Less tax, more luxury: Millionaires flock to Dubai
Rich people are flocking to Dubai in record numbers, drawn to the desert city by its zero income tax policy and easy luxury lifestyle that has become harder to maintain elsewhere.
The United Arab Emirates, particularly Dubai, have long welcomed wealthy people from nearby countries, and people helping millionaires to move there tell AFP it is seeing more Westerners joining the fray.
Advisory firm Henley & Partners estimates that the UAE will attract an unprecedented 9,800 millionaires this yearâmore than anywhere else in the world.
The tightly-policed UAE has molded itself into a magnet for the wealthy, offering economic and political stability with extremely low crime rates, an easygoing business environment, and even easier access to luxury.
The Gulf stateâs golden visa scheme, meant to attract wealthy or skilled foreigners, allows individuals to obtain a 10-year residence permit.
Mike Coady, who heads Skybound Wealth Management, an advisory firm for high-net-worth individuals, says some of his clients âfeel like success has become a liability in their home countries.â
âTheyâre being taxed more, scrutinized more, and offered less,â he says, but in Dubai, âwealth isnât hidden, itâs normalizedâ.
âIn London, my clients whisper about their net worth. In Dubai, they can live freely.â
A top destination for flashy influencers, Dubai has become synonymous with over-the-top displays of wealth.
It is home to an enormous mall with an indoor ski area, the worldâs tallest building, and the Palmâan artificial island dotted with five-star hotels.
The rapid development into a world-leading playground for the rich has been met with criticism over gross inequalities as armies of low-paid migrant workers form the backbone of the economy.

Very little red tape
Coady said his relocating clients were mostly professionals in their 30s and 40s, including tech founders, second-generation business owners, consultants, and fund managers.
One of them is the 42-year-old founder of a cloud software company who, fearing capital gains tax on its sale, had moved to the UAE from Britainânow a leading exporter of millionaires.
Some are pushed out by a stricter taxation policy for people with ânon-domâ statusâthose who live in Britain but whose permanent domicile is abroad and have benefited from no tax on income earned outside the country.
Put together with other looming changes to taxation and inheritance rules, and what Coady calls âincreasing anti-wealth rhetoric,â Britain is expected to lose a record 16,500 millionaires this year, according to Henley & Partners.
The most high-profile departee this year, billionaire John Fredriksen, tells Norwegian media he was moving to the UAE because âBritain has gone to hell.â
Speaking on the âBuilding Wealth With No Bordersâ podcast about his move to Dubai, Max Maxwell, CEO of Paddco Real Estate, says: âWeâre all chasing a lifestyle, whatever that means to everybody.â
The self-described âserial entrepreneurâ explains that after leaving the United States for the UAE, he found his family could enjoy âa better lifestyle than where we wereâ for the same amount of money.
Philippe Amarante of Henley & Partners in Dubai says the wealthy seek to maintain their fortunes and lifestyle, and the ability to do business with âvery little red tape.â
And the UAE has positioned itself âwith a very clear and simple message: We are open for business,â says Amarante.
To Coadyâs clients, âthe UAE fits like a glove,â he says.
Buy a whole building
The inflow of rich foreigners has not been without controversy, however.
Emirati authorities have cracked down on money laundering after the UAE was put on a global âgray listâ in 2022 over concerns about murky financial transactions and a flood of Russian money, as wealthy Russians flocked to the Gulf after the Ukraine invasion to escape crippling sanctions at home.
The UAE has also extradited some wanted individuals, including drug barons, reversing the gray listing.
The wealthy from all over the world are now taking their families, businesses, and private offices with them to Dubai, âwhich is something new,â says Faisal Durrani, head of Middle East research at Knight Frank real estate consultancy firm.
Dubai is already one of the worldâs top 20 cities with the most millionaires, home to 81,200 of them as well as 20 billionaires, according to Henley & Partners.
Overtaking New York and London combined, 435 homes worth $10 million or more were sold in Dubai last yearâmaking it the busiest market for high-end properties, relatively affordable in the UAE compared to the West, Durrani says.
He says that buyers from places such as Monaco and Switzerland would come to the company seeking a Dubai apartment for $100 million, for example.
âBut in Dubai, for that price, you could buy a whole building.â

