Dubai heads towards record year for road construction

18 September 2025

Commentary
Colin Foreman
Editor

Dubai is investing heavily in infrastructure as it strives to keep up with the pace of real estate development across the city.

The most recent award was in early September, when the Roads & Transport Authority (RTA) selected Beijing-headquartered China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation as the contractor for the Al-Safa Street improvement project.

According to regional projects tracker MEED Projects, Dubai is on course for a record year in 2025, with awards already reaching $1.216bn year-to-date. That exceeds the 2024 total of $774m and is almost equal to the total for the whole of 2023, positioning 2025 to surpass the previous peaks of $1.621bn in 2017 and $1.644bn in 2008.

Road construction awards had slumped to just $101m in 2020 and $139m in 2021, reflecting both the impact of the pandemic and a slowdown in project spending. Since then, a strong recovery has taken hold as the government prioritises transport links to support growth areas such as Dubai South, Al-Maktoum International airport and new housing corridors.

By allocating record spending to road construction, Dubai is signalling that it recognises the urgency of the problem.

Building roads alone is not enough. To remain an efficient global city, Dubai needs a modern transportation network that does not just rely on roads. More metro lines are under construction and are being planned, and there are also plans for cable car systems and tunnel networks.  

These projects will take time to be delivered. In the meantime, the record awards of 2025 are a welcome sign that road capacity will increase, even if congestion remains an ongoing problem in the short term.

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