Elite Merit Real Estate · Market Intelligence

Dubai Real Estate
Market Report

June 2026
Liquidity Returns: Volume Rebounds as Prices Keep Cooling

An institutional-grade monthly analysis of the Dubai residential and commercial real estate market. June is best characterised as a volume rebound with continued price cooling — a two-speed re-acceleration. After May's buyer–seller standoff, registered transaction activity surged back (combined volume +35% MoM; cash-sale volume +31%), led by affordable and off-plan stock. At the same time, achievable prices kept easing: the Property Monitor Dynamic Price Index slipped to 231.51 — its lowest reading since mid-2025, ~1.5% below the October-2025/March-2026 peak — and the majority of community median prices printed negative month-over-month. Liquidity and end-user participation returned faster than pricing power.

Report Period
June 2026
Primary Sources
DLD · Property Monitor
Prepared By
Elite Merit Real Estate
Data Cutoff
June 2026 registered transactions (exports 01 Jul 2026)
AED 48.04B
Combined · 18,631 props · +35% vol MoM
AED 32.63B
Cash Sales (13,758) · +31.3% vol
3,861
Mortgages · +49.3% vol MoM
74.7%
Off-Plan Share (Residential)
231.51
PMDPI (May) · −0.74% MoM The Property Monitor Dynamic Price Index is published with a one-month lag; the latest datapoint is May 2026.
Methodology & Disclaimer (Summary)

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 full monthly series, Sales Index, Rentals Index, segment, developer and commercial statistics), Elite Merit proprietary analysis, and supplemental research from Dubai Land Department, Gulf News, Arabian Business, Property Monitor, Fortune, Engel & Völkers, Mitchell's Commercial Realty 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 for the full reconciliation note). The PMDPI is published with a one-month lag — its latest datapoint is May 2026 (231.51). Gross rental yields are indicative, triangulated from cross-validated external benchmarks. Communities with fewer than ~20 transactions are flagged for statistical caution. June's MoM volume gains are measured against a depressed May base and should be read as a recovery in activity; the combined-value dip reflects May's one-off mortgage inflation, not weakening demand.

The full disclaimer, including risk factors and liability disclaimers, appears at the end of the report.

Two-Speed: Volume Up, Prices Cooling

June was a rebound month for activity. After May's buyer–seller standoff — when sales fell around 19% — transactions surged back: combined registered volume rose 35% MoM, cash-sale volume 31%, and mortgage registrations 49%. Roughly 18,600 properties changed hands, worth AED 48.0 billion. But the recovery has a clear character: it was led by affordable and off-plan stock, the average cash ticket fell to AED 2.37M, and prices kept easing. Many more deals, broader participation, softer pricing — a two-speed market where volume recovers ahead of price.

Combined Market Value
AED 48.04B
Cash + Mortgage + Gift · 18,631 properties
↑ +35.0% volume
↓ −7.2% value The value dip is largely an artefact of May's mortgage total having been inflated by ~AED 7B of one-off land-collateral registrations. On a cleaner basis (cash sales), value rose +10.9% MoM.
Cash-Sale Value (Clean Basis)
AED 32.63B
13,758 properties · avg AED 2.37M
↑ +10.9% value · +31.3% volume
PMDPI (May 2026, Latest)
231.51
Lowest since mid-2025 · −1.50% vs peak
↓ −0.74% MoM · +4.78% YoY
Off-Plan Share (Residential)
74.7%
Title Deed 25.3% · off-plan eased from 75.5%
Launch-led, slightly easing
▲ Speed One — Volume Rebounding

Liquidity Returned Decisively

Cash volume +31%, mortgage volume +49%, gift volume +37% MoM. The rebound was led by affordable and off-plan stock — Madinat Al Mataar recorded 2,577 cash deals and Azizi registered 3,388 transactions. The return of mortgage-financed buyers is the healthiest signal: genuine end-user confidence, not just off-plan speculation.

+35.0%
Combined volume MoM
▼ Speed Two — Prices Cooling

Achievable Prices Kept Easing

The PMDPI slipped to 231.51 — a second consecutive monthly decline, ~1.5% below the Oct-2025/Mar-2026 peak of 235.03 — and the majority of community median prices printed negative MoM. Prime apartments led the declines (Madinat Jumeirah Living −6.66%, JBR −4.21%, Bluewaters −4.17%); value apartments and prime villas still gained.

−0.74%
PMDPI MoM (May 2026 datapoint)
Combined Registered Volume — Apr → Jun
The dip-and-rebound (properties, all procedures)
PMDPI — Recent Months
Prices easing while volume rebounds (index, base 100 = Jan 2008)
Key Market Signals — June 2026
Recovery signals vs unresolved pressure points
Recovery Signals
Broad volume recovery. Cash +31%, mortgage +49%, gift +37% MoM — liquidity returned across the board after May's standoff.
End-user re-engagement. The mortgage-volume surge and the near-doubling of ready townhouse transactions (600 vs 283) indicate genuine end-user and family-buyer demand.
Value & prime-villa momentum. Majan +7.84%, Liwan +5.04%, Al Khail Heights +2.87%, Jumeirah Islands +7.27%, Sobha Hartland villas +7.15% — clear pockets of price strength.
Commercial strength. 1,154 commercial sales (AED 7.03B) and 22,613 leases (AED 1.57B annual) point to durable business formation and occupier demand.
Pressure Signals
Single-developer concentration. Azizi registered 3,388 deals — more than 4× the next developer. Headline volume is increasingly hostage to one launch pipeline.
Prime price erosion. Jumeirah Bay Island −18.33% over 3 months; Madinat Jumeirah Living −12.13%; Dubai Festival City −11.00%. Prime price discovery is not yet complete.
Lower-ticket rebound. Average cash ticket fell to AED 2.37M (from AED 2.81M). A volume rebound without value recovery pressures per-transaction economics.
Rents softening MoM. Most communities posted negative last-month rent changes; prime apartment rents −2% to −3%. Yields compress where rents fall faster than prices.
Directional View — June 2026
The weight of the data supports a constructive consolidation — liquidity and end-user confidence returned in June, underlying demand continues to recover, and the price cooling is orderly and consistent with a mature cycle digesting the 2024–2025 gains. It is a recovery in activity ahead of a recovery in price. This environment rewards realistic, valuation-aware pricing, disciplined segment selection (value and prime villas over prime apartments for now), and decisive action where momentum and negotiating leverage align.

