | +2.16% |
| Arjan | 1,387 | +1.67% |
| Meydan Apartments | 1,560 | +1.39% |
| Dubai Sports City Apts | 947 | +1.36% |
| Al Barsha | 1,273 | +1.07% |
| Dubai Production City | 1,023 | +0.89% |
| International City | 673 | +0.72% |
| Community | AED/sqft | MoM |
|---|---|---|
| Jumeirah Bay Island Apts | 9,837 | −8.81% |
| DAMAC Hills 2 Apartments | 1,047 | −4.83% |
| Madinat Jumeirah Living | 2,829 | −3.53% |
| DIP Apartments | 744 | −2.86% |
| DIFC | 2,221 | −2.74% |
| JVT Apartments | 1,297 | −2.40% |
| Dubai Marina | 1,861 | −1.89% |
| Al Habtoor City | 1,881 | −1.64% |
| JBR | 1,731 | −1.61% |
| Dubai Water Canal | 3,044 | −1.59% |
| Bluewaters Island | 5,470 | −1.34% |
| Business Bay | 1,894 | −1.29% |
| Downtown Dubai | 2,510 | −1.26% |
| Community | AED/sqft | MoM |
|---|---|---|
| Motor City Villas | 1,769 | +8.15% |
| Palm Jumeirah Garden Homes | 7,969 | +6.72% |
| Dubai Sports City Villas | 2,137 | +3.18% |
| Dubai Science Park Villas | 1,848 | +2.92% |
| Jumeirah Golf Estates Villas | 2,216 | +2.89% |
| Dubai South Villas | 1,370 | +2.86% |
| DAMAC Hills Villas | 1,736 | +2.25% |
| JVC Villas | 1,115 | +2.15% |
| The Meadows | 3,333 | +2.12% |
| Emirates Hills | 7,765 | +1.61% |
| Jumeirah Islands | 4,534 | +1.59% |
| The Lakes | 3,039 | +1.50% |
| Community | AED/sqft | MoM |
|---|---|---|
| Nad Al Sheba Villas *Small sample — statistically unstable | 1,350 | −14.61% |
| Al Furjan Villas | 1,637 | −4.78% |
| Arabian Ranches 2 | 1,820 | −2.69% |
| Dubai Hills Estate Villas | 2,720 | −2.18% |
| Arabian Ranches | 2,287 | −1.54% |
| Rukan Villas | 1,372 | −1.15% |
| JVT Villas | 1,857 | −1.14% |
| The Sustainable City Villas | 1,219 | −0.93% |
| Tilal Al Ghaf | 2,011 | −0.92% |
| Falcon City of Wonders | 1,243 | −0.89% |
| Mudon | 1,620 | −0.69% |
| Villanova | 1,544 | −0.54% |
| DAMAC Lagoons Villas | 1,208 | −0.47% |
Where Cash Concentrated in May
DLD Sale-by-Project export. "Non-Project" entries denote land/whole-asset registrations recorded outside a named development. Lumena/Lumena Alta led by value; Azizi Venice 14 and Binghatti Skyflame 1 led by raw volume.
| Project | Properties | Total Value (AED M) | Avg per Unit (AED M) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lumena by Omniyat | 44 | 1,427 | 32.43 |
| Trade Center First (Non-Project) | 2 | 1,104 | 552.20 |
| LUNAYA | 89 | 754 | 8.47 |
| THE MERIVA COLLECTION | 122 | 582 | 4.77 |
| Lumena Alta by Omniyat | 23 | 497 | 21.63 |
| Palm Jebel Ali — Beach & Coral Collection | 11 | 437 | 39.74 |
| Palm Jumeirah (Non-Project) | 18 | 429 | 23.82 |
| AZIZI VENICE 14 | 508 | 415 | 0.82 |
| Saih Shuaib 3 (Non-Project) | 2 | 384 | 192.03 |
| Palm Jebel Ali — Beach & Coral Collection (2) | 11 | 379 | 34.42 |
| Sobha Central | 99 | 349 | 3.52 |
| Binghatti Skyflame 1 | 447 | 322 | 0.72 |
| Solaya (5,7) | 8 | 308 | 38.47 |
| Al Mamzer (Non-Project) | 2 | 304 | 152.07 |
| NUMA RESERVE | 20 | 291 | 14.54 |
Lumena / Lumena Alta by Omniyat
Ultra-luxury Business Bay waterfront led by value (AED 21–32M average per unit). The month's top branded-residence story.
