Dubai Marina & JBR Real Estate Market Q3 2025 – Two Neighbours, Two Logics

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Dubai Marina & JBR Real Estate Market Q3 2025 – Two Neighbours, Two Logics

Dubai Marina & JBR Real Estate Market Q3 2025 highlights Dubai’s two-speed waterfront story. Marina saw volumes cool by 30% after a strong first half, yet median prices rose to AED 2 million as buyers shifted to larger, better-located floorplates. JBR held steady in volume but lifted total value 69% as bigger tickets cleared, with median pricing near AED 2.3 million. Marina remains the liquidity engine, compact, fast, and rental-driven, while JBR continues as the lifestyle anchor for end-users and upgraders seeking beachfront stability.


Market Overview

Two neighbours, two logics. Dubai Marina remains the liquidity engine, while JBR acts as the address ballast. In Q3, Marina cooled in volume after a very active H1, yet values held relatively firm. JBR kept volumes steady and saw a sharp lift in total value as bigger tickets cleared.

Scope
Residential Freehold only. Apartments, townhouses, and villas included. Hotel apartments excluded.

Waterfront snapshot: Q3 2025 with QoQ context

AreaQ2 TransactionsQ3 TransactionsQoQ Transactions %Q2 Total value (AED bn)Q3 Total value (AED bn)QoQ Total value %Q2 Median ticket (AED)Q3 Median ticket (AED)QoQ Median ticket %Q2 Median AED/sq.ftQ3 Median AED/sq.ftQoQ Median psf %
Dubai Marina1,8101,265-30.14.674.31-7.71,892,8952,000,000+5.71,9891,745-12.3
Jumeirah Beach Residence263269+2.30.721.22+69.42,300,0002,301,439+0.11,5471,494-3.4

📝 Interpretation

  • Marina: a meaningful pullback in deals after a strong H1, yet value slipped only modestly and the median ticket stepped up. The psf dip suggests larger floorplates or sharper pricing in certain stacks, rather than broad weakness.
  • JBR: volumes were flat, but the value surge points to higher ticket transactions clearing. Median ticket held near 2.3 mn while psf eased slightly, consistent with a quarter where buyers paid for address and outlook more than sheer compact efficiency.

🧭 AIQYA Insight

  • Investor: Marina offers more liquidity and faster exit math; price stack by stack and track first resale spreads before adding.
  • End user and upgrader: JBR’s address carries; shortlist towers with strong management and pay for view, light, and acoustic comfort. In Marina, efficient two beds near quieter spines balance lifestyle with exit options.

Key Market Metrics

The waterfront pair split along familiar lines. Marina stayed broader and more liquid, while JBR concentrated volumes at higher tickets with almost entirely ready stock.

Table 2A. Ready vs. off-plan split (Q2 vs Q3)

AreaQuarterReady (count)Ready (%)Off plan (count)Off plan (%)Total
Dubai MarinaQ2 20251,25569.355530.71,810
Dubai MarinaQ3 20251,01480.225119.81,265
Jumeirah Beach ResidenceQ2 2025263100.000.0263
Jumeirah Beach ResidenceQ3 2025269100.000.0269

Table 2B. Configuration mix (Q3 2025)

AreaStudio1 BR2 BR3 BR3 BR+Other
Dubai Marina10.4%35.6%31.0%13.6%5.1%4.4%
Jumeirah Beach Residence2.2%18.6%40.5%27.9%7.4%3.3%

Table 2C. Ticket bands (Q3 2025)

Area≤ 0.75 mn0.75–1.5 mn1.5–3 mn3–5 mn5 mn+Total
Dubai Marina6.8% (86)39.3% (497)32.2% (407)12.9% (163)8.9% (112)1,265
Jumeirah Beach Residence3.0% (8)12.3% (33)63.9% (172)13.4% (36)7.4% (20)269

Scope: Residential Freehold only. Hotel apartments excluded. Percentages are shares of quarterly transactions.

