Supply
2 projects
2 projects tracked across 2 developers.

District Profile
Me'aisem Second currently has 2 tracked off-plan projects from Emaar Properties and Damac, with pricing from AED 2.
What the current data says
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Supply
2 projects
2 projects tracked across 2 developers.
Price from
AED 2.43M
Lowest tracked entry price in Me'aisem Second.
Me'aisem Second is a western Dubai residential zone where two off-plan projects are currently active, both from Tier 1 developers, with entry pricing from AED 2.43M and the earliest handover due Q2 2026. The district suits families and mid-horizon investors prioritising community scale and space over transit proximity — villa and townhouse product here trades at AED 22,328 to AED 22,812 per sqm, positioning it above the budget fringe of the western corridor but well below premium coastal masterplans. With only two tracked projects and two active developers, the supply picture is deliberately narrow: every buyer in Me'aisem Second is choosing between two community launches from Emaar Properties and Damac, each carrying multi-cycle Dubai delivery records and established masterplan infrastructure behind them.
Me'aisem Second occupies the western residential corridor of Dubai, positioned within the broader Me'aisem masterplan zone adjacent to Dubai Production City. The district character is low-rise and community-scaled: large plot releases, shared lagoon amenity, and villa-footprint typologies rather than high-rise density or mixed-use towers. This is not a transit-optimised corridor. Buyers selecting Me'aisem Second are trading commute convenience for space, resort-style shared infrastructure, and the integrated community living model that Emaar and Damac have exported across their western Dubai masterplans.
Area pricing at AED 22,328 to AED 22,812 per sqm places Me'aisem Second squarely in mid-market villa territory for Dubai's current cycle. That rate sits above the budget fringe of the western corridor — the lower-density, multi-developer communities further from Sheikh Mohammed Bin Zayed Road — but well below the established premium of Emaar's more central masterplans. For buyers priced out of Dubai Hills Estate or The Oasis but unwilling to compromise on developer quality or community infrastructure, Me'aisem Second represents a structurally similar product at a compressed entry point.
The district is most relevant to families with a medium-to-long ownership horizon, lifestyle buyers moving out of central Dubai apartment living, and investors underwriting western corridor appreciation rather than near-term yield compression. Buyers whose primary objective is rental income should benchmark Me'aisem Second against apartment-led alternatives before committing to a villa masterplan. For a cross-district view of where Me'aisem Second sits within Dubai's residential map, the full Dubai areas breakdown covers the broader western corridor context.
Two projects are currently mapped in Me'aisem Second: Palmiera Collective by Emaar Properties and Damac Lagoons Monte Carlo by Damac. Both are community masterplan releases rather than standalone tower launches. Buyer commitment here is to a phased neighbourhood with shared infrastructure — lagoon pools, community retail, landscaped parks — rather than a single completed building. The earliest scheduled handover across current supply falls in Q2 2026, placing Me'aisem Second in active late-stage construction rather than a long-wait off-plan cycle.
Palmiera Collective represents Emaar's expansion into this western corridor, extending the integrated masterplan model Emaar has deployed across its most successful Dubai communities. Emaar's construction execution track record and, critically, its secondary-market resale liquidity make this project the natural anchor for buyers who weight exit optionality alongside lifestyle. Emaar-branded product in Dubai consistently achieves tighter bid-ask spreads on resale than comparable non-Emaar product at similar price points.
Damac Lagoons Monte Carlo extends the Damac Lagoons masterplan with a Mediterranean-themed cluster, integrating into the shared lagoon infrastructure already established across the wider Damac Lagoons community. Buyers entering Monte Carlo are joining an active community build-out rather than a virgin land release, which reduces the amenity delivery risk common to purely greenfield launches.
At AED 2.43M entry and AED 22,328 to AED 22,812 per sqm, both projects price at the accessible end of what Emaar and Damac respectively bring to market in Dubai. Buyers requiring current payment plan structure, unit configuration availability, and project-specific handover phasing should proceed directly to Palmiera Collective for Emaar-side detail or Damac Lagoons Monte Carlo for the Damac position.
Me'aisem Second sits between two adjacent buyer propositions in the western Dubai corridor. Dubai Hills Estate, positioned to the northeast, offers higher-established infrastructure, Emaar's strongest Dubai masterplan brand, a live golf course, and a fully operational retail and school ecosystem — but carries a materially higher per-sqm rate. Buyers who find Dubai Hills Estate pricing above their ceiling and are prepared to trade some proximity to central Dubai for a lower entry point will find Me'aisem Second a structurally comparable product in an earlier stage of community maturity.
Damac Hills 2 and the Arabella clusters to the south target a lower price floor with a smaller community scale and a heavier mix of boutique and mid-tier developers operating alongside Damac. Me'aisem Second's cleaner developer story — only Emaar and Damac currently active — reduces due diligence complexity for buyers unfamiliar with smaller operators and simplifies the resale comparables picture when modelling exit values.
Jumeirah Village Circle is frequently compared by buyers in this part of Dubai, but the comparison is structurally misleading. JVC is apartment-led, high-density, and multi-developer, optimised for rental yield rather than community lifestyle. A buyer choosing between JVC and Me'aisem Second is not comparing equivalent residential formats — they are choosing between an income-generating apartment and a lifestyle villa in a masterplan community. That decision belongs in investment strategy, not area comparison.
For investors underwriting long-term capital growth, Me'aisem Second carries meaningful western Dubai tailwinds: the Al Maktoum International Airport expansion programme anchoring sustained residential demand across this corridor, and the ongoing masterplan build-out by Emaar and Damac adding permanent resident populations rather than transient rental pools. Both dynamics support a medium-term appreciation thesis for villa and townhouse product. Buyers working through investment structuring can apply the full framework available in investment analysis, or review off-plan purchasing mechanics in buying advice.
The AED 2.43M price floor in Me'aisem Second reflects townhouse and smaller villa configurations within masterplan community releases. Both active projects — [Palmiera Collective](/projects/palmiera-collective) and [Damac Lagoons Monte Carlo](/projects/damac-lagoons-monte-carlo) — are villa and townhouse developments rather than apartment towers. Larger villa typologies within these projects carry materially higher asking prices than the tracked floor, so buyers targeting a specific bedroom count or plot size should go directly to project-level pricing before benchmarking against the area minimum.
A Q2 2026 handover places buyers entering now in the late construction phase rather than a ground-up off-plan commitment. Construction risk is substantially compressed at this stage, but so is the capital appreciation window that early-phase buyers have already captured. Buyers purchasing at current pricing are primarily acquiring a near-complete lifestyle or portfolio asset rather than timing maximum off-plan uplift. To assess residual upside, compare the current off-plan ask against secondary-market pricing for equivalent delivered Emaar and Damac community product in western Dubai — that spread reveals what appreciation, if any, remains available before handover.
The villa and townhouse product mix in Me'aisem Second skews this district toward owner-occupiers and long-hold capital growth investors rather than short-cycle yield players. The community masterplan format — shared lagoon infrastructure, landscaped corridors, amenity-heavy shared spaces — is designed for residents who intend to live in the property. Investors targeting near-term gross rental yield will find higher-returning opportunities in apartment-led zones positioned closer to employment corridors. Buyers underwriting western Dubai's medium-term capital appreciation, anchored partly by Al Maktoum International Airport expansion demand, will find Me'aisem Second more relevant as a growth position than an income position. The full framework for structuring that thesis is covered in [investment analysis](/invest).

by Emaar Properties
Starting from
AED 16.5M

by Damac
Starting from
AED 2.43M