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    Home»Technology»Nqubator bets on AI-native real estate at PropTech Cohort 2026 Demo Day
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    Nqubator bets on AI-native real estate at PropTech Cohort 2026 Demo Day

    Editorial TeamBy Editorial TeamMay 15, 2026
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    Backed by Dubai CommerCity, the six-week incubator brought together ten startups from five countries to tackle one question: what does real estate look like when AI runs the building?

    Dubai’s real estate sector, already one of the most digitally ambitious in the world, is now being reshaped from the inside by a new generation of AI-native startups. That trajectory came into sharp focus this week as Nqubator concluded its PropTech Cohort 2026 with a Demo Day in Dubai, supported by Dubai CommerCity.

    For Sultan Ali Lootah, Chairman of Nqubator, the cohort is part of a broader play to position the UAE as a global hub for innovation-driven investment. “The successful conclusion of the PropTech Cohort 2026 demonstrates the strength, ambition, and global potential of the UAE’s innovation ecosystem,” he said.

    “We believe the future of economic growth will be driven by founders and startups capable of solving real-world challenges through scalable technology, intelligent infrastructure, and innovative operational models.”

    That thesis shaped the six-week program, which targeted the technologies quietly redefining how properties are built, sold, managed, and experienced: PropTech, Construction Technology (ConTech), AI-driven property systems, smart infrastructure, and digital real estate ecosystems. Ten startups were selected from a pool of more than 70 applications across five countries, a strong signal of how much international interest the UAE’s innovation ecosystem now commands.

    The numbers from the cohort point to deep, not surface-level, engagement: over 80% startup and ecosystem engagement, a 40% proof-of-concept engagement rate, and an 88% founder satisfaction score, alongside nine expert-led sessions and eight one-on-one mentorships.

    The ten startups reshaping property tech
    The cohort lineup reflects how broadly AI and automation are now permeating the real estate value chain:

    • Manzilo, an AI-powered tenant and property manager communication platform built around WhatsApp-based operational workflows.
    • Colab Cloud, an immersive PropTech sales platform enabling developers to showcase properties through interactive visualisation.
    • eStaie, an AI-native extended-stay booking platform built for long-term hospitality.
    • MaawaOS, a modular operating system for property and facility management, centralizing building operations and maintenance workflows.
    • MyGatePass, a smart digital identity and visitor access platform for connected buildings.
    • PropHero, an agent-focused CRM and real estate intelligence platform for lead management and decision support.
    • Trase, an AI automation engine for home services and construction workflows, focused on transparency and execution speed.

    Collectively, the lineup captures the convergence shaping urban infrastructure globally: AI, automation, digital identity, and immersive technology, all targeting an industry that has historically lagged in digital transformation.

    From incubation to scalable business
    Nqubator’s ambition, Lootah emphasised, extends well beyond the six-week cycle. “Our objective is not only to support startups during an incubation cycle, but to help build sustainable businesses that can contribute to the future of industries, economies, and smart urban development,” he said. “Through strategic mentorship, ecosystem access, investor engagement, and industry collaboration, we are building a platform that empowers startups to scale beyond local markets into regional and global opportunities.”

    That execution-first orientation is what Nqubator’s CEO, Saeed Al Hamli, sees as the program’s defining feature. “Today’s innovation economy requires more than ideas. Startups need execution support, operational guidance, strategic introductions, investor readiness, and access to the right ecosystem at the right stage,” he said. “The Demo Day represents the beginning of the next growth phase for many of these ventures.”

    Mentor network and ecosystem backing
    The cohort drew on a deep international mentor pool spanning entrepreneurship, venture building, technology, infrastructure, finance, and digital transformation. Strategic backing came from international venture-building voices including Serhat Cicekoglu, Founder of Sente Ventures, who participated as a sponsor and mentor.

    “Nqubator’s program supports entrepreneurs at the most difficult stage of their journey,” Cicekoglu said, “with a robust content and mentor pool to prepare them for their next step, growth.”

    Founder feedback echoed the practical orientation. Manzilo described the cohort as a “genuinely impressive experience with highly relevant mentorship.” MyGatePass highlighted its focus on commercialisation over theoretical discussion. Trase credited the program with sharpening product-market fit and opening access to relevant industry stakeholders.

    A widening innovation mandate
    PropTech is one slice of Nqubator’s larger ambition. The organisation continues to expand its incubation work across AI, FinTech, Cybersecurity, Smart Infrastructure, Digital Commerce, Future Mobility, and Sustainable Urban Solutions, the verticals expected to define the next decade of the UAE’s economic diversification.

    In a market where Dubai’s skyline already serves as a global symbol of ambition, the infrastructure beneath it is increasingly software-defined. Cohort 2026 is one more datapoint suggesting that the next wave of real estate winners won’t be the ones with the most square footage, but the ones with the smartest systems running through it.


    Source: Tahawul Tech

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