Dubai, UAE — Dubai’s real estate market recorded about AED 64.4 billion in combined primary and secondary sales in November, up 49% year-on-year, with transaction volumes rising 31%. Primary market values more than doubled, growing 105% year-on-year, while secondary values rose 9%, pointing to strong off‑plan launches and resilient resale demand.
The divergence between value and volume is particularly visible in the primary segment, where a 67% jump in deal numbers alongside faster value growth signals larger average ticket sizes and ongoing appetite for mid‑to‑upper‑tier homes.
Analysts note that this pattern mirrors wider 2024 trends, with Dubai Land Department data showing record annual transaction values above AED 760 billion as the city cements its status as a global investment hub.
Secondary Market Shows Resilient Demand
In the resale space, secondary market values climbed 9% year-on-year in November, even as overall transaction volumes dipped 4%. Off‑plan secondary values increased 8% and ready secondary values 10%, with ready homes accounting for more than 80% of total secondary value as buyers continued to prioritise immediate occupancy and steady rental income.
Secondary off‑plan volumes fell 8% and ready volumes eased 2%, indicating selective buyer behaviour rather than a broad retreat from the segment.
Apartments Dominate Consumer Searches
Apartments remain at the centre of Dubai housing demand, accounting for around 80% of rental searches compared with 20% for villas and townhouses. Within apartment rentals, the share of studios and one‑bedroom units has increased year-on-year, suggesting that rising rents are nudging single tenants, couples and small families towards more compact, affordable options.
On the sales side, apartments make up about 58% of all purchase searches, while villa search share has softened slightly over the year. Roughly 70% of apartment searches target one‑ and two‑bedroom units in well‑connected communities, reinforcing the appeal of mid‑priced homes that balance space, commute times and service charges for cost‑conscious buyers.
Dubai Mortgage Market Fuels Middle-Income Ownership
Property Finder data for November shows the AED 20,000–40,000 monthly income band accounting for nearly 38% of all mortgage requests, up from 30% in October, making it the largest income segment in the Dubai mortgage market. Within this bracket, 85% of home seekers are searching for properties to live in and 15% for investment, underlining how mortgages are enabling resident professionals to transition from renting to ownership while also dipping into buy‑to‑let opportunities.
Across all income groups, November mortgage activity remained robust, with more than 4,400 home loan transactions worth AED 8.03 billion, despite higher global borrowing costs. The apartment segment dominated, with sales of about AED 31.73 billion against mortgages totalling AED 4.85 billion, while villa sales reached roughly AED 4.61 billion with AED 1.56 billion in mortgage financing, indicating solid leverage even in the smaller but higher‑value villa market.
Income Segments: Apartments vs Villas
A closer look at intent by income suggests that middle‑income earners are leading demand both for homes to live in and properties to invest in. Among buyers earning AED 20,000–40,000, 5.1% intend to purchase investment properties, compared with just 2.04% of those earning AED 60,000–80,000 or more, indicating that leveraged investment is more prevalent in the aspirational middle tier than among cash‑rich high earners.
While middle‑income households dominate apartment searches in the Dubai mortgage market, higher‑income groups sustain activity in villas and townhouses despite lower overall availability. Buyers earning AED 40,000–60,000 show the strongest tilt toward villas, with 13.27% favouring houses versus 8.16% choosing apartments; among those earning AED 80,000 or more, villas account for 10.2% of demand compared with 4.08% for apartments, underscoring a lifestyle‑led shift to larger homes.
Shifting Buyer Behaviour And Market Maturity
The data suggests that buying affordable property for personal use is a priority for the AED 20,000–40,000 income bracket, even as many within this group also seek investment apartments as a long‑term wealth‑building tool. Limited stock of villas and townhouses, relative to apartments, is supporting pricing power at the upper end, with developers and brokers reporting rapid absorption of premium, family‑oriented units in established and gated communities.
“October’s slight cooling down of the market was never going to be a reliable indicator of the overall health of the Dubai property market,” said Cherif Sleiman, Chief Revenue Officer at Property Finder.
He added that as the healthy November figures show, buyers are back and they are keen to find great deals after the expected summer slowdown. The middle income earners are truly the backbone of the market, supporting a booming apartment segment. As well as looking to put down roots as long-term UAE residents with their purchases, there is a growing interest in investment properties among middle income earners.
“Investment property is increasingly seen as a solid, long-term wealth building tool across middle and high-income demographics, which is a massive vote of confidence in Dubai’s maturing market,” he added.
Wider Trends In Dubai Housing And Finance
The strong November performance fits a broader pattern of record residential activity over the past two years, with Dubai repeatedly posting new peaks for both off‑plan and ready sales.
Knight Frank’s recent Dubai Residential Market Review notes that total deal value in the first three quarters of 2024 exceeded AED 306.3 billion, while the share of mortgaged purchases in the secondary market has climbed from 23% to 43% over two years, highlighting the structural importance of home finance in sustaining demand.
Parallel data from DXB Interact and other market trackers shows that off‑plan launches remain a key growth engine, especially in emerging communities tied to new infrastructure, waterfront masterplans and long‑stay visa reforms that encourage residency over short‑term speculation.
For investors, particularly from India and other key source markets, the Dubai mortgage market offers a route to lock in assets in a tax‑efficient jurisdiction while spreading payments over construction and post‑handover periods.
What It Means For Indian Investors
For Indian buyers, who have consistently ranked among Dubai’s top foreign investor groups and accounted for an estimated 22% of foreign real estate transactions in 2024, November’s mortgage and sales data reinforces the city’s appeal as both a lifestyle and yield play.
The dominance of apartments in the Dubai mortgage market, combined with rising but still competitive ticket sizes in mid‑market communities, suggests continued scope for rupee‑denominated investors to access high single‑digit rental yields and potential capital appreciation, especially when using mortgages to preserve liquidity.
At the upper end, constrained villa supply, strong end‑user demand and increasing interest from global high‑net‑worth buyers mean larger homes may suit long‑term wealth preservation rather than short‑term flipping, particularly for families looking to combine residency, business interests and education in the UAE. Overall, the latest figures indicate that Dubai remains a maturing, finance‑driven market where disciplined use of leverage, careful community selection and a long‑term horizon are likely to serve Indian and other international investors best.
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