The real estate industry across the Middle East is undergoing a digital transformation, driven by the rise of property technology (proptech) that is revolutionizing how properties are designed, built, bought, and managed.
Within this landscape, a handful of companies are emerging as standouts in this nascent ecosystem, distinguished by their rapid growth, expansion, and strong market traction.
These companies operate across markets including the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Saudi Arabia, and Israel. They facilitate real-estate transactions, streamline property management and rental processes, and improve construction efficiency through greater project visibility and insights.
These companies are among the most prominent private proptech companies in the Middle East, having achieved significant scale, expanded rapidly, and attracted strong interest from partners, investors, and other industry stakeholders. They continue to enhance their product offerings and build broader digital ecosystems, putting them well on track to sustain their growth momentum in 2026.
Top Proptech Startups in the Middle East
Huspy (UAE)

Founded in 2020 and headquartered in Dubai, Huspy is a home-buying platform in Europe and the Middle East designed to simplify property transactions from search to ownership. The company connects homebuyers, real-estate agents, and mortgage brokers through a single technology ecosystem that provides access to mortgage products, property listings, and transaction support. Huspy also offers related services such as furniture, fit-outs, maintenance, and property management.
Huspy operates in the UAE and Spain, with offices in Abu Dhabi, Madrid, and Valencia. The platform facilitates over US$7 billion in real estate transactions annually in Europe and the Middle East.
Huspy raised US$59 million in a Series B in July 2025 to support its European expansion, investment in technology and strategic hiring. In Spain, Huspy is operational in Madrid, Valencia, Alicante and Malaga, and will be launching in six additional cities by the end of 2025.
Huspy is also looking to expand its Middle East presence by entering the region’s largest economy, Saudi Arabia, bringing its total footprint to ten cities globally. Over the next four years, the company intends to launch operations across most major cities in Europe and the Middle East.
Huspy has raised more than US$101 million in venture capital (VC) funding to date, and is valued between US$236-354 million, according to Dealroom.
Property Finder (UAE)

Founded in 2007 and headquartered in the UAE, Property Finder operates one of the Middle East, North Africa, and Turkey (MENAT)’s largest and most preferred property portal. The platform is designed to improve how people buy, sell, and rent homes in the region through its comprehensive listings inventory, trusted user experience, and suite of innovative products powered by technology and artificial intelligence (AI).
Property Finder, which operates in six countries, is delivering strong financial performance, achieving more than 40% group revenue compound annual growth rate (CAGR) from 2020 to 2024. In the UAE alone, the company’s core real estate revenues grew from US$30 million in 2021 to US$117 million in 2024, and US$73 million in H1 2025.
In September 2025, Property Finder announced a combined total investment of US$525 million to further scale its platform, expand into new markets, and capture emerging opportunities across MENA’s dynamic real estate sector.
In November, the company teamed up with Stake, a real estate investment platform, to enable investors to participate in real estate opportunities through fractional ownership starting from as little as AED 500 (US$136) and lower barriers to entry. The new Stake functionality will be available in Q1 2026 on Property Finder’s app and web platforms.
Property Finder has raised US$667 million in VC funding to date, and is valued at US$2 billion, according to Dealroom.
Buildots (Israel)

Founded in 2018 and headquartered in Tel Aviv, Buildots is a construction technology company that uses AI and computer vision to automate on-site progress tracking. The company’s platform provides construction teams with accurate data and previously unavailable predictive performance metrics, improving project visibility and efficiency, enabling reduced delays, enhancing error detection, and supporting successful delivery of projects. It supports large-scale construction projects across North America and Europe, the Middle East, and Africa (EMEA).
In October 2025, Buildots acquired workforce and safety management platform Genda, paving the way for Buildots to connect progress and workforce insights, advancing its vision of unifying construction delivery on a single platform, and bringing unified productivity intelligence. The combined platform will be designed to visibility into labor allocation, highlight inefficiencies, and assess the real impact of mitigation efforts.
Buildots operates in more than 12 countries. The startup is valued at US$300 million and has raised US$166 million in VC funding, according to Dealroom.
Rize (Saudi Arabia)

