Luxury Price Drops is now live on Instagram — catch drops, market highlights & more
Live Dubai
3,580 drops
−6.5% avg
49.8K watching
Market intelligence

Dubai real estate market data,
updated daily.

Price-per-sqft trends, days on market, drop-depth distribution, and tier breakdowns for Dubai.

Live · last updated
Active drops
3,580
+123 in past 24h
Average drop
−6.5%
Across active drops
Biggest % drop
−61.2%
11BR whole building · Damac Lagoons
Biggest drop
−AED 300.00M
Damac Lagoons · whole building
Total wiped
AED 2.50B
Across all drops
Neighborhoods
108
Scanned daily
Showing drops · last scan

Overview

Active drops
3,580
Average drop
−6.5%
Biggest drop
−61.2%
Total wiped
AED 2.50B
Avg size
3,445 sqft

Drops by area

Drops detected · last 14 days
123 62 0 05-3005-3106-0106-0206-0306-0406-0506-0606-0706-0806-0906-1006-1106-12
Top neighborhoods by drops
Downtown Dubai
299
Dubai Marina
165
Palm Jumeirah
149
Dubai Hills Estate
146
Dubai Creek Harbour (The Lagoons)
145
The Valley
140
Mohammed Bin Rashid City (MBR City)
139
Dubai Harbour
111
Business Bay
110
Dubai Land
103

Drops by tier

< 10%
2944
10–20%
577
20–30%
48
30–40%
6
40%+
5

Drops by bedroom count

Studio
50
1 BR
184
2 BR
879
3 BR
986
4 BR
913
5 BR
432
6+ BR
136

Top buildings · most active

Emaar Beachfront
Dubai Harbour · avg −6.0%
87
District 11
Mohammed Bin Rashid City (MBR City) · avg −6.0%
76
Villanova
Dubai Land · avg −5.0%
72
Al Furjan West
Al Furjan · avg −5.3%
62
City Walk
Al Wasl · avg −6.8%
57
Emaar South
Dubai South (Dubai World Central) · avg −6.1%
43
Nad Al Sheba 1
Nad Al Sheba · avg −6.6%
40
Residential District
Dubai South (Dubai World Central) · avg −5.6%
35

Avg price drop % by area

Falcon City of Wonders
9 drops
−11.5%
Liwan
5 drops
−10.5%
DIFC
25 drops
−10.0%
Mina Rashid
19 drops
−9.9%
Sobha Hartland 2
8 drops
−9.4%
Al Jaddaf
7 drops
−9.1%
Dubai Science Park
12 drops
−8.9%
Jebel Ali
52 drops
−8.8%
The Villa
13 drops
−8.8%
Al Wasl
98 drops
−8.7%
Dubai Internet City
5 drops
−8.5%
Meydan
27 drops
−8.5%

Drop volume by area · with avg $

Downtown Dubai
avg AED 404K
299
Dubai Marina
avg AED 401K
165
Palm Jumeirah
avg AED 1.65M
149
Dubai Hills Estate
avg AED 1.03M
146
Dubai Creek Harbour (The Lagoons)
avg AED 236K
145
The Valley
avg AED 311K
140
Mohammed Bin Rashid City (MBR City)
avg AED 769K
139
Dubai Harbour
avg AED 459K
111
Business Bay
avg AED 636K
110
Dubai Land
avg AED 331K
103
Al Furjan
avg AED 373K
99
Damac Lagoons
avg AED 3.49M
98

Price drop index · area & building

1. Downtown Dubai
299 drops · avg −6.3%
71
2. Dubai Marina
165 drops · avg −6.6%
45
3. Palm Jumeirah
149 drops · avg −6.9%
42
4. Dubai Hills Estate
146 drops · avg −6.5%
41
5. Dubai Production City (IMPZ)
4 drops · avg −22.1%
41
6. Mohammed Bin Rashid City (MBR City)
139 drops · avg −6.8%
40
7. The Valley
140 drops · avg −6.4%
40
8. Dubai Creek Harbour (The Lagoons)
145 drops · avg −5.1%
38
9. Business Bay
110 drops · avg −7.8%
36
10. Al Wasl
98 drops · avg −8.7%
35

Days on market vs drop size

0–30d
avg −5.0%
529
31–60d
avg −5.9%
888
61–90d
avg −6.3%
610
91–180d
avg −7.2%
1025
180d+
avg −7.8%
528

