In the sub-AED 1.5M price corridor, MAAS is most directly comparable to Samana Developers, Object 1, and Reportage Properties — all competing for the same first-investor and end-user buyer in Dubailand, JVC, and adjacent emerging districts.
Samana carries a materially larger verified delivery history. If handover track record is your primary filter, Samana's volume of completed inventory provides measurable risk reduction that a developer with one tracked project cannot yet match. Object 1 operates at a similar price point but has spread launches across multiple Dubai districts, giving buyers more geographic choice within the same budget without concentrating on a single sub-district.
MAAS's competitive edge is product positioning: the biophilic design and wellness amenity package at The Haven is a genuine differentiator that supports a modest resale premium over generic apartments in the same postcode, and appeals to an end-user segment that volume builders largely ignore. For buy-to-let investors, this narrative adds some resale optionality — though Majan rental data is thinner than JVC, and the yield differential should be stress-tested against actual achievable rents rather than projections.
Buyers deciding MAAS alongside other Dubai developers should weigh three variables: escrow standing and construction progress on the active project, Majan's rental demand relative to your target yield, and whether the current payment plan structure fits your cash-flow profile better than a competing launch in JVC or Dubai Hills Estate. See all tracked MAAS projects and map each delivery address against infrastructure maturity using Dubai areas before finalising your selection.