📝 Interpretation

  • Readiness: Marina rotated toward ready in Q3 as off plan cooled after an active H1. JBR remained almost entirely ready, consistent with its built beachfront stack and thin launch calendar.
  • Configuration: Marina’s centre of gravity is one and two beds, which supports liquidity and leasing depth. JBR leans larger, with two and three beds dominating as end users pay for address, views, and family living.
  • Tickets: Marina spans the investor lanes from 0.75 to 1.5 mn up to 3 mn, giving sellers more exit options. JBR concentrates in the 1.5 to 3 mn band, which fits its end user profile and beachfront amenity premium.

🧭 AIQYA Insight

  • Investor: Marina is the working book. Shortlist towers with deep leasing history, low exit friction, and stack-specific premiums. Use first resale spreads to time adds.
  • End user and upgrader: JBR pays you back in day-to-day living. Screen by tower management, service-charge trajectory, and orientation. In Marina, efficient two beds off the main spines offer a balanced lifestyle without sacrificing exit speed.

Price signals diverged on the waterfront. Marina raised the median ticket while the price per foot eased. JBR held ticket steady and slipped a touch on psf. The pattern fits their roles. Marina flexed on larger or better located floorplates inside a broad investor market. JBR moved selectively at higher tickets where end users pay for address and outlook.

Table 3A. Price levels by area

AreaMetricQ2 2025Q3 2025QoQ change
Dubai MarinaMedian ticket (AED)1,892,8952,000,000+5.7%
Dubai MarinaMedian AED per sq.ft1,9891,745−12.3%
JBRMedian ticket (AED)2,300,0002,301,439+0.1%
JBRMedian AED per sq.ft1,5471,494−3.4%

Table 3B. Value momentum and participation

AreaTransactionsQoQ %Total value (AED bn)QoQ %
Dubai Marina1,810 → 1,265−30.14.67 → 4.31−7.7
JBR263 → 269+2.30.72 → 1.22+69.4

Notes

  • Scope is Residential Freehold only. Hotel apartments excluded.
  • Medians are computed from registered transactions.

📝 Interpretation

  • Marina: the median ticket rose while psf fell. That mix suggests buyers concentrated in larger or better oriented stacks, or negotiated sharper psf on mid to large layouts. The value slip was moderate compared to the drop in transactions, which points to thicker tickets supporting totals.
  • JBR: flat volumes with a strong jump in total value tells you bigger cheques cleared. Ticket held around 2.3 mn and psf eased slightly, consistent with end users paying for view, management quality, and family floorplates rather than chasing compact efficiency.

🧭 AIQYA Insight

  • Investor: in Marina, price by stack. Efficient one and two beds near quieter spines preserve exit speed even when headline psf softens. Avoid chasing top-floor premiums without comp depth.
  • End user and upgrader: in JBR, focus on tower management, lift capacity, and service-charge trajectory. Pay for orientation and acoustic comfort. If budget is tight, consider Marina’s mid sized two beds that live well and still trade quickly.

Primary vs Secondary Market Composition

The composition split was clear. Marina rotated further toward ready in Q3, while JBR stayed an almost purely ready market.

Table 4A. Ready vs Off plan composition in Q3 2025

AreaReady (count)Ready (%)Off plan (count)Off plan (%)Total
Dubai Marina1,01480.225119.81,265
Jumeirah Beach Residence269100.000.0269

Table 4B. Shift in composition from Q2 to Q3

AreaReady share: Q2 → Q3Off plan share: Q2 → Q3
Dubai Marina69.3% → 80.2% (+10.9 pp)30.7% → 19.8% (−10.9 pp)
Jumeirah Beach Residence100.0% → 100.0% (0.0 pp)0.0% → 0.0% (0.0 pp)

Notes

  • Residential Freehold only. Hotel apartments excluded.
  • Records without a clear ready or off plan flag are excluded from share calculations.

📝 Interpretation

  • Marina: the swing toward ready tells you allocations cooled after a busy H1 and buyers focused on keys-in-hand stock. That aligns with the configuration mix of one and two beds, and it explains why the median ticket rose even as psf eased.
  • JBR: a fully ready market by design. Transactions concentrate in built beachfront towers where end users and upgraders pay for management quality, outlook, and family floorplates.

