Hotel investors and operators are meeting in Dubai from 27–29 October for Future Hospitality Summit, a three-day forum at Madinat Jumeirah focused on hotel investment, deal flow and market outlooks across the Middle East, Europe, Asia and Africa.
Organisers expect more than 300 investors among 1,600+ delegates, underscoring Dubai’s position as a global hub for hospitality investment.
Investor commentary ahead of the summit points to capital returning to hotels with tighter discipline. Delegates cite a clear preference for assets that demonstrate resilient cashflow, stronger operational performance and measurable progress on sustainability and governance.
Themes likely to dominate the Dubai agenda include tech-enabled operations, data-driven revenue management, and asset-light or mixed-use models that blend hotels with branded residences and retail—areas seen as more defensible in a high-cost development cycle.
Across the Gulf, decision-makers are focusing on location, operating efficiency and brand execution rather than headline-grabbing builds.
That approach reflects a broader recalibration in global hotel investment, where underwriting assumptions are being reset to reflect construction inflation, tighter financing and talent constraints in key growth markets.
Deal pipelines suggest a tilt toward lifestyle hotels, extended-stay products and branded residences—segments that align with evolving travel patterns and diversify income beyond traditional room revenue.
Independent research shows the branded residence category remains in growth mode worldwide, with more than 1,000 live and pipeline schemes reviewed across 83 countries in 2025, and an expanding roster of hospitality and non-hospitality brands entering the space.
For developers and owners, fee income, loyalty integration and perceived price premiums continue to be central drivers. Knight Frank
Investors attending the Dubai hotel summit also flag wellness-led resorts and culturally rooted experiences as areas of interest, particularly in destinations building new demand through infrastructure and visa reform.
Extended-stay models are drawing attention for their operating margins and length-of-stay stability, while select-service and midscale lifestyle concepts are viewed as resilient options in markets where construction and fit-out costs are rising.
The local backdrop is supportive. Dubai recorded 92.3 million passengers at Dubai International Airport in 2024—its highest ever—while a government-backed plan to expand Al Maktoum International (DWC) envisions capacity rising to as much as 260 million passengers in the coming years, with a new terminal budgeted at roughly $35 billion.



