Al Mazroui Group's current tracked portfolio covers one active project in Dubai, placing the developer within the city's extensive boutique builder segment. Dubai's Real Estate Regulatory Agency licenses hundreds of developers, spanning from Emaar's institutional delivery scale down to single-project operators, and Al Mazroui Group operates closer to the focused end of that spectrum. Under Dubai Law No. 8 of 2007, all licensed developers — regardless of size — must ring-fence buyer funds in project-specific escrow accounts monitored by the Dubai Land Department. Construction drawdowns are tied to verified milestone completions, providing structural protection that applies uniformly across boutique and mega developers alike. What boutique scale does change is the depth of the verifiable track record: where Emaar or Nakheel can be evaluated against hundreds of completed handovers, a developer with a shorter delivery history requires buyers to lean harder on project-level documentation. For any Al Mazroui Group launch, buyers should confirm the RERA project registration certificate, the appointed main contractor, the escrow bank, and the relationship between funds drawn and construction progress before committing. Pricing is listed at on request, typical of pre-launch positioning, where the developer controls price disclosure to manage demand sequencing. Buyers who engage at this stage can often negotiate better unit selection or floor positioning, but must ensure all agreed payment terms and incentives are documented in a signed Sales and Purchase Agreement registered through the DLD's Oqood system — verbal commitments carry no legal standing in Dubai's off-plan framework. The fee structure of 3% is consistent with boutique developer norms across the market and does not carry differentiated meaning when evaluating investment quality.