Dubai, UAE — Dubai’s residential market logged 2,863 sales transactions in the week of 1–7 December 2025, with a total consideration of about AED 8.996 billion, even as overall deal numbers and average prices per square metre edged down 1.6% year on year. The data, drawn from “Real Estate Market Analytics”, shows volumes rising sharply despite softer headline pricing, underscoring ongoing liquidity in the emirate’s property market.
Total transaction value increased by 43.5% from the comparable week a year earlier, while the market-wide average price slipped to roughly AED 16,140 per square metre, mirroring early signs of price consolidation flagged by recent advisory reports. For investors tracking short-term sentiment against a backdrop of several years of rapid price appreciation, these Dubai weekly off-plan property trends suggest a rotation into higher-value projects rather than a broad-based downturn.
Key Performing Communities
The report indicates that 1,366 of the week’s transactions were concentrated in ten major communities, led by Madinat Al Mataar, Business Bay and Jumeirah Village Circle (JVC). Madinat Al Mataar recorded 246 deals with an estimated AED 543.5 million in sales, while Business Bay closed 223 deals worth about AED 693.2 million and JVC registered 217 deals with AED 487.9 million in value.
Business Bay delivered the highest weekly transaction volume by value among the listed areas, reflecting its status as a core mixed-use hub and ongoing handovers of high-rise projects, while JVC and Arjan continued to attract mid-market buyers seeking relative affordability. DXB Interact, which compiles DLD data, has previously highlighted that JVC has been among the leading submarkets for new supply in 2025, with more than 2,400 units completed in the first quarter alone.
| Area | Weekly Transactions | Weekly Volume (AED M) | Indicative Avg Price/m²* |
| Madinat Al Mataar | 246 | 543.5 | 15,120.2 |
| Business Bay | 223 | 693.2 | 29,082.6 |
| Jumeirah Village Circle | 217 | 487.9 | 24,542.8 |
| Dubai Investment Park 2 | 152 | 398.9 | 19,423.4 |
| Jumeirah Village Triangle | 118 | 153.9 | 14,887.9 |
| Arjan | 92 | 278.9 | 20,975.7 |
| Wadi Al Safa 5 | 85 | 191.6 | 15,763.4 |
| Dubai Land Residence Cplx | 83 | 79.5 | 13,101.4 |
| Dubai Sports City | 82 | 91.6 | 12,840.4 |
| Burj Khalifa | 68 | 191.4 | 28,362.0 |
*Prices shown are blended averages for all property types in each area during the week.
Off-Plan Premiums Widen Against Ready Stock
Charts in the dashboard show that off-plan homes commanded a substantial price premium over ready units during the week, with off-plan averaging close to AED 25,000 per square metre compared with roughly AED 13,000 for ready properties. Off-plan transactions also outnumbered ready deals by a meaningful margin, with more than 1,500 off-plan sales versus just over 1,200 ready transactions.
Also read: Dubai Cash Transactions Hit 54% in H2 2025
Community-level data highlight particularly elevated off-plan pricing in Business Bay and the Burj Khalifa area, where certain towers exceeded AED 35,000–40,000 per square metre, compared with mid-teen thousands in more suburban locations such as Dubai Land Residence Complex and Dubai Sports City. According to CBRE’s latest UAE Real Estate Market Review, prime districts in Dubai continue to see the steepest price gains, with average residential values rising more than 20% year on year through early 2024, driven by high-net-worth inflows and constrained supply.
According to CBRE Middle East’s latest market review, property transactions surged and rental prices climbed across key sectors — commercial, residential, retail, and industrial — driven by strong economic expansion and investor demand. Those dynamics provide context for the weekly numbers, where premium off-plan launches appear to be offsetting mild price softness in more mass-market segments.
Bedroom Mix And Buyer Profiles
The bedroom analysis in the dashboard points to robust activity in smaller units: one-bedroom apartments captured the highest number of weekly deals at just over 1,000 transactions, followed by two-bedroom units and studios. Prices stepped up steadily with size, from around AED 19,000–20,000 per square metre for one- and two-bedroom homes to above AED 28,000 per square metre for five-bedroom properties.
These patterns align with broader market research showing that demand in 2025 has been strongest in mid-income apartment segments catering to both end-users and yield-focused investors. Data from the Dubai Land Department’s open-data portal confirm that apartments account for the majority of registrations, while villa and townhouse volumes, though smaller, have recorded sharper price rises in established freehold communities.
Market Context And Expert Views
The weekly snapshot comes after several years of price and volume expansion in Dubai, underpinned by population growth, sustained foreign capital inflows and pro-investor reforms such as long-term visas linked to property investment. Research compiled by DXB Interact from DLD records shows that residential transaction volumes in the first half of 2025 reached about 94,000 deals worth AED 262.7 billion, up more than 20% in both volume and value terms from the prior year.
Also read: Dubai Property Market November 2025 Sets New Deal Record
Global analysts are now debating whether the market is approaching a plateau. Fitch Ratings and other agencies have suggested that a moderate cooling could emerge as new supply catches up with demand, though they do not anticipate a sharp correction given Dubai’s diversified economy and ongoing infrastructure pipeline. “We expect a transition from a rapid upcycle toward a more mature, steady-growth phase rather than a downturn,” says an expert.
For investors, the weekly decline of 1.6% in both transaction count and average price per square metre compared with the same period last year may reflect this gradual normalization rather than a shift in fundamentals. The strong 43.5% jump in total traded value for the week suggests that buyers are concentrating capital in larger-ticket assets and prime locations, even as some price metrics stabilize.
Implications For Indian Investors
Indian nationals remain among the largest foreign buyer groups in Dubai, alongside investors from the UK, Russia, China and GCC countries, according to DLD registration data and brokerage research. For Indian investors monitoring Dubai weekly off-plan property trends, the latest figures indicate several practical considerations.
First, the evident price premium on off-plan projects in Business Bay, the Burj Khalifa district and JVC underscores the importance of assessing project quality, developer track record and handover timelines before committing to high-priced launches. Reports from consultancies such as Knight Frank, CBRE and ValuStrat have repeatedly highlighted the dispersion in performance between well-located, high-spec schemes and secondary stock in over-supplied corridors.
Second, the strong transaction activity in smaller one- and two-bedroom units suggests that rental demand in these segments remains resilient, an important factor for Indian investors targeting income-generating assets denominated in dirhams. With Dubai’s residential rents having risen more than 20% year on year as of early 2024, according to CBRE, yield compression has been offset by capital gains in many central neighbourhoods. However, investors should stress-test rental assumptions against scenarios in which new supply moderates rental growth.
Third, currency considerations and cross-border tax planning remain critical. While the Indian rupee has at times been volatile, Dubai’s peg to the US dollar offers a degree of currency stability for outward investment, though buyers should factor in remittance rules, potential capital gains tax implications at home and evolving regulations on overseas investments. Leading advisory firms such as Deloitte and local wealth managers recommend bespoke structuring, including use of special purpose vehicles or family offices, for larger portfolios.
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