Dubai’s property market has long been defined by spectacle. Glass towers rise from the desert, whole islands are sculpted from the sea, and fortunes have been made by speculators chasing rapid appreciation. Behind the glamour, however, lies a more complex reality. As the city matures, returns that once seemed inevitable now demand discernment. Oversupply threatens certain districts, handovers loom that will test rental yields, and investors face the sobering fact that buying the wrong unit, at the wrong terms, can lock up capital with little upside.
Yet amidst this volatility, a quiet structural truth is shaping the future of investment in the emirate: scale changes the equation. In a market where access to prime units, favorable payment plans, and financing leverage often determines outcomes more than location alone, the collective weight of large acquisitions is beginning to outpace the isolated efforts of individual buyers. Bulk transactions are not simply a tactic for developers to clear inventory; they are becoming a sophisticated strategy for investors to bend terms in their favor and secure positions in projects otherwise closed off to the retail market.
Within this new market characterized by maturity, volatility, and rising selectivity, a boutique real estate group has emerged, harnessing scale not for speculation but for strategy. Founded by Dutch entrepreneur Lukas Kerrebijn, RD Dubai’s trajectory began in Amsterdam, where he launched a platform that eliminated brokerage fees by connecting sellers directly to investors. Over the course of more than 450 transactions and €375 million in property sales, Kerrebijn built a network of 7,000 investors before shifting focus to Dubai, where regulatory headwinds in the Netherlands gave way to opportunity in a rapidly expanding city.
The firm’s approach is straightforward but powerful: pool investor demand, acquire dozens of units at once, and negotiate conditions far beyond the reach of individual buyers. A project that might list at $1 million per unit becomes a different proposition when 80 or 90 units are purchased in bulk, discounts of 7-8 percent translate into $70,000–80,000 in immediate value. Just as importantly, the payment terms transform. While typical plans in Dubai demand 80 percent during construction and 20 percent at handover, bulk transactions can shift the ratio to 50/50, freeing investor capital and enabling financing leverage that stretches returns further.

Access is equally critical. In a city where the best units are often pre-allocated to bulk buyers, individual investors rarely see the most desirable floors or layouts. Kerrebijn’s team now negotiates directly with the CEOs of Dubai’s largest developers, ensuring their clients gain entry to the city’s flagship projects, including the sold-out Prestige One deal, where Kerrebijn’s team purchased 90 units out of the 243 possible units in the project, then sold out all 90 within only 72 hours.
As Kerrebijn puts it, “The market has become more mature. Capital appreciation is slowing down, which in my view is not necessarily a bad thing. It means investors have to be more selective, and that’s exactly where scale and access make the difference.”
However, property transactions are only one layer of the model. Through RD Advisory, a subsidiary offering full-spectrum support, investors are guided through the realities of Dubai life: setting up companies, opening bank accounts, applying for residence visas, securing tax advice, arranging property management, and even navigating schools and rentals. The intent is not merely to sell units but to provide a turnkey pathway into Dubai’s economic ecosystem, marrying real estate with infrastructure and lifestyle.
As Dubai heads into its next decade of expansion, with population forecasts rising from 3.5 million to 7 million by 2040 and new megaprojects such as Palm Jebel Ali and the Al Maktoum International Airport set to re-anchor the city’s geography, the real estate market is shifting from speculation to selectivity. Kerrebijn’s model demonstrates how investors can adapt: by leveraging scale, accessing top-tier projects, and securing terms that withstand volatility.
The spectacle of Dubai real estate may endure, but its future will be written not by those chasing the flash of appreciation, but by those structuring access, financing, and quality from the ground up.