May vs June — Liquidity Returns

DLD area-list exports on the de-duplicated basis (by-project files; see Methodology for the reconciliation). Combined Cash + Mortgage + Gift across all property types (land, building/villa, units). June's mortgage book is far cleaner than May's — the largest single mortgage is AED 0.39B (Nad Al Shiba Third), versus May's two ~AED 7B land-collateral mega-entries.

Cash Sales (Sale / بيع)
AED 32.63B
13,758 properties · 1,900+ projects · avg AED 2.37M
↑ +10.9% value · +31.3% volume
Mortgages (Rahn / الرهن) The −39.8% value drop reflects the absence of May's ~AED 7B land-collateral distortion, not weakening demand. The +49% volume surge is the genuine signal — financed end-user activity recovered. Land is still 54% of mortgage value.
AED 10.54B
3,861 properties · avg AED 2.73M · largest single AED 0.39B
↑ +49.3% volume
↓ −39.8% value
Gift Transfers (Hiba / هبة)
AED 4.87B
1,012 properties · excluded from pricing
↑ +37.3% volume · +1.5% value
Combined Total
AED 48.04B
18,631 properties · all procedures
↑ +35.0% volume
↓ −7.2% value
May vs June — Side-by-Side
Toggle between value and volume; the volume view is the month's central message
Cash Sales — Asset Class
AED 32.63B total · units-led
Mortgages — Asset Class Land at 54% of mortgage value is normal this month — unlike May, when two land-collateral mega-deals inflated land to ~83%. June's largest single mortgage is AED 0.39B.
AED 10.54B total · clean book
Gifts — Asset Class
AED 4.87B total · land-heavy
MoM Comparison — May 2026 → June 2026
All numbers from DLD by-project exports
MetricMay 2026June 2026ChangeRead
Cash Sales ValueAED 29.43BAED 32.63B+10.9%Cleanest value metric — genuine growth
Cash Sales Volume10,47513,758+31.3%Standoff broke; liquidity returned
Mortgage ValueAED 17.51BAED 10.54B−39.8%May was land-collateral inflated
Mortgage Volume2,5863,861+49.3%Financed end-users returned
Gift ValueAED 4.80BAED 4.87B+1.5%Steady wealth restructuring
Gift Volume7371,012+37.3%Estate activity broadened
Combined ValueAED 51.74BAED 48.04B−7.2%Artefact of May's mortgage inflation
Combined Volume13,79818,631+35.0%Headline rebound
Interpretation
The headline of the month is a broad-based rebound in transaction volume. Cash-sale volume rose +31%, mortgage volume +49%, and gift volume +37% — the market's liquidity returned decisively after May's standoff. Crucially, this recovery came at a lower average ticket (cash average AED 2.37M vs May's AED 2.81M), signalling that the rebound was led by affordable and off-plan stock rather than the top end. The combined-value dip (−7%) is not a demand signal; it is the mechanical result of May's mortgage figure having been inflated by one-off land deals. On the cleanest metric — cash-sale value — the market grew +11% MoM. In short: more deals, broader participation, softer average pricing.

PMDPI: A Shallow, Orderly Cooling — Not a Reversal

New this month: the full monthly Property Monitor Dynamic Price Index series. The PMDPI is a fully automated house-price index based on the three-month moving-average median price per sq ft across 42 Dubai master communities, indexed to 100 (January 2008). After peaking at 235.03 in October 2025 (matched again in March 2026), the index has drifted lower for two consecutive months to 231.51 — roughly 1.5% below the peak. Annual growth remains positive at +4.78%.

One-Month-Lag Note
The PMDPI is published with a one-month lag; the latest datapoint in the June-2026 dataset is May 2026 (231.51). Independent commentary frames the 231.51 reading as "short-term cooling rather than a significant market reversal," consistent with this report's assessment.
PMDPI (May 2026)
231.51
Latest available datapoint
↓ −0.74% MoM
QoQ (3-Month)
−0.92%
Two consecutive monthly declines
Cooling
YoY (12-Month)
+4.78%
Annual growth still positive
Uptrend intact
vs Cycle Peak (235.03)
−1.50%
Peak: Oct 2025 / Mar 2026
Shallow correction
vs Jan 2008 Base
+131.5%
Base 100 = January 2008
Structural gain
Property Monitor Dynamic Price Index — Jul 2025 → May 2026
Monthly index values · peak 235.03 (Oct 2025, matched Mar 2026) · latest 231.51 (May 2026, −1.5% from peak)
Market Price Level — June 2026 (Property Monitor Segment Averages)
Combined Title Deed + Oqood unless noted
MeasureValue
All-residential average (Title Deed + Oqood)AED 1,752/sqft
Apartment average (combined)AED 1,812/sqft
Villa average (combined)AED 1,988/sqft
Townhouse average (combined)AED 1,069/sqft
Title Deed (ready) averageAED 1,498/sqft
Oqood (off-plan) averageAED 1,836/sqft

Trend Read

The index tells a clear story: after peaking at 235.03, the PMDPI has drifted lower for two consecutive months to 231.51 — a shallow, orderly cooling of roughly 1.5% from the peak, not a reversal. Annual growth remains positive (+4.78%). Set against June's sharp volume rebound (Section 01), this confirms a two-speed market: activity re-accelerating while achievable prices consolidate.

Community Corroboration

The community-level Sales Index (Section 12) corroborates the index read — the majority of communities posted negative month-over-month median-price changes in June even as deal counts surged. Prime waterfront apartments show the sharpest medium-term corrections; prime villas and value apartments remain the pockets of positive momentum.

Off-Plan 74.7% — Ready Market Gains a Touch of Share

Off-plan share eased marginally (May ~75.5% → June ~74.7%) — the ready market picked up slightly as end-user/mortgage activity recovered, but off-plan still dominates roughly three-to-one. Property Monitor's residential dataset independently confirms the DLD rebound: combined residential volume rose +32% and value +15% MoM.

