Price from
AED 3.42M
Starting price for 310 Riverside Crescent.

Under Construction
310 Riverside Crescent by Sobha in Sobha Hartland 2. Entry from AED 3.42M for 132 to 136 sqm units, Q4 2027 handover target, and construction currently
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Data coverage
We publish what our pipeline can verify today. Gaps below are on the backlog.
Price from
AED 3.42M
Starting price for 310 Riverside Crescent.
Completion
Q4 2027
Tracked completion target for 310 Riverside Crescent.
Related projects
46
Nearby launches and other Sobha projects.
310 Riverside Crescent is a residential tower by Sobha within Sobha Hartland 2, an 8-million-square-foot lagoon community in Mohammed Bin Rashid City. Entry pricing starts at AED 3.42M for 2-bedroom units of 132 to 136 sqm, with a premium tier running from AED 7.27M to AED 16.7M across 96 to 221 sqm. Handover is targeted for Q4 2027, though construction is currently running 18.43% behind schedule — a gap buyers must price into any hold or rental income timeline. With 678 recorded transactions already attached to this project, secondary-market pricing is observable before completion, giving deciding buyers a resale benchmark most comparable launches cannot offer at this stage. Across the broader Sobha Hartland 2 pipeline, 46 related projects give investors a deep comparison set before committing to any single tower.
The project carries two structurally distinct pricing tiers that reflect materially different product types. The first tier covers 112 units at 132 to 136 sqm priced from AED 3.42M to AED 3.52M, translating to approximately AED 25,833 per sqm. These are sized as substantial 2-bedroom apartments and represent the most accessible entry point in the tower. The second tier covers 164 units spanning 96 to 221 sqm and priced from AED 7.27M to AED 16.7M — a per-sqm rate of approximately AED 75,348. The near-threefold psm premium between standard and premium tiers reflects a genuine product differentiation, not a floor uplift. Buyers comparing the two tiers on ticket size alone will misread the value equation entirely. On top of the purchase price, buyer-facing selling costs include a 6% buyer-side fee — on the AED 3.42M entry unit, that adds AED 205,200 to acquisition cost before DLD transfer fees and registration charges. 678 tracked transactions give this project stronger secondary-market data than most comparable Sobha Hartland 2 launches at this stage, allowing buyers to test their entry price against observable resale comps. Buyers assessing off-plan versus ready property will find that transaction depth a useful calibration tool before committing to the off-plan premium.
The stated handover target is Q4 2027, but the project is currently 18.43% behind its original construction programme. For any buyer acquiring today, that gap introduces real timing risk. If slippage holds at its current rate through to practical completion, a Q1 or Q2 2028 handover becomes a more realistic planning assumption than Q4 2027. Buyers building a rental income model or a chain transaction around this project should incorporate a two-quarter buffer as a minimum. The primary mitigant is Sobha Realty's vertically integrated delivery model — the developer controls its own construction teams, MEP contractors, and fit-out divisions, which eliminates the third-party dependency that drives the worst delays in Dubai's off-plan market. That model has allowed Sobha to recover schedule slippage on earlier Hartland 1 towers without catastrophic deferrals. Even so, the 18.43% gap should not be discounted on the basis of developer reputation alone. The DLD Oqood registration holds the legally binding handover date and escrow account details — buyers should request the SPA and Oqood certificate and read the delay penalty and termination provisions before exchange. sales advisor completion timelines carry no contractual weight. Full buying guidance on SPA review and DLD fee planning applies here.
Sobha Hartland 2 spans approximately 8 million square feet inside Mohammed Bin Rashid City, positioned between the Al Ain Road corridor and the northern edge of the Ras Al Khor Wildlife Sanctuary. The community is anchored by a crystal lagoon, with Sobha positioning the district as a waterfront forest community — combining lagoon frontage with retained tree planting and green corridors across the master plan. Hartland International School is embedded within the community, which generates genuine end-user demand that purely investor-led districts rarely sustain. That school proximity supports longer tenancy durations and a renter demographic with stronger vacancy resistance across market cycles. For 310 Riverside Crescent specifically, the standard-tier pricing at AED 25,833 per sqm positions the tower at the accessible end of the community's off-plan spectrum — the segment that historically delivers the deepest secondary-market liquidity and the most tractable resale window post-handover. Buyers entering at the premium tier above AED 7M are competing in a thinner pool and should apply a longer hold horizon to their investment thesis. The community's MBR City location places it within twenty minutes of Downtown Dubai and Business Bay under normal traffic conditions, with proximity to the planned Meydan extension adding long-term connectivity upside.
Inside Sobha Hartland 2, the Skyvue series occupies the tier above 310 Riverside Crescent in both pricing and product positioning. Skyvue Altier targets the ultra-premium end of the district's residential stack, with a specification and price point aimed at buyers whose selection includes Creek Harbour penthouses rather than Riverside Crescent 2-bedrooms. Skyvue Stellar and Skyvue Spectra offer more direct comparisons in the AED 3M to AED 6M range, and both carry distinct construction timelines that buyers should check against 310's current 18.43% delay before deciding on the basis of handover certainty. Any buyer choosing between 310 Riverside Crescent and a Skyvue tower needs to assess three variables: per-sqm pricing differential, relative construction progress as registered with DLD, and actual floor plan efficiency for the specific unit under consideration. Beyond Sobha Hartland 2, Sobha's broader portfolio provides alternative exposure to the developer's delivery track record in different area contexts. Sobha Sanctuary The Willows, Sobha Sanctuary Phase 1 The Green, and Sobha Sanctuary Phase 1 The Brooks each carry their own area dynamics, unit mixes, and handover schedules. If 310 Riverside Crescent's current delay is a disqualifying factor, comparing construction progress across this Sobha portfolio may reveal a more advanced project with equivalent developer confidence but a closer completion date.
Buyers evaluating 310 Riverside Crescent against the wider MBR City corridor should benchmark inside Sobha Hartland 2 first. The community's crystal lagoon, embedded school, and Sobha's self-delivery track record create a combination of end-user infrastructure that off-community alternatives within the same price bracket rarely replicate on comparable timelines. At the standard-tier entry of AED 3.42M for 132 to 136 sqm, buyers should test whether equivalent or sharper psm pricing is available at Dubai Creek Harbour, where EMAAR-led launches have historically traded at a modest discount to Sobha Hartland 2 on psm while offering Downtown Dubai and waterfront proximity on a large-scale masterplan with its own delivery record. The trade-off is community completeness — Sobha Hartland 2's school, lagoon, and retail infrastructure is more mature than most comparable Creek Harbour zones at the same stage of development. For buyers whose primary thesis is resale within 18 to 24 months of handover, 310 Riverside Crescent's 678 transaction depth is a genuine liquidity advantage over newer launches in adjacent communities where secondary-market pricing remains thin. Buyers whose hold horizon extends to three years or beyond should weight infrastructure maturity and rental yield profile over short-term transaction depth. The full landscape of off-plan projects across MBR City and Creek Harbour is worth benchmarking before any selection is finalised.

