
The Oman Property Market Report, Real Estate - Oman - Q1 2026 shows a market that remains transactionally active despite a more cautious macroeconomic outlook. By the end of March 2026, the value of real estate transactions in Oman reached 678 million OMR, which is 18.4% higher than in the same period of 2025. At the same time, the number of contracts increased by only 0.5%, and mortgage activity by 23.6%. This means that the growth in market value is not solely due to a higher number of agreements, but also to higher financing and transaction values. At the macro level, Oman entered 2026 with a GDP of 42.1 billion OMR at the end of Q4 2025 and a year-on-year growth of 4.6%. Inflation in March 2026 stood at 1.26%, and the construction sector contributed 2.8 billion OMR, recording a 2.4% year-on-year increase. This provides the backdrop for the real estate market: demand is not analyzed in a vacuum, but within an economy supported by the oil and gas sector as well as non-oil activity. For the investor, the most important conclusion is simple: the report does not provide grounds for promises of profitability, but it does allow for the identification of segments requiring further analysis. Al Mouj maintains a clear advantage in apartment and villa rents, Muscat Hills shows a strong performance in the villa segment, and the office market in Muscat remains stable in key submarkets. At the same time, FDI in the real estate sector fell to 584.3 million OMR at the end of Q4 2025, down 2.4% year-on-year. This is a signal that the selection of location, segment, and rental model is more important than a broad thesis about the entire market.

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The Oman Property Market Report, Real Estate - Oman - Q1 2026 shows a market that remains transactionally active despite a more cautious macroeconomic outlook. By the end of March 2026, the value of real estate transactions in Oman reached 678 million OMR, which is 18.4% higher than in the same period of 2025. At the same time, the number of contracts increased by only 0.5%, and mortgage activity by 23.6%. This means that the growth in market value is not solely due to a higher number of agreements, but also to higher financing and transaction values. At the macro level, Oman entered 2026 with a GDP of 42.1 billion OMR at the end of Q4 2025 and a year-on-year growth of 4.6%. Inflation in March 2026 stood at 1.26%, and the construction sector contributed 2.8 billion OMR, recording a 2.4% year-on-year increase. This provides the backdrop for the real estate market: demand is not analyzed in a vacuum, but within an economy supported by the oil and gas sector as well as non-oil activity. For the investor, the most important conclusion is simple: the report does not provide grounds for promises of profitability, but it does allow for the identification of segments requiring further analysis. Al Mouj maintains a clear advantage in apartment and villa rents, Muscat Hills shows a strong performance in the villa segment, and the office market in Muscat remains stable in key submarkets. At the same time, FDI in the real estate sector fell to 584.3 million OMR at the end of Q4 2025, down 2.4% year-on-year. This is a signal that the selection of location, segment, and rental model is more important than a broad thesis about the entire market.
The report indicates that Oman's economic outlook remains positive, as GDP reached 42.1 billion OMR at the end of Q4 2025, representing a 4.6% year-on-year growth. The source of this growth was the stable performance of the oil and gas sector and the continued expansion of non-oil activities. This is significant for the real estate market, as residential demand, office leasing, and development activity depend on the health of employment, businesses, and capital expenditure.
The construction sector contributed 2.8 billion OMR and grew by 2.4% compared to the previous year. This is not just information about the scale of construction. For an investor, it means that the supply of new projects and the pace of investment completion should be analyzed alongside tenant demand. A market where the construction sector is growing may offer new opportunities, but it requires verifying whether supply is outpacing demand in specific locations.
Inflation stood at 1.26% in March 2026. The report describes it as slightly higher. In investment practice, this level of inflation is important for operating costs, rents, maintenance costs, and finishing budgets, but it does not in itself determine the profitability of a purchase. An investor must weigh inflation against real rent, maintenance costs, and potential financing.
| Indicator from the report | Value | Investment significance |
|---|---|---|
| GDP at the end of Q4 2025 | 42.1 billion OMR | Background for demand and economic activity |
| GDP growth y/y | 4.6% | Confirms economic growth during the reporting period |
| Contribution of the construction sector | 2.8 billion OMR | It shows the scale of construction activity |
| Growth of the construction sector | 2.4% | Suggests further supply activity |
| Inflation in March 2026 | 1.26% | It affects costs, rents, and operating budgets |
Macro data from the report should be treated as a risk filter, not as a standalone buying argument. In practice, an investor should check whether the analyzed location benefits from demand generated by economic growth or if it relies solely on general sentiment toward Oman. One should compare rents in a given district, rental liquidity, financing costs, and the level of competitive supply. The report provides a macro view, but the purchasing decision must drill down to the specific asset.