Residential Registration Split — June 2026
Ready market share edged up as financed buyers returned
Off-Plan Share Trajectory
March → June 2026 · first monthly easing since March
Title Deed (Ready) vs Oqood (Off-Plan) — Residential, June 2026
Property Monitor
SegmentVolume (TD)Value (TD)AED/sqft (TD)Volume (Oqood)Value (Oqood)AED/sqft (Oqood)
Overall3,164AED 7.97B1,4989,386AED 17.32B1,836
Apartment2,327AED 4.05B1,5818,657AED 12.94B1,874
Villa237AED 2.51B2,227223AED 2.65B1,809
Townhouse600AED 1.42B963506AED 1.73B1,194
Comparative Metrics — TD vs Oqood, and the MoM Rebound
Property Monitor residential basis
MetricTitle Deed (Ready)Oqood (Off-Plan)Delta
Volume share3,164 (25.3%)9,386 (74.7%)~3× Oqood
Total valueAED 7.97BAED 17.32B~68% of residential value
Avg transactionAED 2,519,114AED 1,844,869Smaller off-plan tickets
Avg AED/sqft1,4981,836~23% Oqood premium
MoM Rebound — Residential Volume (Property Monitor Basis)
MetricMay 2026June 2026Change
Combined residential volume9,49812,550+32.1%
Combined residential valueAED 21.95BAED 25.29B+15.2%
Apartment volume8,46310,984+29.8%
Interpretation
Off-plan remains the engine (74.7% of volume, ~68% of value), but the ready market's modest share gain — and the +49% jump in mortgage registrations — indicate that end-user and financed demand re-entered the market in June, the healthiest feature of the month. The Oqood price premium over Title Deed widened to ~23% per sq ft (1,836 vs 1,498), reflecting the affordable, small-format nature of June's off-plan launches — the average off-plan apartment measured just 740 sqft.

Compact Stock Anchors the Rebound

Property Monitor combined apartment segment (Title Deed + Oqood), June 2026: 10,984 transactions / AED 16.98B / avg AED 1,812/sqft. Apartments are the liquidity engine (~88% of residential transactions), and June's rebound was concentrated in the compact core.

Apartment Bedroom Mix — Combined (TD + Oqood)
Share of 10,984 apartment transactions
Apartment Configuration Detail — June 2026
Combined TD + Oqood · average prices shown per basis
ConfigurationTransactionsShareAvg Price (TD)Avg Price (Oqood)
Studio4,30439.2%AED 700,596AED 693,201
1 Bedroom4,05236.9%AED 1,174,786AED 1,417,971
2 Bedroom2,08018.9%AED 2,284,161AED 2,528,510
3 Bedroom4714.3%AED 4,126,393AED 4,870,351
4 Bedroom570.5%AED 9,123,398AED 20,987,158
5 Bedroom70.1%AED 23,820,000AED 135,000,000
Key Insight
Studios and one-bedroom apartments together are ~76% of apartment volume — the compact, investor- and end-user-oriented core that anchors Dubai's transaction liquidity. June's rebound was concentrated here: the average off-plan apartment measured just 740 sqft. Larger and prime configurations (3-bed and up) remain a small share of volume but a disproportionate share of value, and continue to set headline price records at the very top of the market.

Apartments, Villas & Townhouses — Side By Side

Three Title-Deed (ready) segments, switchable via tabs. Apartments are the liquidity engine, villas anchor wealth-shelter pricing, and townhouses — whose ready volume nearly doubled this month — are the accessible family pathway.

Volume
2,327
Title Deed apartments
Total Value
AED 4.05B
Ready apartment market
Avg Ticket
AED 1.74M
Avg BUA 1,011 sqft
Avg AED/sqft
1,581
Ready apartment average
Apartment Bedroom Mix
TD apartment transactions by configuration
Avg AED/sqft by Bedroom
Premium gradient by configuration
Bedroom Mix Detail — Title Deed Apartments
Property Monitor, June 2026
Bedroom TypeTransactionsAvg Price (AED)Avg AED/sqft
Studio536700,5961,446
1 Bedroom9381,174,7861,462
2 Bedroom6592,284,1611,701
3 Bedroom1564,126,3932,005
4 Bedroom339,123,3982,424
5 Bedroom523,820,0003,668
Read
Ready apartment liquidity is concentrated in studios, 1- and 2-bedroom stock (2,133 of 2,327 transactions). The AED/sqft gradient rises steeply with configuration — from AED 1,446 (studio) to AED 3,668 (5-bedroom) — reflecting the premium buildings in which larger ready units transact. The full apartment price/sqft ranking across ~57 communities appears in the Community Sales Index (Section 12).
Volume
237
Title Deed villas
Total Value
AED 2.51B
Ready villa market
Avg Ticket
AED 10.58M
Avg BUA 4,717 sqft · avg plot 7,031 sqft
Avg AED/sqft
2,227
Premium to apartments
Villa Bedroom Mix
TD villa transactions by configuration
Avg Ticket by Bedroom
AED millions
Bedroom Mix Detail — Title Deed Villas
Property Monitor, June 2026
Bedroom TypeTransactionsAvg Price (AED)Avg AED/sqft
2 Bedroom56,880,0002,558
3 Bedroom435,894,7601,751
4 Bedroom569,899,4592,278
5 Bedroom4413,867,7872,496
6 Bedroom1623,431,1882,504
7 Bedroom110,500,0001,457
Read
The ready villa market remains a premium-to-ultra-prime segment — average ticket AED 10.58M, with 4- and 5-bedroom homes the core and a long tail into AED 23M+ trophy villas (6-bedroom average AED 23.43M). Prime villa enclaves were among June's firmest performers — Jumeirah Islands +7.27%, Sobha Hartland villas +7.15%, Palm Jumeirah Garden Homes +5.49% MoM.
Volume
600
Title Deed townhouses
↑ Nearly 2× May (283)
Total Value
AED 1.42B
Ready townhouse market
Avg Ticket
AED 2.36M
Avg BUA 2,643 sqft · avg plot 2,652 sqft
Avg AED/sqft
963
Family pathway pricing
Townhouse Bedroom Mix
TD townhouse transactions by configuration
Avg Ticket by Bedroom
AED millions
Bedroom Mix Detail — Title Deed Townhouses
Property Monitor, June 2026
Bedroom TypeTransactionsAvg Price (AED)Avg AED/sqft
1 Bedroom4730,6501,037
2 Bedroom263,124,1141,820
3 Bedroom2482,318,4551,028
4 Bedroom2822,111,502803
5 Bedroom243,786,6251,197
6 Bedroom53,693,6001,013
7 Bedroom29,625,0001,285
Segment Highlight
Townhouse volume nearly doubled the ready count vs May (600 vs 283 title-deed townhouses) — the clearest sign of the family-buyer segment re-engaging. The 3- and 4-bedroom bands (88% of volume) around AED 2.1–2.3M define the accessible family-home market.

