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PropTech Connect February 2026: What We Learned From 1,200+ Companies in Dubai

26 March 2026·6 min read
PropTech Connect February 2026: What We Learned From 1,200+ Companies in Dubai

The Biggest PropTech Gathering in the Middle East

PropTech Connect ME returned to Dubai in February 2026, and this year the numbers told the story: 1,675 attendees, 1,214 companies, 221 sponsors, and 246 speaker sessions. For anyone building, investing in, or adopting real estate technology in the region, this was the event to be at.

Map of the PropTech Connect ecosystem across consultancies, developers, software vendors, and startupsThe event brought the full PropTech ecosystem into one operating conversation

1,675Attendees
1,214Companies
221Sponsors
246Sessions

The conference brought together property developers, brokerage firms, global consultancies, enterprise technology vendors, and a growing wave of PropTech startups — all under one roof to discuss how technology is reshaping how real estate operates in the UAE and beyond.

For developers trying to turn those themes into execution, the practical question is no longer whether to digitise broker operations, but which broker management system for real estate developers can actually support sales velocity and operational control.

Who Was There

The diversity of companies attending reflected just how broad the PropTech ecosystem has become. This was not just a tech conference — it was a cross-section of the entire real estate value chain.

Global Real Estate Consultancies

The major international firms showed up in force. JLL, CBRE, Knight Frank, Colliers, Cushman & Wakefield CORE, Savills Middle East, Engel & Völkers, and Newmark all had significant delegations. Their presence signals that institutional players are actively evaluating PropTech solutions, not just observing from the sidelines.

UAE Property Developers

Several of Dubai’s most active developers were represented, including Binghatti (as a sponsor), Danube Properties, Ellington Properties, Deyaar Development, and Imtiaz Developments. For these companies, the conversation has shifted from “should we adopt PropTech?” to “which platform solves our operational bottlenecks?”

Enterprise Technology Vendors

Established software companies brought their real estate solutions to the table. MRI Software had the largest delegation at the event with 14 attendees, alongside Yardi, Schneider Electric, AWS, Siemens, and RUCKUS Networks. These companies are building the infrastructure layer that PropTech solutions run on.

PropTech Startups and Platforms

The startup presence was strong, with companies like Coraly, Bright Spaces, Keyper, PlanRadar, Hayy.AI, 3D Estate, DeepImmo, Propkee, and Luxfolio Real Estate all showcasing solutions across the property lifecycle. From AI-powered property search to construction management and digital twins, the range of problems being solved is expanding rapidly.

Advisory and Innovation

DIFC Innovation Hub, Cavendish Maxwell, Asteco, and Betterhomes represented the advisory and valuation side of the industry, bringing important perspectives on how technology adoption is changing market dynamics and property valuations.

Key Themes From the Conference

Automation Is No Longer Optional

Across sessions and exhibitor booths, one message came through clearly: manual workflows are becoming a competitive liability. Whether it is commission management, inventory distribution, or broker onboarding, the companies that automate these processes are closing deals faster and with fewer disputes.

This is particularly relevant in the UAE off-plan market, where developers manage networks of dozens or hundreds of brokers per project. The operational overhead of WhatsApp coordination, spreadsheet-based commission tracking, and manual payment reconciliation is a real cost — and the market is ready for purpose-built platforms to replace it.

⚠️The Cost of Manual Workflows

Developers managing networks of dozens or hundreds of brokers per project face real operational overhead from WhatsApp coordination, spreadsheet-based commission tracking, and manual payment reconciliation.

The Two-Sided Platform Opportunity

Several conversations at the event highlighted a gap in the market: most PropTech solutions serve either developers or brokers, but not both.

The Two-Sided Platform Model
🏗️DeveloperManages inventory & commissions
↔️Shared PlatformSingle system of record
🤝BrokerReal-time access & tracking

The companies generating the most interest were those building two-sided platforms that connect both parties in a single workflow.

This is exactly the problem Nogbase is solving — providing a shared operational layer where developers manage inventory and commissions while brokers get real-time access to availability and payment tracking, all without the fragmentation of multiple portals and manual processes.

That operating model builds on the wider UAE market shift described in PropTech UAE 2026, where developer-broker infrastructure is becoming a competitive advantage rather than a back-office afterthought.

Data and AI Are Moving From Buzzwords to Production

Unlike previous years where AI was mostly discussed in theoretical terms, this year saw real products with real users. AI-powered document generation, automated property matching, predictive analytics for market timing, and intelligent lead scoring were all being demonstrated with live data.

AI in Production

Unlike previous years, AI at this event was not theoretical. Document generation, property matching, predictive analytics, and intelligent lead scoring were all running on live data.

Regional Expansion Is Accelerating

Multiple companies announced plans to expand beyond the UAE into Saudi Arabia, aligned with KSA’s Vision 2030 and the new REGA brokerage regulations. Abu Dhabi’s growing transaction volumes (AED 142 billion in 2025, up 44% year-over-year) also featured prominently in expansion discussions.

682.5BAED Dubai Volume2025 transactions
142BAED Abu Dhabi VolumeUp 44% YoY
13.59BAED CommissionsDubai brokers 2025

What This Means for the Market

The scale of PropTech Connect February 2026 reflects a market that is maturing rapidly. With Dubai processing AED 682.5 billion in real estate transactions in 2025 and broker commissions totalling AED 13.59 billion, the economic incentive to digitise operations is enormous.

For developers and brokers still running on spreadsheets and WhatsApp, the message from this conference was clear: the platforms are ready, the early adopters are gaining an edge, and the window to modernise before it becomes table stakes is closing.

Looking Ahead

PropTech Connect has established itself as the definitive gathering for real estate technology in the Middle East. For Nogbase, it was an opportunity to connect with the developers and brokers who are experiencing exactly the operational challenges our platform addresses.

If you are a developer managing broker networks or a brokerage looking for a better way to track commissions and inventory, book a demo to see how Nogbase can help.

Ahmed Khaire
Written By

Ahmed Khaire

Founder at Nogbasehttps://ahmedkhaire.com
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