Arab News
Arab News, Sat, Feb 01, 2025 | Shaaban 2, 1446
UAE real estate market ends 2024 with record growth, led by Dubai, Abu Dhabi
Emirates:
The UAE’s real estate market ended 2024 on
a strong note, with Dubai’s residential sales soaring 30 percent year on year to
119 billion dirhams ($32.4 billion) in the fourth quarter.
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.
The UAE real estate market saw strong growth in
2024, driven by rising demand, limited supply, and increasing prices across
residential, commercial, retail, and industrial sectors, supported by new
regulations.
This trend is part of a broader regional shift,
with property markets in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the UAE implementing reforms
to better meet global investor demand.
For example, Saudi Arabia recently allowed
foreigners to invest in Saudi-listed companies that own real estate in Makkah
and Madinah, following a key decision by the Kingdom’s Capital Market
Authority.
“The UAE’s real estate market continue to attract
rising foreign investor interest, supporting record residential transactional
volumes across Dubai and Abu Dhabi during 2024. Commercial sectors also remain
buoyant, with demand largely outstripping supply, as reflected in the rising
occupancy and rental rates across the office, retail and industrial markets,”
said Matthew Green, head of research MENA at CBRE.
In the fourth quarter, residential transactions in
Abu Dhabi rose by 19 percent, while office occupancy rates in both Dubai and the
capital city hit 94 percent, pushing rents up by 15-20 percent annually due to
supply constraints.
“Amid these highly positive market dynamics, the
UAE government has moved to ensure the long-term sustainability of the real
estate market, by implementing several new regulations in recent weeks,” said
Green.
He said that these changes were aimed at improving
transparency through the Dubai Smart Rental Index, expanding the addressable
market via recent changes to Dubai’s designated Freehold areas, and cooling the
off-plan market through the UAE Central Bank’s amendment to lending regulations
on transactional set-up fees.
The UAE’s economic growth further fueled the
commercial market, with Abu Dhabi’s real gross domestic product expanding by 4.5
percent in the third quarter of 2024, driven by a 6.6 percent increase in
non-oil sectors. The rise in new business licenses and corporate expansions
drove strong tenant demand, particularly for premium office spaces, the report
added.
Residential sector
Dubai’s residential sector saw an 18 percent rise
in apartment prices and a 20 percent increase in villa prices, pushing average
values to 1,647 dirhams and 2,024 dirhams per sq. foot, respectively.
Transaction volumes soared, with total residential sales in 2024 reaching 434
billion dirhams, up 33 percent from 2023, the report noted.
Abu Dhabi’s residential market followed suit, with
apartment prices rising 11 percent and villa prices climbing 12 percent. The
capital’s sales activity was led by a 59 percent surge in ready property
transactions, while off-plan sales grew 5 percent but still accounted for 66
percent of total volume.
Rental contract registrations in Dubai rose 7
percent year on year, with renewal contracts up 9 percent and new registrations
increasing 5 percent. Despite rising costs, CBRE noted that tenants continued to
prefer lease renewals to avoid steep rent hikes.