Explore all neighborhoods

Downtown Dubai
299 avg −6.3%
Dubai Marina
165 avg −6.6%
Palm Jumeirah
149 avg −6.9%
Dubai Hills Estate
146 avg −6.5%
Dubai Creek Harbour (The Lagoons)
145 avg −5.1%
The Valley
140 avg −6.4%
Mohammed Bin Rashid City (MBR City)
139 avg −6.8%
Dubai Harbour
111 avg −6.8%
Business Bay
110 avg −7.8%
Dubai Land
103 avg −5.6%
Al Furjan
99 avg −4.9%
Damac Lagoons
98 avg −8.0%
Al Wasl
98 avg −8.7%
Sobha Hartland
89 avg −5.6%
DAMAC Hills
83 avg −5.7%
Jumeirah Beach Residence
81 avg −6.5%
Dubai South (Dubai World Central)
81 avg −5.9%
Arabian Ranches 3
80 avg −5.4%
Tilal Al Ghaf
68 avg −5.3%
Jumeirah Village Circle
59 avg −6.4%
The Springs
57 avg −5.6%
Arabian Ranches
55 avg −6.0%
Jebel Ali
52 avg −8.8%
Mudon
50 avg −5.0%
Dubai Islands
48 avg −7.7%
Jumeirah Lake Towers
46 avg −5.6%
Nad Al Sheba
41 avg −6.7%
Zabeel
38 avg −7.2%
Reem
37 avg −4.9%
Jumeirah
33 avg −6.3%
Expo City
33 avg −8.0%
Umm Suqeim
32 avg −6.5%
Damac Islands
30 avg −5.7%
The Meadows
29 avg −6.8%
Jumeirah Park
28 avg −5.2%
Jumeirah Golf Estates
27 avg −6.0%
Meydan
27 avg −8.5%
DIFC
25 avg −10.0%
Palm Jebel Ali
25 avg −6.9%
The Acres
25 avg −7.2%
Dubai Sports City
23 avg −4.1%
Jumeirah Village Triangle
23 avg −6.4%
Town Square
21 avg −4.3%
The Oasis by Emaar
20 avg −4.6%
Damac Hills 2
20 avg −6.2%
Al Barari
19 avg −6.7%
Mina Rashid
19 avg −9.9%
Haven by Aldar
19 avg −5.1%
Dubai Investment Park (DIP)
18 avg −6.2%
Maritime City
18 avg −6.8%
The Wilds
17 avg −6.7%
Jumeirah Islands
16 avg −6.4%
Athlon by Aldar
15 avg −6.3%
The Lakes
14 avg −7.8%
Arabian Ranches 2
14 avg −4.3%
The Villa
13 avg −8.8%
Dubai Science Park
12 avg −8.9%
The Views
12 avg −4.9%
Serena
12 avg −3.0%
Bluewaters
11 avg −5.5%
Falcon City of Wonders
9 avg −11.5%
Culture Village
9 avg −7.0%
Motor City
9 avg −5.2%
Sobha Hartland 2
8 avg −9.4%
Green Community
8 avg −7.2%
Wasl Gate
7 avg −7.6%
Al Jaddaf
7 avg −9.1%
Sheikh Zayed Road
7 avg −5.8%
Al Barsha
6 avg −7.2%
Dubai Media City
6 avg −6.8%
Ghaf Woods
6 avg −6.3%
Bur Dubai
6 avg −6.2%
Dubai Internet City
5 avg −8.5%
Jumeirah Heights
5 avg −7.9%
Liwan
5 avg −10.5%
The World Islands
4 avg −13.3%
Dubai Production City (IMPZ)
4 avg −22.1%
Pearl Jumeirah
4 avg −13.9%
Greens
4 avg −5.4%
Al Mamzar
3 avg −12.2%
Dubai Silicon Oasis
3 avg −3.5%
Discovery Gardens
2 avg −7.0%
Liwan 2
2 avg −8.8%
Dubai Industrial City
2 avg −14.7%
Al Satwa
2 avg −2.0%
Living Legends
2 avg −12.1%
Al Warqaa
2 avg −5.1%
Mirdif
2 avg −10.1%
Arjan
2 avg −8.6%
Bukadra
2 avg −6.3%
Al Muhaisnah
2 avg −6.4%
The Hills
2 avg −3.1%
Umm Al Sheif
1 avg −14.8%
Deira
1 avg −18.3%
Al Twar
1 avg −13.3%
Emirates Hills
1 avg −0.9%
Barsha Heights (Tecom)
1 avg −5.6%
Al Quoz
1 avg −12.7%
Dubai World Trade Centre (DWTC)
1 avg −6.5%
The Heights Country Club & Wellness
1 avg −3.9%
Dubai Festival City
1 avg −4.2%
Ras Al Khor
1 avg −5.9%
Al Athbah
1 avg −3.0%
International City
1 avg −8.4%
City of Arabia
1 avg −4.8%
Damac Islands 2
1 avg −2.5%
Al Sufouh
1 avg −1.6%
Majan
1 avg −2.7%

Dubai real estate market data — how to read this page

This page tracks the Dubai luxury property market in real time using live listing data from Bayut — currently around 20,000 active listings, refreshed daily. Unlike a quarterly developer report or a portal's "average price" headline, the data here is built from the actual movement of asking prices: how many listings cut their price, by how much, in which neighborhoods, and how long properties sit before they move. The panels above update every day. This section explains what each metric means and how a buyer or investor should read it.