Azizi Venice 14 & Binghatti Skyflame 1
508 + 447 units. Compact, sub-AED 1M off-plan apartment stock that defined May's launch-led character.
Trade Center / Saih Shuaib / Al Mamzer
Single-asset land registrations (AED 152M–552M per line). Episodic, not indicative of broad demand.
Where Capital Concentrated by Procedure
DLD by-Community/Area exports, parent-area rows only (child-project rows excluded to avoid double-counting). Switch between Cash, Mortgage, and Gift to see which communities led each procedure.
| Community | Properties | Total Value (AED M) | Avg Price (AED M) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Business Bay | 400 | 2,719 | 6.80 |
| Madinat Al Mataar | 1,209 | 1,385 | 1.15 |
| Palm Deira | 335 | 1,289 | 3.85 |
| Palm Jumeirah | 68 | 1,171 | 17.23 |
| Trade Center First | 14 | 1,147 | 81.95 |
| Wadi Al Safa 3 | 145 | 843 | 5.82 |
| Palm Jabal Ali | 24 | 838 | 34.92 |
| Saih Shuaib 1 | 89 | 754 | 8.47 |
| Jumeirah Village Circle | 566 | 711 | 1.26 |
| Majan | 822 | 666 | 0.81 |
| Community | Properties | Total Value (AED M) |
|---|---|---|
| Saih Aldahal ⓘSingle land-collateral registration of AED 3.93B | 3 | 3,934 |
| Al Yufrah 1 ⓘSingle land-collateral registration of AED 3.06B | 32 | 3,061 |
| Dubai Investment Park First | 14 | 1,044 |
| Motor City | 37 | 867 |
| Trade Center First | 2 | 773 |
| Sustainable City | 9 | 431 |
| Palm Jumeirah | 44 | 410 |
| Al Satwa | 5 | 334 |
| Emirates Living | 44 | 298 |
| Dubai Hills | 62 | 274 |
| Community | Properties | Total Value (AED M) |
|---|---|---|
| Al Satwa | 5 | 855 |
| Marsa Dubai | 5 | 394 |
| Dubai Harbour | 51 | 236 |
| Wadi Al Safa 3 | 3 | 235 |
| Al Barari | 26 | 209 |
| Palm Jumeirah | 32 | 203 |
| Dubai Hills | 12 | 194 |
| Jumeirah Lakes Towers | 42 | 142 |
| Jumeira Bay | 2 | 142 |
| Emirates Living | 7 | 138 |
A Barbell Market — Volume vs Value
Property Monitor Developer Statistics (registered Title Deed + Oqood transactions attributed to each developer). Developer-name attribution is provided directly in the May export — a methodological improvement over prior months where names were inferred. Azizi and Binghatti dominate volume; Emaar, Nakheel and Meraas dominate value.
| Rank | Developer | Volume | Value (AED M) | AED/sqft |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 01 | Azizi | 1,601 | 1,461 | 1,721 |
| 02 | Binghatti | 798 | 644 | 1,472 |
| 03 | Emaar | 665 | 2,740 | 2,229 |
| 04 | DAMAC Properties | 574 | 1,209 | 1,477 |
| 05 | Reportage Real Estate | 509 | 577 | 1,023 |
| 06 | Ellington Properties | 335 | 1,180 | 2,719 |
| 07 | Imtiaz Developments | 242 | 357 | 1,895 |
| 08 | Sobha Group | 233 | 656 | 2,680 |
| 09 | Nakheel | 189 | 1,712 | 1,885 |
| 10 | Samana Developers | 180 | 193 | 1,520 |
| 11 | Danube Properties | 164 | 210 | 2,122 |
| 12 | Meraas | 154 | 1,506 | 3,398 |
| Rank | Developer | Value (AED M) | Volume |
|---|---|---|---|
| 01 | Emaar | 2,740 | 665 |
| 02 | Nakheel | 1,712 | 189 |
| 03 | Meraas | 1,506 | 154 |
| 04 | Azizi | 1,461 | 1,601 |
| 05 | DAMAC Properties | 1,209 | 574 |
| 06 | Ellington Properties | 1,180 | 335 |
| 07 | Sobha Group | 656 | 233 |
| Rank | Developer | Volume | Value (AED M) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 01 | Azizi | 1,601 | 1,461 |
| 02 | Binghatti | 798 | 644 |
| 03 | Emaar | 464 | 1,340 |
| 04 | DAMAC Properties | 339 | 448 |
| 05 | Ellington Properties | 331 | 1,118 |
| 06 | Reportage Real Estate | 320 | 261 |
Broad, Shallow MoM Softening
Property Monitor Rentals Index and rental contract statistics. Most communities printed negative "last-month" rent changes while remaining positive year-over-year. Value communities are the exception. The PM community Yield Index is not provided as a discrete figure this month — yields below are indicative, cross-validated from external benchmarks.
