The Dubai real estate industry average for lead-to-close conversion sits somewhere between 1% and 3%. That is the headline number agents repeat at networking events. The number that matters is your conversion on qualified leads, which should run 10-25%.
Lead conversion is the ratio of leads that become closed transactions over a given period. The raw number, measured against total inbound, is almost useless because it mixes A-grade and D-grade leads in the same denominator. The useful number is conversion on properly qualified A-grade leads — buyers with intent, budget, and timeline — and that ratio is the real measure of an agent’s skill.
On my own book in 2024, raw conversion was 2.8% across all inbound. Conversion on A-grade qualified leads was 19.4%. The second number is the one I work to improve. The first is a vanity metric.
Track both. But be honest about what the raw number tells you. A low raw number with a high qualified conversion rate means your qualifier works and your closing works. A low raw and low qualified rate means something is broken further down the funnel.
Related: Conversion Rate, Lead, Qualified Lead, Follow-up.
From first call to keys in hand
Most buyers underestimate how many decisions sit between a shortlist and a signed title deed. We handle MoU, SPA, NOC, escrow coordination, and handover inspection as a single workflow. Start with a call or see what’s on the market.