According to the report, the Ministry of Housing stated that the value of real estate transactions reached 678 million OMR by the end of March 2026. This is an 18.4% increase compared to the same period in 2025. This is one of the strongest signals in the report, as it shows higher turnover value in the market, rather than just rent stabilization.
At the same time, the number of contracts increased by only 0.5%. This relationship is important: if the value of transactions grows significantly faster than the number of contracts, an investor should check whether the growth results from higher unit values, a greater share of mortgage financing, a change in the transaction structure, or a concentration of turnover in more expensive locations. The report does not break this value down into segments, so one should not assume which type of property is responsible for the growth.
Mortgage activity increased by 23.6%. This may indicate greater use of financing in transactions, but the report does not provide details regarding the structure of loans, the level of down payments, or the type of buyers. For an investor, this means the necessity of asking additional questions before purchasing: is the demand in a given location based on end-users, corporate tenants, investment buyers, or bank financing?
| Transaction data | Value / change | Conservative interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| Year-on-year change in transaction value | +18.4% | Growth stronger than the change in the number of contracts |
| Year-on-year change in transaction value | +18.4% | Growth stronger than the change in the number of contracts |
| Number of contracts | +0.5% | The market is not growing primarily through the number of contracts |
| Mortgage activity | +23.6% | Financing is more important in trade |
The investor should ask the seller or advisor how a given offer fits into the broader growth of transaction value. Specifically: are prices rising in the given location, is the number of transactions increasing, are comparable sales assets available, and does mortgage financing affect demand? The report provides direction, but it does not replace local price due diligence.
The report indicates that Foreign Direct Investment in the real estate sector fell to 584.3 million OMR at the end of Q4 2025, which represents a decline of 2.4% year-on-year. Compared to the rising value of transactions, this is a mixed signal: the market remains active locally, but the inflow of foreign capital into the real estate sector was weaker than a year earlier.
For an external investor, this information is significant because FDI can affect market depth, liquidity, project scale, and interest from international buyers. A 2.4% decline does not necessarily mean a market deterioration, but it reduces comfort with the thesis that foreign capital automatically strengthens all segments. It is necessary to check which projects actually attract demand and which only benefit from Oman's general image as a stable market.
The report does not provide the structure of FDI by asset type, location, or source of capital. This limitation must be clearly taken into account in the analysis. It cannot be stated on this basis that the decline concerns apartments, offices, land, or residential projects. However, it can be said that the investor should maintain discipline when assessing foreign exposure and exit liquidity.
Before buying, it is worth checking whether the project has real interest from tenants and buyers, rather than just declarations of growing foreign demand. One should ask for the project's sales data, buyer profile, absorption rate, transaction history in the area, and information about rental operators. The decline in FDI from the report does not close the market, but it forces greater selectivity.
In the two-bedroom apartment segment, Al Mouj achieved an average monthly rent of 710 OMR, which means an increase of 3% in Q1 2026. The report emphasizes that this location continues to achieve a rental premium and remains a preferred choice among tenants. For an investor, this is a signal that Al Mouj has a strong position in the rental segment, but it is not enough to compare the rent rate alone. One must also calculate the purchase cost, maintenance costs, and potential vacancy periods.
Muscat Hills achieved an average rent of 491 OMR, with an increase of 2%. The report describes the broader market as stable, but with local differences. This is an important observation: in Oman, the housing market should not be analyzed as a single average. The differences between Al Mouj, Muscat Hills, Al Khuwair, and Qurum show that location remains the main filter for investment decisions.
Al Khuwair fell to 385 OMR, while Qurum maintained rent at the level of 350 OMR. The report does not elaborate on the reasons for these differences, so they should not be speculated upon. However, a practical conclusion can be drawn: the investor should compare not only the rent level but also the stability of the rate, the tenant profile, competition, and the building standard.
| Location | Average monthly rent for a 2BR apartment | Change / status according to report |
|---|---|---|
| Al Mouj | 710 OMR | +3% |
| Muscat Hills | 491 OMR | +2% |
| Al Khuwair | 385 OMR | decline indicated in the report |
| Qurum | 350 OMR | stably |
The Al Mouj rental premium indicates that tenants are willing to pay more for a specific location and its market standard. However, this does not automatically mean higher purchase profitability, as the report does not provide transaction prices or operating costs. An investor should compare the rent with the purchase price, community fees, management costs, and projected occupancy.
