Qatar Weekly Property Deals Reach $155m As Doha Leads Activity
Economy Middle East reported that Qatar recorded QAR565.3 million ($155 million) in real estate transactions in the week ending July 2, but the ministry data did not name individual buyers, sellers or the largest deal.

Qatar recorded QAR565.3 million ($155 million) in real estate transactions in the week ending July 2, with Doha leading activity across a market still concentrated in registered property transfers, Economy Middle East reported.
The figures came from Qatar's Real Estate Registration Department at the Ministry of Justice.
The department listed QAR482.77 million in registered sale contracts for the period from June 28 to July 2, while residential unit contracts added QAR82.52 million.
Qatar Real Estate Transactions Reached QAR565.3 Million
The weekly total rose from QAR383.03 million in the previous reporting period, according to the department figures cited by Economy Middle East.
That comparison makes the latest week a sharper transaction reading, but the source did not break out whether the increase came from larger individual deals, higher unit volume or a different asset mix.
The department said residential units formed a separate QAR82.52 million component of the week.
The reported asset mix spanned undeveloped land, houses, residential buildings, compounds, units and mixed-use buildings with commercial, administrative or residential components.
The ministry figures describe a registered ledger covering several property types in the same reporting window, not a single-tower sale or one luxury-community outlier.
Doha And Lusail Led The Geographic Spread
Economy Middle East reported that activity appeared in Doha and six other municipalities.
The list included Al Rayyan, Al Wakrah and Umm Salal, plus Al Khor and Al Thakhira, Al Daayen and Al Shamal.
Economy Middle East also listed development-area sales at Lusail 69 and The Pearl Island, with Al Kharaej, Ghar Thuaileb, Al Qatifiyah, Al Mashaf, Al Wukair and Umm Al Amad also named.
The geographic list shows that the weekly ledger was not limited to central Doha.
It included established urban areas and newer residential communities, giving the reported total a broader Qatar property-market footprint than a single-district sales update.
The data remains a weekly registration snapshot, not a full market valuation study.
It does not include financing terms, buyer profiles or project-level price changes for Qatar's property cycle.
The ministry-registered value remains the concrete weekly data point.
Economy Middle East did not provide rental yields, mortgage data, buyer nationalities or off-plan handover schedules for the same week.
The Ministry Data Does Not Name Individual Deals
The latest Economy Middle East article followed another weekly Qatar property report in which transactions exceeded $152.8 million.
The Ministry of Justice data did not name individual buyers, sellers, building projects, transaction counts or the largest registered property sale behind the weekly increase.


