🧭 AIQYA Insight

  • Investor: in Marina, prioritise ready towers with deep leasing history and transparent service charges. Treat off plan selectively where brand and delivery track record are strong.
  • End user and upgrader: in JBR, readiness is the point. Negotiate on stack, orientation, and running costs. In Marina, ready stock gives you more choice and faster move-in timelines.

Configuration Distribution

The waterfront split shows up cleanly in the floorplans. Marina lives in the one and two bed lane. JBR tilts larger with a strong two and three bed spine.

Table 5A. Configuration mix, Q3 2025

AreaStudio1 BR2 BR3 BR3 BR+Other
Dubai Marina10.4%35.6%31.0%13.6%5.1%4.4%
Jumeirah Beach Residence2.2%18.6%40.5%27.9%7.4%3.3%

Notes

  • Scope is Residential Freehold only. Hotel apartments excluded.
  • Sample sizes: Marina 1,265; JBR 269.
  • Shares may not sum to 100 due to rounding.

📝 Interpretation

  • Marina: One and two-bedrooms dominate. That mix supports liquidity, rentability, and a wide buyer pool.
  • JBR: Two and three-bed lead, which fits a beachfront, end-user profile where families and upgraders pay for space, view, and tower management.

🧭 AIQYA Insight

  • Investor: Marina’s one and two beds near quieter spines offer clean exit math and deep leasing depth. Screen service charges and stack acoustics before you chase a low headline psf.
  • End user and upgrader: JBR rewards patience and selection. Shortlist by tower, then buy orientation, lift capacity, and floorplate efficiency. If budget is tight, Marina’s mid sized two beds deliver daily use value without giving up exit speed.

Size tells the real story. Marina leaned into larger floorplates in Q3, which explains why the median ticket rose while psf eased. JBR stayed firmly in family territory with a heavy 1,100 to 1,500 sq.ft spine and a deep large-format tail.

Table 6A. Size bands (Q3 2025)

AreaCompact ≤550Urban 551–800Mid 801–1,100Family 1,101–1,500Large 1,500+Sample
Dubai Marina10.7% (135)11.9% (151)22.8% (289)25.5% (323)29.0% (367)1,265
Jumeirah Beach Residence0.0% (0)6.7% (18)1.9% (5)48.0% (129)43.5% (117)269

Table 6B. Median size, Q2 vs Q3 (sq.ft)

AreaQ2 2025Q3 2025ChangeSample (Q2 → Q3)
Dubai Marina9591,181+23.1%1,810 → 1,265
Jumeirah Beach Residence1,4481,434−1.0%263 → 269

📝 Interpretation

  • Marina: the median size jumped to about 1,181 sq.ft. Buyers moved into mid and family bands, with nearly three in ten trades in 1,500+ sq.ft. That shift supports a higher median ticket and a softer psf without signalling weakness.
  • JBR: the centre of gravity stayed in 1,101–1,500 sq.ft with a strong large-format tail. The very thin compact share underlines JBR’s end-user tilt and explains why tickets cluster higher even when psf eases.

🧭 AIQYA Insight

  • Investor: Marina’s sweet spot is efficient 1,000–1,200 sq.ft two beds on quieter spines. They rent quickly and preserve exit speed. Avoid overpaying for top-floor view premiums unless comps show durable spreads.
  • End user and upgrader: JBR rewards selection. Buy floorplate, light, lift capacity, and service-charge trajectory. If the budget is tight, Marina’s mid-sized two beds offer daily-use comfort with better liquidity.

Top Projects and Developer Activity

Two waterfront neighbours, two playbooks. Marina printed a broad, ready-led tape across established towers with a handful of headline launches. JBR concentrated activity inside a few beachfront anchors where end users paid for address and outlook.

Signals from the leaderboard

  • Marina balanced breadth with a few high-visibility launches like Rove Home and Residences Du Port.
  • Established Marina towers recycled well as keys-in-hand stock drew both investors and upgraders.
  • JBR clustered in big-name beachfront stacks such as Jumeirah Gate, with occasional high-ticket clears in La Vie and One JBR.