In the four-bedroom villa segment, Al Mouj achieved an average monthly rent of 1,770 OMR, an increase of 2%. The report describes Al Mouj as a leading location in this segment and points to its position as a lifestyle destination. For an investor, this means that villas in Al Mouj can serve tenants willing to pay higher rents, but again: the rental rate alone does not replace a full calculation of the cost of capital.
Madinat Sultan Qaboos recorded an average rent of 908 OMR, a decrease of 1%. Muscat Hills reached 1,200 OMR, an increase of 25%. Such a large difference between locations shows that the villa segment is not uniform. One location may be growing, another may be under pressure, and yet another may maintain its position due to the scale of demand and standard.
The report uses the phrase "sustained demand" despite price corrections. This is important for an investor because demand does not always mean rent growth in every location. It may mean rental liquidity, lower vacancy rates, or the location's resilience during weaker periods. Without data on occupancy and purchase prices, these rates should not be converted into profitability.
| Location | Average monthly rent for a 4BR villa | Change according to report |
|---|---|---|
| Al Mouj | 1,770 OMR | +2% |
| Madinat Sultan Qaboos | 908 OMR | -1% |
| Muscat Hills | 1,200 OMR | +25% |
In the villa segment, an investor should check the tenant profile, the length of typical leases, home maintenance costs, and requirements regarding technical service, gardening, air conditioning, and repairs. The report indicates rents but does not provide operating costs. In practice, the difference between an apartment and a villa lies not only in higher rent but also in the owner's greater responsibility for maintaining the asset.
The report indicates that the office market in Muscat remained stable in major submarkets in Q1 2026. The CBD maintained a rate of 2.0 OMR per m2 per month, Qurum 3.5 OMR, Al Khuwair 4.5 OMR, Shatti Al Qurum 6.0 OMR, Ghubrah 5.5 OMR, and Azaiba 6.0 OMR. The lack of changes in these locations suggests a market without sharp rent movements during the reporting period.
For an office investor, stability can be operationally beneficial, but it requires careful interpretation. Stable rent does not yet reveal vacancy rates, lease lengths, tenant quality, or space fit-out costs. The report provides rental rates but does not describe the structure of office demand or space absorption. Therefore, office analysis should go beyond the nominal rent per m2.
The highest rates among the listed submarkets are achieved by Shatti Al Qurum and Azaiba, at 6.0 OMR per m2 per month each. Ghubrah maintains 5.5 OMR, Al Khuwair 4.5 OMR, Qurum 3.5 OMR, and the CBD 2.0 OMR. Such a spread shows that even in a stable nominal market, location and space standard matter.
| Office submarket | Monthly rent | Change according to report |
|---|---|---|
| CBD | 2.0 OMR/m² | stably |
| Qurum | 3.5 OMR/m² | stably |
| Al Khuwair | 4.5 OMR/m2 | stably |
| Shatti Al Qurum | 6.0 OMR/m2 | stably |
| Ghubrah | 5.5 OMR/m2 | stably |
| Azaiba | 6.0 OMR/m2 | stably |
You should ask about lease lengths, technical standards, fit-out costs, tenant history, vacancies, service charges, and the possibility of rent indexation. The report confirms the stability of rates, but it does not replace an analysis of tenant quality and cash flow predictability.
In the outlook section, the report indicates that economists have lowered Oman's GDP growth forecast for 2026 to 1.9%. The reason is regional disruption related to the conflict with Iran. This is a significant change in tone compared to earlier macro data, which showed GDP growth of 4.6% year-on-year at the end of Q4 2025. Investors should therefore distinguish historical data from the forecast.
The report simultaneously points out that Oman is still perceived as one of the economies least exposed to spillover effects. The argument for this is continued port operations and the relatively limited impact of disruptions compared to airspace closures in other parts of the region. This is important, as the efficiency of ports and exports affects public finances and the operational stability of the economy.
Public finances are expected to benefit in 2026 from largely uninterrupted exports, especially in an environment of high energy prices. At the same time, the conflict has disrupted global supply chains, contributing to rising costs and strengthening inflationary pressure. For the real estate market, this means two opposing forces: support from exports and energy, and cost risks on the side of construction, finishing, and operations.
