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Times of India reports that Dubai buyers can now pay for property with Bitcoin, Ethereum or leading stablecoins after the Land Department plugged Crypto.com Pay into its title-transfer system. The same gateway will soon let Emirates passengers book flights in crypto, giving Dubai the first public roll-out of digital money across two pillar industries.
Under the pact signed on 6 July, Crypto.com supplies wallets, on-chain ID checks and instant dirham settlement while buyers send BTC, ETH, USDC or USDT. AInvest details that the upgrade sits inside the Real Estate Strategy 2033, aimed at cutting paperwork and opening Dubai homes to more overseas investors.
On the travel side, Bitbo notes that Emirates has begun testing Crypto.com Pay at checkout. “This partnership reflects our commitment to meet evolving customer preferences,” said Adnan Kazim, Emirates’ chief commercial officer, as he confirmed plans for a full ticketing launch in 2026 once regulators sign off.
Dubai already hosts fractional-ownership platforms like Prypco Mint, where villas are tokenised and sold in minute shares. Direct crypto payments now remove the last fiat step and could pour fresh liquidity into those tokens. With zero capital-gains tax and a fast-growing virtual-asset rulebook, the emirate continues to court crypto-rich buyers who want real bricks as easily as digital coins.
Officials say the twin deals move Dubai closer to its target of shifting ninety percent of public services onto digital-asset rails by 2026. If uptake stays strong, they project crypto spending on property alone could top AED 10 billion next year—signalling that what began as a pilot is fast becoming everyday practice.