The
wealthy once rushed to Dubai. Now they’re scrambling to leave
Published
Thu, Mar 5 20268:59 AM ESTUpdated Thu, Mar 5 202610:41 AM EST
Robert
Frank
Hayley
Cuccinello
The Iran
war has shaken Dubai’s status as a global wealth hub, as legions of expatriates
scramble to escape and family offices and wealth managers reconsider their
Middle East footprint.
For the
past decade, Dubai has successfully marketed itself as a safe haven for the
global elite. Attracted by the sun, safety and tax-free income, Dubai’s
millionaire population has doubled since 2014 to more than 81,000, according to
Henley & Partners. Dubai’s luxury real-estate market has grown for five
straight years, with 500 properties selling last year for more than $10 million
— up from just 30 in 2020.
Now,
however, Dubai’s reputation for safety has been shattered.
Over the
past week, Dubai’s five-star Fairmont The Palm Hotel, on its famed man-made,
palm-shaped archipelago, was struck by an explosion. Debris from a downed
Iranian drone set fire to Burj Al Arab hotel, and the Dubai airport was damaged
by a missile strike. On Tuesday, the U.S. Consulate in Dubai was targeted by a
suspected drone strike that caused a fire nearby.
“The
U.S.-Israel war on Iran is upending that crucial aura of security in Dubai,”
said Jim Krane, a fellow at Rice University’s Baker Institute. “Dubai’s
economic model is based on expatriate residents providing the brains, brawn and
investment capital. You need stability and security to bring in smart
foreigners.”
Dubai and
the United Arab Emirates sought to quickly reassure investors. The UAE’s
National Emergency Crisis and Disasters Management Authority announced Saturday
that the situation was “under control.” Dubai’s police force this week
threatened to arrest and jail social media influencers who share social content
that “contradicts official announcements or that may cause social panic.”
Other
wealth hubs in the region — including Abu Dhabi, Doha and Riyadh — are also
caught in the fallout of the war. And like Dubai, they’ve made attracting the
wealthy a key economic policy. Yet Dubai’s ascendance and dependence on wealth
capital stand out in the region. Kane said that’s because Dubai no longer
relies on oil revenue like its neighbors do, instead banking on the confidence
of foreigners.
“The city
cannot function if everyone with a foreign passport flees,” he said. “Dubai
will literally shut down. Dubai is more exposed to the risks of an expat
exodus.”
Dubai is
now home to 237 centimillionaires — those worth $100 million or more — and at
least 20 billionaires, according to Henley & Partners. An estimated 9,800
millionaires moved to Dubai in 2025, bringing $63 billion in wealth — more than
any other country in the world, according to Henley. Most of Dubai’s wealthy
are arriving from the U.K., China, India, and other parts of Europe and Asia.
With the ruling Maktoum family starting to diversify the economy away from oil
decades ago, Dubai created special economic zones and golden visa programs to
effectively industrialize wealth attraction as a national strategy.
Dubai has
no personal income tax, no capital gains tax and no inheritance tax, making it
ideal for the ultra wealthy and family offices. The Dubai International Finance
Center, a special economic zone, reported in early January that the top 120
families in the economic zone managed more than $1.2 trillion combined. Last
month, the DIFC said that it was home to 1,289 “family-related entities,” up
61% from a year ago.
For now,
many wealthy families and wealthy professionals are focused on getting out.
Charter companies report that demand for private jets far exceeds available
seats and flights. Ameerh Naran, CEO of Vimana Private Jets, said Tuesday that
the broker received more than 100 client inquiries overnight. He said he hasn’t
seen such demand since the pandemic. A jet from Riyadh to Europe can cost up to
$350,000, he said.
He added
that the Dubai residents he spoke to are traveling for business meetings, not
fleeing to safety.
“They
don’t feel unsafe,” he said. “It’s pretty much life as normal was just a bit of
extra noise in the background with all these missiles. But life has to go on.
They need to travel.”
Dale
Buckner, CEO of security firm Global Guardian and a former Green Beret, said
the exodus shows no signs of slowing. By Tuesday morning, Buckner said, the
firm had seven corporate clients including large finance and consulting firms
looking to evacuate 1,000 to 3,000 employees.
“This
looks very much like Ukraine,” he said.
“I think
everyone has realized the Iranians are successfully targeting five-star hotels
and airports at scale, and now they’re starting to shut down the oil
infrastructure,” he said. “I do not believe anyone thought that was possible.”
Many
companies and professionals in Dubai said the business case for staying remains
strong. And they are careful not to cross the government at a time of crisis.
Hasnain Malik, who leads emerging markets equity and geopolitics strategy at
Dubai-based Tellimer, said hedge funds and family offices are mainly drawn to
Dubai’s tax, regulatory and stable banking regimes. All those attributes remain
in place, he said.
“Those
reasons have not changed,” he said. “It is only in one aspect of the lifestyle
driver, pristine security, that recent events have called into question.”
Henley
& Partners, which helps the wealthy secure visas in other countries, said
Dubai has always proven resilient in times of uncertainty. Dominic Volek, group
head of private clients at Henley & Partners, said the attacks in Dubai are
also a reminder of the importance of geographic hedging.
“Situations
like this reinforce a core principle we often discuss with clients: the value
of global optionality,” he said. “Internationally mobile families typically
diversify their residence and citizenship exposure across multiple regions —
including the Americas, Europe, the Middle East, and Asia — so they retain
flexibility in the face of geopolitical uncertainty, wherever and whenever it
may arise. These decisions are generally strategic and long-term in nature
rather than reactions to short-term events.”
One
sector that could feel longer-term pressure is Dubai’s real estate market.
Dubai’s real estate prices have been surging for five years straight, boosted
by its golden visa program that gives foreigners a 10-year renewable visa for
buying a property of $550,000 or more. Last year a 47,200-square-foot penthouse
at the new Bugatti Residences set a price record for Dubai and the UAE when it
sold for 550 United Arab Emirates dirhams, or about $150 million.
Yet even
before the Iran war, there were some signs that Dubai’s breakneck building
spree, soaring prices and widespread speculation could start to cool. In
September, UBS estimated that Dubai had the fifth-highest bubble risk of 21
major cities, ranking behind Zurich and Los Angeles. In the spring, Fitch
Ratings predicted a correction in late 2025 and in 2026, with prices falling as
much as 15%.
Fitch
Ratings’ Anton Lopatin said the effect on real estate values will depend on the
conflict’s scope and duration. For now, he said, expatriate departures could
“put pressure” on Dubai’s housing market.

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