Dubai property market is bouncing back as the European buyers are relocating families to Dubai

Dubai property market is bouncing back as the European buyers are relocating families to Dubai

European buyers, mainly end-users shifting their families to the relative safety of Dubai, have been driving a significant rebound in the emirate’s property sector as costs hit an eight-year high, registering a 10% year-on-year rise in June.

A report by Property Monitor, a leading property portal, said European buyers came up as  “a key demographic recently, driving sales with most being end users.”

“Based on our conversations with brokers and industry experts, the motivation here is the relocation of entire families from Europe as opposed to the sole breadwinner living in Dubai. As further evidence of this trend, several schools have reported an uptick in enrolments of new residents,” said the report.

“What we’re seeing here is an evolution… where people are buying homes to live in after renting for a few years, then going on to sell those homes and upgrade to larger properties, creating a mature property cycle,” Lewis Allsopp, CEO of Allsopp & Allsopp, the estate agency, said.

In June, Dubai’s strong property market maintained its resounding recovery, with a 2.1% price hike, the eighth successive monthly rise as transaction numbers reported their best performance since December 2013 with 6,389 deals reported, said the portal.

Median prices in June were Dh928,848 for apartments, Dh1.7 million for townhouses, and Dh3.4 million for villas.

“On a monthly basis, prices spiked 2.1 percent and now stand at Dh924 per sq ft. They were last seen at these levels two years ago. Since bottoming out in November 2020, property prices have risen by 12.7 percent,” said the report.

“The recovery still remains uneven between communities with the strongest price increases seen in the market for villas and traditionally sought-after communities. However, we expect the recovery to balance out over the rest of 2021 and switch to a more tenable pace across Dubai,” said the report.

As per Dubai Land Department data, the Dubai property market registered Dh68 billion worth of deals in the initial 53 days of the year. For the full year, the projections are for Dh300 billion-plus.

Demand continues to remain strong for properties at the top end of the market with deals for properties worth more than Dh10 million recording yet another strong month.

In all, 111 deals were reported for this segment in June, slightly lower than the 117 in May, but still indicative of a buoyant market.

On a monthly basis, sales increased by 43.7% and touched a massive 174% from last June when purchasers first noticed attractive real estate deals amid easing movement restrictions.

“A block of delayed registrations in June for previous months was recorded from Azizi Developments, including off-plan and initial sales from the developer. While this was a notable contributor to the rise in sales volumes this month, even without these deals, June recorded one of its best performances for transactions since at least 2009,” said the report.

A total of 2,419 off-plan deals were reported in June, up 43.3% on a monthly basis. Completed properties took 62.1% market share in June 2021 versus 37.9% for off-plan, continuing a year-long trend as new launches stalled, and buyers demonstrated a preference for ready-to-move properties.

However, finished property transactions may begin to give up some of these market share gains as new project launches accumulate pace. Meanwhile, initial sales transactions—the first sale of a property from the developer for an off-plan or finished project—hopped 51.2 percent month to month to remain at 3,800 in June.

Mortgages for villas and townhouses rose month-on-month while loans for apartments fell, showing buyer preferences. Altogether, at 2,135, new loans for June decreased by 9.4% over the previous month, driven by a fall in bulk mortgages, which are primarily taken out for apartment buildings.

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