| Community | Avg Rent (AED/yr) | Last Month | YoY (12m) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Al Khail Heights | 80,360 | +1.55% | +19.48% |
| DIP Apts | 124,829 | +1.74% | +5.81% |
| Liwan | 60,778 | +1.54% | +9.87% |
| Bluewaters Island | 526,927 | +0.60% | +0.48% |
| Al Furjan Apts | 314,402 | +0.17% | +0.70% |
| International City | 37,265 | −0.29% | +7.99% |
| JVC Apts | 92,172 | −1.36% | +3.18% |
| Business Bay | 156,062 | −2.38% | +1.23% |
| Dubai Hills Estate | 217,846 | −2.21% | +5.15% |
| Downtown Dubai | 158,423 | −2.95% | −2.31% |
| Dubai Harbour | 234,148 | −2.58% | −6.89% |
| Dubai Festival City | 221,236 | −5.26% | +11.60% |
| City Walk | 280,648 | −2.57% | +13.52% |
| JBI Apts | 1,237,942 | −4.71% | −9.47% |
| Al Kifaf *Small-sample anomaly | 119,615 | −21.56% | −24.22% |
| Community | Avg Rent (AED/yr) | Last Month | YoY (12m) |
|---|---|---|---|
| DIP Villas *Small-sample anomaly | 465,465 | +45.60% | +57.36% |
| Jumeirah Islands | 731,259 | +3.46% | +21.75% |
| Dubai South Villas | 200,959 | +0.84% | −10.18% |
| Motor City Villas | 355,874 | +0.63% | +2.14% |
| Al Furjan Villas | 269,406 | +0.41% | −9.18% |
| Arabian Ranches | 248,655 | +0.19% | +3.57% |
| DAMAC Hills Villas | 376,906 | −0.68% | +0.09% |
| The Meadows | 424,959 | −1.65% | −0.33% |
| JGE Villas | 730,571 | −1.74% | +4.42% |
| Arabian Ranches 3 | 290,246 | −2.53% | +5.70% |
| DAMAC Lagoons Villas | 239,159 | −3.02% | −28.01% |
| JBI Villas | 2,177,205 | −5.35% | −8.77% |
The Bright Spot — Grade-A Office & Off-Plan Premium
Office remains the structural backbone — 243 sales / AED 2.52B and 13,397 rental contracts / AED 517M annual. Off-plan commercial commands a steep premium to ready stock: office +151%/sqft, retail +63%/sqft. A relative bright spot against the residential consolidation.
| Segment | Volume | Value (AED M) | AED/sqft |
|---|---|---|---|
| Office | 243 | 2,525 | 3,635 |
| Retail | 87 | 375 | 3,986 |
| Hotel Apartment | 221 | 306 | 1,862 |
| Whole Building | 20 | 1,704 | 480 |
| Land (commercial) | 40 | 1,083 | — |
| Warehouse | 1 | 5 | 627 |
| Showroom | 1 | 6 | 2,246 |
| Segment | TD Vol | TD AED/sqft | Oqood Vol | Oqood AED/sqft | Premium |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Office | 70 | 1,753 | 173 | 4,397 | +151% |
| Retail | 26 | 2,759 | 61 | 4,509 | +63% |
| Segment | Contracts | Annual Rent (AED M) | Avg Rent (AED) | Avg AED/sqft |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Office | 13,397 | 517 | 38,560 | 107 |
| Retail | 2,376 | 326 | — | — |
| Warehouse | 574 | 109 | 189,555 | 89 |
| Showroom | 74 | 21 | 281,445 | 163 |
| Hotel Apartment | 202 | 24 | 118,000 | 135 |
| Labour Camp | 195 | 14 | 72,558 | 349 |
| Whole Building | 8 | 11 | 1,417,571 | 46 |
Every Community, Every Window
Property Monitor achievable median AED/sqft with 12-month, 6-month, 3-month and 1-month change windows. Sortable, searchable, and filterable. Heat-map cells colour each percentage by magnitude. Collapsed by default to the top 15 — click "Show all" to expand. Small-sample prints are flagged.
