Skip to main content

Dubai machine sale for Euro Auctions

A major auction of construction machines has been carried out successfully in Dubai by the specialist firm Euro Auctions The firm says that it has consolidated its Middle East position with its second Dubai sale. According to Euro Auctions, the firm saw increases in buyers and vendors at the one-day plant and machinery sale. The company held its first Dubai auction in September and has now carried out a successful follow-up event that attracted more buyers and vendors. The firm saw an increase in the
May 11, 2018 Read time: 3 mins
The auction attracted a large number of bidders and buyers
A major auction of construction machines has been carried out successfully in Dubai by the specialist firm Euro Auctions


The firm says that it has consolidated its Middle East position with its second Dubai sale. According to 214 Euro Auctions, the firm saw increases in buyers and vendors at the one-day plant and machinery sale.

The company held its first Dubai auction in September and has now carried out a successful follow-up event that attracted more buyers and vendors.

The firm saw an increase in the number of bidders opting to attend the second sale of more than 40%. The firm now has a permanent site in Dubai and the sale also saw a jump in the total number of successful buyers. There were also new vendors consigning equipment to this event for the first time.

Over 400 lots went under the hammer in a packed day, attracting strong interest from right across the Middle East as well as from India, Western Europe and Russia. Almost US$2 million of all sales were snapped up by United Arab Emirates-based bidders with significant purchases also going to Oman and Saudi Arabia.  Europe accounted for a further $700,000 of the total hammer prices with key consignments going to bidders in Germany, the Netherlands and the UK. Floor sales on the day accounted for the vast majority of business with just over 20% being transacted online, suggesting that a physical presence in the region is important to meet local demand.

“We are absolutely delighted about how this sale has gone, firmly placing our Dubai operation in the region and on the calendar,” said Jonnie Keys, Euro Auctions’ commercial manager. “News on our recent arrival in the region and our ambition to be a professional and key player in the used construction equipment sector is certainly getting out and stimulating much discussion. We’re also now signing up a number of the key equipment holders across the region as they look to use our facilities moving forward.”

Notable lots that went under the hammer at the recent Dubai sale included an unused 2016 2394 Volvo EC210BLC excavator which went for $75,000; Telehandlers and loaders were also in good supply with a 2008 255 JCB 540-170 selling for $43,000, while a low hours 2015 2294 CAT 966 went for $147,500.   


Euro Auctions leased a 91,000m² site in the Jebel Ali Free Zone that includes a purpose built auction complex covering over 3,000m² with a 360-seat, fully air-conditioned enclosed auction arena as well as ancillary buildings, workshops and infrastructure. Euro Auctions has all the necessary services and logistic licences in place for the new venture and will trade under the Euro Auctions brand.

Keys added, “Having a permanent presence in the region is both opening the door to many new buyers and sellers and enabling us to better link together our global operations so we can offer a complete service and sell equipment in the markets where they are most desired and where they will achieve the best prices possible.  Having a strong sales and support team here on the ground in Dubai, backed up by our international operations, has been a key factor in our success and was a key part of our growth plans for 2017 along with founding our successful operation in Hong Kong.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Permanent repairs at lower costs thanks to JCB’s revolutionary PotholePro machine
    December 15, 2021
    Shock figures from the AA reveal more than £11bn-worth of potholes need repairing across the UK and British digger maker JCB is on a mission to fix them.
  • Austria is first to tender for C-ITS data collection on roads
    September 18, 2018
    This time next year Austria will be the first European country to have vehicles that collect safety‐relevant traffic information in real‐time. “We’re going for it,” Marko Jandrisits, the telematics services programme manager for Austria’s publicly own road and toll company ASFiNAG, said the tender for equipping the Austrian motorway network with the hardware and software for C-ITS – cooperative ITS - had just been launched. “The future is here,” said Jandrisit on the stand of AustriaTech at the ITS W
  • Egis buys Projacs to boost its Middle East presence
    August 5, 2015
    French engineering group Egis has acquired 51% of Projacs, a major project and construction management firm in the Middle East. Egis, based in Guyancourt, north of Paris, made the purchase for an undisclosed sum. The move follows the purchase in Brazil of highways contractor Lenc at the end of last year. Projacs, founded in 1984, is based in the Gulf Cooperation Council countries of Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Oman, Qatar, United Arab Emirates and Kuwait, but also operates in neighbouring countries. It
  • Curtains for speeders at Curtin University thanks to Actibump
    June 10, 2019
    Curtin University in Perth, Australia, is rolling out more Actibumps for slowing traffic after what is says has been a successful trial of four systems. “We expected the same effect as in Sweden,” said David Eskilsson, general manager at Edeva, the Actibump manufacturer based in Linkoping. “But the decrease in the percentage of speeding drivers from over 70% of all drivers in January to below 25% in October last year on the most difficult site has been better than even we expected.” In January 2018 Curtin