Supply
21 projects
21 projects tracked across 14 developers.

District Profile
Wadi Al Safa 3 is an emerging freehold district inside Dubailand with 21 live off-plan projects, 14 active developers, and handovers beginning Q3 2026.
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Data coverage
We publish what our pipeline can verify today. Gaps below are on the backlog.
Supply
21 projects
21 projects tracked across 14 developers.
Price from
Price on request
Lowest tracked entry price in Wadi Al Safa 3.
Wadi Al Safa 3 is a freehold district inside Dubailand carrying 21 live off-plan projects from 14 active developers, with the earliest completions scheduled from Q3 2026. Buyers entering at the lower end of the price range gain access to a market where 1-bedroom units have transacted at AED 1,333–1,634 per square foot — below the February 2026 Dubai-wide average of AED 1,740 per square foot. That entry point is the district's clearest commercial signal: Wadi Al Safa 3 suits investors building a mid-market residential position in an emerging Dubailand node, and end-users who prioritise land-use scale and developer variety over proximity to the downtown waterfront. Projects including The Wilds Residences, Arthouse Private Residences, and Noore represent current live depth, while Samana, Nakheel, and Mag Property Development anchor the developer base.
Wadi Al Safa 3 sits within Dubailand, one of Dubai's largest master-planned freehold zones, positioned approximately 12.2km from Business Bay and 12.6km from Burj Khalifa. Non-UAE nationals hold full freehold ownership rights across the broader Dubailand framework, confirmed by DLD registration records. The district's spatial character is built around low-to-mid-rise residential clusters rather than the ultra-high-density tower corridors defining Downtown or Business Bay — a distinction that shapes both lifestyle fit and rental demand profiles. DLD transaction data through February 2026 shows pre-registration off-plan activity concentrated in 1-bedroom flats, confirming Wadi Al Safa 3's role as an entry-to-mid-tier investment district rather than a luxury residential address. The area ranked among Dubai's top-demand off-plan nodes in early 2026 alongside Wadi Al Safa 5, Al Yelayis 1, and Dubai South — a cluster of emerging Dubailand sub-markets absorbing investor capital priced out of more central locations. The earliest mapped handover is Q3 2026, giving buyers a near-term completion window. Families evaluating the district should weigh 10.5km to the coast and the current infrastructure stage against a lower acquisition cost and the competitive developer density that keeps launch frequency high.
Observed pricing across 21 tracked projects spans AED 12,848 to AED 41,924 per square metre (AED 1,193–3,892 per square foot). The upper band confirms that boutique premium product exists in the district, but DLD transaction records concentrate activity at the lower end. Samana Barari Heights recorded a 751 sq ft, 1-bedroom flat at AED 1,634 per square foot — AED 1,226,700 total — and comparable pre-registration transactions have ranged between AED 1,333 and AED 1,634 per square foot. Against a February 2026 Dubai-wide average of AED 1,740 per square foot, up 12.2% year-on-year, the district's transaction pricing sits at a measurable discount to the emirate mean. That gap is the core investment argument: buyers acquiring at current Wadi Al Safa 3 levels are entering below the Dubai average with Q3 2026 handovers already in the pipeline. With 21 live projects currently active, selection depth is genuine — buyers are not choosing between two or three launches. Investors stress-testing yield assumptions at the upper price band should work through the investment analysis framework before committing, since rental demand at AED 3,892 per square foot in an infrastructure-maturing node carries assumptions that current transaction volumes do not yet validate.
Fourteen active developers are currently mapped in Wadi Al Safa 3 — a concentration level that exceeds many comparable Dubailand sub-districts and signals active pricing competition at launch. Samana holds one of the deepest footprints in the area, with Samana Barari Heights and Rome 2 both in active sales. Samana's payment plan structures — typically 1% monthly post-handover — have driven its volume sales model across emerging Dubai districts and remain a key conversion tool for buyers sensitive to cashflow timing. Nakheel brings infrastructure credibility as one of Dubai's largest state-linked master developers, a material consideration when evaluating area delivery risk. Mag Property Development adds mid-market residential depth to the developer mix. Binghatti Titania recorded confirmed DLD transactions in February 2026, and Barari Palace is active within the current launch cycle. Buyers should treat this concentration as a two-sided signal: more developers mean more competitive pricing and launch variety, but 14 builders competing across 21 projects also means secondary market absorption will depend heavily on infrastructure delivery and area maturation post-handover. Project-level due diligence on The Wilds Residences and Arthouse Private Residences is the right next step before drawing conclusions about the district's full price ceiling.
Wadi Al Safa 3 competes most directly with Wadi Al Safa 5, Al Yelayis 1, and Dubai South — all Dubailand-adjacent nodes ranked among Dubai's top-demand off-plan areas in the first quarter of 2026. Against Wadi Al Safa 5, the distinction is primarily project mix and micro-location within the same master plan zone; buyers choosing between the two should compare handover timelines and developer track records at the project level rather than at the district headline. Dubai South targets a different investment thesis — proximity to Al Maktoum International Airport and the Expo City legacy infrastructure makes it more relevant for investors underwriting long-term logistics and aviation-driven residential demand, not lifestyle-led residential positioning. Al Yelayis 1 shares similar emerging-area characteristics but carries a smaller tracked project inventory, reducing selection depth for buyers who want choice at entry price. For buyers who require urban walkability, established retail, or metro access, Wadi Al Safa 3 concedes ground to Business Bay and the districts closer to the existing Red and Green Line corridors — the nearest metro stops are over 10km away, and bus-dependent connectivity remains a real day-to-day constraint. Investors comfortable with a three-to-five-year infrastructure maturation cycle, motivated by sub-average acquisition pricing, and holding through the first wave of Q3 2026 completions will find Wadi Al Safa 3 more competitive on raw entry cost than any established central district. Buyers at the decision stage should validate hold strategy assumptions against the buying framework before selecting between Wadi Al Safa 3 and its nearest Dubailand peers. Noore provides a useful project-level reference point for the district's current quality ceiling.
DLD-recorded pre-registration transactions show 1-bedroom units in Wadi Al Safa 3 selling between AED 1,333 and AED 1,634 per square foot. Samana Barari Heights recorded a 751 sq ft unit at AED 1,226,700 — one of the lower acquisition totals in current Dubai off-plan supply. Total cost depends on payment plan terms, which vary by developer. Samana, one of the most active builders in the district, typically structures post-handover payments on a 1% monthly model, reducing capital required at launch.
The earliest mapped handover in Wadi Al Safa 3 is Q3 2026. With 21 live projects across 14 developers, completion timelines stagger across the following 12–24 months. Buyers entering now face a shorter off-plan hold than projects launching with 2027–2028 handover targets elsewhere in Dubai, which compresses both risk exposure and the timeline to potential rental income or resale.
Both districts are Dubailand nodes ranked among Dubai's top off-plan demand areas in early 2026, and they share similar infrastructure maturation timelines. Wadi Al Safa 3 currently carries a deeper project inventory — 21 tracked launches versus a smaller pipeline in Wadi Al Safa 5 — giving buyers more developer choice and pricing competition. The investment distinction ultimately comes down to specific project terms, developer track records, and micro-location within the master plan. Reviewing [The Wilds Residences](/projects/the-wilds-residences) alongside comparable Wadi Al Safa 5 launches side by side gives a cleaner read than comparing districts at the headline level.

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