Dubai Delivered Over 2,700 New Hotel Rooms in H1 2024
More than 2,700 new hotel rooms were delivered in Dubai in the first half of 2024, with a further 10,100 set to come onto the market by the end of 2025, according to new research by a leading real estate advisory group and property consultant, Cavendish Maxwell.
Dubai added 12 hotels to its inventory between January 1 and June 30, 2024, bringing the total number of hospitality establishments to 716, with almost 149,750 rooms between them. Another 40 hotels are due for delivery between now and the end of next year, with 4,748 additional rooms expected in 2026 and 2027, according to Cavendish Maxwell’s H1 2024 hospitality market performance study.
Hotels in the four-star category saw the biggest growth compared to 2023, with 436 new rooms delivered in H1 2024 – a 216 percent increase from the same period last year. There was also a surge in the number of new five-star hotel rooms opening for businesses: 1,681 came online during H1 this year, up 111 percent from H1 2023.
Compiled from data from Cavendish Maxwell, AM:PM Hotels, STR, Dubai Tourism, and the Department of Economy, the report shows that high-end accommodation continues to dominate Dubai’s hospitality offering, with 67 percent of inventory falling in the luxury, upper upscale, or upscale classification in June 2024. Upper midscale and midscale hotels accounted for 27 percent of inventory between January and June this year, with 5 percent in the economy category.
More than 75 percent of new supply delivered between January and June fell in the luxury and upper upscale categories, accounting for 2,054 rooms opening in H1. Luxury openings so far this year include The Lana Dubai Dorchester Collection, SIRO One Za’abeel, One & Only Za’abeel, FIVE Lux JBR, and the Address Palace Dubai Creek Harbour. More hotels in the luxury segment – including the Ciel Dubai Marina, Viceroy Dubai Business Bay, Port De La Mer hotel, and the Marbella and Berlin hotels at the Heart of Europe – are due to open this year.
Occupancy Levels Surpass Pre-Covid Levels
Occupancy in Dubai remained stable, reaching 78 percent in H1 – higher than the pre-Covid levels of 2019 – with the luxury and upper mid-scale segments seeing the highest gains on the same period last year: two percent and 1.6 percent respectively. Elsewhere in the UAE, Abu Dhabi City hotels reached 83 percent occupancy, up from 76 percent in 2023, and surpassing pre-pandemic levels. Abu Dhabi resorts reached 72 percent, Fujairah hotels hit 76 percent, and Ras Al Khaimah 72 percent.
“Hospitality is firmly established as a cornerstone of Dubai’s economic diversification, and, with around 15,000 new rooms set for delivery between now and the end of 2027, shows no sign of slowing down. However, with rising construction costs and growing competition, the industry will need to prioritize innovation, sustainability, and unique experiences to sustain the momentum. Adapting to evolving trends, sustaining its unrivaled capacity for diversity and innovation, and leveraging emerging opportunities will further enhance Dubai’s position as a world-leading hospitality destination, and help the city achieve its Dubai Economic Agenda D33 objective of becoming one of the top three global tourism destinations.”