On February 28, 2026, regional conflict escalated sharply. Within days, the Dubai secondary real estate market changed in ways that no data report fully captures — because the most important dynamics are not in the DLD transaction logs. They are in the conversations happening between buyers, sellers, and brokers on the ground.
This is our honest account of what we have observed over the past six weeks: the freeze, the standoff, the distress deals, and the two scenarios that will determine where this market goes next.
The market Dubai entered this from
Dubai entered this period from a position of genuine strength. According to CBRE, the market recorded over 206,000 residential transactions in 2025, up 18% year on year, with prices rising 13% annually as of Q4 2025. January 2026 alone recorded AED 72.4 billion in residential sales — the highest single month in the history of Dubai real estate.
That context matters. A market absorbing a geopolitical shock from a position of record strength behaves very differently from one absorbing it from stretched valuations and thin demand. Sellers who had watched their assets appreciate 60 to 75% since 2021 did not enter this crisis feeling vulnerable. They entered it feeling anchored.
AED 72.4B January 2026 — highest single month ever | +18% YoY residential transactions 2025 (CBRE) | +13% annual price growth Q4 2025 (CBRE) |
The freeze: what happened in the first two weeks
The first impact of the conflict was mechanical, not structural. Government offices, developer teams, and brokerages were physically closed during the week following the escalation. Transactions were not being rejected — they were not being processed.
Goldman Sachs data showed a 51% month-on-month decline in secondary market transactions in the first half of March. Secondary market volumes and values dropped over 50% year on year in the weeks that followed. The villa segment froze almost entirely — discretionary, high-ticket purchases deferred first.
This was a sentiment shock, not a valuation collapse. As one market analyst put it: prices in Dubai are ‘sticky’ in the short term because sellers do not immediately accept lower offers — they wait. What changes first is not the asking price but the willingness to negotiate, the time a property sits on the market, and the incentives required to close.
-51% secondary transactions month-on-month, first half of March (Goldman Sachs) | -50 to -54% secondary volumes and values year on year, early April |
The standoff: why the market is frozen
As the initial shock absorbed, a clear pattern emerged on the ground. Buyers came back — but not at pre-conflict prices. The expectation circulating among active buyers was a 25 to 30% discount from January and February pricing. That is not a negotiation. That is a rerating.
The majority of sellers refused. And they have the financial capacity to refuse. Dubai’s secondary market is dominated by cash buyers — 67% of resale activity involves no mortgage. Sellers who have owned for several years are sitting on assets that have doubled. Carrying costs — service charges, and in some cases modest mortgage payments — are manageable. There is no forced selling pressure for most of this group.
What resulted is a market in effective paralysis. The majority of sellers are conceding 5 to 10% from peak — a realistic reflection of changed conditions. Buyers want 25 to 30%. The gap between those two positions is not closing. Transactions have slowed dramatically, not because both sides have disappeared, but because neither side will move far enough to meet the other.
Prices in Dubai are sticky in the short term because sellers do not immediately accept lower offers. What changes first is not the asking price but the willingness to negotiate and the time a property sits on the market.
— Mitchell’s Commercial Realty, market analysis March 2026
The distress layer: rare deals, hungry buyers
Into early April, something new appeared: genuine distress deals. A small but growing number of sellers entering the market not to optimise their return, but to solve a liquidity problem.
The conflict did not only affect real estate. Businesses across hospitality, shipping, tourism, and services have been severely impacted. Revenue dropped sharply, costs continued, and some business owners found themselves needing to inject capital fast. When that capital is tied up in a property and the business is bleeding, the calculus changes entirely. These sellers are not anchored to January pricing. They need to close, and they will accept 25 to 30% below pre-conflict market — the number buyers have been demanding — to do it.
These deals are being absorbed instantly. Cash buyers who have been sitting on the sidelines, watching and waiting, are moving within hours of a genuine distress listing appearing. The appetite is there. The patience is there. The capital is there. What was missing was a seller willing to meet the price. The distress layer is beginning to provide that.
This is a thin layer of the market — these deals are rare. But their existence matters because they are the only segment where price discovery is actually happening at present.
5–10% discount most sellers will concede from Jan/Feb pricing | 25–30% discount most buyers are demanding | ~30% discount on rare genuine distress deals — absorbed instantly |
Two scenarios: who blinks first?
The paralysis cannot last indefinitely. One of two things will eventually resolve it.
In the first scenario, sellers blink. If the ceasefire holds but recovery is gradual — international flights normalise slowly, buyer confidence rebuilds incrementally, rental income stays below pre-conflict levels — carrying costs accumulate. The psychological anchor to January pricing erodes. A cluster of price adjustments from motivated but non-distressed sellers unlocks the market at 15 to 20% below peak, a number both sides could accept. Volume recovers, sentiment follows.
In the second scenario, buyers blink. If the ceasefire firms up, flights recover quickly, the regional economic mood improves through May and June, and competition for quality secondary stock returns before seller patience runs out, the 30% discount expectation starts to feel unrealistic. Buyers who have been holding out settle for 8 to 12% below January pricing and move. The standoff breaks from the demand side. This scenario is accelerated by each passing week of pent-up buying intent.
There is a third path that neither side wants to acknowledge: a prolonged standoff where distress deals remain the only real transaction activity, volumes stay suppressed through summer, and the price discovery process gets stuck for a full quarter or more. Not a crash. Not a recovery. A market waiting for a catalyst that takes longer than anyone expects.
We do not have a crystal ball. The next few weeks and months will tell us which of these scenarios is unfolding. What we can say with confidence is that the underlying demand for Dubai real estate has not disappeared. The buyers are there. The capital is there. The disagreement is not about whether Dubai is worth owning — it is about at what price, right now, in April 2026.
What this means for you
For sellers: the market has changed. Pricing at January levels will result in your property sitting. Sellers who need to move should price where the market actually is today — 5 to 15% below peak depending on asset quality and location. Sellers who can afford to wait may find that patience is rewarded if buyers blink first. The key question to ask yourself honestly is which camp you are in.
For buyers: your negotiating power is higher than at any point since 2022. The standoff sellers will not give you 30%, but the market is genuinely more negotiable than it was in January. The distress deals are real, rare, and move fast — if you are positioned with clean capital and quick decision-making, this is the most compelling entry point in several years. Do not wait for a perfect 30% discount that may never materialise at scale. A 10 to 15% reduction in a structurally sound asset is a real opportunity.
For investors already holding: secondary villa prices are still up 16% year on year despite everything. The structural case for Dubai — population growth toward 5.8 million by 2040, zero income tax, 6 to 8% rental yields, Golden Visa accessibility — has not changed. The crisis disrupts the trajectory. It does not eliminate the destination.