Dubai Housing Prices Ease Again as May Data Points to Stabilization
Dubai’s ValuStrat Price Index slipped to 222.1 points in May, with capital values down 1.2 percent for the month but still 2.5 percent higher annually. The data shows villa values and apartment values diverging while ready-home and off-plan transactions weakened.

May data shows a slower price decline
Dubai’s residential market softened again in May, but the latest ValuStrat Price Index points to a slower pace of decline rather than a sharper correction.
The index slipped to 222.1 points, with capital values down 1.2 percent during the month after a 5.9 percent contraction in March and a 1.9 percent decline in April.
Annual growth remained positive at 2.5 percent.
That distinction matters because the market is showing two conditions at once: monthly price pressure and residual annual gains from the earlier run-up in Dubai property values.
Villa values eased to 297.3 points, while apartment values stood at 170 points.
Both readings are benchmarked against a base of 100 in January 2021, giving the May numbers a longer post-pandemic comparison rather than only a month-to-month snapshot.
Villas still carry stronger annual support
Villa capital values fell 1.4 percent in May but remained up 5 percent annually.
The strongest annual performers included Jumeirah Islands, The Meadows, Emirates Hills, The Villa and Tilal Al Ghaf.
Annual declines appeared in Victory Heights, Arabian Ranches Phase 2, International City and Mudon.
Older freehold villa communities remain far above earlier benchmarks.
Their comparison with 2014 is still positive at 78 percent above that market peak, and the post-pandemic comparison is even wider at 191 percent.
Those figures show why a monthly drop does not automatically mean the villa segment has reversed its post-pandemic gains.
Apartments show a weaker annual comparison
Apartments recorded a 0.9 percent monthly decline in May.
On an annual basis, apartment values were 1.4 percent lower, marking the first annual decline in six years for the apartment VPI.
DIFC led the strongest yearly gains, followed by Remraam, Dubai Silicon Oasis and Dubai Sports City.
Burj Khalifa, Jumeirah Beach Residence and Town Square registered the largest annual declines.
International City Phase 2 and 3 and Al Quoz Fourth were the only communities that recorded monthly gains.
Older freehold apartment prices remain 71 percent above post-pandemic levels, but they are 7 percent below the previous market peak recorded in 2014.
The apartment segment therefore looks less insulated than villas when measured against both annual change and the older peak.
Transaction weakness is the sharper watchpoint
The more direct pressure point is transaction volume.
Oqood registrations for off-plan properties fell 29.3 percent month on month and were 41.4 percent lower year on year, while still accounting for 77 percent of total residential sales.
Ready-home transactions declined 18.5 percent monthly and 55.1 percent annually.
Ultra-prime activity did not disappear.
A total of 16 ready-property transactions exceeded AED30 million, including 11 deals above AED50 million.
The cited locations include DIFC, Jumeirah Bay Island, District One, Emirates Hills, Dubai Hills Estate and Palm Jumeirah.
The May data does not prove a broad market downturn by itself.
It does show that Dubai’s residential market is entering a more selective phase, with villas retaining stronger annual support, apartments showing weaker yearly performance and transaction volumes carrying the clearest sign of buyer caution.
