The core insight the data captures: asking-price reductions are the earliest visible signal of where the Dubai market is softening or tightening, neighborhood by neighborhood. A community where 20% of listings have cut prices in the last 30 days is behaving very differently from one where 5% have — even if the published "average price per sqft" looks similar. That divergence is invisible in standard market reports and is exactly what this dataset surfaces.

Price per square foot — the only comparison that matters

Dubai property is best compared on a price-per-square-foot (AED/sqft) basis, never on headline price, because unit sizes vary enormously within the same building. A "AED 3M apartment in Downtown" tells you nothing; "AED 2,400/sqft in Burj Vista" is comparable across units. Prime Dubai luxury currently spans roughly:

  • Ultra-prime (Palm Jumeirah, Emirates Hills, Bvlgari, One/Como): AED 3,500–7,000+/sqft
  • Prime apartments (Downtown, DIFC, Bluewaters, Dubai Marina towers): AED 2,200–3,500/sqft
  • Established villa communities (Dubai Hills, Arabian Ranches, The Springs): AED 1,500–2,800/sqft
  • Emerging/mid-tier (JVC, Business Bay, Damac Lagoons, Tilal Al Ghaf): AED 1,200–2,000/sqft

When you evaluate any individual listing — especially a distressed Dubai property with a price cut — the question is never "how far below the original ask is it?" It is "where does the new price sit on a per-sqft basis versus recent transactions in the same building?" A 15% cut that merely brings an overpriced unit back to the building median is not a deal. A unit that is now 8% below the building's per-sqft median is.

Days on market (DOM) — the patience signal

Days on market measures how long a listing has been live before selling or being withdrawn. In Dubai luxury, DOM is a direct proxy for seller motivation and market liquidity:

  • Under 30 days: hot segment. Either underpriced or genuinely scarce inventory. Cuts here are rare and meaningful.
  • 30–90 days: normal Dubai luxury liquidity. Most prime apartments transact in this window.
  • 90–180 days: the seller's price expectation is above market. This is where the first real cuts appear.
  • 180+ days: stale. These listings either cut hard or get withdrawn. The longer a quality property sits, the more negotiable the seller becomes — DOM and discount depth are tightly correlated.

The "Days on market vs drop size" panel above plots this relationship directly. The pattern is consistent: the deepest discounts cluster among the longest-listed properties, because time on market erodes seller resolve faster than any other factor.

Drop-depth distribution — reading the discount curve

Not all price drops are equal. The data sorts reductions into bands:

  • 2–5% cuts: routine repricing. Roughly half of all Dubai listings that reduce fall here. Usually competitive adjustment, not distress.
  • 5–10% cuts: motivated. The seller has a reason to move — relocation timing, another purchase, end-of-payment-plan pressure.
  • 10–20% cuts: genuinely distressed. Track these on the distress property feed. This is the band where below-market entries appear.
  • 20%+ cuts: rare, real distress or a correction of a badly overpriced original listing. Always verify against per-sqft comparables.

The shape of this distribution across the whole market is a barometer. When the share of 10%+ cuts rises month over month, motivated-seller supply is increasing — a buyer's window. When it compresses toward the 2–5% band, the market is tightening.

Drops by tier — where the softness concentrates

Dubai's price tiers do not move together. Through 2025–2026 the pattern has been:

  • Entry-luxury (AED 1–3M): highest drop volume by count, driven by investor turnover and off-plan handover flips colliding in the same buildings.
  • Mid-luxury (AED 3–8M): moderate drop activity; the most liquid prime segment.
  • Ultra-prime (AED 8M+): lowest drop frequency but largest absolute discounts when they occur — thin buyer pool, idiosyncratic seller circumstances.

The tier panel above shows the current split. The takeaway for buyers: opportunity density (count of deals) is highest at entry-luxury, but opportunity size (AED saved per deal) is highest at ultra-prime.

Neighborhood divergence

The "drops by area" and "avg drop % by area" panels reveal which Dubai communities are softening fastest. The persistent leaders by drop volume are the recently-handed-over communities — Business Bay towers, Dubai Marina, JVC, and the 2024–2026 off-plan handover cohort — where flippers compete with each other. Established villa communities like Dubai Hills Estate, Arabian Ranches, and Palm Jumeirah show fewer but larger absolute cuts. Use the area grid above to drill into any community's live drop feed.