Table 7A. Dubai Marina — Top Projects, Q3 2025

ProjectDeveloperTransactionsTotal value (AED bn)Median ticket (AED)
Multiple / untaggedN/A3741.691,794,400
ROVE HOME DUBAI MARINAN/A790.151,597,568
Residences Du Port, Dubai Marina, Autograph Collection ResidencesN/A530.182,841,189
Aba Lux LivingN/A420.203,040,676
DAMAC HEIGHTSN/A280.072,262,500
PRINCESS TOWERN/A280.061,963,178
ORRA MARINAN/A280.02137,937
ELITE RESIDENCEN/A250.041,525,000
SULAFA TOWERN/A250.031,143,693
TORCH TOWERN/A240.041,665,000

Table 7B. JBR — Top Projects, Q3 2025

ProjectDeveloperTransactionsTotal value (AED bn)Median ticket (AED)
Multiple / untaggedN/A2501.082,270,000
Jumeirah GateN/A130.085,276,853
La VieN/A40.024,710,000
THE ONE JBRN/A20.0316,869,840

Note: Developer attribution is incomplete in the current Q3 mapping for these two areas. We will enrich and add a developer leaderboard once the mapping is updated.

📝 Interpretation

  • Marina: The tape is wide rather than top-heavy. A mix of established towers and launch-led schemes kept absorption steady. The project list reads like a cross section of keys-in-hand stock plus a few fresh stories that offered clear specs and branding.
  • JBR: activity concentrated in tower-scale brands with beachfront advantages. Median tickets held higher, and the small count of very large cheques moved total value disproportionately.

🧭 AIQYA Insight

  • Investor: in Marina, prioritise efficient one and two beds in towers with deep leasing history and clean service-charge profiles. Use first resale spreads in launch-led schemes to time adds.
  • End user and upgrader: in JBR, buy tower, then stack. Pay for orientation, acoustic comfort, and lift capacity. If the budget is tight, Marina’s mid-sized two beds off main spines deliver daily-use value with better exit speed.

Affordability Snapshot — Where Buyers Are Spending

The waterfront split is as much about chequebooks as it is about skyline. Marina spreads demand across investor friendly tickets up to 3 mn. JBR concentrates in the 1.5 to 3 mn family lane, with a meaningful tail above 3 mn where address and outlook price in.

Table 8A. Ticket bands (Q3 2025)

Area≤ 0.75 mn0.75–1.5 mn1.5–3 mn3–5 mn5 mn+Total
Dubai Marina6.8% (86)39.3% (497)32.2% (407)12.9% (163)8.9% (112)1,265
Jumeirah Beach Residence3.0% (8)12.3% (33)63.9% (172)13.4% (36)7.4% (20)269

Table 8B. Affordability lanes (Q3 2025)

Area≤ 1.5 mn1.5–3 mn3 mn+
Dubai Marina46.1%32.2%21.8%
Jumeirah Beach Residence15.3%63.9%20.8%

Notes

  • Residential Freehold only. Hotel apartments excluded.
  • Percentages may not add to 100 due to rounding.

📝 Interpretation

  • Marina: nearly half the market sat at ≤ 1.5 mn, with another third between 1.5 and 3 mn. That breadth explains Marina’s exit speed and why price per foot can soften without breaking the story.
  • JBR: almost two-thirds of trades landed in 1.5–3 mn. This is an end user reading: families and upgraders paying for management, beach adjacency, and larger floorplates. The small sub-1.5 mn base keeps liquidity thinner but does not define the market.

🧭 AIQYA Insight

  • Investor: Marina’s 0.75–1.5 mn band is your workhorse. Focus on efficient one and two-bed towers with deep leasing history and sensible service charges.
  • End user and upgrader: JBR is a shortlist market. Pick two or three towers, buy the stack for light and acoustic comfort, and price service charges into your monthly plan. If the budget is tight, Marina’s mid-sized two-bed offer a livable balance with cleaner exits.