| Community | AED/sqft | 12-mo | 6-mo | 3-mo | 1-mo |
|---|
Geopolitics in Background; Bank Valuations in Foreground
The regional conflict that disrupted sentiment in late February 2026 has de-escalated and is now a background rather than active risk. Independent sources describe the market as having "absorbed two months of geopolitical disruption without a structural break." House view: monitor, but do not over-weight; the present constraint on activity is price-expectation gaps and bank valuation tightening, not active conflict risk.
De-escalated, residual
The Feb–Mar regional conflict has de-escalated to a background risk. Technically unresolved; residual uncertainty still influences the pace at which buyers, sellers and developers commit — but no longer the dominant driver.
Recovering gradually
Interest from regional retail investors and from UAE-based companies and residents continues to recover, supported by population growth, business formation, and Dubai's status as a regional safe-haven. The May slowdown is caution and negotiation, not capital exit.
Bank valuation friction
Reported across the market: where banks value below the agreed price, the buyer must cover the shortfall in cash or withdraw. A real, current friction dampening secondary/mortgage-financed transactions — partly explaining the −36.6% MoM drop in mortgage volume.
High, Moderate, and Positive Offsets
The May rebound did not arrive. Several risks are now material enough to shape positioning, underwriting, and exit assumptions. We classify them by priority — each risk is paired with the data point that elevates it.
Eight Things The May Data Tells Us
The data sits inside a consistent narrative. The headline is consolidation, the mechanics are two-speed, and the cycle is mature but intact.
May 2026 = Consolidation Month
Combined registered transactions fell ~27% in volume and ~25% in value MoM. The April rebound did not broaden into recovery; the market moved into a buyer–seller standoff. Normalisation from an elevated base, not a structural decline.
A Waiting Market
Sellers holding asking prices; buyers negotiating or waiting; developers launching with aggressive payment plans. Activity is constrained by a price-expectation gap and bank valuation tightening — not by absent demand.
Off-Plan Deepened Its Dominance (~75.5%)
Increasingly launch-led. Azizi and Binghatti drove volume with compact, sub-AED 1M stock; Emaar, Nakheel and Meraas drove value with premium product. A barbell market.
Two-Speed by Segment
Secondary/ready apartments are the soft spot (prime apt MoM −1% to −9%); prime villas and value/mid-market communities are holding-to-rising. Risk-adjusted momentum favours value and yield over trophy apartments.
Rental Recalibration Underway
Most communities show negative MoM rent, positive YoY. Yields compressing in prime, holding 7–9% in value communities. Income investors should favour the value segment.
Financing Is a Live Constraint
Mortgage volume −36.6% MoM amid bank valuation tightening. The headline mortgage value rise is a two-deal land-collateral artefact, not a financing recovery.
Underlying Demand Still Recovering
Regional retail and resident-corporate interest persists; commercial leasing and a record Q1 (AED 252B, +31% YoY) confirm the structural story is intact. The geopolitical overhang has receded.
Net Assessment
The weight of evidence supports a consolidation-within-an-uptrend narrative. The cycle is mature and decelerating, not breaking. The environment rewards selectivity, realistic pricing, and segment-specific positioning.
Eight Indicators That Will Shape Q3
The summer quarter (June–August 2026) will determine whether May's pause resolves into a renewed uptrend or settles into an extended low-velocity phase. These are the highest-signal indicators.
| Pri. | Indicator | What to Watch For | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Transaction Velocity (Jun–Aug) | Combined volumes — stabilise or keep sliding? | Determines if May was a one-month pause or a longer low-velocity phase |
| 2 | Secondary vs Off-Plan Spread | Title Deed share — recovery toward 30%+ vs slide below 24% | Signals whether the secondary standoff is resolving |
| 3 | Bank Valuation & Mortgage Trend | Mortgage volume ex-land outliers; lender valuation behaviour | Clearest leading indicator of secondary-market thaw |
| 4 | Prime Apartment Price Discovery | JBI, DIFC, Marina, Downtown, Business Bay correction depth | Sets confidence ceiling for the broader apartment market |
| 5 | Rental Index Direction | Whether MoM softening stabilises through the leasing season | Determines yield trajectories for income investors |
| 6 | Developer Launch Cadence | Azizi, Binghatti, Emaar, Nakheel, Meraas — pricing, plans, sell-through | Primary swing factor for headline volume |
| 7 | Handover Pipeline (2026–2028) | Completion volumes and handover pricing vs off-plan purchase prices | Mark-to-market risk as the supply wave approaches |
| 8 | Macro | Regional stability, Fed trajectory, USD/AED peg, oil prices | Defines macro appetite for EM real estate |
Source Hierarchy, Data Treatment & Reconciliation
Every number in this report is traceable to a documented source. The DLD area-list exports require careful handling — see the reconciliation explainer below.
