
Dubai real estate sector recorded AED 3.2bn in transactions last week, reflecting continued activity in prime districts and strong buyer interest.
Last week the Dubai real estate sector logged a total transaction value of AED 3.2bn across 3,068 sales, with notable headline deals including an AED 33m home in the Burj Khalifa district and a AED 17.4m apartment on Palm Jumeirah. These figures come from market reporting summarising weekly trading and show that high-value trophy assets continue to trade alongside a large volume of mid‑market transactions, keeping liquidity available across segments.
For investors and market watchers the mix matters: a handful of headline deals pushed values higher in prime pockets while overall sales volume — 3,068 properties — indicates sustained transactional flow. The week’s data signals active demand for central Dubai addresses and waterfront projects, and gives both buyers and sellers fresh price and liquidity context.
Total value
AED 3.2bn
Transactions
3,068
Largest sale
AED 33m
Notable sale
AED 17.4m
Dubai real estate sector recorded AED 3.2bn in transactions and 3,068 sales last week, including headline residential deals in Burj Khalifa and Palm Jumeirah.
The week’s total value of AED 3.2bn and 3,068 individual sales shows both scale and depth in activity. Among those sales the largest recorded transaction was an AED 33m property in the Burj Khalifa district, and another notable prime transaction was an AED 17.4m apartment on Palm Jumeirah. These numbers combine large-ticket trophy sales with many everyday transfers, underlining mixed participation from investor and end-user buyers.
For the Dubai real estate sector this mix reduces single-segment exposure but concentrates headline price signals in prime areas. High-value deals tend to set market reference points for luxury pricing, while the broad count of 3,068 sales preserves liquidity and resale comparables across other neighbourhoods.
Most of the largest-value Dubai real estate transactions last week were in marquee addresses: the Burj Khalifa district and Palm Jumeirah, with headline prices of AED 33m and AED 17.4m respectively.
The two highest disclosed sales reported were the AED 33m Burj Khalifa-area property and the AED 17.4m Palm Jumeirah apartment. Both locations are established trophy markets that attract premium pricing and buyers willing to pay a premium for location and views. These single high-value trades contributed materially to the AED 3.2bn weekly total and highlight how a small number of trophy sales can influence summary figures for the Dubai real estate sector.
Concentration of large sales in a few communities can signal robust demand at the top end but also increases sensitivity to single-deal visibility. For pricing watchers and appraisers, these trades become key comparables when valuing other prime listings in central and waterfront districts.
| Location | Property type | Sale price |
|---|---|---|
| Burj Khalifa district | Residential home | AED 33m |
| Palm Jumeirah | Apartment | AED 17.4m |
"High-value sales in Burj Khalifa and Palm Jumeirah show sustained demand for trophy assets, supporting price resilience in prime pockets."
— Binayah Research Team
The transaction mix — AED 3.2bn total value, 3,068 sales, and a handful of multi‑million‑dirham deals — signals both broad market liquidity and concentrated premium demand in prime pockets.
For investors the headline AED 33m and AED 17.4m sales are evidence that trophy assets remain investible and can trade at top prices, while the 3,068 sales count shows that everyday liquidity is present across other segments. That combination benefits diversified strategies: core investors can rely on turnover in mainstream stock to realise positions, while opportunistic buyers or funds can target premium assets for capital appreciation and branding effects.
Risk-wise, reliance on a small number of high-value trades to lift weekly totals means headline figures can be volatile week-to-week. Investors should therefore look at rolling aggregates rather than single-week totals when judging long-term trends in the Dubai real estate sector.
Buyers should use the week’s data — AED 3.2bn total and 3,068 sales, plus prime transactions of AED 33m and AED 17.4m — to benchmark offers and to confirm liquidity in target areas.
Sellers can interpret the headline deals as support for asking prices in prime communities, but they should also account for variability: a few trophy sales can inflate weekly summaries. Price setting should therefore reference local comparables and recent closed deals rather than weekly aggregates alone. Buyers should insist on verified sale records when negotiating, and sellers should present transaction evidence to justify premium pricing.
Short-term strategic action is simple: buyers seeking value should focus on proven liquidity pockets evident in the sales count, and sellers of premium stock should time listings to align with periods of buyer attention to trophy assets. Keep clear records of comparable closed deals when preparing offers or asking prices.

Investors and sellers should treat single-week headline numbers as directional only. Use the AED 3.2bn and 3,068-sales figures as a reference point, but verify comparables in your neighbourhood and focus on multi-week trends before making major pricing or acquisition decisions.
The Dubai real estate sector posted AED 3.2bn in transactions across 3,068 sales last week, anchored by two headline trades: AED 33m in the Burj Khalifa district and AED 17.4m on Palm Jumeirah. These figures show that while trophy assets continue to trade at premium levels, overall sales volume remains healthy, giving buyers and sellers concrete comparables for immediate pricing decisions.
Binayah Editorial
Property Market Analyst
Our editorial team researches Dubai's real estate market, tracking DLD data, developer launches, and investment trends to keep buyers and investors informed.
Speak with our analysts about the best opportunities in today's market — free consultation.