May → June: Gainers & Losers

Property Monitor Sales Index, community-level median AED/sqft, "last-month" column (May 2026 → June 2026). In June the majority of communities printed negative month-over-month median-price changes, with prime apartments leading the declines. Gains concentrated in value/mid apartments and select prime villas. Small-sample communities are flagged with an asterisk.

Community MoM Price Movers — Diverging View
Gainers in green, losers in red · sorted by MoM change · median AED/sqft basis
Key MoM Signal
Prices remained the soft side of the two-speed market. Prime apartments led the declines (Madinat Jumeirah Living −6.66%, JBR −4.21%, Bluewaters −4.17%, Palm Jumeirah −3.74%, DIFC −2.90%, Dubai Marina −2.45%). Gains were concentrated in value/mid apartments (Majan +7.84%, Liwan +5.04%, Al Khail Heights +2.87%, Dubai Sports City +2.25%) and select prime villas (Jumeirah Islands +7.27%, Sobha Hartland +7.15%, Palm Jumeirah Garden Homes +5.49%). The message is consistent all year: capital appreciation is rotating out of prime apartments and into value communities and prime villas, even as headline transaction volume recovers.

Where June's Cash Concentrated

DLD Cash (Sale) by-project export. "Non-Project" entries denote land/whole-asset registrations outside a named development — episodic, not broad demand. Click column headers to sort.

Top Projects by Cash-Sale Value — June 2026
AED millions · DLD cash sales
Top Projects by Transaction Value — DLD Cash Sales, June 2026
Sortable · click a column header
ProjectPropertiesTotal Value (AED M)Avg per Unit (AED)
Um Suqaim First (Non-Project)5735147,000,000
ELTIERA VIEWS2546992,752,000
Business Park (Non-Project)1575575,000,000
AZIZI VENICE 14731558763,000
Cedarwood Estates2246621,182,000
Saih Shuaib 3 (Non-Project)4459114,750,000
Dubai Industrial City (Non-Project)1043643,600,000
Eden Hills838047,500,000
Hayat 1723645,056,000
Bugatti Residences by Binghatti535270,400,000
THE MERIVA COLLECTION492635,367,000
Lumena Alta by Omniyat1325219,385,000
Volume Juggernaut

AZIZI VENICE 14 — 731 units

Compact, sub-AED 1M off-plan apartment stock (average AED 763K per unit). Up from 508 units in May; the single clearest driver of June's affordable-led rebound. ELTIERA VIEWS (254 units, ~AED 2.75M average) added mid-market breadth.

Ultra-Luxury Active

Bugatti & Lumena Alta

The ultra-luxury branded-residence segment stayed active at the top — Bugatti Residences by Binghatti at AED 70.4M average per unit and Lumena Alta by Omniyat at AED 19.4M. Cedarwood Estates and Eden Hills carried premium villa/estate demand in the AED 21–48M-per-home range.

Episodic Land

Non-Project Parcels

Um Suqaim First, Business Park, Saih Shuaib 3 and Dubai Industrial City are large single-asset land registrations (AED 44M–575M per line) — episodic transactions, not indicative of broad demand.

Madinat Al Mataar — The Volume Epicentre

DLD by-Community exports, parent-area rows only (child-project rows excluded to avoid double-counting). Madinat Al Mataar (Dubai South / Al Maktoum airport corridor) recorded 2,577 cash deals — driven by AZIZI VENICE and adjacent affordable off-plan supply — embodying the affordable-led nature of June's rebound.

Cash Sales by Community — Top 10, June 2026
Sortable · parent-area rows only
CommunityPropertiesTotal Value (AED M)Avg Price (AED)
Madinat Al Mataar Volume epicentre2,5772,7571,070,000
Business Bay4722,2034,667,000
Jumeirah Village Circle7631,0081,321,000
Business Park1398546,144,000
Palm Jumeirah918429,253,000
Al Thanyah Fifth2888312,885,000
Palm Deira2148123,794,000
Burj Khalifa1547885,117,000
Al Hebiah Fifth3667842,142,000
Jabal Ali First5397761,440,000
Mortgages by Community — Top 10, June 2026
Sortable · parent-area rows only · largest single entry Nad Al Shiba Third (AED 390M)
CommunityPropertiesTotal Value (AED M)
Business Bay252645
Palm Jumeirah48490
Emirates Living54453
Dubai Marina373448
Nad Al Shiba Third12390
Jumeirah Village Circle290384
Meydan One213355
Dubai Hills85320
Al Hebiah Fifth143296
Dubai Investment Park First22258
Financed-Demand Read
The mortgage top-10 is dominated by established end-user communities — Business Bay, Dubai Marina (373 properties), JVC (290), Emirates Living, Dubai Hills — consistent with the +49% mortgage-volume surge being a genuine end-user re-engagement signal rather than land-financing noise.
Gift Transfers by Community — Top 10, June 2026
Sortable · excluded from pricing analysis
CommunityPropertiesTotal Value (AED M)
Al Mamzer2446
Jumeira Bay4403
Burj Khalifa85246
Business Bay79215
Palm Jumeirah18211
Palm Deira8208
City Walk37199
Dubai Creek Harbour73184
Jabal Ali Industrial First5171
Al Satwa47128

Azizi's Dominance Intensified Dramatically

Property Monitor Developer Statistics (registered Title Deed + Oqood transactions), with developer names provided directly in the export. At 3,388 registrations, Azizi more than doubled its May volume (1,601) and is now more than 4× the next developer. Emaar leads on value (AED 3.44B, avg AED 4,364/sqft) — the barbell persists.