The DLD "by Community/Area" export lists every transaction twice — once as a community subtotal row (parent) and once as the project rows nested beneath it (marked with the "▪/•" symbol, which the export's own footnote defines as "project under community/area"). Selecting and summing the entire Total column therefore adds each transaction twice.
Worked example. International City PH 1 parent row = 122 properties / AED 120,542,943. The 11 child project rows underneath it independently sum to the identical AED 120,542,943. The full-column total adds both, yielding 2× the true number.
Verified three ways: (a) by-project total AED 29.43B / 10,475 props ≈ (b) by-area community-rows-only AED 29.46B / 10,484 props ≈ (c) by-area full column ÷ 2.
Transactions without a named project (land, certain commercial assets) are not dropped by the by-project view — they appear as explicit "(Non-Project)" line items (e.g., Trade Center First (Non-Project), Palm Jumeirah (Non-Project)).
Equivalent reconciliation applies to Mortgage (true AED 17.51B vs 35.11B doubled) and Gift (true AED 4.80B vs 9.59B doubled).
Rule: use by-project (or by-area community-rows-only) for totals; use by-area only for community-level breakdowns; never sum the full by-area column.
DLD Transaction Figures
Sourced from DLD area-list exports. "By Project" exports used for headline totals (de-duplicated); "By Community/Area" used only for community-level rankings (Section 08), parent-area rows only. The mortgage figure includes two large land-collateral entries (~AED 7B) flagged as outliers throughout.
Procedure Mapping
Sale = cash/registered sales; Mortgage = financed registrations; Gift (هبة) = transfers, excluded from pricing analysis. The DLD export tool mislabels the Gift procedure; files re-exported and corrected by Elite Merit.
Pricing Metric
AED per square foot as the primary equalising metric across segments. Title Deed = ready/completed; Oqood = off-plan registration. Residential segment splits (Section 3) from Property Monitor.
PMDPI Vintage
The Property Monitor Dynamic Price Index summary tile (index value, MoM/QoQ/YoY) is not provided as a discrete figure in this month's source set; the index is presented as a trend chart rather than a stated value. No specific index number is quoted; price-level estimates are triangulated from the community Sales Index and cross-validated external sources, and labelled accordingly.
MoM Price Source
Property Monitor Sales Index "last-month" column (April 2026 → May 2026), median AED/sqft per community. Communities with fewer than ~20 transactions are interpreted with statistical caution and flagged in-line.
Rental & Developer Data
Property Monitor Rentals Index (rent levels + change windows) and rental contract statistics. Gross-yield figures are indicative, drawn from cross-validated external benchmarks. Developer data: Property Monitor Developer Statistics with developer names provided directly in this month's export (an improvement over prior months' inference).
What the May Data Means For You
Audience-segmented guidance derived from the May 2026 dataset. Select the audience tab that matches your position — Investors (Income / Appreciation / Trophy), Sellers, or Buyers. The "Practical implication" callouts translate the analysis into action.
The single most important decision this quarter is which of three environments your strategy operates in — because they are diverging sharply.
Recalibrate Rental Income Expectations 5–10% Downward for Q3–Q4 2026
Rents softened MoM across most communities while holding positive YoY. Prime apartment rents fell 2–5% MoM (Jumeirah Bay Island −4.71%, Downtown −2.95%, Business Bay −2.38%), compressing already-thin prime yields. The strongest yield opportunities remain in the value segment, where rents are still rising and gross yields sit in the 7–9% range.
Highest-yield communities (8%+ gross):
Al Khail Heights · Dubai Investments Park · Liwan · Dubai Production City · International City · Dubai Sports City · Dubai Studio City
The Price-Momentum Map Has Rotated to Value & Emerging
May's strongest single-month gains were in value and emerging communities. Meanwhile prime apartments repriced down.
