Supply
15 projects
15 projects tracked across 6 developers.

District Profile
Warsan Fourth off-plan market: 15 tracked projects, 6 active developers, pricing from Price on request.
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Data coverage
We publish what our pipeline can verify today. Gaps below are on the backlog.
Supply
15 projects
15 projects tracked across 6 developers.
Price from
Price on request
Lowest tracked entry price in Warsan Fourth.
Warsan Fourth is a mid-density residential district in eastern Dubai, suited to buyers who need a freehold entry point without accepting International City's strata-heavy constraints. With 15 live off-plan projects, 6 active developers, and per-sqm pricing observed between AED 9,545 and AED 18,331, the district gives budget-conscious investors and owner-occupiers a credible selection alternative to Dubai Silicon Oasis and Nad Al Sheba. Every mapped project is under construction; the earliest scheduled handover falls in Q4 2026, so buyers are committing to a 12-to-24-month wait in exchange for pre-completion pricing.
Warsan Fourth occupies eastern Dubai's inland residential band, positioned between the Warsan Lakes corridor and the Academic City–Silicon Oasis employment axis. The district is not a lifestyle destination — it functions as an affordable owner-occupier and yield-play suburb, drawing buyers who are priced out of Meydan or Al Furjan but want freehold title in a structured Dubai neighbourhood rather than International City's older strata environment.
The resident profile skews toward professionals employed in Dubai's eastern technology and education corridor. Infrastructure is functional rather than premium: access onto Sheikh Mohammed Bin Zayed Road and Al Khail Road makes Business Bay and Downtown commutable within 30 to 40 minutes, and the Dragon Mart retail and wholesale corridor serves daily convenience needs. Amenity density within Warsan Fourth itself is low by the standards of established mid-market districts, which is the central lifestyle trade-off buyers are making against a lower per-sqm entry price.
For investors comparing districts across Dubai areas, Warsan Fourth belongs on the selection when the primary filter is price-per-square-metre efficiency rather than address prestige or walkability. It does not compete with DAMAC Hills 2 on community lifestyle or with Meydan on capital appreciation narrative, but it delivers freehold residential supply at a price tier few other Dubai districts can match in 2025 and 2026 launch cycles.
Observed pricing across the 15 live Warsan Fourth projects runs from AED 9,545 per sqm at the entry floor to AED 18,331 per sqm for upper-specification units. That spread implies a meaningful quality gradient within the district: the lower band covers standard mid-rise apartment product from boutique operators, while the upper band reflects larger floor plates or better-specified finishes from developers positioning their Warsan Fourth launches against Dubai Silicon Oasis comparables.
Fifteen simultaneously active projects in a single district represents significant launch volume. It signals developer conviction in the corridor's absorption potential but also intensifies post-handover competition — buyers should model resale and rental take-up against a supply pipeline that will deliver multiple projects into the same postcode within a compressed 24-month window. Selective unit positioning within the district matters as much as district selection itself.
For buyers applying investment analysis criteria, the AED 9,545 per sqm floor is a genuine signal for Dubai freehold. That figure sits materially below the Dubai-wide average for new residential launches, which has tracked above AED 15,000 per sqm across the wider city in recent cycles. The ceiling at AED 18,331 indicates that premium Warsan Fourth units are priced in line with Silicon Oasis mid-market rather than at a structural discount, which compresses the margin of safety for buyers overpaying on specification.
Current launches with tracked project pages include Dar Al Aiham One, Chapter 02, and Sports View 2, each representing distinct price and specification positioning within the district's active supply. Dar Al Aiham One is the strongest first project to evaluate given its current launch status and unit mix.
Six active developers are operating in Warsan Fourth simultaneously. That count is low relative to established districts like JVC or Business Bay, where 20-plus operators compete within a single postcode. The concentration means buyer due diligence focuses on a tighter list of names — but it also means the district's supply trajectory is exposed to the execution capability of a small group of operators, most of whom are boutique rather than institutional.
Dugasta Properties Development is among the active names in the district. Dugasta has targeted affordable residential supply in emerging Dubai corridors, which aligns directly with Warsan Fourth's price positioning. Hz Development and Laraix also hold live projects in the area, representing boutique operators whose project-level credentials — escrow registration status, DLD filing, construction progress — carry more weight in the evaluation process than brand recognition alone.
Six developers across 15 projects implies that some operators are running two or more simultaneous launches in the same district. Before committing funds to any Warsan Fourth project, verify that each launch maintains a separate RERA-registered escrow account and that construction drawdown milestones are auditable against an independent progress schedule. Smaller developers in emerging districts carry delivery risk that brand-name operators in established areas do not, and Warsan Fourth's developer mix requires buyers to apply more rigorous project-level screening than they would in, for example, Downtown Dubai or Dubai Creek Harbour.
