Date: 25th November 2025
Last Edited: 25th November 2025
Author: LYM Real Estate
Price Cycle Analysis
Supply, Demand & Affordability
Global Macro & Migration
LYM Market Intelligence Series - 2025
Dubai’s property market has just come through one of its strongest runs on record. Residential prices rose about 19% in 2024 alone, with villas up slightly more than apartments, and transaction values hit new highs.That kind of performance inevitably triggers the same question over and over again:
"Is Dubai a bubble thats about to burst?"
The honest answer requires more than vibes, Twitter threads, or recycled 2008 stories. In this report, we strip the discussion back to what actually matters: bubble indicators, real numbers, and external analyst views.
Note: All referenced articles and data-sets are provided in the citations section at the end of this report.
A lot of “Dubai is a bubble” claims aren’t coming from spreadsheets; they’re coming from psychology.
Since 2020, prices have surged. Fitch estimates that Dubai residential prices are up around 60% from 2022 to early 2025, after years of strong demand. Knight Frank data shows villas now trade well above their 2014 peak, while apartments are only just starting to surpass that previous peak. To someone who remembers 2008, this feels uncomfortably familiar, even if the underlying market structure is very different.
The “bubble” narrative is usually based on:
This doesn’t mean people’s concerns are invalid. It just means they are not yet fully fleshed-out pieces of analysis. For that, we need proper diagnostics.
In macro and housing economics, you don’t call “bubble” just because prices are high. You look at a cluster of indicators that, together, signal fragility.
The classic checklist includes:
A bubble is when most of these lights flash red at the same time. So, what happens when we run Dubai through this filter?
There is no doubt that affordability pressure is rising. Rents rose about 16% year-on-year in Dubai according to one 2025 survey, while average salaries were projected to be broadly flat.That squeezes middle-income residents.
However, relative to other global hubs, Dubai still looks more affordable:
Signal: affordability is deteriorating at the margin, but Dubai doesn’t yet show the extreme price-to-income distortions seen in pre-crisis London or Hong Kong.
On the yield side, Dubai continues to stand out:
If Dubai were a classic bubble, we’d expect the opposite: paper-thin yields with investors happy to hold property purely for capital gains. That’s not today’s reality.
Signal: yields are normal-to-high, not bubble-level compressed.
Before 2008, Dubai and the wider UAE had looser lending and lighter regulation. That’s not the case anymore.
Post-crisis reforms introduced:
Fitch notes that, even after the recent boom, banks have reduced real estate loan exposure from about 20% of total loans to around 14%, precisely to avoid systemic risk. That’s the opposite of what you’d expect in a runaway bubble.
At the same time, mortgage usage is clearly increasing and will make the system more sensitive to interest rates and job losses than it was a decade ago. But compared to heavily leveraged markets in Europe or North America, Dubai is still relatively conservative.
Signal: leverage is a risk factor to monitor, but not at red-alert levels.
This is where the data gets more uncomfortable.
Fitch, Reuters and other sources highlight that around 210,000 new units are expected to be delivered over the next two years - roughly double the completions of the previous three years. Some estimates put 90,000+ apartments landing in 2025 alone. However, In LYM Real Estates estimation, this number is closer to 64,000 - still signifcant but not quite at the higher end of what is being reported.
At the same time:
So we have a genuine tug-of-war:
This doesn’t scream “long-term bubble”, but it does scream “some segments are at risk of overbuilding and a local correction.”
Signal: supply is the most credible near-term pressure point, especially for mid-tier apartment clusters.
The Financial Times recently noted that flipping accounted for roughly a third of resales at one point, dropping to around 20% as conditions tightened and more investors struggled to exit off-plan positions. At the very top of the market, ultra-luxury penthouses are seeing aggressive bidding from global UHNWIs, but that segment is tiny in volume.
So yes, speculation exists - particularly in off-plan and “hot” branded projects - but the data shows:
Signal: speculative pockets, but not a citywide mania.
Dubai’s housing demand is anchored by several real-economy pillars:
This is not a market where prices are floating in a vacuum above a stagnant economy. If anything, the macro risk is that the real economy temporarily slows while supply keeps arriving, leading to a cyclical correction - not the collapse of a hollow bubble.
Signal: strong real-economy connection; not a fake-growth environment.
Fitch’s official line is that Dubai faces a “moderate correction” of up to 15% in 2H 2025-2026, after a 60% run-up in prices since 2022 and with 210,000 units scheduled for delivery. They explicitly note that:
This is important: external, conservative institutions are not calling this a bubble, they’re calling it a hot market due for a cooling phase.
Signal: risk of a pullback is real; risk of a systemic meltdown is low.
If you zoom out and compare Dubai with other major cities, a more nuanced picture appears.
This doesn’t mean Dubai is “cheap” - it just means that, on a risk-return basis, the market doesn’t fit the usual bubble profile.
If we’re strict with definitions:
The data says:
However:
The honest verdict is this:
Dubai is not a hollow bubble, but investors should behave as if we are in the later innings of this cycle, not the first.
Given everything above, here’s how an analytical, not emotional, investor should respond:
In 2025, Dubai is not showing the structural weaknesses of a true real estate bubble. Yields remain healthy, leverage is contained, banking exposure is low, and the city’s economic and population growth continue to underpin long-term demand.
However, the market is also no longer in the early stages of its cycle. A significant supply wave, tightening affordability, and global macro pressures mean a moderate correction in certain segments is both possible and healthy.
For investors, the priority now is not panic - but precision: choosing the right communities, the right asset quality, and the right timelines.
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