
The migration is no longer subtle. It can be seen in the restaurant reservations, the branded skyscrapers that emerge from the mist, and the line of black SUVs outside the DIFC at nightfall. Dubai is now more than just a wealthy person’s opulent vacation destination. It is being used more and more as a base camp, a legal address, a hub for the family office, and, for some, insurance against a less predictable world than it was a few years ago. According to Henley & Partners’ forecast, the United Arab Emirates would receive 9,800 millionaire net inflows in 2025—the highest number in the world—while 81,200 millionaires lived in Dubai. It’s not a blip. It appears to be more of a structural change.
| Important Information | Details |
|---|---|
| Location | Dubai, United Arab Emirates |
| Core appeal | 0% personal income tax, long-term residency, safety, global connectivity |
| Main residency pathway | UAE Golden Visa |
| Property threshold for 10-year Golden Visa | AED 2 million |
| Broader wealth trend | UAE projected to attract 9,800 millionaire net inflows in 2025 |
| Dubai wealth base | 81,200 resident millionaires in 2025 |
| Financial ecosystem | DIFC and ADGM continue expanding as wealth and family-office hubs |
| Key risk | Regional geopolitical tensions have recently tested Dubai’s “safe haven” image |
| Authentic reference website | Official UAE Golden Visa page |
Taxes are the obvious reason, and it would be foolish to act otherwise. The UAE does not impose income tax on individuals, according to the official government platform. This statement is particularly significant at a time when many wealthy people are anxiously reevaluating their lives in higher-tax jurisdictions. That pressure was increased by Britain’s repeal of the previous non-dom regime, particularly for globally mobile fortunes that previously considered London to be their natural home. In that comparison, Dubai doesn’t just appear less expensive. It appears more straightforward, and simplicity is now a luxury in and of itself.
However, referring to Dubai as a tax haven ignores the complexity of the situation. The city has become a low-friction operating system for wealth, which is the richer story. Here, the Golden Visa is important. According to the UAE government, property ownership with a minimum capital threshold of AED 2 million is one way for investors to be eligible for long-term residency. The psychology is altered by that. Instead of feeling like a weekend arbitrage trade, a ten-year residency program feels more like a home strategy. Schools, routines, domestic help, and the quiet comforts that make money feel like home rather than just parked are all things that families can schedule around.
Because they don’t like the aesthetics, critics frequently undervalue the place’s useful charm. Yes, Dubai’s polished marble lobbies and cool air blasting into valet lanes can make the place seem unreal. However, it functions. That is important. With unusual ease, flights connect east and west. Digital services are provided by the government. Employees arrive. If competence can be purchased, problems are resolved more quickly. This “it just works” aspect is significant to affluent families who are accustomed to bureaucratic stumbling elsewhere. It might be the most underappreciated aspect of Dubai’s allure.
Naturally, money enjoys company. A city’s supporting cast includes private bankers, tax advisors, estate planners, school administrators, boutique medical providers, art dealers, chefs, and security firms once it begins to draw large numbers of affluent residents. That is precisely the type of ecosystem that DIFC has been creating. In February 2026, DIFC reported that it was home to over 500 wealth and asset management firms; in late 2025, it reported that the top 120 families in the center managed over $1.2 trillion in assets worldwide and that over 1,250 family-related entities were based there. Such numbers generate their own gravitational pull. Rarely does wealth move on its own; it usually moves with infrastructure.
This has a different, less flattering side to it. It is evident that disillusionment elsewhere is driving some of the migration. A number of factors have contributed, including a general feeling of administrative animosity toward mobile wealth, political polarization in Western capitals, and gradual tax changes. The way the rich react to this is not always commendable. Occasionally, it is blatant self-preservation masquerading as a principle. Nevertheless, their actions reveal something about how they are feeling right now. It appears that investors now value flexibility over steadfast loyalty. A second base in Dubai serves as a tool for emotional release, geopolitical hedging, and tax planning.
As this develops, it is difficult to ignore how Dubai has evolved into a kind of neutral platform for global wealth. There is no reason why Russians, Indians, Britons, Africans, Europeans, and Southeast Asians would feel that they have entered a rival bloc. One of its best selling points has been its neutrality. However, there is now a disclaimer attached to even that benefit. Even though a large-scale capital flight was still unlikely, Reuters reported in early March 2026 that recent Iranian retaliatory strikes and associated disruptions had put Dubai’s reputation as a safe haven to the test and damaged confidence. A city that was partially founded on the promise of stability was suddenly forced to demonstrate it under pressure.
Perhaps the most intriguing aspect of the narrative is that tension. Dubai is profiting from an increasingly divided, taxed, suspicious, and slow world. However, Dubai itself may also be invaded by the same fractured world. It’s still unclear if the recent regional shocks will have a more lasting effect on the ultra-rich price risk in the Gulf or just a temporary psychological bruise. The larger movement seems to be unharmed for the time being. Because Dubai provides what many wealthy people desire most—control, speed, and the tenuous sense that their lives can be planned according to their own terms—the wealthy keep coming.
In that regard, although both are beneficial, sunshine and skyscrapers are not the main reasons why billionaires are moving to Dubai. When older capitals feel worn out, the goal is to find a jurisdiction that feels effective. Families want security without sacrificing their status. And it’s about a city that has realized—with remarkable clarity—that contemporary wealth is more than just a desire for low taxes. It desires to be protected, cared for, and welcomed. That’s exactly what Dubai has been providing. The rest of the world is still debating whether or not it ought to.