Strongest MoM gainers:
Motor City Villas +8.15% · Majan Apts +6.43% · Jaddaf Waterfront +5.52% · Dubai Sports City Villas +3.18% · Al Khail Heights +2.83% · Dubai South Villas +2.86%
Prime apartments that repriced down:
Jumeirah Bay Island −8.81% · DIFC −2.74% · Dubai Marina −1.89% · Downtown Dubai −1.26%
Trophy Demand Is Intact and Migrating Toward New Supply
The top end remained visible and firm. Prime villas held or rose; ultra-prime branded apartments continued to trade at record tickets.
Prime villas holding / rising MoM:
Palm Jumeirah Garden Homes +6.72% · Emirates Hills +1.61% · Jumeirah Islands +1.59% · The Meadows +2.12%
Record tickets recorded in May:
AED 112.6M (Solaya at Jumeirah First) · AED 101–106M (Dubai Water Canal & La Mer) · Capital continues rotating toward new waterfront supply (Palm Jebel Ali, Lumena/Omniyat)
The defining dynamic is the standoff. The secondary/ready market contracted to ~24.5% of residential volume, and bank valuations have tightened — where a bank values below the agreed price, the buyer must cover the gap in cash or walk. This is actively slowing financed transactions and lengthening days-on-market for overpriced listings.
This Is Not a Market That Absorbs Overpricing Through Momentum
Prime-apartment sellers (negative MoM communities):
Jumeirah Bay Island, DIFC, Dubai Marina, Downtown, Business Bay — price competitively and realistically. Holding out for peak pricing extends days-on-market and weakens negotiating position.
Mid-market and value sellers (positive momentum):
Majan, Jaddaf Waterfront, Al Khail Heights, Arjan, Dubai Production City, Dubai South — retain pricing power, but the window is defined by momentum, not unlimited. Price at fair market value to transact.
Villa sellers — segment is firmest:
Firm: Palm Jumeirah, Emirates Hills, Jumeirah Islands, The Meadows, Dubai Sports City — can hold asking prices. Correcting: Al Furjan villas −4.78%, Dubai Hills villas −2.18%, Arabian Ranches −1.54% — adjust expectations.
The Standoff Is the Key Variable
If you must transact, price to the current market and to a bank-supportable valuation — this is now a gating factor. If you can wait, monitor whether June–August volumes stabilise; a thaw in bank valuations would be the clearest signal that secondary conditions are improving.
Be mindful that the 2026–2028 handover wave will add ready supply, which argues against indefinite holding in oversupplied segments. Sellers with properties in high-demand communities should act while the recovery momentum holds; sellers in correcting segments should evaluate whether holding 6–12 months aligns with their broader financial objectives.
May 2026 is one of the more favourable end-user entry environments of the cycle. The standoff has created negotiating leverage that did not exist during the 2024–early-2025 surge, and seller flexibility is greatest in the secondary apartment market.
The Market's Core Is Compact Stock
Studios and one-bedrooms are ~76% of apartment volume; the AED 1M–2M and sub-AED-750K bands together are ~65% of transactions.
Value-for-money corridor:
JVC (AED 1,346/sqft) · JVT (AED 1,297) · Arjan (AED 1,387) · Discovery Gardens (AED 1,007) · Dubai Production City (AED 1,023) — competitive entry with established rental infrastructure.
Premium-lifestyle balance:
Dubai Hills Estate (AED 2,397/sqft) · Sobha Hartland (AED 2,088) · Business Bay (AED 1,894) — premium living, with prime apartments currently offering negotiating room.
Negotiating leverage zones:
Prime apartment communities showing MoM softness (Dubai Marina, Downtown, DIFC, Business Bay) are where sellers are most flexible right now.
Villas Are Premium; Townhouses Are the Family Pathway
The villa market is overwhelmingly premium (ready villa average AED 13.2M). Townhouses are the accessible family pathway, anchored by 3–4 bedroom product around AED 3–4M.
Family townhouses:
DAMAC Hills 2 · Mudon · Town Square · Villanova — established infrastructure at accessible prices.
Premium family villas (slight MoM softening = near-term entry window):
Dubai Hills Estate (AED 2,720/sqft, −2.18% MoM) · Arabian Ranches (AED 2,287/sqft, −1.54% MoM) — benchmarks for premium family living.
