Qatar Football World Cup claim surge sees Qatar land owner smash rental fee 40% Football mega event host Qatar has tried everything from cruise ships, desert camps and regional shuttle flights to ensure a limited supply of accommodation can meet an expected 1.2 million FIFA World Cup visitors during the month-long competition. Local landlords have a simpler plan to increase the rent. Residents in popular localities say they’re being forced to agree to rent hikes of as much as 40% and contract periods extending two years. Football World Cup 2022 fans from all over the world can book Football World Cup tickets from our online platforms WorldWideTicketsandHospitality.com. Football fans can book Qatar Football World Cup Tickets on our website at exclusively discounted prices.
Faced with rents they can no longer afford, some residents say they’ve been forced to move even after years of tenancy. Many hotels have been forced to get long-term occupants to vacate and make room for Football World Cup teams and international event officials, leaving residents with few options in a nation that has an 88% expatriate population and low rates of home ownership. That’s helped engineer a turnaround in the property bazaar after more than seven years of collapsing demand when entire buildings sat vacant as new residential, commercial and hospitality supply poured into the market. First-quarter rents rose 3.3%, helped by the recent surge in requests, according to data compiled by hotels, while average prices on the Pearl an artificial island neighbourhood popular with white-collar exiles surged 19%. Housing was the second-biggest contributor to a June inflation rate of 5.4% in Qatar, where costs are climbing faster than in any other Gulf Arab state. FIFA alone has reserved thousands of rooms in hotels