Dubai Prime residential market set for world’s strongest growth in 2023
Prime residential prices in Dubai, which encompass the neighbourhoods of The Palm Jumeirah, Emirates Hills and Jumeirah Bay Island, are set to experience the strongest price growth globally.
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Dubai’s prime residential market has and continues to be a global outlier, with record price growth in 2022, albeit this has been from a low base.
Prime values are being fuelled by Dubai’s safe-haven status, a diverse range of international ultra-high-net-worth individuals in search of luxury second homes, combined with the government’s response to the pandemic, which has spurred business confidence.
Adding to the city’s appeal is its relative ‘affordability’, with prime homes transacting for around US$800 per square foot, making Dubai one of the most ‘affordable’ luxury residential markets in the world.
Overall residential prices trail 2014 peak levels by 21.4%.
Dubai's supply challenge
Dubai’s perennial challenge has been its ‘build-it-and-they-will-come’ mantra, which has resulted in more homes being built than the market is capable of absorbing.
In this cycle however, the number of new high-end homes planned is failing to keep pace with demand.
Bulgari Lighthouse on Jumeirah Bay Island (31 apartments) and Alpago’s Palm Flower on the Palm Jumeirah (11 apartments) account for the bulk of new high-end homes coming to the city’s prime neighbourhoods.
Outlook for 2023
Dubai’s mainstream residential market is expected to register price increases of 5-7% by the end of 2022 and a similar rate of growth is expected in 2023.
For prime Dubai, prices are likely to end the year around 50% higher than 2021. Supply is the other critical factor in our 2023 outlook, with just eight villas in Dubai’s prime precincts expected to be delivered by 2025.
Developers have not responded to the buoyancy in demand as we have seen in past cycles and with supply remaining limited and demand for luxury waterfront continuing to strengthen, our 2023 prime residential forecast of 13.5% is supported by a clear demand-supply imbalance as well as a positive economic backdrop.
Indeed, the UAE is expected to have one of the world’s fastest growing economies in the world in 2022. A return to steady and sustainable growth will instil confidence in homeowners and investors alike.
Our outlook is not without its risks. Dubai is a world city and as such is to an extent vulnerable to global macroeconomic conditions. With increasing global economic uncertainty, Dubai is once again emerging as a safe haven destination, just as it did during the height of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Prime global residential markets
Across the 25 cities tracked, we expect prime residential prices to rise by 2.0% on average in 2023, down from 2.7% predicted six months ago.
Despite this slowdown, aggregate growth in 2023 would still be higher than that recorded in six of the last ten years.
After two years in which the pandemic fuelled a surge in house prices in most global cities, the landscape is now shifting.
Money is becoming more expensive, geopolitics more complex and China is no longer powering the world’s economy. Homeowners are having to grapple with the unpredictability of soaring inflation, the rising cost of debt and higher taxes.
Although prime markets are more insulated to the fallout from higher mortgage costs, they’re not immune.
The transition from a sellers to a buyer’s market is already underway across many prime residential markets. But prime residential prices would need to dip by 30-40% in some cities for prices to return to their pre-pandemic levels of 2019.
For more information, please contact Faisal Durrani.