Price from
AED 830K
Starting price for Binghatti Corner.

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Binghatti Corner is a completed 111-unit compact building in Jumeirah Village Circle, delivered on its Q1 2024 target by Binghatti. Every unit is 61.
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Price from
AED 830K
Starting price for Binghatti Corner.
Completion
Q1 2024
Tracked completion target for Binghatti Corner.
Related projects
52
Nearby launches and other Binghatti projects.
Binghatti Corner in Jumeirah Village Circle cleared its Q1 2024 handover target on schedule, making this a completed Binghatti building in a district where a large share of competing supply is still under construction. Every one of the 111 units is a 61.59 sqm layout priced from AED 830,000—a single-format building with no bedroom options and a yield case that either holds at this rate or does not. At AED 13,476 per sqm, Corner is priced in JVC's mid-range resale band, not at a discount. The 1,226 tracked transactions confirm secondary-market liquidity, and 650 rent signals confirm that tenant demand is genuine. The question before adding Corner to any selection is not whether Binghatti can deliver—that risk is fully resolved—but whether 61.59 sqm at AED 830,000 produces a yield that justifies passing on the 52 tracked projects competing for capital in JVC's active launch market.
All 111 units in Binghatti Corner are 61.59 sqm, and all are priced from AED 830,000. There are no larger formats, no defined-bedroom variants, and no premium-floor tiers in the tracked unit mix. That uniformity simplifies the buyer's comparison task: every resale comparable inside the building is the same product, which makes secondary-market benchmarking straightforward but removes any option to target higher rents through unit selection.
At AED 13,476 per sqm, Corner sits in the mid-range of JVC's current resale band for completed compact units. The district's range for this product type runs roughly AED 12,000–15,500 per sqm depending on floor, aspect, and building finish. Corner is not a below-market entry—buyers expecting an undervalued acquisition relative to JVC averages will not find it here. The investment case is a yield and liquidity argument, not a discount play.
The standard Dubai buyer cost structure applies: a 4% Dubai Land Department transfer fee and a 4% agency fee, each calculated on the transaction value. On an AED 830,000 purchase those two costs add approximately AED 66,400, bringing total acquisition cost to roughly AED 896,400 before any financing. Model these costs into your yield calculation before comparing with off-plan alternatives that quote headline prices without full acquisition cost layering. Buying advice covers the complete Dubai purchase cost structure and process steps.
Binghatti Corner's Q1 2024 handover target has elapsed, and schedule data shows delivery at 0% ahead of plan—the building came in on the original timeline rather than early. For buyers entering the secondary market in 2026, the direct implication is that construction-stage risk is fully resolved. You are acquiring a completed asset in a community where Binghatti has built a consistent on-schedule delivery record across multiple JVC projects.
The 1,226 tracked transactions on a 111-unit building represent a transaction-to-unit ratio that confirms genuine secondary-market liquidity. That volume reflects initial launch sales, off-plan sub-sales, post-handover resales, and refinancing events accumulated across the project lifecycle. Buyers who entered at launch have had 18–24 months of potential rental income or capital events since handover. Understanding where those early investors' exit pricing sits establishes whether today's AED 830,000 entry absorbs their gain or still represents an independent entry point.
The 650 rent signals confirm the building has maintained consistent tenant demand since completion. In JVC's competitive rental market, sustained tenancy in a single-format compact building is a more meaningful quality indicator than a launch-price headline. If you are weighing a secondary purchase here against an active off-plan commitment elsewhere in JVC, the off-plan vs ready comparison outlines the risk and payment-structure tradeoffs specific to Dubai.
Jumeirah Village Circle is Nakheel's master-planned residential community positioned at the convergence of Al Khail Road and Sheikh Mohammed Bin Zayed Road, placing residents within 15–25 minutes of Business Bay, DIFC, and Dubai Marina in off-peak traffic. That road connectivity is central to JVC's appeal for mid-income professionals who prioritise central Dubai access without Downtown or Marina pricing.
For investors, JVC's core proposition is yield density. Completed compact units in the district typically produce gross yields of 6.5–8%, supported by a large tenant base of young professionals and working couples who value affordability and commute flexibility. Binghatti Corner's 650 rent signals indicate the building has attracted consistent tenant interest rather than struggling with vacancy—a meaningful distinction in a community where off-plan completions add new rental supply on a rolling basis and create continuous competition for tenant budgets.
The district's active off-plan pipeline is the structural risk that completed-building buyers must price in: launches in the AED 830K–1.1M segment regularly enter JVC, adding future rental supply within 12–24 months of purchase. Corner's position as a completed building with an established rent roll provides a buffer against that supply pressure that a pre-delivery purchase cannot offer. Binghatti's JVC brand recognition has historically supported occupancy through periods when smaller independent developers in the same tenant market have faced sustained vacancy.
Binghatti has developed a dense JVC and broader Dubai portfolio, and running a same-developer comparison before committing to Corner tests whether the 61.59 sqm single-format structure is the right entry point for your investment model.
Binghatti Skyflame is the primary same-developer comparison in the JVC catchment. Running Skyflame against Corner on a per-sqm basis and projected net yield reveals whether Corner's compact uniformity or a multi-format Binghatti building better fits your rental strategy. If your target tenant is a single professional, Corner's format consistency is an operational advantage—every unit rents to the same profile at a predictable rate. If you want to target couples or shared tenancies at higher gross rents, a multi-format Binghatti project changes the yield equation significantly.
Binghatti's delivery history across JVC removes developer risk as a live variable in this comparison. The evaluation between Binghatti projects is therefore a format and unit-economics analysis rather than a credibility assessment. Concentrate the comparison on unit size, achievable rent, annual service charge, and net yield—not on brand consistency, which is a constant across the Binghatti range.
JVC's depth of active and recently completed projects gives buyers several direct comparisons before Corner earns final selection status. Tresora By Wadan and New Project By Empire represent independent developers entering JVC at sub-AED 1M price points. Before treating entry price as the primary differentiator, compare handover timelines, payment plan structures, and each developer's JVC track record—factors that outweigh a sub-AED 100K price gap when delivery credibility is not yet established.
Nexara Tower and Vision Avtr offer layout and format variety that Corner cannot provide. If the 61.59 sqm ceiling limits your tenant strategy—whether because you want a defined bedroom count or a larger unit to target higher annual rents—these alternatives widen the option set without leaving JVC's geographic catchment and rental demand base.
Vision Simplex rounds out the JVC compact-unit comparison and should be run against Corner on a per-sqm and projected net yield basis to test whether Binghatti's brand premium translates into a measurable improvement in location quality, building amenities, or finish standard at this price point. The correct comparison metric is not launch price but projected net yield after service charge at a realistic market rent for the specific unit type.
For buyers whose primary objective is JVC exposure rather than a specific developer affiliation, the district's pipeline depth means deciding Corner requires it to win on unit economics—yield, liquidity, and tenant demand depth—not on brand recognition alone.