Buyer Profile and Demand Lens

Two waterfronts, two buyer logics. Marina attracts investors and mobile end users who price entry and exit first. JBR pulls families and upgraders who pay for management, beach adjacency, and floorplate quality.

Table 9A. Who is buying and what they optimise

SegmentDubai Marina: what they valueJBR: what they valueQ3 behaviour signal
InvestorLiquidity, days to rent, clean exitsLower participation; selective yield in a few towersMarina allocations cooled, ready two beds traded on exit maths; JBR investors focused on stack quality and service-charge stability
End userEfficient two beds near quieter spines, commute balanceTower management, lift capacity, beachfront accessMarina end users upgraded within district; JBR end users paid for orientation and view even with softer psf
UpgraderLarger layouts without trophy pricingFamily floorplates, kid-friendly amenities, acoustic comfortMarina shifted into 1,100–1,500 sq.ft; JBR cleared larger tickets where layout and management aligned

Table 9B. Playbook by segment

SegmentMarina: actionable stepsJBR: actionable steps
InvestorShortlist 5 to 7 towers with deep leasing history; price by stack and acoustic profile; watch first resale spreads after any launchWork a narrow list of buildings with proven rentability; underwrite net yield after service charges; avoid paying for view premiums without comp depth
End userTarget 1,000–1,200 sq.ft two beds just off the main spines; compare total monthly outflow to current rentPick two or three towers, then choose orientation and floorplate; confirm lift capacity and visitor parking
UpgraderTrade up inside Marina to mid sized two beds with stronger light and better noise controlFor family plans, prioritise stack, management, and service-charge trajectory ahead of a small psf discount

📝 Interpretation
Marina’s breadth makes it a working book for investors and pragmatic end users. JBR concentrates demand where daily life is the product: management, lift experience, and beachfront. That is why Marina can soften on psf while median tickets rise, and JBR can lift total value without a big volume swing.

🧭 AIQYA Insight
Run two shortlists. Use Marina for liquidity and exit speed. Use JBR for lifestyle ballast. In both, buy evidence: rent history, service charges, and real comps by stack


Rents on the waterfront held firm to higher. Marina’s monthly median was steady with a lift per foot. JBR’s rent per month moved up on a small but high quality sample concentrated in branded beachfront towers. Yields compressed in Marina as sales firmed on ticket and softened on psf. JBR’s directional yields look elevated because the lease mix skews to larger, premium stacks while sales medians capture a wider band. Treat JBR yields as an upper bound.

Table 10A. Rents and yields, Marina and JBR (Q2 vs Q3 2025)

AreaQuarterMedian rent (AED/mo)Rent psf (AED/mo)Gross yield %PSF yield %Sales sampleRent sample
Dubai MarinaQ2 202510,41710.066.606.071,8101,765
Dubai MarinaQ3 202510,41710.416.257.161,2652,467
Jumeirah Beach ResidenceQ2 202519,34919.4910.1015.1126344
Jumeirah Beach ResidenceQ3 202526,25019.3213.6915.5226970

Notes

  • Residential Freehold only. Hotel apartments excluded.
  • Area logic for leases: DLD tags Marina and JBR leases under Marsa Dubai. We split them by project name: JBR identifiers include Rimal, Bahar, Sadaf, Amwaj, Shams, Murjan, Jumeirah Gate, One JBR, La Vie. Bluewaters rows are excluded.
  • Method: gross yield equals median annual rent divided by median ticket. PSF yield equals 12 times the rent psf per month divided by the sale psf.
  • Caveat: JBR rent samples are smaller and skew to branded beachfront towers. Yields are directional medians, not tower specific.

📝 Interpretation

  • Marina: steady rents with a higher rent per foot align with the Q3 size shift toward mid and family bands. Gross yield eased as the median ticket rose. PSF yield lifted because sale psf fell more than rent psf rose, a mix effect rather than a pure rent surge.
  • JBR: higher monthly medians reflect concentration in larger, premium stacks. The yield print looks rich; treat it as an upper bound given sample size and building mix.

