New data from property portals Bayut and dubizzle shows a broad-based recovery in market activity during the first half of 2026, with property searches, buyer enquiries and agent engagement rebounding steadily across the emirate’s most sought-after residential communities.
According to the platforms’ analysis of user activity between January and June, property views recovered to 95% of their 2026 baseline by Week 14, while property impressions reached 83%, active users climbed to 80% and unique buyers recovered to 87%. The figures point to a gradual return in buyer confidence despite geopolitical volatility that briefly weighed on regional markets.
The recovery mirrors broader trends in Abu Dhabi’s real estate sector. Data from the Abu Dhabi Real Estate Centre (ADREC) shows the emirate has continued to attract domestic and international investors, supported by long-term residency initiatives, expanding freehold ownership opportunities, major infrastructure investments and a diversified non-oil economy.
Daily agent responses have risen to 102% of the year’s baseline, indicating that real estate professionals have remained actively engaged with buyers and tenants throughout the recovery period.
An artificial intelligence-led analysis of more than 7,000 property enquiry calls recorded through the platforms further underlined the market’s stability. Sales enquiries accounted for 54% of all calls, while rentals represented 46%, suggesting balanced demand across both segments.
“Abu Dhabi’s property market has continued to demonstrate resilience, supported by improving user activity and sustained demand for quality residential communities,” said Haider Khan, CEO of Bayut and dubizzle and CEO of Dubizzle Group Mena.
The rental market has shown particularly strong momentum. Apartment communities including Masdar City, Al Reef, Al Raha Beach, Yas Island, Al Khalidiyah and Al Reem Island have returned close to or above pre-disruption demand levels, reflecting continued interest in waterfront developments and well-connected residential districts.
Demand for villa rentals has also strengthened, led by Al Shamkha, Mohamed Bin Zayed City, Khalifa City, Al Reef and Yas Island, attracting families seeking larger homes and access to schools, healthcare and lifestyle amenities.
Among ready properties, apartments in Al Raha Beach, Yas Island, Saadiyat Island and Al Reem Island remained the preferred destinations for end-users and investors, while Al Shamkha, Al Reef and Khalifa City led demand for ready villas.
Interest in Abu Dhabi’s off-plan market has also remained robust. Buyers continued to favour apartment projects in Masdar City, Zayed City, Yas Island, Al Reem Island, Al Maryah Island and Al Hudayriat Island, reflecting confidence in the emirate’s long-term urban development strategy. Premium villa destinations such as Ramhan Island, Yas Island and Saadiyat Island also attracted sustained investor attention.
The market’s resilience comes as Abu Dhabi froze all rent increases in early June 2026, providing greater certainty for tenants and landlords. The emirate is also managing over 600 infrastructure projects worth more than Dh200 billion as part of its economic diversification strategy.
According to global property consultancy Cavendish Maxwell, thousands of new residential units are scheduled for delivery over the next three years, but demand is expected to remain supported by population growth, expanding business activity and government-led economic diversification under Abu Dhabi’s Falcon Economy strategy.
Analysts note that population growth and job creation continue to underpin demand for quality housing across both the ownership and rental markets, positioning the emirate’s residential sector for measured growth as it enters the second half of 2026.
