Price from
AED 2.6M
Starting price for LIV LUX.

Under Construction
LIV LUX by LIV in Jumeirah Beach Residence (JBR). One-bedrooms from AED 2.6M across 69–83.71 sqm, two-bedrooms from AED 4.25M across 125–143.54 sqm.
What the current data says
Project shortlist
Get a sharper read on this launch
Data coverage
We publish what our pipeline can verify today. Gaps below are on the backlog.
Price from
AED 2.6M
Starting price for LIV LUX.
Completion
Q4 2026
Tracked completion target for LIV LUX.
Related projects
6
Nearby launches and other LIV projects.
LIV LUX enters Jumeirah Beach Residence at AED 2.6M for a one-bedroom, with a Q4 2026 handover that currently runs 8.15% behind schedule. With 232 tracked transactions already on record, buyer conviction in the project is visible — but the construction slippage, combined with a per-sqm range stretching from AED 29,608 to AED 97,718, means selection evaluation must go well beyond headline numbers. Before committing, benchmark LIV LUX against LIV Maritime and LIV Marina for developer track record, and test its pricing against what Jumeirah Beach Residence alternatives offer at the same budget.
The entry tier — one-bedrooms from AED 2.6M to AED 3.25M across 69 to 83.71 sqm — translates to a blended per-sqm rate between approximately AED 37,700 and AED 38,800. Two-bedroom units range from AED 4.25M to AED 4.4M across 125 to 143.54 sqm, compressing to AED 30,650–AED 34,000 per sqm. The observed pricing ceiling of AED 97,718 per sqm points to differentiated penthouse or upper-floor inventory sitting well above the core stack — a buyer profile and budget entirely separate from the primary one- and two-bedroom offer.
Buyer-facing costs add material weight to each headline price. The 4% buyer-side fee lifts the AED 2.6M entry point to approximately AED 2.7M before DLD transfer fees. At the top of the one-bedroom range, AED 3.25M becomes approximately AED 3.38M all-in. Investors underwriting a yield play must test that fully loaded cost base against JBR's current rental market: long-let one-bedrooms in established towers run between AED 140,000 and AED 195,000 annually. At AED 3.38M acquisition and AED 165,000 rent, gross yield sits near 4.9%. At AED 2.7M and the same rent, gross yield improves to approximately 6.1%. Both figures sit ahead of service charge deductions and any furnishing outlay.
Review all active projects in the JBR cluster to benchmark whether LIV LUX's per-sqm rate reflects a genuine newbuild premium or simply tracks the district average before committing to a specific unit tier.
LIV LUX is currently 8.15% behind its construction schedule, with Q4 2026 remaining the official handover target. Buyers should plan financially for a Q1–Q2 2027 delivery. The delay is most consequential for investors who structured entry on a payment plan tied to construction milestones — those buyers need written confirmation that their obligation schedule has been adjusted to match the revised completion curve before any further payments are triggered.
LIV operates a concentrated portfolio rather than a multi-project pipeline of the scale that Emaar or Nakheel manages. That structure means the developer cannot absorb construction setbacks across simultaneous builds the way a tier-one operator can. It also means LIV carries concentrated reputational exposure on each project — which is an incentive to deliver but not a structural guarantee of on-time completion.
For buyers who modelled LIV LUX as a pre-handover resale play, the 8.15% slippage already shortens the available trading window. If delays extend beyond Q1 2027, that exit route closes entirely. Owner-occupiers and long-term rental investors are better positioned to absorb schedule drift than short-horizon traders who need the pre-handover market to remain liquid into late 2026.
Jumeirah Beach Residence is Dubai's most established beachfront residential cluster, built around The Walk promenade and direct access to JBR Beach. The district's rental demand is anchored by beach access, walkability, and proximity to Dubai Marina — drawing short-term tourists, corporate tenants, and long-term residents in roughly equal measure. That demand depth gives JBR one of the most liquid secondary markets in Dubai, which matters to any buyer who needs a credible exit path if strategy shifts post-handover.
New off-plan supply in JBR is structurally constrained. The district is built-out, and genuine beachfront launches represent a narrow inventory window. LIV LUX enters that constrained environment, which supports its pricing at the lower end of the observed per-sqm range. However, not every unit in LIV LUX carries equal demand — floor level, sea-view allocation, and orientation will drive meaningful spread in both resale and rental performance. Buyers should request a unit-level view breakdown before selecting a specific floor or stack, and should not assume that the district's premium transfers uniformly to all unit types.
Ready stock in Rimal 1 and Rimal 4 defines JBR's existing pricing floor for finished apartments. Those towers benchmark the district's secondary-market rate and allow buyers to stress-test whether LIV LUX's off-plan pricing is justified by the newbuild specification differential over older finished stock.
LIV Maritime and LIV Marina are the most direct developer comparisons for LIV LUX. LIV Marina, the earlier delivery in the portfolio, established LIV's market positioning: premium boutique finishes targeting owner-occupiers and yield-focused investors rather than speculative bulk buyers. LIV Maritime — the developer's more recent launch — carries the same branded specification strategy and targets a comparable demographic at Dubai Marina.
The most important comparison to run across these three projects is post-handover resale performance. If LIV Marina and LIV Maritime delivered at or above their respective off-plan pricing, that track record strengthens the capital-preservation argument for LIV LUX. If either project saw material resale discounts emerge after handover, or if LIV Maritime is currently trading below its launch price in the secondary market, those signals should weigh heavily against the 8.15% schedule slippage now visible in LIV LUX construction data.
LIV's boutique positioning is a genuine differentiator relative to anonymous tier-two developers — but it also makes each project a concentrated bet on a single developer's execution capacity. There is no multi-project pipeline diversification to fall back on if a delivery stumbles.
Amwaj 4 sits within JBR and provides the closest within-district off-plan comparison point for LIV LUX buyers. Before finalising a selection, map Amwaj 4's per-sqm pricing, unit mix, handover timeline, and payment plan structure directly against LIV LUX. Differences in handover certainty between the two projects are particularly relevant given LIV LUX's current construction slippage.
Ready stock in Rimal 1 and Rimal 4 remains the strongest alternative for buyers who want JBR beach exposure without construction execution risk. If LIV LUX's delay extends into mid-2027, the case for buying a finished Rimal apartment at a comparable all-in cost — with rental income starting immediately — becomes significantly stronger. The off-plan versus ready comparison is the single most important financial decision in this selection, and the 8.15% slippage makes the ready-stock case more competitive than it would be on a project running on schedule.
For buyers with budget flexibility above AED 4M evaluating the two-bedroom tier, other beachfront-adjacent launches across Dubai Harbour and the broader Marina cluster may offer tighter construction timelines and newer specifications at comparable per-sqm rates. Review the buying advice section for a full breakdown of Dubai's fee and cost structure — transfer fees, service charge differentials, and buyer-side fee variation between developers can shift the true cost comparison by meaningful percentages when comparing across districts.