🧭 AIQYA Insight

  • Investor: in Marina, underwrite on net yield after service charges and days to rent by tower. Use PSF yield as a cross check against stack specific rent comps.
  • End user and upgrader: JBR is a shortlist market. Let orientation, acoustic comfort, lift capacity, and service-charge trajectory decide the final choice. If budget is tight, Marina’s mid sized two beds balance daily living with exit speed.

Configuration Spotlight: What actually moved

On the waterfront, configuration is the real filter. Marina’s leaders skewed compact to mid sized with clear brand hooks. JBR’s trades clustered in larger, view led stacks where families pay for address and management.

Table 11A. Dubai Marina — project snapshots that set the tone (Q3 2025)

ProjectTransactionsMedian ticket (AED)Configuration signalBuyer lens
Rove Home Dubai Marina791,597,568Studio and 1BR heavy with efficient plansInvestor first, end user spillover at entry tickets
Residences Du Port, Autograph Collection532,841,189One to two bed spine with premium finishesUpgraders paying for brand, spec, and quay side positioning
Aba Lux Living423,040,676Mid sized one to two beds clearing higher psfMixed lane: investors chasing rentability plus upgraders buying finish
Princess Tower281,963,178Wide stack mix, active one to two bedsLiquidity tower for exit speed at sensible tickets
DAMAC Heights282,262,500Larger one to two bed formats, selective three bedsSpec and view premium where stack and elevation align

Table 11B. JBR — project snapshots that carried value (Q3 2025)

ProjectTransactionsMedian ticket (AED)Configuration signalBuyer lens
Jumeirah Gate135,276,853Larger one to three beds with branded serviceEnd users paying for outlook, brand, and managed experience
La Vie44,710,000Two to three bed family plansUpgraders trading space and beach adjacency
One JBR216,869,840Trophy scale three bed plusCapital buys for address and skyline front row

Notes

  • Residential Freehold only. Hotel apartments excluded.
  • Project medians come from registered transactions. Developer attribution in Q3 is still being enriched, so the spotlight focuses on configuration and buyer logic rather than branding detail.

📝 Interpretation

  • Marina: the volume leaders were compact to mid sized and rent ready. That is why the quarter could carry a higher median ticket even as psf eased. Buyers priced stack, light, and exit speed over raw headline psf.
  • JBR: Fewer projects did more of the value work. Larger floorplates and branded services drew end users and upgraders who buy for daily life outcomes: view, lift experience, and managed operations.

🧭 AIQYA Insight
Shortlist by tower, then buy the stack. In Marina, efficient one and two beds near quieter spines keep rentability and resale friction low. In JBR, pay for orientation and management, where you will actually feel the difference day to day.

Risks and Watchpoints

Waterfront buys are about daily life as much as yield. Most risks sit at the tower level. Selection and stack choice decide outcomes.

Table 12A. Waterfront risk map — Marina and JBR

Risk or watchpointWhy it matters on the waterfrontSignal to trackWhat a prudent buyer should do
Service charges and opexMarine environment raises façade and MEP upkeep, flattening net yieldAnnual service-charge notices, reserve-fund health, recent façade worksUnderwrite net yields; compare opex across 3 peer towers before offer
Lift capacity and queueingTall towers with beach traffic can choke vertical movementPeak-hour lift wait times, service-lift downtimeTest lifts at peak; avoid chronic queues even at a lower psf
Acoustics and nightlife spillPromenade and venue noise can raise vacancy or discountNight and weekend noise checks; resident forumsBuy stack and orientation; pay for quieter exposures
Parking and ingress/egressWeekend beach traffic can strain access and visitor baysAM/PM travel times; visitor parking rulesTest weekend access; prefer towers with clean ingress/egress
Short-stay policy and enforcementRules vary by tower and affect leasing liquidityHOA circulars; enforcement actions; building noticesGet permitted-use in writing; price risk into yield cases
Handover clustering in adjacent tractsNearby completions can tug tenant demand short termCompletion calendars, days-to-rent by micro pocketPhase entries; prefer proven rent depth and management quality
Water-side works and promenade upgradesPublic realm projects can disrupt access or view temporarilyMunicipality schedules; tower noticesTime renovations; negotiate if works are imminent

📝 Interpretation
Marina and JBR reward evidence. Most soft spots show up as running-cost creep, vertical-transport friction, or noise. Fix those in your due diligence and the waterfront premium pays you back in daily life and exit speed.

