DUBAI, United Arab Emirates— Fireworks over malls, cyclists streaming down Sheikh Zayed Road at dawn and shoppers queuing for gold raffles — in 2025, Dubai doubled down on its formula of festivals as economic engine.
The city’s year-round calendar of retail, fitness, gaming and food events drew millions of residents and tourists, many of them expatriates who make up the bulk of Dubai’s population and increasingly turn out in force for mass participation experiences.
Orchestrated by the Dubai Festivals and Retail Establishment (DFRE), the programme underlined the emirate’s ambitions under the Dubai Department of Economy and Tourism to position itself as a global hub for business and leisure as part of the D33 economic agenda.
From bargain hunters to marathon runners, 2025 offered something for nearly every demographic in the cosmopolitan Gulf city. The landmark 30th edition of the Dubai Shopping Festival turned the emirate into a 38-day spectacle spanning more than 60 venues, with hundreds of concerts and raffles worth tens of millions of dirhams — including cars, cash and gold.
Retail campaigns over the year recorded a reported 144 percent average increase in spending, with more than 1,300 brands across 4,000 outlets taking part. Summer promotions alone generated over AED150 million in sales, driven by discount drives and app-based prize campaigns.
But the retail bonanza was matched stride for stride by a surge in mass fitness. The ninth Dubai Fitness Challenge drew more than three million participants in November, encouraging residents to complete 30 minutes of activity for 30 days. Flagship events such as Dubai Run and Dubai Ride attracted record crowds, transforming highways into running tracks and cycle lanes — scenes that have become emblematic of the city’s lifestyle push.
The emirate also leaned into its ambitions as a digital and gaming hub. The fourth Dubai Esports and Games Festival welcomed more than 45,000 attendees, alongside hundreds of companies, reinforcing plans to develop a regional gaming industry under the Dubai Programme for Gaming 2033.
Meanwhile, the 28th edition of Dubai Summer Surprises stretched across 66 days of concerts, dining promotions and mall sales, with more than 1,050 brands participating. International and regional music stars headlined dozens of shows, while restaurant weeks and budget dining deals drew residents eager to sample the city’s expanding culinary scene.
Dubai’s push extended beyond consumers to the boardroom. Through its convention bureau, the city secured more than 500 international business event bids in 2025 for gatherings through to 2029, expected to bring some 270,000 delegates and further bolster its knowledge economy.
For a city where nearly nine in 10 residents are foreign nationals, the festivals have evolved into more than shopping sprees — they are social fixtures that blend commerce with community.
With the 10th anniversary edition of Dubai Fitness Challenge slated for 2026 and further expansions of its retail calendar in the pipeline, officials say the strategy remains clear: keep the city active, keep the tills ringing, and keep Dubai at the centre of the global events map.- With inputs from WAM/ Photo by WAM