Supply
18 projects
18 projects tracked across 9 developers.

District Profile
Eighteen live off-plan projects, nine active developers, and a price floor of AED 1.08M define Maritime City's current buying window — a
What the current data says
Area shortlist
Need the strongest options in this area?
Supply
18 projects
18 projects tracked across 9 developers.
Price from
AED 1.08M
Lowest tracked entry price in Maritime city.
Dubai Maritime City is a 249-hectare waterfront peninsula positioned between Port Rashid and Dubai Drydocks World, and it is currently one of Dubai's most concentrated early-stage off-plan opportunities for buyers willing to accept an infrastructure-phase timeline. Eighteen live projects are tracked across the district, with nine active developers and a price floor of AED 1.08M — entry costs that sit well below comparable seafront addresses. The earliest mapped handover is Q4 2026, meaning every buyer entering today is acquiring an under-construction asset. Full freehold ownership is available to international investors, and the district carries free zone designation under the UAE Ministry of Economy. This is an emerging-district play, not a move-in-ready market, and the investment case rests on infrastructure delivery executing on schedule.
Maritime City is a purpose-built maritime and residential peninsula occupying 249 hectares between Port Rashid and Dubai Drydocks World. The master plan divides the district into six specialised zones: a maritime business precinct, a ship repair and construction yard, a maritime heritage village, a residential area, a marine industry cluster, and a commercial hub. The 3.5-kilometre waterfront promenade anchors residential positioning, and AED 140M in phased infrastructure investment is covering road networks, utilities, and coastal frontage. The district carries free zone designation under the UAE Ministry of Economy, supporting commercial licensing and operational flexibility for maritime businesses. Residential units are available as full freehold, giving international buyers unrestricted acquisition rights with no requirement for UAE residency.
The single most important structural characteristic for investment analysis is land concentration. One entity controls approximately 90% of the residential land bank — roughly 11 million square feet — which means supply cadence, pricing strategy, and phasing decisions are driven by a single landlord rather than competitive market dynamics. That concentration creates pricing discipline but reduces the developer competition that typically benefits buyers in more open markets like Dubai areas elsewhere on the mainland. Maritime City suits buyers who prioritise waterfront identity at below-benchmark pricing and can tolerate a 2026 to 2028 neighbourhood maturation timeline. Buyers who need near-term lifestyle amenity activation should benchmark against Mina Rashid or Bluewaters Island before committing capital here.
The price floor across the 18 tracked live projects stands at AED 1.08M, representing genuine seafront-adjacent entry for buyers priced out of Palm Jumeirah or Bluewaters Island. Observed per-square-metre pricing spans AED 2,534 to AED 59,376, a range that reflects both unit configuration and floor-level premiums on sea-facing orientations. On a per-square-foot basis, average off-plan transacted pricing ran between AED 2,280 and AED 2,800 as of December 2025. Year-on-year, that metric declined 15.2% — a normalisation from early-launch speculation, not a signal of weakening fundamentals in the underlying waterfront land story.
Buyers entering now are acquiring reset pricing in a district where comparable seafront addresses trade at multiples above current levels. The most accessible entry points sit in one-bedroom configurations in projects such as Kanyon, while two- and three-bedroom units with direct sea views push toward the AED 2M to AED 4M band depending on floor and orientation. For investors running a yield calculation, the per-square-foot cost differential versus Bluewaters Island — which transacts above AED 4,990 per square foot — creates a credible capital appreciation argument if infrastructure delivery executes on schedule and neighbourhood activation follows. Sea-view layouts represent limited inventory in the current supply; buyers targeting specific orientations should move early in each launch phase rather than waiting for developer discounts. Detailed yield and exit mechanics for waterfront-adjacent assets are covered in investment analysis.
Nine active developers are currently building in Maritime City, but the supply balance is heavily skewed toward a single landowner that controls approximately 90% of the residential land area. This means the district's launch cadence, payment plan structures, and phasing decisions are predominantly set by one entity rather than through competitive developer dynamics. For buyers, this has two consequences: pricing is more stable and less subject to aggressive discounting, but there is also less leverage in negotiation compared to districts where multiple developers compete for the same buyer pool.
Among the named active developers, DAMAC has launched Harbor Lights, a high-specification waterfront residential tower sitting at the upper end of the district's pricing band. Deyaar has brought MarCasa to market, targeting mid-range buyers with a one-to-three bedroom product mix. Danube and Select Group add further supply depth and introduce competition at the mid-market level. Projects including Hilton Residence and Il Vento extend the branded and design-led segment of the pipeline.
Due diligence for any Maritime City purchase should include DLD escrow verification — confirm that the developer has registered the project under Oqood and that buyer payments are held in a RERA-supervised escrow account. In a single-landowner district, construction financing risk and payment milestone discipline are more concentrated than in open markets. Buyers should also verify that their sales and purchase agreement contains explicit reference to the DLD-registered handover date and not a developer-issued target. Buying advice covers the full DLD registration and escrow verification process.