Investors should test scenarios. The first scenario assumes the maintenance of port operations and rental stability. The second assumes rising costs resulting from supply chain pressure. The third assumes slower economic growth at the 1.9% forecast. Every purchase should be checked for resilience to higher costs, longer lease times, and slower resale.
GDP at 42.1 billion OMR and 4.6% y/y growth refer to the end of Q4 2025. The forecast for 2026 has been lowered to 1.9%. These two levels of analysis should not be mixed. Historical data shows the starting point, while the outlook shows the risks for subsequent quarters.
The report shows different behaviors for apartments, villas, and offices. Apartments in Al Mouj have a rent of 710 OMR, villas in Al Mouj 1,770 OMR, and offices in Shatti Al Qurum 6.0 OMR/m² per month. These are different markets with different costs, tenants, and operational risks.
For apartments, compare Al Mouj, Muscat Hills, Al Khuwair, and Qurum. For villas, compare Al Mouj, Madinat Sultan Qaboos, and Muscat Hills. For offices, compare CBD, Qurum, Al Khuwair, Shatti Al Qurum, Ghubrah, and Azaiba. Do not draw conclusions about all of Oman from one location.
The report provides rents but does not provide sales prices, maintenance costs, financing costs, or vacancy rates. Therefore, it is impossible to honestly calculate profitability based solely on the report. Rent is the beginning of the calculation, not the final result.
Inflation was 1.26% in March 2026, but the outlook points to cost pressure resulting from global supply chains. When purchasing, one must therefore assess the cost of finishing, service, maintenance, and potential renovations.
Mortgage activity increased by 23.6%. It is worth asking whether demand in the analyzed segment is based on credit, cash, or institutional leasing. Changes in financing conditions can affect sales liquidity.
The report does not provide sales prices, vacancy rates, maintenance costs, management costs, or buyer structure. These data must be collected separately before a decision. Otherwise, the analysis will be based on rents and macro data, but without a full investment model.
The report confirms an increase in the value of real estate transactions to 678 million OMR by the end of March 2026, which is an 18.4% increase compared to the same period in 2025. At the same time, the number of contracts increased by only 0.5%, so market growth cannot be reduced to a higher number of agreements. The data points rather to an increase in turnover value and greater mortgage activity.
According to the report, the highest average monthly rent for two-bedroom apartments is achieved by Al Mouj: 710 OMR in Q1 2026, with a 3% increase. Muscat Hills is at 491 OMR, Al Khuwair at 385 OMR, and Qurum at 350 OMR. However, the rent level alone is not enough to evaluate an investment, because the report does not provide purchase prices or maintenance costs.
In the four-bedroom villa segment, Al Mouj achieves an average monthly rent of 1,770 OMR, Muscat Hills 1,200 OMR, and Madinat Sultan Qaboos 908 OMR. Muscat Hills recorded a 25% increase, Al Mouj a 2% increase, and Madinat Sultan Qaboos a 1% decrease. This shows strong locational differences in the villa segment.
The report describes the office market as stable in Q1 2026. Rates in the main submarkets have not changed: CBD 2.0 OMR/m² per month, Qurum 3.5 OMR, Al Khuwair 4.5 OMR, Shatti Al Qurum 6.0 OMR, Ghubrah 5.5 OMR, and Azaiba 6.0 OMR. However, the stability of rates does not speak to vacancy rates or tenant quality.
The outlook indicates a lowering of Oman's GDP growth forecast for 2026 to 1.9% due to regional disruptions related to the conflict with Iran. At the same time, the report emphasizes that Oman is perceived as an economy relatively less exposed to spillover effects, partly thanks to continued port operations. The risk remains rising costs resulting from disruptions in global supply chains.

Autor
Mariusz Cieślukowski
CEO / FOUNDER
Co-founder of PlanoGroup and the person responsible for the development of the entire group. He built a brand based on quality, trust, and effectiveness, developing it in the Spanish market and subsequently expanding operations to further investment destinations. Today, he is developing PlanoGroup - a project that responds to the needs of clients who are looking not only for real estate but also for new opportunities for living, investment, and relocation. He specializes in trend analysis and building investment strategies in foreign markets - including Spain, Oman, and emerging locations such as Montenegro.





