Lebanese market don't just perform — it endures.
I've said this to clients more times than I can count.
Every time, I get the same look. "Lebanon? After everything that happened?"
Yes. After everything.
Most people evaluate this market through a conventional lens.
That's the first mistake.
Lebanon doesn't follow normal real estate logic. And that's precisely why it holds.
Here's what the data — and my clients — taught me:
The diaspora doesn't panic. It buys.
A crisis at home triggers one instinct: protect. Not sell. Real estate here is emotional capital. The apartment in Achrafieh. The land in the mountains. Sentiment absorbs shock in ways spreadsheets never capture.
Dollar-denominated deals created a floor.
Even as the lira collapsed, prime properties were priced and transacted in USD. That single factor insulated values where it mattered most — in the segments serious buyers actually care about.
Supply here doesn't move fast.
No speculative building at scale. Limited inventory. Stubborn demand — including diaspora demand. That equation doesn't produce the crashes people expect.
Am I saying there's no risk? No.
I'm saying: if you misread the structure, you misread the opportunity.
The clients who understood this early are sitting on assets that held — while everything around them didn't.
That's not luck. That's structure.
If you're looking at Lebanon and not sure what to make of it — let's talk.
I work with international clients navigating exactly this kind of market. DM me or drop your question in the comments.