There are no completed ready-transfer units in the current 18-project tracked supply. Every buyer entering Maritime City today is acquiring an under-construction asset, with the earliest mapped handover across the live pipeline falling in Q4 2026. Projects including Kanyon, Hilton Residence, and Il Vento sit within phased delivery schedules that depend on both individual building completion and wider district infrastructure reaching a usable baseline by 2026.
Active resale transactions are occurring in the one-to-three bedroom segment, primarily from buyers who entered at earlier launch prices in 2022 and 2023 and are now seeking an exit before handover. Given the 15.2% year-on-year per-square-foot normalisation, many of those sellers are exiting at compressed margins, which creates a secondary market entry window for buyers who want to acquire at reset pricing without dealing directly with the developer. Sea-view layouts represent limited secondary inventory; buyers targeting specific orientations or upper floors should engage sales teams with access to original purchaser assignment lists.
The phased nature of the district means early-handover buildings will sit within an incomplete neighbourhood at delivery — neighbouring plots may still be under construction, road surfaces may be temporary, and retail activation may be minimal. That reality should be priced into acquisition calculations. Buyers who need an income-generating asset from day one should treat Maritime City as a 2027 to 2028 rental activation story rather than a day-one yield play. Detailed buying advice on off-plan assignment purchases and secondary market mechanics is available for buyers considering a resale entry rather than a direct developer transaction.
The two most relevant comparison districts for Maritime City buyers are Mina Rashid and Bluewaters Island, each representing a different point on the waterfront maturity and pricing spectrum.
Mina Rashid is the adjacent cruise-terminal and waterfront regeneration zone that shares Maritime City's infrastructure trajectory. Pricing at Mina Rashid is activating faster following infrastructure completion, and the developer mix is more competitive, with Emaar, DAMAC, and other tier-one names delivering supply into a district that already benefits from operational hospitality and retail. Buyers who want comparable waterfront positioning with a shorter wait for neighbourhood maturity and more developer competition — which typically produces better payment plan terms — should evaluate Mina Rashid in parallel with Maritime City before committing.
Bluewaters Island represents the established waterfront benchmark for the broader Dubai market. Pricing there consistently exceeds AED 4,990 per square foot — roughly double the Maritime City average — and the secondary market is liquid with hotel, retail, and leisure infrastructure fully operational. Bluewaters suits buyers who require immediate lifestyle utility and a proven resale exit; Maritime City suits buyers willing to absorb infrastructure-phase risk in exchange for a lower entry cost and a potential price re-rating as the precinct delivers.
Within the broader Dubai areas waterfront hierarchy, Maritime City occupies the emerging tier: above off-waterfront mainland locations in terms of the sea-view and maritime identity premium, but clearly below fully activated island or creek-facing addresses in terms of near-term lifestyle and rental yield certainty. Buyers comparing Maritime City against inland alternatives should note that the waterfront premium is already partly embedded in current pricing at AED 2,280 to AED 2,800 per square foot, which means the investment case depends directly on infrastructure delivery timing rather than location alone.
The 15.2% year-on-year decline reflects post-launch normalisation rather than a demand collapse. Early Maritime City launches in 2022 and 2023 were priced with speculation premiums embedded; current pricing is resetting toward a more defensible baseline of AED 2,280 to AED 2,800 per square foot. Established seafront addresses like Bluewaters Island still transact above AED 4,990 per square foot, preserving a credible upside argument as infrastructure matures. The execution risk is timing: if the 3.5-kilometre promenade, retail activation, and road completion slip materially beyond 2026, the re-rating thesis weakens. Buyers should treat current pricing as infrastructure-phase entry cost, not completed-district value, and build a 12-month delivery buffer into any yield or resale model.
Single-landowner districts carry a specific resale risk: if the dominant entity still holds unsold primary inventory when secondary buyers want to exit, those sellers are effectively competing against the developer's own supply at comparable price points. In Maritime City, buyers should monitor primary sell-through rates before committing to an exit strategy. Projects where more than 85% of launched units are absorbed before handover tend to see stronger secondary pricing because competing developer supply is limited. Dubai Land Department transaction data, updated monthly, is the most reliable signal for tracking absorption pace. Confirm that your sales and purchase agreement is registered through DLD's Oqood system and that payment milestones are tied to verified construction stages, not marketing-driven estimates.
Q4 2026 is the earliest delivery date mapped across the current 18-project supply, based on developer disclosure rather than confirmed DLD completion certificates. AED 140M in phased infrastructure works is progressing, but buyers should model a six-to-twelve month contingency in any plan that depends on rental income or resale proceeds at handover. Under UAE law, buyers whose payments flow through a RERA-registered escrow are protected if a developer delays, and DLD's Oqood registration system allows independent verification of project status and payment milestone compliance. Before signing, confirm that your SPA references the DLD-registered handover date specifically, and not a developer marketing timeline that carries no contractual weight.

by Beyond
Starting from
AED 2.43M

by Prestige One
Starting from
AED 3.2M

by Kora Properties
Starting from
AED 2.45M

by Beyond
Starting from
AED 2.94M

by Danube
Starting from
AED 1.39M

by Beyond
Starting from
AED 3.8M