Dubai Telegraph - Dubai housing boom buoys buyers, burdens tenants

EUR -
AED 3.86685
AFN 71.942333
ALL 97.857868
AMD 409.586548
ANG 1.897514
AOA 959.054589
ARS 1055.620096
AUD 1.622742
AWG 1.88917
AZN 1.797901
BAM 1.950982
BBD 2.12585
BDT 125.819279
BGN 1.950681
BHD 0.396776
BIF 3109.749767
BMD 1.05277
BND 1.414001
BOB 7.291063
BRL 6.078061
BSD 1.0529
BTN 88.822225
BWP 14.383411
BYN 3.445591
BYR 20634.293986
BZD 2.122279
CAD 1.475178
CDF 3021.450065
CHF 0.930902
CLF 0.037098
CLP 1023.671627
CNY 7.629322
CNH 7.634773
COP 4639.547309
CRC 534.679567
CUC 1.05277
CUP 27.898408
CVE 109.994405
CZK 25.307751
DJF 187.488763
DKK 7.459229
DOP 63.503174
DZD 140.772339
EGP 52.354022
ERN 15.791552
ETB 131.271761
FJD 2.393842
FKP 0.830969
GBP 0.832341
GEL 2.889866
GGP 0.830969
GHS 16.713883
GIP 0.830969
GMD 74.221004
GNF 9075.759115
GTQ 8.127927
GYD 220.278098
HKD 8.194294
HNL 26.606294
HRK 7.509682
HTG 138.308436
HUF 409.826549
IDR 16746.624556
ILS 3.934102
IMP 0.830969
INR 88.81595
IQD 1379.193972
IRR 44326.885401
ISK 145.4717
JEP 0.830969
JMD 166.887857
JOD 0.746727
JPY 163.453614
KES 136.344082
KGS 91.053644
KHR 4248.487847
KMF 489.301203
KPW 947.492692
KRW 1472.683207
KWD 0.323821
KYD 0.877429
KZT 523.015887
LAK 23119.125103
LBP 94294.627672
LKR 306.32351
LRD 190.568471
LSL 19.09654
LTL 3.108557
LVL 0.63681
LYD 5.137313
MAD 10.518224
MDL 19.161588
MGA 4928.874574
MKD 61.523837
MMK 3419.356223
MNT 3577.312748
MOP 8.441214
MRU 41.854637
MUR 48.745134
MVR 16.265676
MWK 1825.708611
MXN 21.338002
MYR 4.707458
MZN 67.335164
NAD 19.09654
NGN 1768.611444
NIO 38.744318
NOK 11.653349
NPR 142.11738
NZD 1.794469
OMR 0.405322
PAB 1.05281
PEN 3.995533
PGK 4.238613
PHP 62.046013
PKR 292.692273
PLN 4.340792
PYG 8245.636751
QAR 3.839418
RON 4.976123
RSD 116.977483
RUB 105.999876
RWF 1451.928141
SAR 3.952442
SBD 8.81118
SCR 14.357341
SDG 633.238296
SEK 11.613797
SGD 1.414612
SHP 0.830969
SLE 23.792808
SLL 22076.067626
SOS 601.711169
SRD 37.299761
STD 21790.215563
SVC 9.212424
SYP 2645.116313
SZL 19.086047
THB 36.469074
TJS 11.212915
TMT 3.695223
TND 3.323293
TOP 2.465691
TRY 36.30334
TTD 7.128396
TWD 34.280257
TZS 2792.473228
UAH 43.415295
UGX 3885.404687
USD 1.05277
UYU 45.0097
UZS 13522.604862
VES 48.19987
VND 26766.679826
VUV 124.986982
WST 2.938903
XAF 654.337953
XAG 0.033835
XAU 0.000398
XCD 2.845164
XDR 0.801122
XOF 654.353454
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.085567
ZAR 19.091844
ZMK 9476.200113
ZMW 29.138317
ZWL 338.991543
  • BCE

