Facility management team oversees power, cooling and IT systems at a 45MW data centre on Yas Island, Abu Dhabi.
Abu Dhabi, UAE, August 25, 2025
The Gulf facility management sector is on a steady growth path, driven by public infrastructure, healthcare expansion, tourism and smart building adoption. The region’s market is valued in the tens of billions of dollars and is forecast to rise substantially over the coming years, with the UAE showing faster expansion. Outsourcing demand is increasing for both hard and soft FM services, especially in green and smart assets. A recent integrated FM contract for a 45MW data centre on Yas Island underlines rising demand for specialist teams that combine electrical, cooling and IT systems expertise.
The facility management market across the Gulf region is on a steady growth path, valued at USD 60.11 billion in 2025 and forecast to reach USD 77.52 billion by 2030 at a compound annual growth rate of 5.22%. At the same time, the market in the United Arab Emirates stands at about USD 6.56 billion in 2024 and is expected to reach USD 10.95 billion by 2030, growing faster at roughly 8.75% annually. In parallel, a major facilities management contract was awarded for a new 45MW data centre on Yas Island in Abu Dhabi, marking a significant FM win in the region’s growing data centre sector.
Public and private building projects are creating continuous demand for facility services. Large national development programs and urban projects are pushing construction of hotels, towers, healthcare buildings and transport hubs. That in turn means more long‑term needs for cleaning, energy management, mechanical services and systems oversight, not just one‑off maintenance.
Several forces are shaping the rise in FM demand:
Smart building tools—sensors for energy and occupancy, AI for system optimisation, and digital platforms for task tracking—are pushing FM away from manual work toward tech‑driven service models. That shift is improving energy use and reducing downtime, but it also exposes a skills gap. The region faces a shortage of technicians who can handle both traditional mechanical and electrical systems and modern digital platforms. Training and upskilling are becoming critical parts of industry planning.
The FM sector in the Gulf is split across hard services (electrical, mechanical), soft services (cleaning, landscaping), risk and administrative services. Outsourcing of these services is rising, with more building owners choosing specialist providers to run day‑to‑day operations. Opportunities are strongest in green buildings, smart infrastructure projects, healthcare facilities and large hospitality assets. Companies that combine sustainability expertise with digital tools tend to win the larger, long‑term contracts.
The market is competitive and includes a mix of regional and international firms. Several providers are active across multiple countries, and industry moves include acquisitions, partnerships and investments in new service technology. This competitive dynamic is compressing margins in some segments while raising standards in others.
A recent contract for a 45MW data centre on Yas Island illustrates how FM services are evolving. The data centre recently came online and will rely on specialist FM for mission‑critical systems. The contract covers ongoing maintenance of both low‑voltage and high‑voltage electrical equipment, including UPS units, switchgear and backup generator systems, along with support for hybrid air and liquid cooling systems and network and ICT management. This sort of integrated FM work requires a blend of conventional engineering expertise and IT systems know‑how.
Data centre investment in the region is growing fast as cloud services and AI demand increase. Some operators now manage hundreds of megawatts of capacity across multiple countries, and joint ventures to expand in nearby markets are becoming common. As more campuses and hyperscale sites come online, the need for specialised FM teams that can handle continuous operations around the clock will rise.
Despite healthy demand, several limits persist: price competition and tight margins, strict regulatory compliance, and the workforce skills shortage mentioned above. Small and medium providers may find it hard to invest in training and new technologies, while large firms must balance cost pressures with the need to upgrade digital capabilities.
Over the next five years, the FM market in the Gulf is likely to grow steadily. The biggest opportunities will be in sustainable building services, smart building operations and long‑term outsourcing deals tied to major public and private projects. Providers that can combine energy efficiency, digital monitoring and skilled teams will be best positioned to capture new business.
The market is valued at about USD 60.11 billion in 2025 and is forecast to reach USD 77.52 billion by 2030.
The UAE market was near USD 6.56 billion in 2024 and is projected to grow to roughly USD 10.95 billion by 2030.
Major drivers include public infrastructure projects, healthcare expansion, tourism growth and adoption of smart building technologies.
Yes. IoT sensors, AI analytics and automation tools are reshaping operations, enabling predictive maintenance and better energy management.
Key challenges are skills shortages, regulatory compliance, and strong price competition that pressures margins.
Data centres require 24/7 integrated support for electrical systems, cooling, backup power and network operations, raising demand for specialist FM services with IT capabilities.
Feature | Detail |
---|---|
GCC market size (2025) | USD 60.11 billion |
GCC projected (2030) | USD 77.52 billion (CAGR 5.22%) |
UAE market size (2024) | USD 6.56 billion |
UAE projected (2030) | USD 10.95 billion (CAGR 8.75%) |
Notable FM contract | 45MW data centre on Yas Island — integrated FM for power, cooling and ICT |
Major drivers | Infrastructure programmes, healthcare, tourism, smart buildings |
Key challenges | Skills shortage, regulation, price competition |
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