Top Developers — June 2026
Toggle between registration volume and total sales value · Azizi ≈4× the next developer by volume
Top Developers — Combined by Volume, June 2026
Property Monitor developer statistics
RankDeveloperVolumeTotal Sales (AED)Avg AED/sqft
1Azizi Concentration watch3,3882,889,000,000853
2DAMAC Properties8411,854,000,000~1,360
3Binghatti8221,468,000,0001,786
4Emaar7893,443,000,0004,364
5Nakheel4451,096,000,0002,462
6Ellington Properties4381,263,000,0002,884
7Reportage Real Estate343409,000,0001,193
8Wasl308967,000,0003,139
9Samana Developers273286,000,0001,049
10Imtiaz Developments233401,000,0001,721
11Sobha Group218607,000,0002,785
Off-Plan (Oqood) Leaders by Volume
Property Monitor
RankDeveloperVolumeTotal Sales (AED)
1Azizi3,3882,889,000,000
2Binghatti8221,468,000,000
3Emaar5291,656,000,000
4DAMAC Properties490665,000,000
5Ellington Properties4381,263,000,000
6Wasl285497,000,000
Concentration Risk — Tied to Risk Signals (Section 14)
One developer now shapes headline volume
Azizi's affordable off-plan programme (AZIZI VENICE and adjacent) is the primary engine of June's volume rebound and the concentration story of the month. With one developer accounting for a large share of monthly primary volume, headline transaction counts are increasingly sensitive to a single launch pipeline. Any disruption would sharply dent market-wide volume optics. Monitor Azizi delivery and absorption closely. The top three by volume (Azizi, DAMAC, Binghatti) account for over 5,000 registrations.
Barbell Read
Two distinct leaderboards persist. Azizi leads volume with compact, investor-friendly affordable stock (avg AED 853/sqft); Emaar leads value (AED 3.44B across 789 deals at avg AED 4,364/sqft). DAMAC and Binghatti sit in between on both axes. The June market is barbell-shaped — high-volume affordable on one end, high-value prime on the other.

Contracts Up, Rents Softening — Tenant-Favourable

Property Monitor Rentals Index and rental contract statistics (DLD-registered tenancy contracts, June 2026). Rental contract volume rose ~+9.2% MoM (May 32,903 → June 35,920), reinforcing that occupier and end-user demand strengthened alongside the sales rebound — while most communities printed negative last-month rent changes.

Residential Contracts
35,920
AED 3.22B total annual rent · avg AED 89,747
↑ ~+9.2% MoM
Apartment
31,954
AED 2.32B · avg AED 70,996 rent... avg AED 72,755 · AED 84/sqft
Volume backbone
Villa
2,128
AED 597.1M · avg AED 280,595 · AED 85/sqft
Premium leasing
Townhouse
1,838
AED 301.8M · avg AED 164,188 · AED 73/sqft
Family segment
Gross Yield Context — Indicative
Citywide average gross residential yield: ~6.5% (apartments ~7.1%; villas materially lower). Value communities anchor yield-focused demand at 7–9% gross; prime/ultra-prime waterfront compresses to 3–5%. Source: GlobalPropertyGuide / Engel & Völkers (2026). The Property Monitor community-level Yield Index is not provided as a discrete figure in this month's source set; yields above are cross-validated external benchmarks and are indicative.
Apartment Rental Index — Selected Communities
Avg rent AED/yr · MoM & YoY heat-mapped
CommunityAvg Rent (AED/yr)Last MonthYoY (12m)
Al Barari867,458+0.35%+4.49%
Dubai Investments Park125,287+0.74%+5.38%
Discovery Gardens50,256+0.70%+6.40%
Al Khail Gate51,203+0.64%+2.25%
DAMAC Hills 2182,013+0.37%+4.57%
Al Jaddaf47,541+0.21%+3.34%
Al Barsha70,138−0.86%+1.08%
Arjan62,379−0.88%+11.77%
Business Bay152,890−1.90%−1.23%
Dubai Marina145,344−1.88%+1.35%
DIFC197,447−2.04%+0.99%
Dubai Creek Harbour161,381−2.05%+3.70%
City Walk274,541−2.78%+11.19%
Dubai Hills Estate211,050−3.12%+1.75%
Downtown Dubai153,430−3.15%−4.65%
Dubai Harbour227,091−3.10%−9.19%
Villa Rental Index — Selected Communities
Avg rent AED/yr · MoM & YoY heat-mapped
CommunityAvg Rent (AED/yr)Last MonthYoY (12m)
Dubai Investments Park Villas *Small sample — statistically unstable465,4650.00%+59.17%
Arabian Ranches247,2680.00%+1.42%
Al Furjan Villas269,406+0.20%−8.15%
DAMAC Hills 2 Villas106,815−0.94%+3.11%
DAMAC Hills Villas372,020−1.20%−1.12%
Dubai Hills Estate Villas308,548−2.37%+1.00%
Arabian Ranches 3283,885−2.39%+3.38%
DAMAC Lagoons Villas228,393−4.29%−30.72%
Rental Read
The rental market broadly softened month-over-month — most communities printed negative last-month changes while remaining positive year-over-year — mirroring the sales-price consolidation. Prime apartment rents led the declines (Downtown −3.15%, Dubai Harbour −3.10%, Dubai Hills −3.12%, City Walk −2.78%). Value communities (DIP, Discovery Gardens, DAMAC Hills 2) held or edged higher and continue to offer the strongest gross yields. Rising contract volume (+9%) against softening rents signals more supply reaching tenants — a tenant-favourable market this quarter.

Commercial Strengthened Alongside Residential

Property Monitor commercial sales and rental statistics (DLD-registered). Sales reached 1,154 transactions (AED 7.03B), up materially on May, and office/retail continued to command premium per-sqft pricing. Office remains the structural backbone — 18,499 office tenancies in June.

Commercial Sales
1,154
AED 7.03B · avg AED 9.03M... avg AED 6.09M · AED 2,691/sqft
↑ Up materially on May
Office Sales
333
AED 1.73B · AED 3,172/sqft
Premium pricing
Commercial Leases
22,613
AED 1.57B annual · AED 124/sqft
Occupier demand robust
Office Leases
18,499
AED 942.0M annual · AED 111/sqft
Structural backbone
Commercial Sales by Segment — June 2026
Title Deed + Oqood combined
SegmentVolumeTotal Value (AED)Avg AED/sqft
Commercial Overall1,1547,029,752,5132,691
Office3331,726,703,3083,172
Retail145623,632,8993,355
Hotel Apartment483645,965,0511,957
Whole Building17394,900,003777
Warehouse14,113,239733
Land (commercial)913,186,538,568
Commercial Sales — Title Deed vs Oqood
BasisVolumeTotal Value (AED)Avg AED/sqft
Title Deed3914,750,273,0912,582
Oqood7632,279,479,4222,732
Commercial Rental Market — June 2026
SegmentContractsAnnual Rent (AED)AED/sqft
Commercial Overall22,6131,566,288,195124
Office18,499942,018,236111
Retail2,482334,638,664227
Warehouse613113,434,03544
Showroom8029,389,383142
Labour Camp24421,819,731260
Hotel Apartment23227,025,805125
Commercial Read
Commercial activity strengthened alongside residential. Sales reached 1,154 transactions (AED 7.03B), up materially on May, and office/retail continued to command premium per-sqft pricing (AED 3,172 and AED 3,355). Commercial leasing was robust at 22,613 contracts (AED 1.57B annual), led by 18,499 office tenancies — a leading indicator of business formation and occupier demand that underpins residential rental support. Office remains the structural backbone of Dubai's commercial market.