Momentum communities:
Dubai South Residential District villas (+2.86% MoM) · Motor City villas (+8.15%) — affordability with growth.
What to Watch — Next 90 Days (Jun–Aug 2026)
The summer quarter will determine whether May's pause resolves into a renewed uptrend or settles into an extended low-velocity phase. These are the highest-signal indicators distilled into a checklist for the next data cycle.
- 1
Transaction velocity
Do combined volumes stabilise or keep sliding? The Sale-procedure count is the cleanest read.
- 2
Title Deed share
A recovery toward 30%+ signals the secondary standoff is resolving; a slide below 24% signals deepening primary dependency.
- 3
Bank valuations & mortgage volume
Easing here is the clearest leading indicator of a secondary-market thaw.
- 4
Prime apartment price discovery
Depth and duration of the correction in JBI, DIFC, Dubai Marina, Downtown and Business Bay set the confidence ceiling for the broader apartment market.
- 5
Rental direction
Whether MoM softening stabilises through the leasing season — confirms yield trajectories.
- 6
Developer launch absorption
Sell-through on Azizi, Binghatti, Emaar, Nakheel and Meraas programmes — primary swing factor for headline volume.
Precision, Not Caution
May 2026 closes the post-disruption rebound chapter and opens a consolidation chapter. The headline is a ~25% month-over-month cooling in registered value and volume — real, but best understood as normalisation from April's elevated base rather than the onset of a downturn.
The market's mechanics tell a consistent story: off-plan deepened to ~75.5% of residential activity, the secondary/ready apartment segment came under the most pricing pressure, prime villas and value/mid-market communities held firm, rents softened month-over-month while staying positive year-over-year, and bank valuation tightening added genuine friction to financed deals.
Strategically, this is a waiting market defined by a buyer–seller standoff. It rewards realism on price, discipline on segment selection, and patience. Value and yield communities are outperforming trophy apartments on a risk-adjusted basis; prime villas remain the preferred wealth-shelter asset; and the secondary apartment market offers the clearest end-user negotiating leverage of the cycle.
Underlying demand from regional and resident capital continues to recover, the geopolitical overhang has receded, and the annual base remains strong. The signal for Elite Merit and its clients is not caution for its own sake, but precision — the months ahead will reward those who price to the market, position by segment, and act decisively where leverage exists.
Full Disclaimer
This document is prepared by Elite Merit Real Estate for informational purposes only and is intended for use by clients, partners, and stakeholders of the firm.
This document does not constitute investment advice, a solicitation to buy or sell any asset, or a recommendation regarding any investment decision. All data, analysis, and commentary contained herein are based on information from the Dubai Land Department (DLD), Property Monitor, and supplemental research from reputable industry sources. While every effort has been made to ensure accuracy, Elite Merit Real Estate does not guarantee the completeness, reliability, or timeliness of the information provided.
All figures are based on registered transactions as of May 2026 (DLD exports and Property Monitor reports generated on or around 1 June 2026) and are subject to revision by the relevant authorities. Month-over-month and year-over-year comparisons reflect the data available at the time of preparation and may be revised as additional data becomes available. Month-over-month declines in May 2026 are measured against an elevated April 2026 rebound base and should be interpreted as normalisation rather than evidence of a structural downturn.
Certain figures are explicitly flagged as estimated, inferred, indicative, or affected by data-source limitations — including the Property Monitor Dynamic Price Index headline reading and community-level gross rental yields (not provided as discrete figures in this month's source set and therefore triangulated from cross-validated external benchmarks), and the mortgage total (inflated by two large one-off land-collateral registrations). Community-level metrics based on fewer than approximately 20 transactions are statistically unstable and are flagged in-line; readers should not draw trend conclusions from them.
Real estate markets are subject to significant risks, including but not limited to: market volatility, geopolitical events, regulatory changes, interest rate fluctuations, bank valuation and lending-policy changes, currency risk, liquidity risk, and developer execution risk. The geopolitical context referenced in this document reflects conditions as understood at the time of publication and may evolve.
Readers are strongly encouraged to seek independent professional advice from licensed financial advisors, legal counsel, and real estate professionals before making any investment, acquisition, or disposal decisions. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
Elite Merit Real Estate, its officers, employees, and affiliates disclaim any liability for losses, damages, or consequences arising from reliance on the content of this document.