Dubai, UAE — 15 December 2025: Gold prices in the UAE moved higher on Monday, with Dubai’s benchmark retail rates pushing to fresh December highs as international bullion climbed on a softer US dollar and easing Treasury yields. The day’s action has kept both jewellery buyers and investors on alert, especially with key US jobs data in focus and major banks publishing increasingly bullish 2026 outlooks. [1]
Gold price in UAE today: latest Dubai rates (15.12.2025)
The UAE’s most-watched retail benchmark—published through the Dubai Gold & Jewellery Group and tracked live by Gulf News—showed a clear uptick between the morning and afternoon updates on Monday, 15 December 2025: [2]
- 24K gold: Dh521.25/gram (morning) → Dh523.75/gram (afternoon)
- 22K gold: Dh482.75/gram (morning) → Dh485.00/gram (afternoon)
- 21K gold: Dh462.75/gram (morning) → Dh465.00/gram (afternoon)
- 18K gold: Dh396.75/gram (morning) → Dh398.75/gram (afternoon)
- 14K gold: Dh309.50/gram (morning) → Dh311.00/gram (afternoon) [3]
Compared with Sunday (14 December 2025), the afternoon benchmark implies gold rose by roughly Dh5–Dh6 per gram across major purities (for example, 24K: Dh523.75 vs Dh518.00). [4]
What shoppers saw early in the day
UAE business outlets reporting on the morning open also flagged the jump: Khaleej Times cited 24K at Dh521.25/gramin the morning, alongside 22K at Dh482.75/gram. [5]
And Gulf News reported that Dubai gold “jumped” to a December high in early trade (with 24K around the Dh521–Dh522 range at the time of publishing), reflecting the same upward trend that later carried into the afternoon update. [6]
Why UAE gold prices rose today: the global driver behind the local move
Monday’s UAE gains were closely tied to the international gold market.
A Reuters market update reported gold rising to a more than seven-week high, around $4,344/oz, supported by a weaker US dollar and falling US Treasury yields as markets watched for upcoming US labour-market data. [7]
Khaleej Times similarly noted spot gold rising around the morning UAE time window (it cited spot near $4,343.51around 10:15am). [8]
Why the dirham price moves quickly with global bullion
The UAE dirham is pegged to the US dollar (officially referenced as $1 = Dh3.6725), which means gold priced globally in USD tends to pass through quickly into AED retail benchmarks. [9]
That’s why UAE buyers often see the gold rate shift on the same day as moves in:
- the US dollar,
- US bond yields, and
- market expectations for Federal Reserve policy. [10]
Retail gold in Dubai vs “spot” gold: what the posted rate really means
It’s important to separate benchmarked retail gold rates (like Dubai’s posted Dh/gram numbers) from the spot price seen on global trading screens.
- The Dubai benchmarks are commonly used across retail counters as a reference for jewellery pricing and are updated in scheduled windows (e.g., morning and afternoon). [11]
- Your final jewellery bill can still differ because of making charges, design premiums, and merchant pricing policies.
Also remember that the UAE applies a 5% VAT on taxable goods and services, which can affect the final checkout price depending on the product type and how it’s sold. [12]
Investment bullion VAT nuance (relevant for bars/coins)
UAE tax rules also distinguish “investment precious metals” in certain cases. Under the UAE’s Executive Regulation for VAT, the supply or import of “investment precious metals” is zero-rated when criteria are met (including high purity and forms tradable in global bullion markets). [13]
In practical terms: jewellery shoppers and bullion investors may face different pricing structures—so it’s worth checking whether the product is jewellery, a coin, or a bullion bar, and what the invoice includes.
“December high” in Dubai: what local reporting says about the trend
Beyond the day-to-day tick, local coverage shows Dubai’s gold market has been steadily firming through December.
Gulf News reporting from earlier in the month described modest swings that gradually turned into a rebound as international prices strengthened—context that helps explain why Monday’s jump pushed the market to a December high. [14]
In other words, the Monday move wasn’t happening in isolation: it was an extension of a broader month-to-date climb, with global macro factors doing most of the heavy lifting.
What to watch next in the gold market (from a UAE buyer’s perspective)
If you’re tracking the gold rate in UAE today because you’re planning a purchase (or timing an investment), these are the biggest near-term catalysts being watched globally—and they matter locally because of how quickly they transmit into AED benchmarks:
- US jobs data and rate expectations
Reuters flagged investor focus on incoming labour-market indicators, because weaker data can reinforce expectations of easier policy—often supportive for non-yielding assets like gold. [15] - The US dollar and Treasury yields
Monday’s move was explicitly tied to a softer dollar and lower yields in market reporting. [16] - Risk sentiment and safe-haven flows
With gold already having posted a dramatic run in 2025, shifts in risk appetite can quickly amplify moves in either direction—particularly around geopolitics and policy headlines. [17]
Forecasts and outlook as of 15.12.2025: where analysts think gold could go in 2026
Gold’s surge through 2025 has pulled 2026 forecasts sharply higher—but the outlook is not one-directional. Below is a snapshot of the most current institutional views circulating into 15 December 2025, showing both upside cases and correction risks.