Every Community, Every Window

Property Monitor achievable median AED/sqft with 12-month, 6-month, 3-month and 1-month (May→June) 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. Communities are grouped by primary product per the source data.

Heat-map legend: ≥+5% +2 to +5% 0 to +2% 0 to −2% −2 to −5% ≤−5%
Full Community Sales Index — June 2026
Showing top 15 of 93 communities
Community AED/sqft 12-mo 6-mo 3-mo 1-mo
Benchmark Read
The 12-month column remains broadly positive — most communities are up over the year — while the 3-month and 1-month columns capture the ongoing cooling: a clear majority of communities printed flat-to-negative monthly moves in June. Prime waterfront apartments show the sharpest medium-term corrections (Jumeirah Bay Island −18.33% over three months; Dubai Festival City −11.00%; Madinat Jumeirah Living −12.13%). Prime villas (Jumeirah Islands, Sobha Hartland, Palm Jumeirah Garden Homes) and value apartments (Majan, Liwan, Al Khail Heights) remain the pockets of positive momentum. This is consolidation within an intact annual uptrend — prices digesting the 2024–2025 surge while transaction volume re-accelerates.

Sentiment Has Largely Normalised

The regional conflict that disrupted sentiment in late February 2026 has receded further and now sits as a minor background risk. June's volume rebound is itself evidence that sentiment has largely normalised.

Geopolitical Overhang

A minor background risk

The late-February conflict remains technically unresolved, and residual uncertainty still shapes the pace at which participants commit — but it is no longer a material driver of monthly activity. House view: continue to monitor, but do not over-weight.

Underlying Demand

Strengthening structurally

June's broad rebound — cash, mortgage, and gift volumes all up 30%+ — reflects renewed participation from regional retail investors, resident end-users, and UAE-based corporates. The return of mortgage-financed buyers (+49% volume) is the healthiest signal, indicating end-user confidence rather than purely speculative off-plan flows.

Financing Discipline

Bank valuations still tight

Bank valuation discipline persists from Q2, keeping financed buyers price-sensitive and reinforcing the affordable/value tilt of current demand. Where a bank values below the agreed price, the buyer covers the gap in cash or walks.

Macro Frame — Cross-Validated
IndicatorReadingSignal
Q1 2026 DLD transactionsAED 252B, +31% YoYStrongest opening quarter on record; H1 2026 sustained well above 2025's pace
Jan–May 2026 residential sales~66,900 recordedOff-plan capturing ~74% of transactions
PMDPI (May 2026)231.51External commentary: "short-term cooling rather than a significant market reversal"
Two-speed dynamicVolume ▲ / Prices ▼Healthy mid-cycle digestion of the 2024–2025 gains rather than a downturn
Bank valuation disciplinePersisting from Q2Financed buyers price-sensitive; reinforces affordable/value tilt

What Could Bend the Recovery

Classified by priority. The emerging watch item this month is developer concentration — one launch pipeline now shapes a large share of headline volume.

High Priority
Single-Developer Concentration (Azizi ~3,388 deals)
One developer now accounts for a very large share of monthly primary volume. Headline transaction counts are increasingly hostage to a single launch/delivery pipeline; any disruption would sharply dent market-wide volume optics.
High Priority
Off-Plan Concentration ~74.7%
Off-plan continues to dominate. The 2026–2028 handover wave will test whether off-plan purchase prices hold at completion, especially in the compact, sub-AED 1M investor stock that led June.
High Priority
Prime Price Erosion
Prime apartments continue to correct (Jumeirah Bay Island −18.33% over 3 months; Madinat Jumeirah Living −12.13%; Dubai Festival City −11.00%). Prime price discovery is not yet complete and sets the confidence ceiling for the broader apartment market.
High Priority
Value-Led, Lower-Ticket Rebound
June's recovery skews to affordable stock (average cash ticket down to AED 2.37M). A volume rebound not matched by value/price recovery can pressure per-transaction brokerage economics and signals cautious, price-sensitive demand.
Moderate
Rents Softening MoM
Most communities posted negative last-month rent changes; prime apartment rents −2% to −3%. Yields compress where rents fall faster than prices.
Moderate
PMDPI Two-Month Decline
The index has eased for two consecutive months from its peak. Shallow so far, but a trend to watch for whether cooling deepens or stabilises.
Moderate
Mortgage Value Distortion (Historical)
The May-to-June value comparison is noisy due to May's land-collateral inflation; use volume and cash-value metrics for cleaner reads.
Moderate
Small-Sample Volatility
Several community prints (Nad Al Sheba, DIP villas, Jumeirah Bay Island villas, The Lakes) are statistically unstable; avoid trend conclusions from them.
Positive Signal
Broad Volume Recovery
Cash +31%, mortgage +49%, gift +37% MoM — liquidity returned across the board after May's standoff.
Positive Signal
End-User Re-Engagement
The mortgage-volume surge and the near-doubling of ready townhouse transactions indicate genuine end-user and family-buyer demand, not just off-plan speculation.
Positive Signal
Value & Prime-Villa Momentum
Majan (+7.84%), Liwan (+5.04%), Al Khail Heights (+2.87%), Jumeirah Islands (+7.27%), Sobha Hartland villas (+7.15%) — clear pockets of price strength.
Positive Signal
Commercial Strength
1,154 commercial sales (AED 7.03B) and 22,613 leases (AED 1.57B) point to durable business formation and occupier demand.

