Dubai is undergoing a profound demographic transformation as new data reveals residents are increasingly putting down permanent roots in the emirate. According to the Betterhomes Future Living Report 2025, the average length of residency has surged to 10.5 years, marking a dramatic increase from 7.5 years recorded just one year prior. This represents one of the most significant behavioral shifts in tenant patterns witnessed in the past decade.
The trend is particularly pronounced among Dubai’s rental population. Renters now report an average residency period of 9.9 years, up substantially from 6.7 years in 2024. Furthermore, tenants currently anticipate remaining in Dubai for an average of 10.7 years, compared to merely 7 years in the previous assessment period. These findings indicate substantially deeper emotional and financial commitments to the emirate, reflecting a strategic long-term planning mentality that was comparatively rare five years ago.
Louis Harding, CEO of Betterhomes, characterized the data as a pivotal turning point in how residents perceive Dubai. “With 59% of tenants committing to Dubai for the long term, it’s evident that people are planning their lives here with far greater confidence and clarity than we’ve seen before,” Harding noted. “This shift reflects Dubai’s continued appeal as a stable, liveable city for both families and professionals.”
Supporting this demographic evolution, Dubai’s real estate market demonstrates robust growth and investor confidence. The Dubai Land Department reported 125,538 real estate transactions worth approximately Dh431 billion during the first half of 2025, representing a 25% increase in value compared to the same period in 2024. Investor participation surged dramatically with 94,717 investors entering the market—a 26% year-on-year increase—including nearly 59,000 first-time investors. Notably, UAE residents constituted 45% of these new investors, signaling a growing trend of tenants transitioning into property ownership.
Rupert Simmonds, Director of Leasing at Betterhomes, emphasized that extended tenancy durations reflect deliberate choice rather than necessity. “People are choosing to stay longer because the city supports long-term living, stability, and progression,” Simmonds observed. “Tenants are setting roots, planning ahead, and aligning their careers and families with a city they increasingly see as home.”
Market dynamics further substantiate this transformation. Residential sales prices increased 7.8% compared to the second half of 2024 and 16.6% year-on-year from the first half of 2024, driven by vigorous transaction activity and sustained demand. Rental markets show early indications of stabilization after prolonged rapid growth, with rates dipping 0.6% from the latter half of 2024 despite maintaining a 9.9% year-on-year increase—suggesting a maturing market achieving balance between landlords and long-term tenants.
The city’s development pipeline supports this upward residency trend, with approximately 17,200 residential units completed in the first half of 2025 and over 61,800 units currently under construction for delivery later this year.
Collectively, these indicators present a coherent narrative: Dubai has evolved from a transient expatriate hub into a permanent destination where residents increasingly choose to settle, invest, and build futures. As the emirate continues expanding infrastructure, diversifying its economy, and enhancing its global stature, the trajectory toward long-term residency appears poised to accelerate further, cementing Dubai’s status as one of the world’s most desirable cities to establish lasting roots.
