Today: 24 June 2026
Dubai Real Estate Forecast After Iran Strikes: What Investors Watch as UAE Markets Reopen
1 March 2026
2 mins read

Dubai Real Estate Forecast After Iran Strikes: What Investors Watch as UAE Markets Reopen

Dubai, March 1, 2026, 18:23 GST — The session wrapped up with the market now closed.

  • Debris from Iranian drones and missiles struck several locations—among them Dubai International Airport, the Burj Al Arab, and Palm Jumeirah—leading to flight suspensions and injecting a new risk premium into Dubai assets.
  • Dubai’s main index slipped 1.8% on Friday, with Emaar Properties tumbling 4.1% ahead of the most recent wave of attacks.
  • Property sales in Dubai hit AED 60.6 billion in February, according to Dubai Land Department figures quoted by Zawya, highlighting the surge before the shock.

Iran’s retaliatory strikes in Dubai have rattled confidence in a property market long dependent on the city’s reputation as a safe haven and its nonstop flow of cross-border visitors.

Dubai International Airport and the Burj Al Arab took damage overnight, with Palm Jumeirah also affected, according to Reuters. The incidents came after the U.S. and Israel carried out strikes on Iran, prompting Tehran to fire back with missiles and drones across the Gulf.

Here’s why it’s crucial right now: Dubai’s deals and rental market are tightly linked to tourism, business travelers, and expat arrivals—and those streams can dry up suddenly if flights are grounded or insurers hike risk premiums.

Flights at both Dubai International and Al Maktoum International were suspended by Dubai Airports as regional airspace closed off, while Iran pushed its own airspace closure through to March 3. That’s a new headache for buyers, brokers, and developers who rely on in-person sales across the city.

With UAE equity markets closed Sunday and set to resume trading Monday, investors are bracing for the initial reaction in listed developers and mortgage-financing banks.

Nerves were on full display ahead of the weekend. Dubai’s main index dropped 1.8% Friday, according to Reuters, with Emaar Properties tumbling 4.1%—its sharpest single-day slide in almost 10 months.

Transaction volumes kept surging in the background. According to Dubai Land Department data published by Zawya, February saw 16,959 sales totaling AED 60.60 billion. Off-plan deals—those signed before a project’s completion—accounted for about 62% of all activity.

Traders are likely to zero in on that off-plan mix right away. It’s a straightforward confidence play—buyers betting on construction schedules and waiting out delivery times, all for a shot at those early price points.

Oil’s acting as the offset here. On Sunday, OPEC+ signed off on a 206,000 barrel-per-day production hike starting in April, despite the war rattling shipments and sending Brent crude near $80. The bump could help with liquidity in the region, though it also highlights stress on logistics and insurance.

“GCC markets are likely to remain under pressure as investors price in a higher and potentially prolonged geopolitical risk premium,” said Tahir Abbas, head of research at Oman’s Ubhar Capital. Shipping routes through the Strait of Hormuz, he said, present a “more material concern” right now—even if higher oil prices give a short-term fiscal buffer. Reuters

Operational chaos took center stage for some. Iridium Advisors flagged “uncharted territory” after the events, citing airspace turmoil and uncertainty over business continuity. The National

Real estate’s outlook in the short run looks patchy. Prime waterfront properties and trophy assets are still buoyed by global capital, but the broader market hinges on jobs, tourism, and credit—factors that now depend on the pace at which airports and ports get back to normal.

The risks aren’t hard to map out. Persistent trouble in airspace and shipping? That spells slower progress on sites, pricier materials, contractors asking for more. Developers would feel the squeeze. On the other end, buyers might hold off signing, and lenders could ratchet up mortgage and construction loan requirements.

The next thing to watch: Monday’s open in Dubai and Abu Dhabi. Investors are eyeing airport status updates, signs of new attacks, any move toward de-escalation, and whether February’s strong sales momentum carried over into early March.

Marcin Frąckiewicz is the founder and CEO of TS2 Space, a satellite communications company serving customers around the world. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), he has more than two decades of experience in telecommunications, satellite services and technology ventures. He writes about satellite communications, space technology, artificial intelligence and the stock market, with a particular focus on technology companies, semiconductors, emerging industries and the trends shaping global innovation.

Stock Market Today

  • Wheat Prices Bounce Wednesday Following Tuesday's Losses
    June 24, 2026, 10:22 AM EDT. Wheat futures rebounded Wednesday after Tuesday's declines across Chicago SRW, Kansas City HRW, and Minneapolis spring wheat markets. Chicago March contracts dropped 11 cents Tuesday, with open interest falling by 14,838 contracts. Export inspections showed 375,402 metric tons shipped in the week ending Feb. 12, down 35.34% from the previous week but nearly 50% higher than last year. Russia's wheat crop estimate rose to 85.9 million metric tons, while EU soft wheat exports increased year-on-year. March Chicago wheat futures reopened up 7 3/4 cents at $5.37 3/4, reflecting renewed buying interest amid global supply updates.
FuelCell Energy spikes premarket on Fit Energy power agreement

FuelCell Energy spikes premarket on Fit Energy power agreement

24 June 2026
FuelCell Energy shares jumped 16% premarket after announcing a strategic deal to supply Fit Energy with up to 380 MW of on-site power for data centers, with an initial 30 MW phase beginning this year and later phases optional; warrants for up to 12 million shares at $26.44 are tied to project deposits, and the company cautioned that most capacity is not yet secured and results may differ due to execution and financing risks.
Pulsenmore sees premarket action after Ouma Health ultrasound agreement

Pulsenmore sees premarket action after Ouma Health ultrasound agreement

24 June 2026
Pulsenmore shares saw premarket volume of 19.19 million—vastly above average—after announcing its FDA-authorized home ultrasound will join Ouma Health’s U.S. virtual maternity care platform, but the deal disclosed no financial terms or patient targets, and Pulsenmore cautioned that results are subject to significant risks.
Tesla shares steady in premarket after crash probe expands to self-driving

Tesla shares steady in premarket after crash probe expands to self-driving

24 June 2026
Tesla plunged 5.79% after U.S. regulators launched a probe into a fatal Texas crash involving its driver-assistance system, overshadowing a 108% surge in May European registrations and a $5 billion battery storage deal, as investors weigh safety risks against growth and upcoming delivery numbers.
Why Is AI Not Perfect? Regulators Are Forcing Chatbots to Admit the Flaw
Previous Story

Why Is AI Not Perfect? Regulators Are Forcing Chatbots to Admit the Flaw

Ashtead share price: AHT set to disappear from London screens as Sunbelt listing goes live
Next Story

Ashtead share price: AHT set to disappear from London screens as Sunbelt listing goes live

Go toTop