Gulf News

Good news for tenants, rents in Dubai have dropped by 10 per cent

RENT IN MOST POPULAR DUBAI LOCATIONS ARE DOWN BY AROUND 10%

- BY MANOJ NAIR Associate Editor

Have you seen your apartment rent go down by 10 per cent or more in the last 12 months? That’s the average rental drop in the Dubai residentia­l property space during this period.

This allows a tenant to lease a studio in Business Bay from Dh40,000, and at Dh35,000 and over if the location preference is for Dubai Marina.

A single-bedroom unit in the Greens could be had for Dh50,000. At all three locations, rents are down 11-12 per cent in the 12 months to end September, according to the latest report from Asteco. Across Dubai, this has been the rental declines based on listings or tenancy contracts. In the third quarter alone, the average dip was 3 per cent. These rentals are based on prevailing trends in these residentia­l clusters. There could be variations on these based on the building, its relative age, amenities, etc. But these days, it’s rare to find a tenant who has not benefited from a downward revision of his annual rental outgo.

More dips

And more handovers in preferred residentia­l hotspots should lead to renewed pressure on rental terms decided between landlords and tenants. “This trend is likely to solidify due to the sheer volume of supply expected for handover in the short to medium term,” Asteco notes.

For the record, Dubai has seen a 35 per cent dip on the residentia­l side since the second quarter of 2014. That was the time when rentals had zoomed to a six-year high after the 2009 downturn. At the time, rentals were hugely inflated as Dubai was yet to see the steady completion of new projects. Landlords could demand and get what they wanted.

A better comparison for today’s

rental rates should be with early 2017, by which time more the market had seen the last of the super-inflated rental terms. Between 2017 and now, rents would have dropped around 20-22 per cent.

According to one tenant who recently signed a contract for an upscale villa, much depends on the landlord and his/her estate agent.

“My initial experience dealing through an estate agent was dismal — the demand was for Dh180,000 plus. The landlord was an overseas investor and all negotiatio­ns had to be done through the agent.

“But just waiting for a month yielded a tenancy for Dh160,000 for another villa in the same cluster.”

Asteco reckons full-year delivery to total “just over 20,000

[The dip in Sharjah and Ajman was] exacerbate­d by the increase of supply in those emirates, coupled with the continuous delivery of affordable properties in Dubai.”

apartments and 7,500 villas in 2019. Whilst these figures represent a marked decline on previous projection­s, it is still a significan­t volume and a notable increase from 2018, which recorded deliveries of 12,000 apartments and 2,750 villas.”

The report states that handover volumes actually declined in the third quarter — to 4,600 units compared to over 5,000 in both the first and second quarters.

Asteco, in its latest property report

 ?? Gulf News Archives ?? A view of Dubai Marina. Rentals for studio flats in Business Bay are starting from Dh40,000, while the number is at Dh35,000 and over if the location preference is for Dubai Marina.
Gulf News Archives A view of Dubai Marina. Rentals for studio flats in Business Bay are starting from Dh40,000, while the number is at Dh35,000 and over if the location preference is for Dubai Marina.

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