Find property owners in JLT
JLT works the same buyer pool as Dubai Marina at a lower entry price, separated from it by Sheikh Zayed Road and not much else. DMCC free-zone employment keeps the tenant base deep, and the mix of owner-occupiers and small landlords across the lettered clusters produces steadier resale flow than the investor-heavy towers across the road.
Start hunting in JLT free- Sales (12mo)
- 5,589
- Avg sale price
- AED 2.87M
- +2.9% YoY
- Avg AED/sqft
- AED 1,786
- Gross rental yield
- 8.7%
Stats refreshed
Why UnitHunter for JLT
JLT's defining quirk is the addressing. The clusters run A to Z, typically three towers each, and a tower name means little without the cluster letter attached. Listings routinely carry one identifier but not the other, so the same unit can look like three different properties across PropertyFinder, Bayut, and Dubizzle. UnitHunter dedupes those into one canonical row, resolves the DLD unit number behind it, and surfaces the registered owner so your first call skips the broker queue.
DMCC is the demand engine. The free zone keeps thousands of companies based inside JLT itself, which feeds a tenant base that converts to owner-occupiers and a title register where company-held units are common. UnitHunter returns the owner exactly as the DLD record states it, entity names included, and ambiguous matches come back as a candidate set. The mechanics of getting from a listing to a DLD unit number are walked through in our DLD unit number lookup guide.
Every serious Marina brokerage works JLT as its value pitch, which is why cross-listing is heavy: the same agents push Dubai Marina stock and JLT stock to the same buyers, and price-sensitive demand spills here and into JVC when the waterfront premium stops making sense. UnitHunter's agency view shows who actually holds the inventory cluster by cluster, refreshed daily, and the RERA permit check flags the expired-permit listings that pile up in heavily cross-listed buildings. Beach-side stock in JBR rounds out the same prospecting corridor.
JLT - FAQ
- How does UnitHunter tell JLT towers apart when names repeat across clusters?
- JLT addresses need both a cluster letter and a tower name to be unambiguous, and listings often carry only one of the two. UnitHunter works from the full listing metadata, building, floor band, unit type, and asking price, to resolve the DLD unit number behind the listing. Where the metadata genuinely fits more than one tower, the match comes back as a candidate set rather than a single guess, so one question to the lister settles it.
- Can UnitHunter identify the owner when a JLT unit is held by a DMCC company?
- Yes, with a caveat. UnitHunter surfaces the registered owner exactly as the DLD record states it, and in JLT that is sometimes a company rather than an individual, since free-zone entities can hold title here. The export gives you what the title shows; tracing a company back to its principals is your prospecting work. Where the match is ambiguous, you get the candidate set instead of a guess.
- Which agencies dominate JLT listings, and are they the same as Dubai Marina?
- Largely yes. JLT and Marina sit across Sheikh Zayed Road from each other and most brokerages farm both, so the same brands keep appearing on both sides. UnitHunter's agency view ranks the top contributors by active listing count, refreshed daily, so you can see who actually controls inventory in a given cluster rather than who advertises the loudest. The cross-listers are easy to spot once the duplicates are grouped.
- What fields come with a JLT export?
- Each hunt exports to Excel or CSV with 70+ fields per row: cluster and tower, resolved DLD unit number, bedrooms, asking price with its history while the listing has been live, portal source, agent name and phone, RERA permit number and expiry, duplicate-group flags, and the registered owner where DLD data permits. The point is a list you can work straight from, with no copy-pasting between portals.
- Does UnitHunter show asking-price changes on JLT listings?
- Yes. UnitHunter records each listing's asking-price history for as long as it stays live on PropertyFinder, Bayut, or Dubizzle. In a market like JLT, where stock competes directly with the Marina across the road, a sequence of cuts usually means an owner pricing to exit rather than testing the market, and that is the listing worth calling first. The history comes through in the export when you re-run a hunt.