Founded in 2021 and headquartered in Riyadh, Rize is a “rent-now-pay-later” platform that allows tenants to pay annual rents in flexible monthly installments instead of a one sum payment. The company is the first in Saudi Arabia to offer this solution and has already facilitated more than half a billion Saudi riyals in rental value through its platform.
Rize is currently focusing on strengthening its presence in the Riyadh region while also expanding into the Eastern and Western regions. The company also aims to develop new technological solutions and automate the leasing process via its app to enhance the user experience and offer innovative services that meet their expectations.
In January 2025, Rize closed a Series A investment round worth SAR 132 million (US$35 million), consisting of both equity and debt. This funding will support Rize’s growth plans and expand its services in line with Saudi Arabia’s vision for digital transformation and enhancing the real estate sector.
Rize has secured US$31.4 million in funding to date, and is valued between US$112-168 million, according to Dealroom.
Keyper (UAE)

Founded in 2022 and headquartered in Dubai, Keyper is a digital real estate operating system that unites property management and rent facilitation in one seamless platform. The company’s core product enables tenants to convert traditional annual rent payments into flexible monthly installments using a RNPL model, while giving landlords access to upfront payments and real-time portfolio insights.
Keyper’s system is used by thousands of tenants, covering more than 3,000 residential units. The platform processes over US$10 million in annual rent payments, and deploys more than US$1 million in annual rent facilitation through its RNPL product.
In November 2025, Keyper partnered with Property Finder to offer RNPL facilities on the Property Finder app and website. The company is also expanding its services to Abu Dhabi, advancing partnerships in fintech, payments, tenant screening, as well as strengthening data collaborations with real-estate entities and regulators.
Ajras (Saudi Arabia)

Founded in 2022 and headquartered in Riyadh, Ajras provides unique financing solutions to facilitate rent payments. The company offers RNPL solutions to tenants, while allowing landlords to manage their rental operations in compliance with Islamic Sharia laws and without late fees. It focuses on commercial and industrial sectors.
Ajras raised US$28 million in November 2023, followed by a US$1.5 million pre-Series A funding round in March 2025. The startup has raised US$16 million in funding, and is valued at US$70 million, according to Dealroom.
Prypco (UAE)

Founded in 2022 and headquartered in Dubai, Prypco is building an ecosystem that makes real estate more accessible and simpler across investment, financing, and ownership.
The company’s verticals include Prypco Mint, a digital platform for property ownership and transactions; Prypco Mortgage, which allows buyers to compare, apply for, and secure home financing with partner banks; Prypco Blocks, a tokenized real-estate investment platform; Prypco One, an all-in-one ecosystem connecting buyers, sellers, investors, and services providers; and Prypco Golden Visa, a service designed to help investors qualify for and obtain long-term residency through real-estate investment.
Since its inception, Prypco has facilitated close to AED 10 billion (US$2.7 billion) in mortgages, helped over 3,000 individuals secure a UAE Golden Visa, and onboarded more than 50,000 users who have invested nearly AED 20 million (US$5.4 million) across 21 properties through its Prypco Blocks fractional ownership platform. The company’s Prypco Mint platform now boasts almost 2,000 active investors who have invested over AED 16 million (US$4.4 million). It also supports over 60,000 agents in the UAE with 300+ exclusive secondary projects, a data hub of 1,500 projects, and additional income streams through mortgage and Golden Visa referrals.
Prypco has raised US$10 million in funding, and is valued between US$40-70 million, according to Dealroom. Its latest round, secured in September 2025, will be used to expand its offerings, deepen regulatory collaboration, and continue scaling.
Featured image: Edited by Fintech News Middle East, based on image by khfcollections via Freepik