Eight Conclusions From the June Data

1 · June 2026 = volume rebound, prices still cooling. Combined registered volume rose +35% MoM (cash +31%) while the PMDPI eased to 231.51 (−0.74% MoM, −1.5% below peak). Liquidity returned faster than pricing power — a two-speed re-acceleration.
2 · Affordable & off-plan led the recovery. Madinat Al Mataar (2,577 cash deals) and Azizi (3,388 developer transactions, AZIZI VENICE at 731 units) drove the rebound. Average cash ticket fell to AED 2.37M — broad and price-sensitive, not top-heavy.
3 · End-user demand re-engaged. Mortgage volume +49% and ready townhouse transactions roughly doubling signal genuine end-user and family-buyer return — the healthiest feature of the month.
4 · Prime apartments remain the soft spot. Continued MoM and 3-month declines in prime waterfront apartments; capital appreciation is rotating toward value communities and prime villas.
5 · Off-plan still dominant (~74.7%), slightly easing. The ready market gained a touch of share as financed buyers returned, but off-plan remains the structural engine.
6 · Rents softening, volume rising. Rental contracts +9% MoM against broadly negative MoM rents — a tenant-favourable market with compressing prime yields and resilient value yields.
7 · Developer concentration is the emerging risk. Azizi's scale (>4× the #2 developer) makes headline volume sensitive to one pipeline. Diversification of the volume base is a watch item.
8 · Net assessment: constructive. Liquidity and end-user confidence returned, underlying demand continues to recover, and the price cooling is orderly and consistent with a mature cycle digesting prior gains — consolidation within an intact uptrend, not a downturn.

What We Are Watching Into Q3

  1. 1

    Volume Durability (July–September)

    Confirm whether June's rebound sustains or was a bounce off a depressed May base. Watch the cash-sale count specifically.

  2. 2

    Price Index Trajectory

    Whether the PMDPI stabilises around 231–232 or continues to ease determines if cooling is a pause or a trend.

  3. 3

    Prime Apartment Price Discovery

    Jumeirah Bay Island, Madinat Jumeirah Living, Dubai Festival City, Dubai Marina, Downtown — depth of correction sets the market's confidence ceiling.

  4. 4

    Azizi & Off-Plan Absorption

    Given the concentration, track Azizi launch cadence, delivery, and sell-through as the primary swing factor for headline volume.

  5. 5

    Mortgage & Bank Valuation Trend

    Sustained mortgage-volume strength (ex-land) would confirm an end-user-led recovery; watch lender valuation discipline.

  6. 6

    Rental Direction

    Whether the MoM rent softening stabilises through the summer leasing season, and the yield implications.

  7. 7

    Ready-Market Share

    A rising Title Deed share would signal a healthier balance between primary and secondary markets.

  8. 8

    Macro

    Regional stability, US Federal Reserve trajectory and USD/AED peg affordability effects, and oil-price stability.

Data Treatment & Source Hierarchy

DLD Transaction Figures

Sourced from DLD area-list exports. Headline totals use the de-duplicated basis — the by-project files, equivalently the by-community "parent rows only." The by-community exports list every transaction twice (a community subtotal row plus its nested project rows marked with the "▪/•" symbol), so summing the full column double-counts (≈2× the true total). By-project totals are used for headlines; by-community parent rows for community rankings (Section 08).

Procedure Mapping

Cash/Sale (بيع) = registered cash sales; Mortgage (الرهن) = financed registrations; Gift (هبة) = transfers, excluded from pricing analysis. June's mortgage total is not distorted by mega land-collateral deals (unlike May); its largest single entry is AED 0.39B.

PMDPI

Property Monitor Dynamic Price Index, full monthly series from the House Price Timeline dataset; published with a one-month lag, so the latest datapoint is May 2026 (231.51). MoM/QoQ/YoY computed from the series. Pricing metric throughout: AED per square foot.

MoM Price & Rental Sources

Property Monitor Sales Index "last-month" column (May 2026 → June 2026), median AED/sqft per community. Rental data from the Property Monitor Rentals Index and rental contract statistics. Gross-yield figures are indicative, drawn from cross-validated external benchmarks (the Property Monitor community Yield Index is not provided as a discrete figure this month).

Developer & Third-Party Data

Property Monitor Developer Statistics, with developer names provided directly in the export. Web/third-party context from Dubai Land Department, Gulf News, Arabian Business, Fortune, Engel & Völkers, Mitchell's Commercial Realty, GlobalPropertyGuide. Where folder data and web data cover the same metric on different scopes, both are reported with scope noted rather than blended.

Sample & Comparability Cautions

Communities with fewer than ~20 transactions may show amplified percentage changes and are flagged in-line. June's MoM volume gains are measured against a depressed May base (a consolidation month with ~19% lower sales); read June as a recovery in activity. The combined-value dip reflects May's one-off mortgage inflation, not weakening demand.

Liquidity Returns: What It Means for You

Prepared for Elite Merit Real Estate clients, partners, and stakeholders. June was a rebound month for activity — combined registered volume rose 35% MoM, cash-sale volume 31%, and mortgage registrations 49%; roughly 18,600 properties changed hands, worth AED 48.0 billion. But the recovery has a clear character: it was led by affordable and off-plan stock, the average cash ticket fell to AED 2.37M, and prices kept easing. The most encouraging signal is the return of mortgage-financed buyers, up 49% — genuine end-user confidence, not just off-plan speculation. Below, what the two-speed reality means for each client segment.

Income-Focused · Yield Strategy

Value communities still carry the yield story

Rents softened month-over-month across most communities while holding positive year-over-year, and rental supply is rising (contracts +9% MoM) — a tenant-favourable market. Prime apartment rents fell 2–3% MoM (Downtown −3.15%, Dubai Harbour −3.10%, Dubai Hills −3.12%). The strongest gross yields remain in the value segment (7–9%): Al Khail Heights, Dubai Investments Park, Discovery Gardens, DAMAC Hills 2, Liwan.

Practical implication: Favour affordable-to-mid-market communities for income; their yields are structurally supported and rents are steadier. Avoid over-allocating to prime waterfront for yield — those returns are compressing.
Capital Appreciation · Growth Strategy

Momentum sits in value apartments and prime villas

Price momentum has rotated firmly toward value apartments and prime villas. June's strongest single-month gains: Majan +7.84%, Jumeirah Islands +7.27%, Sobha Hartland villas +7.15%, Dubai Water Canal +5.78%, JVT villas +5.76%, Palm Jumeirah Garden Homes +5.49%, Liwan +5.04%. Prime apartments continued to reprice down (Madinat Jumeirah Living −6.66%, JBR −4.21%, Bluewaters −4.17%, Palm Jumeirah −3.74%).

