Dubai, UAE — Dubai’s office market has flipped from a quiet corner of the property cycle into its tightest segment. Office sales reached AED8.2bn ($2.2bn) in the first quarter of 2026, up 203 per cent on the same period last year, and for the first time since the third quarter of 2010 buyers committed more capital to offices still under construction than to ready buildings. The Dubai office space shortage is now the clearest reason capital is moving the way it is.
The figures come from property consultancy Cavendish Maxwell, whose Q1 review shows transaction volumes rising almost 75 per cent to about 1,600 deals between January and March. For investors who spent the past three years focused almost entirely on apartments and villas, the commercial side has quietly become the part of the market with the least available stock and the fastest rent growth.
What The Q1 Data Shows
Off-plan offices generated AED6.4bn in the quarter, an increase of more than 760 per cent year on year and over 60 per cent of all office sales by volume. Roughly 950 off-plan deals went through, nearly five times the number a year earlier. Average sale prices rose close to 23 per cent to AED2,029 per square foot, while average rents climbed 20 per cent to AED191.9 per square foot.
Rent growth was sharpest where supply is thinnest. DIFC rents rose 28.2 per cent, Downtown Dubai 27 per cent and Business Bay 21.6 per cent. Cavendish Maxwell notes that landlords in these districts are still achieving their asking rents because high-quality Grade A space is scarce. Grade A here means the top tier of office stock: newer buildings with modern specifications, better location and higher service standards.
CBRE has described the same picture from the leasing side. The firm reports occupancy above 95 per cent across prime central buildings, and Taimur Khan, its head of research for the Middle East and North Africa, called it one of the tightest supply environments in recent history. That tightness is what pushes corporates to sign for space before it is finished.
Why Off-Plan Offices Are Suddenly The Story
The off-plan swing matters because it changes who is buying and why. When companies and investors commit to space a year or more before handover, they are betting that scarcity will persist long enough to protect both rent and resale value. The concentration is striking: around 40 per cent of all off-plan office sales sat in a single project, Shahrukhz by Danube, according to Cavendish Maxwell. Al Sufouh 1 and Business Bay led transaction counts.
Demand for larger floorplates also grew. Offices above 5,000 square feet made up 7.3 per cent of off-plan sales, up from 1.5 per cent a year earlier, which Cavendish Maxwell reads as a sign of businesses expanding rather than simply relocating. DIFC alone attracted 775 new company registrations in the quarter.
What Does The Dubai Office Space Shortage Mean For Investors?
For buyers, the appeal is yield durability rather than quick capital gains. Office rents in core districts are rising off a constrained supply base, and limited completions over the next two years suggest that pressure will not ease quickly. About 240,000 square metres of additional space is expected across the rest of 2026, lifting total stock toward 9.7 million square metres by year end, with the market forecast to reach 10.8 million square metres only by 2028.
That is a modest pipeline against current absorption, which is why the Dubai office space shortage continues to favour landlords in prime zones. The trade-off is liquidity. Commercial assets are harder to exit than apartments, ticket sizes are larger, and a single tenant departure hits income more directly than in residential.
Where This Fits In Dubai’s Cycle
The commercial surge sits alongside a residential market that is maturing rather than slowing. Buyers are holding longer and chasing quality, and capital that once chased off-plan apartment flips is testing offices as a diversification play. Business formation underpins it: Dubai’s standing as a regional headquarters base keeps drawing multinational and financial-sector tenants, and that occupier demand is the foundation under office values.
What Could Slow The Run
The risk is that the current numbers reflect a narrow window. Cavendish Maxwell’s Vidhi Shah noted that January and February accounted for 83 per cent of quarterly volumes, with March activity softening against the backdrop of regional tensions, the timing of Ramadan and Eid, and the usual lag in registration data. The firm cautioned that the next few months will give a clearer read on whether demand holds.
Concentration is the other concern. A market where 40 per cent of off-plan sales sit in one project and a handful of districts carry most of the rent growth is exposed if a single development underdelivers or sentiment turns. An AED1bn government support package announced earlier in the year offers some cushion, but it does not remove cyclical risk.
For NRI Buyers, A Different Entry Point
For Indian and NRI investors who know Dubai mainly through apartments, the office story offers a different risk-return shape. Yields in commercial Grade A space are supported by corporate leases and short supply rather than by retail buyer sentiment, which can make income steadier even as entry prices climb. Against a weaker rupee, the larger ticket sizes demand more careful currency timing, and the thinner resale market rewards patience over speed. The opportunity is real, but it rewards investors who treat offices as a hold, not a flip.
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