The UAE’s real estate sector opened 2026 with a performance that has reset expectations across the entire industry. Real estate markets across the UAE witnessed notable growth in the first three months of 2026, with official figures from Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Sharjah and Ajman underscoring the country’s status as a prominent global hub for property investment. Every emirate posted growth. But one market did not just grow — it rewrote its own record books by a magnitude that demands a closer look. Abu Dhabi’s Q1 2026 performance was not an incremental improvement on 2025. It was a structural re-rating of the emirate’s position in the global real estate investment landscape, confirmed by the most comprehensive set of official data the market has ever produced. For investors weighing where to deploy capital across the UAE in 2026, the Q1 numbers provide the clearest possible data-driven roadmap. Here is the complete picture.
Abu Dhabi Q1 2026: The Full Transaction Breakdown
Abu Dhabi delivered by far the most dramatic performance of any emirate in Q1 2026. The Abu Dhabi Real Estate Centre reported that total transaction value reached AED 66 billion, representing a 160.7% increase across 13,518 deals in Q1 2026, compared to AED 25.31 billion from 6,896 transactions in the same period of 2025.
| Metric | Q1 2026 | Q1 2025 | YoY Change |
| Total Transaction Value | AED 66.0 billion | AED 25.31 billion | +160.7% |
| Total Deals | 13,518 | 6,896 | +96.1% |
| Sales & Purchases Value | AED 50.97 billion | — | +228.6% |
| Sales & Purchases Volume | 8,940 transactions | — | +134% |
| Mortgage Transactions Value | AED 15.03 billion | — | +53.4% |
| Mortgage Transactions Volume | 4,578 transactions | — | +48.8% |
| New Projects Registered | 16 | 10 | +60% |
| Investor Nationalities | 99 | 68 | +45.6% |
The 228.6% surge in sales and purchases value is the figure that stands out most sharply — it means Abu Dhabi’s transactional engine is not simply running faster, it is running at a fundamentally different speed than it was twelve months ago.
Abu Dhabi’s Top-Performing Districts: Where the Capital Went
Hudayriyat Island was the leading area for real estate transactions, recording deals amounting to approximately AED 11.97 billion. It was followed by Reem Island, with AED 9.45 billion, and Saadiyat Island, with AED 8.8 billion, while Yas Island recorded activity exceeding AED 5.5 billion in transactions.
| District | Q1 2026 Transaction Value | Share of Total |
| Hudayriyat Island | AED 11.97 billion | 18.1% |
| Reem Island | AED 9.45 billion | 14.3% |
| Saadiyat Island | AED 8.80 billion | 13.3% |
| Yas Island | AED 5.50 billion+ | 8.3%+ |
Hudayriyat Island’s emergence as Abu Dhabi’s single most active district is the market’s clearest endorsement of the island’s rapidly maturing master plan. The successive sellout launches by Modon Properties — Wadeem, Nawayef Village, Nawayef Park Views, Nawayef East, Nawayef West, and Bashayer — have collectively generated over AED 10.5 billion in sales since mid-2024, perfectly mirroring the district-level dominance now confirmed by ADREC’s official data.
The Foreign Investment Story: 423% FDI Growth
The most structurally significant data point in Abu Dhabi’s Q1 2026 report is not the headline transaction figure — it is the foreign direct investment number.
| FDI Metric | Q1 2026 | Comparison |
| FDI by Individuals | AED 8.27 billion | +423% vs. Q1 2025 |
| Investment Zone Transactions | AED 36.4 billion | 84% of total AED 43.59bn |
| Investment Zone Growth | +242% YoY | — |
| Investor Nationalities | 99 | Up from 68 in Q1 2025 |
| Top Source Markets | UK, India, Russia, China, Jordan, France, Egypt | — |
Total FDI investments by individuals reached AED 8.27 billion, marking a 423% increase compared to Q1 2025 and equivalent to the total foreign direct investment recorded throughout all of 2025. One full year of foreign capital inflow, matched and equalled in a single quarter. The breadth of that buyer pool — 99 nationalities — is the structural foundation that insulates Abu Dhabi property values from single-market demand shocks. For investors seeking to understand how to position within this international buyer landscape, working with a trusted property advisor provides the market-level intelligence to identify which asset types and districts are attracting the most committed global capital.
