Supply
4 projects
4 projects tracked across 2 developers.

District Profile
Ras Al Khor Industrial First has 4 live off-plan projects tracked across 2 active developers — Sobha and Prestige One — with entry pricing from AED 1.
What the current data says
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Supply
4 projects
4 projects tracked across 2 developers.
Price from
AED 1.4M
Lowest tracked entry price in Ras Al Khor Ind. First.
Ras Al Khor Industrial First is an industrial zone in active residential conversion, positioned directly alongside the Ras Al Khor Wildlife Sanctuary and within 12 minutes of Dubai International Airport. Four off-plan projects are currently tracked here, entry pricing starts at AED 1.4M, and per-square-metre figures span AED 2,599 to AED 38,062 — a range that reflects both value-entry apartments and a branded luxury tier occupying the same postcode. Two developers — Sobha and Prestige One — are active in the district, with the earliest handover arriving Q4 2026. Buyers who want creek-adjacent and sanctuary-fronted positioning at a lower land-cost basis than Business Bay or Dubai Festival City will find the current supply worth serious evaluation. Those who require a mature amenity layer on day one should weight that gap against the entry price before committing.
The district occupies the western edge of the broader Ras Al Khor area, bordered by Dubai Creek to the north and the Ras Al Khor Wildlife Sanctuary — one of the only urban flamingo reserves in the Gulf region — to the south. That sanctuary corridor is a permanent green buffer that no future development can displace, and residential developers launching here have been explicit in positioning it as a lifestyle differentiator unavailable at comparable price points in Business Bay or Downtown.
The industrial land classification historically kept plot values below those of neighbouring mixed-use districts, which is why per-square-metre entry here still trails Dubai Festival City and Business Bay by a material margin. Sobha's decision to anchor a multi-tower master plan — Sobha One, which includes The Element At Sobha One — at this address was an institutional signal that residential conversion had reached investable scale. Prestige One follows as the second active developer, expanding the product range beyond a single-developer pocket.
Road connectivity is a genuine operational asset. Ras Al Khor Road and Al Khail Road deliver Downtown Dubai in 10–15 minutes and Dubai International Airport in approximately 12 minutes — both figures that matter for short-term rental underwriting and end-user commute tolerance. The honest limitation is amenity: there is no established retail, dining, or community infrastructure within walking distance of current launches. Buyers on a three-to-five-year horizon who are underwriting the amenity catch-up as part of their investment thesis will find the price-to-view trade-off compelling. Buyers who need walkable infrastructure at handover should price that absence into their decision.
Four projects are currently tracked in Ras Al Khor Industrial First across two active developers, with a handover window opening in Q4 2026. Sanctuary is the recommended first project to research in this district — it anchors current supply and offers the clearest read on buyer demand and pricing at this address. The Element At Sobha One, developed by Sobha, sits within the broader Sobha One master plan and delivers creek and sanctuary views through a developer with a consistent delivery record in Dubai. Mansory Residences By Amaal targets the branded luxury segment: Mansory's automotive design vocabulary applied to a residential tower is a specification-led, collector-oriented product, not a gross-yield purchase.
The AED 1.4M price floor buys access to compact one-bedroom configurations — not the view-premium or branded product tiers. The AED 2,599 per sqm floor and AED 38,062 ceiling confirm that value-entry and ultra-premium buyers can both find relevant inventory here, but they are evaluating categorically different assets. Payment plan structures from Sobha and Prestige One in this district have typically followed 60/40 or 70/30 developer-finance splits, reducing the capital drawdown required to hold to handover. All four projects carry construction-stage risk consistent with Q4 2026 and later delivery — standard for Dubai off-plan and reflected in entry pricing. The buying advice section covers payment plan structure and off-plan risk factors in detail.
Dubai Festival City is the closest established mixed-use district and the most direct comparison. It offers operational retail and waterfront amenity, proven short-term rental demand, and resale liquidity — at a per-square-metre premium that is substantial relative to current Ras Al Khor Industrial First pricing. Buyers moving from Festival City to this district trade walkable infrastructure for a lower entry cost and a stronger capital growth runway on a five-year view. That trade-off is clear-cut for investors; it requires more consideration for end-users who will live through the amenity gap.
Business Bay delivers superior rental liquidity, a denser short-term rental market, and direct proximity to Downtown, but comparable-specification apartments now launch well above AED 2M. Ras Al Khor Industrial First is the value-entry creek-adjacent alternative for investors who want that positioning without paying established-district land prices. Meydan, to the south-west, shares the transitional-zone narrative — mid-conversion infrastructure, improving connectivity, and a buyer base underwriting future uplift — but Meydan's product mix skews toward villas and townhouses at larger plot scale. The sanctuary frontage defining Ras Al Khor Industrial First is a differentiator Meydan cannot replicate.
Nad Al Sheba operates in a separate product category entirely, serving villa buyers rather than apartment investors, and is not a relevant price comparison. For buyers running a structured side-by-side evaluation through investment analysis, the central question is whether the permanent sanctuary and creek view premium justifies the present amenity gap. For a five-plus year holding period, the answer is yes. For buyers targeting 12-to-24-month resale or immediate stabilised rental income, more established Dubai areas will generate faster liquidity at lower execution risk.
The industrial designation is a historical land-use classification for the broader Ras Al Khor zone, not a constraint on residential build quality. DLD-approved development permits govern construction standards within the specific plots where current off-plan projects sit, and those standards are identical to any other approved Dubai launch. The practical consequence for end-users is that surrounding streets include logistics and light-industrial operations — a factor worth assessing during a site visit before committing. Developers such as [Sobha](/developers/sobha) have oriented podium layouts and tower views toward the creek and the Ras Al Khor Wildlife Sanctuary, minimising direct exposure to the industrial streetscape from living areas. The amenity gap is the more material lifestyle limitation for the next two to three years, not the zoning classification itself.
The spread reflects fundamentally different product tiers within the same administrative boundary, not volatility in a single asset class. The AED 2,599 per sqm floor corresponds to entry-level apartments in compact, value-positioned launches. The AED 38,062 ceiling reflects [Mansory Residences By Amaal](/projects/mansory-residences-by-amaal), a branded luxury tower where Mansory's automotive design language, premium material specification, and brand rarity are priced directly into the per-unit figure — it is a collector's product, not a yield-first purchase. Buyers comparing projects across the district should benchmark per-sqm strictly within the same product tier. Averaging the two extremes produces a figure that accurately describes neither the value-entry opportunity nor the branded luxury play.
Verified transactional rental yield data specific to Ras Al Khor Industrial First is limited given the area's early-stage residential conversion, so proxy benchmarks apply. Comparable creek-adjacent districts — Dubai Festival City and Meydan — have registered gross yields of 6–8% on two-bedroom apartments in recent cycles, though those figures reflect established buildings with operational community amenity. Off-plan purchases here carry a handover-to-stabilisation lag; realistic expectations should account for a 12–18 month ramp period post-Q4 2026 delivery before achieving market-rate occupancy. Capital growth upside is strongest for buyers underwriting a five-plus year horizon, once surrounding retail and F&B infrastructure has caught up with incoming residential supply. For a structured framework on evaluating these variables see [investment analysis](/invest).

by Prestige One
Starting from
AED 1.84M

by Sobha
Starting from
AED 1.83M

by Amaal Development
Starting from
AED 1.94M

by Sobha
Starting from
AED 1.4M