Analysis · April 2026
510,810 UHNWIs worldwide · 128,000 relocations in 2025, absolute record · Migration accelerated by tensions in the Middle East · Europe consolidates its position as a safe haven.
There are times in recent history when the flow of wealth moves with a speed and stealth that headlines never fully capture. The rise in tensions in the Middle East since 2023, the intensification of conflicts, the partial closure of trade routes and the geopolitical shock wave that reached asset markets in 2025-2026 have triggered one of these moments. The wealth migration of UHNWIs to Europe has accelerated at an unprecedented pace.
This movement is not a disorganized flight. It's a strategy. And the UHNWIs who do so aren't just looking for a place to move their money — they're looking for a place to live, raise their children, build wealth, and find what money alone can't buy: stability, discretion, the real quality of an exceptional ordinary life.
The numbers that outline the movement
According to Altrata data (World Ultra Wealth Report 2025), the global population of UHNWI reached 510,810 individuals at the end of June 2025, an increase of +5.4%. Their total wealth is $59.8 trillion. In 2025, a record 128,000 millionaires changed countries of residence — a figure that has been steadily increasing since 2022, and projected for 2026 to be even higher.
Tensions in the Middle East play a decisive role in this movement. According to WealthBriefing, the escalation of conflicts has caused a measurable flight towards safe havens on the markets: rise in gold, fall in American bond yields, acceleration in requests for second passports. Private bankers and wealth managers from Dubai and Abu Dhabi — themselves exposed — have recommended to their UHNWI clientele urgent geographic diversification towards continental Europe.
France finds itself in this equation with 14,565 UHNWI residing on its territory (Altrata, mid-2025), ranked 8th in the world and 3rd in Europe. Its institutional stability, its depth of heritage, its cultural and gastronomic fabric, and its central position in Europe make it one of the strongest destinations for UHNWI on the move.
Why Europe — and not just Geneva or Monaco
The classic UHNWI destinations — Switzerland, Monaco, Luxembourg — remain essential. But they have their limits. Monaco is saturated. Geneva is known to all Gulf family offices. Luxembourg is powerful for structuring, not for life. What 2026 has revealed is that territories previously considered “peripheral” in UHNWI mapping offer exactly what the wealthy are looking for in a crisis context: natural discretion, access to institutions, the beauty of everyday life and security without ostentation.
France, in this context, plays several cards simultaneously. Parisian prime real estate remains between 16,000 and 28,000 euros/m² in the premium sectors (Fairway Luxury Real Estate, 2026), with a stability that neither London nor New York guarantees in an unstable geopolitical context. The Côte d'Azur remains an incomparable concentration of exceptional properties. And the regions – Alsace, Lorraine, Burgundy, Provence – offer a radically different proposition.: the real living environment, far from the flashes, with a built and natural heritage that no city can reproduce.
Strasbourg: the discreet crossroads that UHNWIs discover
Strasbourg is not a UHNWI destination in the classic sense of the term. It's not Monaco, it's not Megève. But in the context of 2026 – accelerated asset migration, search for discretion, need for an operational European anchor – it presents a profile which has no direct equivalent.
Unique geopolitical position: Strasbourg is the only French city that is the simultaneous seat of the European Parliament, the Council of Europe and the European Court of Human Rights. For a UHNWI in international wealth mobility, settling in Strasbourg means physically anchoring yourself in the capital of the institutions that protect rights and freedoms in Europe. It's not symbolic — it's structural.
Unparalleled accessibility: Strasbourg is 2 hours 15 minutes from Paris by direct TGV, 45 minutes from Basel (and therefore from Zurich in 1 hour 15 minutes), 1 hour from Frankfurt, 1 hour 30 minutes from Geneva. EuroAirport Basel-Mulhouse-Fribourg receives direct flights from European and Middle Eastern capitals. For a UHNWI family that maintains activities in Paris, Switzerland and Germany, Strasbourg is mathematically at the center.
Exceptional real estate heritage without visible speculation: The Orangerie, Contades and UNESCO-listed Neustadt districts offer bourgeois houses and luxury apartments of an architectural quality that large metropolises no longer produce. Prices remain — compared to Paris or Geneva — in a heritage and non-speculative logic. And the Alsatian off-market market, on which Adopts a Conciergerie is positioned, contains properties that will never appear on public platforms.