How the data is collected

Luxury Price Drops scans active Dubai listings on Bayut daily, capturing the original listing price, every subsequent price change, the current asking price, and the full price history for each unit. Drops are detected within minutes of being posted. We do not estimate or model prices — every figure on this page is derived from actual published asking prices and their changes over time. This is listing-side data (asking prices), not transaction-side data; for closed-transaction values, the Dubai Land Department is the authoritative source, and the two are best read together.

Using this data as a buyer or investor

The practical workflow:

  1. Anchor on per-sqft, not headline price or original ask. Pull the building's recent per-sqft range before evaluating any listing.
  2. Filter for the 10%+ band via the distress feed to find motivated sellers.
  3. Cross-check DOM. A 12% cut on a 200-day listing is a stronger negotiating position than a 12% cut on a 20-day listing.
  4. Confirm the cut translates to below-market. Below the seller's original price is not the same as below market.
  5. Verify the fundamentals — RERA title, service-charge ledger, snagging — before committing. See the distress property buying guide for the full due-diligence checklist.

Related Dubai resources

Luxury Price Drops is an independent analytics platform — not a brokerage. We publish public listing-market data so buyers and investors can read the Dubai market clearly. We do not list, sell, or represent properties.

Frequently asked questions

What is the average price per square foot in Dubai?

Dubai luxury property spans roughly AED 1,200–2,000/sqft for emerging and mid-tier communities, AED 2,200–3,500/sqft for prime apartments (Downtown, DIFC, Dubai Marina), AED 1,500–2,800/sqft for established villa communities, and AED 3,500–7,000+/sqft for ultra-prime (Palm Jumeirah, Emirates Hills). Always compare individual listings on a per-sqft basis against recent prices in the same building, not on headline price.

How is Dubai real estate market data collected on this page?

We scan around 20,000 active Dubai listings on Bayut daily, capturing original listing price, every price change, current asking price, and full price history for each unit. Price drops are detected within minutes. All figures are derived from actual published asking prices — we do not estimate or model. This is listing-side (asking-price) data; for closed-transaction values, the Dubai Land Department is the authoritative source.

How often is the Dubai market data updated?

Daily. Listings are scanned every day and the panels on this page refresh continuously throughout the day. New price drops appear within minutes of being posted to the source listing site.

What does 'days on market' tell me about a Dubai property?

Days on market (DOM) measures how long a listing has been live. Under 30 days signals a hot, scarce, or underpriced segment. 30–90 days is normal Dubai luxury liquidity. 90–180 days means the seller's price is above market and first cuts appear. 180+ days is stale — these listings either cut hard or get withdrawn, and the seller is usually highly negotiable. DOM and discount depth are tightly correlated.

Are Dubai property prices dropping in 2026?

It varies sharply by neighborhood and tier rather than uniformly. Recently-handed-over communities (Business Bay, Dubai Marina, JVC, the 2024–2026 off-plan cohort) show the highest volume of price cuts as flippers compete. Established villa communities show fewer but larger cuts. The drop-depth distribution and 'drops by area' panels above show the current picture — watch whether the share of 10%+ cuts is rising (softening) or compressing (tightening).

What percentage of Dubai listings reduce their price?

Roughly 15–20% of Dubai luxury listings see a price reduction within their first 60 days on market. About half of those are routine 2–5% adjustments; 5–10% cuts signal motivated sellers; 10%+ cuts (tracked on our distress feed) indicate genuine distress and are where below-market entries appear.

How do I know if a Dubai price drop is actually a good deal?

Compare the new asking price to the per-square-foot range of recent listings in the same building — not to the seller's original price. A cut that only brings an overpriced unit back to the building median is not a deal. A unit now priced 8%+ below the building's per-sqft median is. Then cross-check days on market (longer = more negotiable) and verify RERA title and service-charge status before committing.

Which Dubai neighborhoods have the most price drops?

By volume, the recently-handed-over communities lead — Business Bay towers, Dubai Marina, JVC, and the 2024–2026 off-plan handover cohort — because flippers compete in the same buildings. By absolute discount size, established and ultra-prime communities (Palm Jumeirah, Emirates Hills, Dubai Hills) produce fewer but larger cuts. Use the area panels above to drill into any specific community.

Is Luxury Price Drops a Dubai real estate brokerage?

No. Luxury Price Drops is an independent analytics platform that publishes public listing-market data. We do not list, sell, or represent properties. Use this data to read the market, then contact listing agents on Bayut directly to view and transact.

Independent analytics platform — not a brokerage. Price drops are a natural part of any healthy market and often represent opportunity. All data is sourced from publicly available listings. Read more