Julius Baer's Global Wealth and Lifestyle Report 2026 places Dubai above Paris and London on lifestyle value for high-net-worth individuals, citing the emirate's competitive pricing across real estate, private aviation, and luxury goods while European peers face strengthening local currencies that compress purchasing power.
The Swiss private bank's annual benchmark tracks 271 luxury goods and services across 25 global cities. Dubai's pricing advantage stems from currency stability—the dirham's 27-year peg to the dollar—and zero personal income tax, allowing UHNW principals to deploy capital into experiences and assets rather than fiscal obligations. Paris and London, by contrast, saw lifestyle costs rise 8-12 percent year-over-year in dollar terms as the euro and sterling appreciated against baseline currencies.
The report matters because it quantifies what family offices have quietly observed since 2022: Dubai offers institutional-grade wealth infrastructure without the tax drag or currency volatility of legacy European centers. Real estate remains the clearest example. A 5,000-square-foot penthouse in Dubai Marina or Palm Jumeirah trades at $3.2-4.8 million, while comparable floor plans in Mayfair or the 8th arrondissement command $12-18 million. The gap persists even after Dubai's 17 percent property price appreciation in 2025. For family offices rotating out of London or Paris for tax or regulatory reasons, the math is simple: redeploy the cost basis difference into operating companies or direct investments.
Private aviation and hospitality show similar spreads. A 12-hour heavy-jet charter from Dubai to London costs $85,000-105,000, roughly 15 percent below equivalent Paris-New York routes due to competitive positioning among UAE operators. Luxury hotel ADRs in Dubai averaged $620 in Q4 2025, compared to $890 in Paris and $780 in London, even as occupancy rates held above 82 percent across all three markets. The emirate is adding 14 luxury hotels in 2026, including Rosewood, Aman, and MGM properties, which will test pricing power but also signal developer confidence in sustained demand.
Operators should track three developments. First, whether Dubai's 2026 luxury hotel pipeline—estimated at 3,400 keys—softens ADRs below the $600 threshold, which would compress margin assumptions for hospitality-focused family offices. Second, how European wealth centers respond if currency tailwinds reverse; a 10 percent euro decline against the dollar would narrow Dubai's value gap materially. Third, the emirate's ability to sustain its tax advantage as OECD's 15 percent global minimum tax framework takes effect in 2026-2027, though free-zone structures and exemptions will likely preserve most benefits for qualifying entities.
Julius Baer's report arrives as 42 single-family offices opened Dubai operations in 2025, up from 29 the prior year, and as the emirate's luxury hotel pipeline reaches a 10-year high.