🧭 AIQYA Insight
Buy tower, then stack. Pay for management quality, service-charge trajectory, and acoustic comfort before shaving psf.


Supply Snapshot — What is in the pipeline?

Registry tagged pipeline in these two districts is thin. Both are mature, with activity centred on selective launches or late-stage construction rather than volume expansion.

Table 13A. Pipeline snapshot by quarter

AreaQuarterPipeline projectsLaunchedUnder Construction
Dubai MarinaQ2 2025000
Dubai MarinaQ3 2025000
Jumeirah Beach ResidenceQ2 2025000
Jumeirah Beach ResidenceQ3 2025000

Note

  • The registry mapping for live pipeline in Marina and JBR is minimal for Q2–Q3 2025. New supply tends to be selective projects or redevelopment and does not create bulk absorption like mid-ring corridors. We will update if fresh tags appear in the projects dataset.

📝 Interpretation
A quiet pipeline supports pricing resilience in both areas. It also explains why ready share dominates and why ticket bands skew higher in JBR.

🧭 AIQYA Insight
Investors should not chase scarcity for its own sake. Buy towers with proven rent depth and clean operations. End users should lean into stack and orientation without fear of near-term oversupply.


Final Observations and Buyer Takeaways

Two neighbours, two logics — and both worked in Q3.

  • Marina stayed liquid. Volumes cooled after H1, but tickets firmed while psf eased as buyers moved into larger, better floorplates. Ready led. Configuration centred on one and two beds, which preserves exit speed and rentability.
  • JBR concentrated value. Volumes held, total value surged on bigger cheques. Families and end users paid for beachfront management, view, and lift experience. Rents printed high medians on a premium mix.

Buyer playbook

  • Investor
    • Marina: efficient one and two beds between 0.75–1.5 mn in well run towers. Underwrite net yields after opex.
    • JBR: selective yield in a few towers with proven rent depth. Do not overpay for view without comp evidence.
  • End user / upgrader
    • Marina: mid sized two beds on quieter spines balance commute and lifestyle with clean exits.
    • JBR: shortlist two or three towers, then buy stack for light, acoustics, and lift capacity. Price service charges into the monthly plan.

What to watch into Q4

  • First-resale spreads on new Marina launches.
  • Service-charge notices and reserve-fund health in older waterfront towers.
  • Any fresh planning tags for small-scale infill or redevelopment.

Data Source Attribution

Primary sources

  • Dubai Land Department registered sales transactions.
  • Dubai Land Department registered lease contracts.

Scope and filters

  • Residential Freehold only. Apartments, townhouses, villas included. Hotel apartments excluded from core scope.
  • Sales areas filtered as AREA_EN = Dubai Marina and AREA_EN = Jumeirah Beach Residence with manual sanity checks.
  • Leases for both areas originate under Marsa Dubai; we split JBR vs Marina using project names (Rimal, Bahar, Sadaf, Amwaj, Shams, Murjan, Jumeirah Gate, One JBR, La Vie). Bluewaters records excluded.

Metrics and calculations

  • Median ticket equals the median of transaction values.
  • Median AED/sq.ft equals transaction value divided by built area in sq.ft, then median applied.
  • Rent metrics use median monthly rent and median rent per sq.ft per month.
  • Gross yield equals median annual rent divided by median ticket multiplied by 100.
  • PSF yield equals 12 times median rent per sq.ft per month divided by median sale price per sq.ft multiplied by 100.
  • Supply snapshot uses projects tagged Launched or Under Construction via STATUS_STD for the two districts.

Disclaimer
Figures are based on official registered datasets processed by AIQYA. Minor gaps may exist due to naming inconsistencies or exclusions. This brief is intended for insight and education, not financial advice.

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