Practical implication: Position in value/mid communities with positive momentum and in firm prime-villa enclaves. Contrarian entry into correcting prime apartments remains a higher-conviction, 24–36-month play — the prime correction may not be complete (Jumeirah Bay Island is down 18% over three months).
Ultra-Luxury & Trophy Assets

Trophy demand intact, migrating to new supply

The top end stayed active — Bugatti Residences by Binghatti (AED 70.4M avg) and Lumena Alta by Omniyat (AED 19.4M avg) transacted, and prime villas held or rose. Capital continues rotating toward new waterfront and branded supply.

Practical implication: Trophy demand is intact and migrating to new supply; prime villas remain the preferred wealth-shelter asset. Assess whether holdings sit in rotation-source (established ultra-prime apartments) or rotation-destination (prime villas, branded residences, new waterfront) communities.
Selling Environment

Better on volume, not on price

The selling environment improved on volume but not on price. More buyers are active, and mortgage-financed demand has returned — but they are price-sensitive, and bank valuations remain disciplined (a below-value appraisal means the buyer covers the gap in cash or walks).

Prime-apartment sellers in correcting communities (Madinat Jumeirah Living, JBR, Bluewaters, Palm Jumeirah apartments, DIFC, Dubai Marina, Downtown) should price to the current market and to a bank-supportable valuation. Momentum will not absorb overpricing.

Value and mid-market sellers in communities with positive momentum (Majan, Liwan, Al Khail Heights, Dubai Sports City, Jaddaf Waterfront) have more pricing power and a broader, active buyer pool — use it to transact at fair value.

Villa sellers in firm enclaves (Jumeirah Islands, Sobha Hartland, Palm Jumeirah Garden Homes, DAMAC Hills, The Villa) can hold asking prices; the villa segment is the firmest. Sellers in softening villa communities (The Lakes −7.84%, Dubai Hills villas −3.24%, JGE villas −2.28%) should adjust expectations.

Practical implication: The return of volume and mortgage buyers is your opportunity — but it is a market that rewards realistic, valuation-aware pricing. The window is best for well-priced stock in momentum communities; correcting prime segments require patience or price flexibility.
Apartment Buyers

A constructive entry environment

June is a constructive entry environment for end-users. More stock is transacting, financing demand has returned, and prime-apartment pricing continues to offer negotiating room. The market's core is compact stock (studios and 1-beds ~76% of volume; sub-AED 2M dominant).

Value corridor: JVC (AED 1,328/sqft), JVT (AED 1,272), Arjan (AED 1,378), Discovery Gardens (AED 1,006), Dubai Production City (AED 1,018) — competitive entry with strong rental infrastructure.

Premium-lifestyle balance: Dubai Hills Estate (AED 2,352/sqft), Sobha Hartland (AED 2,050), Business Bay (AED 1,881) — prime apartments currently offer the most negotiating room.

Momentum + affordability: Majan (+7.84% MoM), Al Khail Heights (+2.87%), Dubai Sports City (+2.25%), Liwan (+5.04%).

Villa & Townhouse Buyers

Family buyers are re-engaging — join them selectively

Villas are overwhelmingly premium (ready villa average AED 10.6M); townhouses are the accessible family route (3–4 bed around AED 2.1–2.3M). The near-doubling of ready townhouse sales shows family buyers re-engaging.

Family townhouses: value and mid communities (Town Square, Serena, Villanova, Reem) with re-engaging demand.

Premium family villas: Dubai Hills Estate (AED 2,632/sqft) and Arabian Ranches (AED 2,277) — both eased slightly MoM, a near-term entry window for patient buyers.

Momentum villas: Jumeirah Islands, Sobha Hartland, The Villa, DAMAC Hills — firm and rising.

July–September 2026: Durable Rebound or Bounce?

The summer quarter will show whether June's rebound is durable or a bounce off a depressed base. The highest-signal indicators:

  1. 1

    Transaction velocity

    Do volumes hold, or fade back?

  2. 2

    Price index

    Does the PMDPI stabilise near 231–232 or keep easing?

  3. 3

    Mortgage strength (ex-land)

    Sustained gains confirm an end-user-led recovery.

  4. 4

    Prime apartment price discovery

    Depth of the correction sets the confidence ceiling.

  5. 5

    Azizi / off-plan absorption

    The concentration makes this the primary swing factor for volume.

  6. 6

    Rental direction

    Whether MoM rent softening stabilises through the leasing season.

Our Assessment
The weight of the data supports a constructive consolidation — liquidity and end-user confidence returned in June, underlying demand continues to recover, and the price cooling is orderly and consistent with a mature cycle digesting the 2024–2025 gains. It is a recovery in activity ahead of a recovery in price. This environment rewards realistic, valuation-aware pricing, disciplined segment selection (value and prime villas over prime apartments for now), and decisive action where momentum and negotiating leverage align.

A Recovery in Volume, Not Yet in Price

June 2026 turned May's standoff into a broad rebound in activity. Registered volume rose about a third month-over-month, driven by affordable and off-plan stock and, encouragingly, by the return of mortgage-financed end-users. Yet the recovery is one-sided: it is a recovery in volume, not yet in price. The Property Monitor Dynamic Price Index eased for a second month to 231.51, and most communities recorded softer median prices — the market is digesting the extraordinary 2024–2025 appreciation even as its liquidity returns.

Strategically, June rewards precision over enthusiasm. Value communities and prime villas carry the price momentum; prime apartments remain in correction and offer the clearest buyer leverage; rents are tenant-favourable; and financing demand is the healthiest signal in the data. The main structural watch item is concentration — a single developer now shapes a large share of headline volume. For Elite Merit and its clients, the message is that the market is open for business again, but on the terms of a maturing cycle: realistic pricing, segment selectivity, and disciplined execution will separate outcomes over the coming quarter.

Terms of Use & Limitations

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 June 2026 (DLD exports and Property Monitor reports generated on or around 1 July 2026) and are subject to revision by the relevant authorities. The Property Monitor Dynamic Price Index is published with a one-month lag; its latest datapoint is May 2026. Month-over-month and year-over-year comparisons reflect the data available at the time of preparation and may be revised. June 2026 month-over-month volume gains are measured against a depressed May 2026 base and should be read as a recovery in activity; the combined-value change reflects a one-off distortion in May's mortgage total.

Certain figures are explicitly flagged as estimated, inferred, indicative, or affected by data-source limitations — including community-level gross rental yields (not provided as discrete figures in this month's source set and therefore triangulated from cross-validated external benchmarks). 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 and concentration 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.