Top 10 Proptech Startups to Watch in 2026: London, Europe, Dubai, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Singapore, India, US, Canada and China
In November 2025, a new wave of PropTech innovation and capital deployment reset the competitive board across global hubs. From AI-powered maintenance platforms in London to mortgage marketplaces scaling in Dubai and data-rich listing engines in Singapore and China, these ten startups have made consequential moves this month—positioning for outsized impact in 2026.
Why These Ten Are Poised for 2026
A flurry of November 2025 updates—product launches, earnings, and regulatory signals—has sharpened the global PropTech picture. We spotlight ten startups whose recent actions and momentum make them ones to watch across London, Europe, Dubai, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Singapore, India, the US, Canada, and China. Each selection reflects new releases, expansion moves, or financial performance disclosed in the last 30 days.
Across markets, digital listing workflows, AI for building operations, and transaction automation are converging. For more on related blockchain developments. Industry trackers note rising corporate demand for tools that cut vacancy time, reduce operating expenses, and improve compliance, as highlighted in ongoing coverage by TechCrunch, Bloomberg Real Estate, and recent peer-reviewed work on building digital twins and indoor vision systems published on arXiv.
London and Europe: AI Maintenance and iBuying Resets
In London, Plentific is strengthening its foothold in social housing and enterprise residential portfolios. This month, the startup highlighted advancements in AI-led maintenance triage and contractor marketplace integrations in customer updates, targeting faster work-order routing and lower unit-turn costs. The positioning aligns with public-sector digitization priorities and broader capital efficiency strategies reported across UK real estate this quarter, per sector coverage from Reuters.
In continental Europe, Milan-based Casavo signaled a reset around streamlined seller services and data-driven valuation modules released in November user notes. The startup is focusing on lighter-asset transaction rails, optimizing days-to-close rather than inventory-heavy models. Analysts tracking European housing liquidity say that workflow-focused PropTech can outperform in tighter credit conditions, as seen in November policy updates and liquidity commentary in European market briefs.
Middle East Momentum: Dubai, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey
Dubai’s mortgage marketplace Huspy announced regional expansion steps this month, adding lender integrations and pipeline tooling for brokers. For more on related automation developments...