Yes, and it changes it in two specific ways. First, buyers should underwrite Q1–Q2 2027 delivery rather than Q4 2026, which extends the period before rental income starts and increases carrying cost on any payment plan tied to construction milestones. Second, if your strategy included a pre-handover resale, that window is already compressed — further slippage closes it entirely. JBR's demand base is durable enough that the delay is unlikely to destroy resale value, but it transfers execution risk squarely onto the buyer. Request an updated construction report and verify that your payment milestone schedule reflects the revised timeline before signing.
Ready one-bedrooms in established JBR towers typically trade between AED 1.9M and AED 2.8M depending on floor, view, and finish quality. LIV LUX's AED 2.6M entry sits at the upper end of that secondary-market range, which means the off-plan premium over ready stock is thin on a like-for-like basis. The case for buying LIV LUX over a finished apartment in Rimal or Amwaj rests on LIV's branded specification and any capital appreciation between now and handover — not on a discount to the existing market. If the handover delay extends and ready stock continues trading at current levels, the risk-adjusted case for off-plan narrows further.
JBR one-bedrooms in quality towers currently achieve between AED 140,000 and AED 195,000 annually depending on furnishing standard and letting strategy. At AED 2.6M plus the 4% buyer-side fee, your all-in acquisition cost is approximately AED 2.7M. At AED 165,000 in annual rent, gross yield lands near 6.1%. At the top of the one-bedroom range — AED 3.25M plus fees — all-in cost reaches approximately AED 3.38M and gross yield at the same rent falls to around 4.9%. Deduct service charges and any furnishing cost from those figures before comparing against the yields available on ready JBR stock, where rental income starts immediately and handover risk is zero.

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