At the current rate of programme slippage, Q4 2027 should be treated as an optimistic scenario rather than a planning date. A Q1 to Q2 2028 handover is a more defensible base case. The legally binding handover date is recorded in the DLD Oqood registration and your SPA — not in sales advisor marketing materials. Buyers structuring mortgage pre-approvals, rental income projections, or any chain transaction around this unit need a financial buffer of at least two quarters beyond the stated completion. Sobha's in-house construction model has enabled schedule recovery on prior Dubai projects, but the 18.43% gap is material enough to demand contingency planning rather than reliance on that track record alone.
The 112 standard units are priced at approximately AED 25,833 per sqm, while the 164 premium units are priced at approximately AED 75,348 per sqm. This is not a floor premium or view uplift — it reflects a genuine product differentiation between standard residential apartments and a separate premium specification, most likely duplex units, sky villas, or penthouses with distinct finishes and layouts. Buyers comparing units across these two tiers on headline price alone will misread the value proposition. before deciding any specific unit, confirm with Sobha's sales team which floor plate, specification schedule, and floor-to-floor height applies to each tier.
678 tracked transactions is above average for a Sobha Hartland 2 tower at this stage of construction and provides a real pricing dataset that most comparable launches lack before keys are handed over. However, pre-handover transactions predominantly reflect payment plan arbitrage and speculative resale rather than rental-yield-driven demand. Post-handover liquidity will depend on community completion pace, Hartland International School enrollment, and broader MBR City absorption rates. The transaction depth gives buyers a credible entry price reference — it does not guarantee an equivalent buyer pool will exist at your target exit price, particularly if the delayed handover compresses your resale window.

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