Dubai's residential market has long offered investors one primary route: buy a unit, rent it out, and realise value on sale.
It has been a reliable model, but for institutions looking to deploy capital at scale into long-term income-producing residential assets, it has significant limitations; ownership is fragmented, governance is complex, and performance is tied to the sales market rather than income. Dubai now has a large and settled rental population, longer tenant tenures among professional cohorts, and institutional capital already comfortable underwriting long-term income across the UAE; the conditions that typically precede an institutional residential ownership model are in place but the investment opportunities have been historically limited.
The recent off-market acquisition of a mixed-use development in Studio City - a record-setting transaction in the area and one of the largest mixed-use deals in the UAE this year - signals that institutional appetite for purpose-built residential assets is beginning to translate into actual transactions. Cushman & Wakefield Core advised SRG Developments on the sale to Aldar of a scheme in Studio City comprising six residential buildings and a community mall, totalling 312 apartments and 39 retail units.
Large-scale residential development is not unusual in Dubai; the city has long been dominated by major developers delivering residential communities at scale. The distinction is what happens after completion. Most residential projects are ultimately sold down on a strata basis, with ownership fragmented across individual buyers, capital returned early, risk transferred quickly, and value realised at unit level rather than at asset level.
That structure has been effective, supporting speed, liquidity, and volume during periods of strong growth, and it remains the dominant model. The consequence, however, is that very little residential stock has ever been designed to remain under single ownership and generate long-term income rather than sell-down proceeds.
Multifamily - or Build to Rent as it is more commonly termed in the UAE – offer an alternative with residential developments in which multiple units within a single property are retained under one owner rather than sold individually. A Build to Rent market has in fact existed in the UAE for decades, concentrated in leasehold areas where regional family offices have long held large residential portfolios as income-generating assets. With strong occupancy and reliable income, there has been little commercial pressure to sell, limiting the investment opportunity for institutional capital.
For institutions deploying capital at scale, the appeal of the model is practical; governance is clearer, capital expenditure is easier to plan, and performance is measured through net operating income rather than absorption rates, with exit value linked to cash flow and scale rather than individual unit sales. For developers, the model carries different demands; capital is committed for longer, feasibility rests more heavily on operating margins than absorption, and execution over a longer horizon becomes the determining factor. It will not suit every site or every balance sheet, and it does not displace the strata model, which will continue to define much of Dubai's residential market for years to come.
Historically, the challenge has been less about investor appetite and more about the limited availability of purpose-built assets capable of supporting institutional ownership. The Studio City transaction is an early signal that this is beginning to change, and that institutional demand for the right residential product, at the right scale, is present in this market.