Why More German Capital Is Looking to Dubai

Germany/UAE – Germany is significantly expanding its commitment to social housing. At the same time, parts of the private investment landscape are turning outward. This divergence is becoming more visible across the DACH region, where regulatory pressure, rising costs and subdued returns are weighing on traditional real estate models.

Public Funding Reaches New Highs

In Bavaria, more than 175,000 rent-controlled apartments were recorded at the end of 2025, according to a recent housing stock survey. The state government has underlined its ambitions with a record allocation of approximately €3.6 billion in its 2026/27 budget, complemented by additional project funding of around €600 million.

The objective is clear: to counter housing shortages and rising rents through increased supply. At the same time, policymakers acknowledge structural constraints. Planning procedures, construction costs and regulatory requirements continue to limit the pace of new development.

Structural Tensions in the Housing Market

The growing role of public funding is stabilizing parts of the market, but it also highlights deeper tensions. A larger share of housing stock is now tied to long-term regulatory frameworks, including extended occupancy controls. While this supports affordability, it also narrows the scope for market-based allocation.

For private investors and developers, the environment has become more complex. Profitability depends increasingly on regulation, while new construction remains expensive. As a result, private capital — long a central pillar of housing supply — has weakened in many areas.

Market Insight From Industry Practice

Dr. Angela Thomas, who advises clients in the real estate sector, observes these developments at close range. Through her work with investors and market participants, she has direct insight into current investment strategies and sentiment.

“Decisions are becoming more cautious, but also more internationally oriented,” she says. “Many investors are reassessing risk and looking more closely at jurisdictions that offer planning certainty and operational efficiency.” According to her assessment, this does not reflect a general retreat from real estate, but a shift in geographic focus.

Dubai as an Alternative Investment Environment

In this context, Dubai continues to attract attention among European investors. The emirate offers a markedly different regulatory and fiscal framework, characterized by comparatively low taxation, streamlined processes and a strong international demand base.

While parts of the public debate in Europe point to geopolitical uncertainties in the region, market activity suggests a more differentiated picture. Transaction volumes and investor interest remain robust, supported in part by the city’s role as a global hub. Price adjustments in certain segments are, in some cases, interpreted less as a sign of weakening fundamentals than as cyclical normalization — and, for some investors, as an entry opportunity.

Portfolio Diversification Gains Importance

As Dr. Thomas notes, diversification is playing a larger role in current allocation decisions: “For many investors, international exposure is no longer a marginal consideration but a strategic component. Markets such as Dubai are evaluated in that context — not as substitutes, but as complements.”

This shift is occurring gradually but consistently, particularly among investors seeking to balance regulatory risk and return expectations.

Outlook

Germany’s efforts to expand affordable housing are likely to remain a central element of its economic policy. Whether these measures will be enough to reactivate private-sector momentum remains an open question.

At the same time, the growing internationalization of capital allocation suggests that investment decisions are becoming less tied to national markets. Instead, they are shaped by a broader assessment of stability, predictability and long-term prospects. In that comparison, locations such as Dubai are gaining relevance — not as a short-term trend, but as part of a structural shift in investor behavior.et.

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