World Gold Council: range-bound, breakout… or a pullback scenario
The World Gold Council’s Gold Outlook 2026 lays out scenario-based outcomes and explicitly includes a downside case where gold could see a 5%–20% correction from current levels if macro conditions turn “risk-on” with rising yields and a stronger dollar. [18]
Importantly, WGC also outlines upside scenarios (including mid-teen to ~30% upside in certain macro paths), which is why the market narrative remains split between “still bullish” and “due for consolidation.” [19]
Deutsche Bank: higher 2026 forecast, wide trading range
Reuters reported Deutsche Bank raising its 2026 gold forecast to $4,450/oz, with expectations for a $3,950–$4,950range next year, citing the structural backdrop of central-bank buying and investment demand. [20]
Bank of America: $5,000 target for 2026
Reuters also reported Bank of America lifting its 2026 outlook, with gold seen potentially reaching $5,000/oz in 2026(with an average around the mid-$4,000s in its framework). [21]
HSBC: “bull wave” could hit $5,000 in early 2026
HSBC expects gold’s “bull wave” could reach $5,000/oz in the first half of 2026, supported by geopolitics, central bank buying, ETF flows, and interest-rate dynamics, Reuters reported. [22]
JPMorgan: sees $5,055 average by late 2026
Reuters also cited JPMorgan projecting gold prices averaging $5,055/oz by late 2026—one of the more aggressive forecasts among top-tier institutions. [23]
Reuters poll: 2026 average forecast above $4,000 for the first time
A Reuters poll (reported in late October) indicated the annual 2026 gold-price forecast topping $4,000/oz for the first time, with an average forecast around $4,275/oz. [24]
A note for UAE readers: what those USD targets look like in AED terms
Because the dirham is pegged at $1 = Dh3.6725, headline USD forecasts can be loosely translated into AED equivalents for context (before local premiums). [25]
For example, targets around $5,000/oz imply a materially higher AED-per-gram baseline than today’s levels, though UAE retail prices will still depend on spreads, product type, and fees. [26]
Risk check: BIS warns of bubble-like signals in gold markets
Not all analysis is bullish.
Reuters reported that the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) has flagged signs of “explosive” behaviour and raised concerns about a rare situation where both gold and stocks show bubble-like characteristics—adding a cautionary note for anyone assuming the rally is “one-way.” [27]
UAE gold market news today: Emirates NBD launches bank-branded gold bars
One of the most notable UAE-specific gold headlines on 15 December 2025 wasn’t about the per-gram rate—it was about access.
Emirates NBD unveiled the UAE’s first bank-branded gold bar, marketed in 10g, 50g and 100g options, according to Gulf News and the Dubai Media Office. [28]
Why it matters for the UAE gold conversation:
- It signals continued appetite for physical gold products alongside jewellery demand.
- It reflects how the UAE’s gold ecosystem—retail, bullion, banking, and trading—continues to broaden as prices remain historically elevated. [29]
Bottom line: gold price in UAE today and what it signals
As of 15 December 2025, the UAE’s gold rate story is being driven by a familiar mix: global bullion strength, US macro expectations, and local retail benchmarks that quickly reflect international moves.
- Dubai’s 24K benchmark touched Dh523.75/gram in the afternoon update, up notably versus Sunday. [30]
- Global gold climbed to a seven-week high around $4,344/oz, with markets watching the US data calendar closely. [31]
- Looking into 2026, forecasts span everything from correction scenarios (WGC) to $5,000/oz upside targets (BofA, HSBC, JPMorgan)—a wide band that underscores why volatility remains part of the story. [32]
For UAE residents planning to buy gold today—whether for weddings, gifting, or investment—the key takeaway is simple: today’s rates are firm, the global drivers are still active, and the next major move will likely come from US macro signals and shifts in the dollar/yields backdrop. [33]
References
1. gulfnews.com, 2. gulfnews.com, 3. gulfnews.com, 4. gulfnews.com, 5. www.khaleejtimes.com, 6. gulfnews.com, 7. www.reuters.com, 8. www.khaleejtimes.com, 9. u.ae, 10. www.reuters.com, 11. gulfnews.com, 12. u.ae, 13. tax.gov.ae, 14. gulfnews.com, 15. www.reuters.com, 16. www.reuters.com, 17. www.reuters.com, 18. www.gold.org, 19. www.gold.org, 20. www.reuters.com, 21. www.reuters.com, 22. www.reuters.com, 23. www.reuters.com, 24. www.reuters.com, 25. u.ae, 26. www.reuters.com, 27. www.reuters.com, 28. gulfnews.com, 29. gulfnews.com, 30. gulfnews.com, 31. www.reuters.com, 32. www.gold.org, 33. www.reuters.com


