Whoever is buying off-plan in Dubai without looking at the supply pipeline five years out is buying half a picture.
Supply pipeline is the total count of units already planned, approved, or under construction that will be delivered into a market over a given horizon — usually two, three, and five years. In Dubai the authoritative numbers come out of RERA and the DLD quarterly reports, and they’re tracked by cluster: Dubai Hills, Business Bay, JVC, Dubai Creek Harbour each have their own delivery curve.
The 2025-2028 Dubai pipeline sits at roughly 300,000 units across known projects — a number that has spooked headline writers but needs to be read against two things: absorption (the market is still clearing 15,000-20,000 new-build transactions per quarter) and where the units are actually landing. A cluster delivering 12,000 units in 2027 when today’s absorption is 200 units a quarter is not the same story as a cluster delivering 3,000 against current demand of 150.
A client earlier this year was ready to buy a Dubai South 1BR. Pipeline in that cluster showed 8,000 units in 2027-2028 against current absorption of under 80 a quarter. I told him to wait. He did.
Read the pipeline by area, not by emirate. The headline never tells you where the oversupply lands.
Related: Absorption Rate, Transaction Volume, Launch Price, Completion Date.
Market data in context, not in isolation
DLD aggregates — price-per-sqft indices, transaction volumes — are the start of an investment thesis, not the end. Request a market brief or explore areas.