Supply vs. Demand: The Imbalance That Drives Returns
| Supply Metric | Figure |
| Current Residential Supply (2025) | 314,976 units |
| Projected Supply End 2026 | 325,248 units (+3.3%) |
| Projected Supply End 2027 | 333,564 units |
| New Projects Registered Q1 2026 | 16 (+60% YoY) |
| Repeat Lease Price Index Growth | +16% YoY (March 2026 vs. March 2025) |
Strong demand continues to outpace supply, emphasising the market strength. A 3.3% supply growth rate against transaction volumes that nearly doubled year-on-year is a supply-demand imbalance that directly translates into rental price appreciation and capital growth for investors already holding or entering the market. The 16% annual increase in lease prices as of March 2026 confirms that this imbalance is already feeding through into real income for property owners.
The UAE Picture: Dubai, Sharjah and Ajman in Context
While Abu Dhabi dominated in terms of growth rate, the broader UAE picture confirms that Q1 2026 was a nationwide performance story.
| Emirate | Q1 2026 Total Value | YoY Change |
| Abu Dhabi | AED 66.0 billion | +160.7% |
| Dubai | AED 252.0 billion | +31% |
| Sharjah | AED 18.5 billion | +40.7% |
| Ajman | AED 6.22 billion | +12% |
In Dubai, the Dubai Land Department reported continued strong market activity, with the total value of transactions rising to AED 252 billion, up 31%, while Sharjah’s real estate trading volume reached AED 18.5 billion, representing growth of 40.7% compared to the same period of 2025. Dubai’s absolute transaction volume remains the largest in the UAE, but Abu Dhabi’s 160.7% growth rate dwarfs every other emirate’s performance — and reflects a market catching up to its own fundamental potential after years of undersupply relative to demand.
Conclusion: Abu Dhabi’s Data Makes the Investment Case for Itself
Q1 2026 is not a data point to be filed and forgotten. It is the most comprehensive official confirmation yet that Abu Dhabi’s real estate market has entered a new phase of its development — one defined by record foreign capital inflows, a supply pipeline running well behind demand, rental prices rising at 16% annually, and a district-level concentration of activity in exactly the coastal island addresses where the best off-plan opportunities currently exist. The numbers make the case. The window remains open, but Q1 2026 confirms it is closing faster than most anticipated.
ADREC confirmed total transactions of AED 66 billion across 13,518 deals — a 160.7% year-on-year increase and the highest quarterly performance ever recorded in the emirate. Sales and purchases alone surged 228.6% to AED 50.97 billion. Contact Ayman Sadieh for a district-by-district breakdown of where the strongest opportunities lie.
Hudayriyat Island led all districts with AED 11.97 billion in transactions — 18.1% of Abu Dhabi’s total — followed by Reem Island at AED 9.45 billion and Saadiyat Island at AED 8.8 billion. Yas Island recorded activity exceeding AED 5.5 billion.
FDI by individuals reached AED 8.27 billion — a 423% increase year-on-year and equivalent to the total FDI recorded across all of 2025 — with buyers from 99 nationalities participating. Foreign investment within designated investment zones accounted for 84% of total investment value, totalling AED 36.4 billion. For guidance on entering the market as an international investor, visit Ayman Sadieh.
Abu Dhabi’s 160.7% YoY growth significantly outpaced Dubai (+31%), Sharjah (+40.7%), and Ajman (+12%). While Dubai’s absolute transaction value of AED 252 billion remains the largest in the UAE, Abu Dhabi’s growth rate confirms the emirate is in a structural acceleration phase that no other market in the country is currently matching.
Yes. Residential supply is projected to grow just 3.3% in 2026 — from 314,976 to 325,248 units — while transaction volumes nearly doubled. This imbalance has already pushed repeat lease prices up 16% year-on-year as of March 2026, creating both strong rental yields for existing owners and compelling capital appreciation prospects for new entrants. For a personalised investment analysis, contact NAS Luxury Real Estate.



