Projects
1
1 tracked launch with Al Mazroui Group.
Developer Profile
Al Mazroui Group is a boutique Dubai off-plan developer with one tracked active project and pricing on request.
What the current data says
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Projects
1
1 tracked launch with Al Mazroui Group.
Areas
0
Active across 0 Dubai areas.
Price from
Price on request
Lowest tracked entry price from Al Mazroui Group.
Al Mazroui Group is a Dubai-licensed real estate developer operating at boutique scale, with one active project currently tracked in the off-plan market. Unlike the volume-led launch pipelines of Emaar, DAMAC, or Sobha Realty — each managing dozens of simultaneous projects across major masterplans — Al Mazroui Group's footprint is concentrated rather than broad. For buyers comparing developers before committing capital, that distinction carries real evaluation weight: a boutique developer's reputation rests entirely on individual project execution, which means the due diligence standard must be higher, not lower, than when buying from an established Tier 1 builder. Pricing is currently listed on request, consistent with projects in pre-launch or early registration phases where the developer qualifies buyers before releasing the full price schedule publicly. fee is set at 3%, standard across Dubai's off-plan boutique developer segment. before deciding any Al Mazroui Group launch, buyers should obtain the RERA project registration number, confirm the escrow account held under Dubai Law No. 8 of 2007, and benchmark the entry price per square foot against recent Dubai Land Department transaction records in the same district.
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.
Set against Dubai's broader boutique developer landscape, Al Mazroui Group competes in a segment defined by concentrated project delivery, limited unit supply per building, and pricing typically calibrated at or below Tier 1 brand levels. Developers at comparable scale have historically been active in residential districts where accessible plot sizes and sustained demand from first-time purchasers and yield-focused investors create viable project economics — areas including Jumeirah Village Circle, Arjan, Liwan, Dubai South, and Al Furjan have all attracted boutique developer activity for these structural reasons. The competitive case for a boutique developer rests on three factors: a lower total unit count per project, which reduces resale competition at handover; more direct developer access for buyers with post-handover snagging or service concerns; and entry pricing that can occasionally undercut the brand premium embedded in high-profile Tier 1 launches in the same district. The trade-off is lower brand liquidity on resale. A completed unit from Emaar Properties or Sobha Realty consistently attracts a larger secondary market buyer pool — including mortgage-backed purchasers — than an equivalent unit from a developer with a shorter delivery history. For investors modelling a three-to-five-year hold, the core underwriting question is whether the Al Mazroui Group entry price per square foot is sufficiently below the area's secondary market average to absorb a liquidity discount at exit. DLD transaction records, accessible through the Dubai REST application, provide the most reliable comparable data for this calculation. A sales advisor with recent completed sales in the same sub-district will deliver more accurate exit modelling than any published area average. Compare Al Mazroui Group directly against the full roster of active Dubai developers, and cross-reference their current launch details against Dubai areas transaction momentum before finalising any selection.
The fastest verification route is the Dubai REST application, where any buyer can search a licensed developer by name and confirm RERA registration status, active project registrations, and escrow account compliance. For Al Mazroui Group specifically, request the RERA project number for the relevant launch and cross-reference it against the DLD's Oqood pre-registration system before any funds change hands. Under Dubai Law No. 8 of 2007, no developer may collect off-plan payments without a valid project-specific escrow account supervised by a DLD-approved bank. If the developer or selling sales advisor cannot provide the escrow account number and the supervising institution in writing, do not proceed with any deposit payment. Registered title agents at the DLD's transaction centre on Baniyas Road can also confirm developer standing in person.
Price on request is a standard pre-launch practice in Dubai's off-plan market, used by developers to qualify buyer intent before publicly anchoring a price list that limits negotiating flexibility. It does not signal financial distress or an unregistered project — but it does place the burden of price discovery entirely on the buyer. When engaging with an Al Mazroui Group launch at this stage, request the full unit type schedule, per-square-foot rate by floor and aspect, payment plan structure including the construction-linked milestone split, and any early-buyer incentives confirmed in writing. Compare the quoted figures against DLD-recorded transactions for completed resale stock in the same sub-district to determine whether the off-plan entry discount is sufficient to justify the construction completion risk on a pre-delivery asset.
A developer's brand recognition and delivery history directly shape how quickly a completed unit sells on the secondary market and whether mortgage-eligible buyers can finance against it. For boutique developers like Al Mazroui Group, the resale pool at handover tends to be narrower than for a Tier 1 name — more dependent on cash buyers and investors already active in that specific sub-district rather than a broad national and international buyer pool. To stress-test the exit, model the projected handover date against the supply pipeline for the same area using DLD data, estimating how many comparable units will compete for the same buyer pool in the same completion quarter. Districts with constrained new supply at the handover window produce materially stronger resale conditions than oversupplied corridors, regardless of the developer's scale. Review [Al Mazroui Group projects](/projects?q=Al%20Mazroui%20Group) to assess the specific district and unit type before modelling an exit.
Ordered by strongest districts first, then by entry price.