Every project currently mapped in Warsan Fourth is under construction. There is no ready secondary stock within the tracked off-plan dataset for this district — buyers entering the market today are committing to a pre-completion purchase with no option to take immediate possession or generate rental income before handover.
The earliest mapped handover is Q4 2026, placing the first keys approximately 9 to 12 months away from the current date. A cluster of remaining projects is likely to complete between 2027 and 2028, creating a staggered supply entry into the district's rental and resale market. Buyers who purchase now at pre-completion pricing will be competing with other project completions at handover if they intend to sell or lease immediately upon receiving keys — a concentration of simultaneous handovers suppresses both resale premiums and initial rental rates.
The all-under-construction profile reflects the early-cycle nature of Warsan Fourth as an actively developing district. It creates two viable buyer postures: investors targeting a flip on completion, which requires a clear view of what post-handover secondary pricing will bear against a well-supplied market, and long-term holders who are comfortable with a 24-to-36-month illiquid period before stable occupancy and income normalise.
Review the buying advice considerations for off-plan contracts in Dubai before signing, particularly around SPA cancellation rights under RERA regulations and payment plan structures tied to verified construction milestones rather than fixed calendar dates.
The four districts a Warsan Fourth buyer should verify against are Dubai Silicon Oasis, International City, Nad Al Sheba, and Al Warsan.
Dubai Silicon Oasis offers directly comparable eastern-Dubai positioning with materially stronger existing infrastructure, an established retail and F&B base, and a higher-profile technology employer cluster that supports rental demand. Per-sqm pricing in Silicon Oasis typically runs 15% to 25% above the Warsan Fourth entry floor, making it the natural step-up if budget allows. Silicon Oasis also carries a longer track record of rental absorption and resale liquidity, which reduces occupancy risk at handover for buyers who cannot tolerate extended void periods.
International City sits adjacent and offers lower absolute ticket prices, but its strata-heavy ownership structure, older building stock, and restricted unit typology create a different risk profile. Warsan Fourth's freehold launches with current specifications carry a genuine quality premium over International City resale product, even where headline per-sqm numbers overlap at the lower end of the Warsan Fourth range.
Nad Al Sheba is positioned as a premium mid-market district with stronger developer brand presence — Meydan Group and Sobha Realty are both active there. Pricing is materially higher, but the capital appreciation narrative is more developed and the infrastructure investment is more visible. Investors targeting equity growth over a five-to-seven-year horizon rather than near-term yield should model both districts before allocating.
Al Warsan overlaps geographically with Warsan Fourth and competes for the same tenant pool. The distinction between the two sub-districts is primarily administrative, but project quality and developer credentials vary across the boundary. Buyers comparing both should evaluate individual project specifications, payment plan structures, and developer escrow compliance rather than assuming sub-district parity on any of those dimensions.
For investors with a firm eastern-Dubai conviction, Warsan Fourth's 15-project depth and AED 9,545 per sqm entry floor make it a credible primary research target in its own right. The comparison question is whether Silicon Oasis's infrastructure premium justifies its price premium for the specific unit type, payment plan, and hold period the buyer is targeting.
Warsan Fourth sits at the affordable end of Dubai's residential spectrum, with observed per-sqm pricing from AED 9,545 to AED 18,331 across 15 live projects. The entry floor is one of the lowest available in any mapped Dubai freehold district outside International City, which means absolute ticket prices are accessible but buyers must model resale absorption carefully given the volume of simultaneous supply entering the same postcode at handover.
Every project currently tracked in Warsan Fourth is under construction, with the earliest scheduled handover in Q4 2026. Buyers are taking on standard Dubai off-plan construction risk with no option to purchase a completed unit and earn immediate rental income. Before signing any SPA, verify that the project holds a RERA-registered escrow account and that construction milestones are tied directly to payment schedule drawdowns rather than fixed calendar dates.
Warsan Fourth's tenant pool draws primarily from professionals employed in Dubai Silicon Oasis, Academic City, and the Dragon Mart commercial corridor. Gross rental yields in eastern Dubai's affordable residential tier have historically tracked between 7% and 9%, but buyers should stress-test occupancy assumptions against the concurrent supply pipeline — 15 projects delivering within a similar timeframe will add meaningful rental inventory into a relatively contained catchment area.

by Dar Al Aiham Properties
Starting from
AED 630K

by Newbury Developments
Starting from
AED 532.3K

by HZ Development
Starting from
AED 604.6K

by Laraix
Starting from
AED 919.5K

by Valores Property Development
Starting from
AED 565K

by Newbury Developments
Starting from
AED 835K