Aya Beachfront Residences: What a 5% Entry into Umm Al Quwain's Coastline Actually Means
Deyaar Development is building Aya Beachfront Residences in Al Raudah, Umm Al Quwain. Deyaar is a Dubai-listed developer with a track record across the UAE, and this project marks their move into the northern emirates' growing residential market. Construction started in March 2025, with completion targeted for December 2027.
Why Umm Al Quwain Changes the Calculus
Umm Al Quwain is the smallest and quietest of the seven emirates. That is not a warning. For some buyers, it is exactly the point.
Property prices here sit well below Dubai and Ras Al Khaimah. The emirate has no municipal tax, low population density, and a coastline that has largely sat undeveloped. It sits roughly an hour's drive from Dubai, depending on traffic. That is viable for a second home or a weekend retreat. As a daily commute to central Dubai, it is a stretch.
The investment thesis here is early positioning in an emirate that has seen limited formal residential development. Umm Al Quwain is not yet a proven market in the way that Ras Al Khaimah now is. Buyers coming in at this stage are making a bet on future demand, not buying into an established price floor. Know the difference before you commit.
What AED 1.1M to AED 11.7M Buys You Here
The price range on this project is wide. AED 1,095,000 at the low end gets you into an apartment, likely a one-bedroom with a water view. AED 11,723,888 at the top puts you into penthouse or villa territory, which in a beachfront context is a meaningful product.
The spread reflects the range of property types on offer: apartments, duplexes, penthouses, and villas. These are not comparable products sitting on the same floor of the same tower. A buyer at AED 1.1M is buying an entry-level apartment in a northern emirate. A buyer at AED 11M is buying a waterfront villa or penthouse from a listed UAE developer at a fraction of what comparable stock would cost in Palm Jumeirah or Mina Al Arab.
The apartment buyer here is likely an investor hunting yield potential or a second-home buyer who wants beachfront without a Dubai price tag. The villa and penthouse buyer is probably seeking a primary or secondary residence with genuine space, privacy, and direct water access at a price point that simply does not exist in the more established emirates.
What the Amenities Say About the Target Resident
| Category | Amenities |
|---|---|
| Wellness | Jacuzzi and steam, yoga room, gymnasium |
| Outdoors and leisure | Landscaped gardens, children's play area, view of water |
| Food and retail | Restaurants, retail facilities |
| Productivity | Work and study space |
The inclusion of a dedicated work and study area is worth a moment of attention. It signals that Deyaar expects residents to spend real time here, not just weekends. Combined with on-site dining and retail, the project is positioning itself as self-contained. That makes sense given the location. You are not walking out the front door to a high street in this part of Umm Al Quwain.
The wellness offering is solid for a project at this scale. The yoga room and jacuzzi and steam facilities suggest the target resident values that kind of lifestyle, and the beachfront setting reinforces it.
A December 2027 Finish: What That Means Now
Construction started March 2025. Completion is expected December 2027. That gives you roughly two and a half years of build time from now. For an off-plan buyer entering in early 2026, you are buying into a project that is early in its construction cycle. That means more time before you see the asset, but also more time for capital appreciation if demand in the area builds as expected.
Getting In for 5%
| Stage | Percentage |
|---|---|
| Down payment | 5% |
| During construction | 35% |
| On handover | 60% |
A 5% down payment is genuinely low by UAE market standards. Most off-plan projects ask for 10% to 20% upfront. Getting into a beachfront project from a listed developer for 5% down reduces your initial exposure significantly.
The trade-off is the back-weighted structure. 60% falls due at handover, which means you need to have that capital available in late 2027, either from savings or a mortgage arranged at that point. There is no post-handover payment plan here, so buyers relying on rental income to service debt after handover will need to plan their financing carefully before committing.