The Q1 2024 handover target has elapsed and schedule data shows delivery at 0% ahead of plan, meaning Corner came in on its original timeline. As of early 2026 this should be a completed, occupied building. Before transacting on the secondary market, confirm title deed registration status directly with the Dubai Land Department and verify the current annual service charge with the building manager—both figures directly affect your net yield calculation.
All 111 units in Binghatti Corner are 61.59 sqm priced from AED 830,000. Binghatti built this as a single-format investor building rather than a mixed residential scheme. The benefit is benchmark clarity: every resale comparable inside the building is the same product, which simplifies pricing analysis. The constraint is that buyers targeting higher average rents, family tenants, or defined bedroom counts need to look at other Binghatti JVC projects or nearby alternatives. If unit diversity matters for your tenant strategy, [Binghatti Skyflame](/projects/binghatti-skyflame) or one of the competing JVC launches is a better starting point.
It sits in the middle of JVC's completed compact-unit resale band, which runs roughly AED 12,000–15,500 per sqm depending on floor, view corridor, and building finish. Corner is neither a distressed entry nor a premium outlier. The yield test matters more than the per-sqm figure: at AED 830,000 acquisition cost and typical JVC annual rents for 61.59 sqm units in the AED 55,000–65,000 range, gross yield lands between approximately 6.6% and 7.8%. That is competitive within the district but not exceptional enough to selection Corner without running a direct comparison against nearby completed and off-plan alternatives.

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