    -0.1580

    27.152

    -0.58%

  • CMSC

    -0.0450

    24.52

    -0.18%

  • NGG

    -0.3960

    63.184

    -0.63%

  • BCC

    -0.4100

    137.77

    -0.3%

  • AZN

    -0.4400

    63.36

    -0.69%

  • RIO

    0.0400

    62.47

    +0.06%

  • GSK

    -0.1250

    33.335

    -0.37%

  • SCS

    -0.0400

    13.05

    -0.31%

  • JRI

    -0.0600

    13.2

    -0.45%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1300

    6.56

    -1.98%

  • VOD

    0.0150

    8.935

    +0.17%

  • RBGPF

    -0.5400

    59.65

    -0.91%

  • CMSD

    -0.0836

    24.26

    -0.34%

  • RELX

    -0.3550

    44.935

    -0.79%

  • BP

    -0.2000

    28.89

    -0.69%

  • BTI

    0.0410

    36.971

    +0.11%

Dubai housing boom buoys buyers, burdens tenants
Dubai housing boom buoys buyers, burdens tenants / Photo: Karim SAHIB - AFP

Dubai housing boom buoys buyers, burdens tenants

With rents soaring and properties selling fast, the expatriate hub of Dubai is in the throes of a housing boom bolstered by rich emigres that has buoyed investors and burdened tenants.

Text size:

Dubai, renowned for its towering skyscrapers and ultra-luxury villas, saw record real estate transactions in 2022, largely due to the influx of wealthy investors -- especially from Russia.

That helped to rake in more than $140 billion last year, marking a 76 percent annual rise in property market transactions for the Gulf city state, based on the latest official figures.

"The market in the last year has massively changed -- it is great for landlords, but it's not so good for tenants," said Jacob Fletcher of brokerage firm Betterhomes.

While it may not be as rich in oil as the UAE capital Abu Dhabi, Dubai lures expatriates with tax incentives, a lush lifestyle and cheap services provided by low-wage labourers from Asia, Africa and the Middle East.

In upscale Dubai neighbourhoods, where properties sell for more than $10 million, the 219 sales recorded in 2022 were "more than the total recorded between 2010 and 2020", said real estate consultancy Knight Frank.

Property prices in these prime locations jumped by 44 percent in 2022 compared with the year before, it said.

"The luxury market in Dubai was the fastest growing in the world but remains cheaper than main big cities," said Faisal Durrani, head of Middle East research at Knight Frank.

- Rich Russians -

Over a decade ago, Dubai's property market slumped due to a financial crisis.

The city is now a magnet for ultra-rich investors, including Russians fleeing the impact of sanctions after their country's invasion of Ukraine.

Russians were the biggest foreign buyers on Dubai's property market last year, according to Betterhomes.

British, Indian, Italian and French nationals are also among the top investors, the brokerage firm says.

Entrepreneurs, business executives, bankers and celebrities are among the wild assortment of clients rushing to clinch a home in one of the first cities to open up after the Covid-19 pandemic.

"We're seeing a lot of customers from Europe, who are wanting to move here and who are wanting to send their kids to school here, start business here," said Farhad Azizi, who heads property development firm Azizi Developments.

"So, we were seeing a lot of a lot of new clientele, and they've kept the market very busy."

Most of Dubai's population of more than 3.5 million is comprised of expatriates.

But the housing boom has made it more expensive for them to live in the city.

"There's about a 20 percent increase in the rental market this year compared to last year alone," said Fletcher of Betterhomes.

"The people that have lived here especially for a while are very not happy with how high the prices have gone."

- 'Take the hit' -

The real estate sector accounts for about a third of Dubai's economy.

The city's residents are used to volatility on the property market, with saw prices plummeting during the 2009 financial crisis as well as the pandemic.

With inflation spiralling worldwide, the rapid rise in rental prices in recent months has sparked alarm for many.

"The market is so insane. It's so expensive," said a Western expatriate who has lived in Dubai with her husband and son for five years.

The family must find a new home because their landlord has decided to sell the apartment.

"The market is very, very different. So, we are going to have to pay for something smaller and further out," she told AFP on condition of anonymity.

Social media networks are buzzing with disgruntled tenants who are locked in disputes with landlords over rental prices.

"What can we do? We've got to move so we have to take the hit," the expatriate said.

Y.Sharma--DT