



Starting Price
AED 1.3M
Delivery
2027 Q1
Downpayment
10%
Starting Price
AED 1.3M
Manarat Living
AED 1.3M
Starting Price
AED 1.3M
Delivery
2027 Q1
Downpayment
10%
Manarat Living II has a buyer friendly payment plan of 65/35 which encourages investment with a 10% initial downpayment amount.

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Manarat Living Project Brochure
At Manarat Living II, every amenity is curated to enhance creativity, wellness, and connection. Whether you’re relaxing by the infinity pool, working at the art hub, or practicing yoga in the Zen garden, the community is designed to inspire balance and self-expression in every moment.
Manarat Living II brings a different kind of energy to Saadiyat Island’s Cultural District — something softer, more expressive, and genuinely connected to the artistic spirit of the neighbourhood. It’s not trying too hard; instead, it invites you in with spaces that feel personal, like you could shape them over time. As an off-plan project in Dubai’s wider property landscape, it also carries that sense of potential investors often look for, though in a calmer, more thoughtful way. The project offers studios, 1-, 2-, and 3-bedroom apartments, and each layout feels like a small canvas. Not in the dramatic sense, but more in the way a home quietly reflects the people living in it. I noticed that the interiors lean toward clean lines and soft tones, giving residents room to add their own character — which, perhaps, is the whole idea here. In a market filled with glossy, ultra-modern concepts, Manarat Living II stands out by keeping things a bit more grounded. Its location is, admittedly, one of its strongest advantages. Sitting right in the heart of the Saadiyat Cultural District, it’s just minutes from places like Louvre Abu Dhabi, Guggenheim Abu Dhabi, and the Zayed National Museum. For anyone who values culture, design, or simply being surrounded by beautiful public spaces, this feels like a rare combination. And from an investment perspective, real estate on Saadiyat Island has consistently shown strong performance, especially as more institutions and attractions open across the district. Walking through the concept of the community, you get the sense that daily life here is meant to flow easily. There’s an infinity pool that overlooks calm surroundings, an art hub where residents can work or create, and a Zen garden that seems intentionally placed for moments of quiet. The amenities aren’t just about luxury; they lean toward wellness and self-expression — a mix that fits perfectly with the area’s cultural identity. As an off-plan project in Dubai and Abu Dhabi’s thriving real estate landscape, Manarat Living II offers both lifestyle depth and long-term potential. The payment plan is structured in a way that feels accessible for many investors, and the completion timeline keeps things realistic without rushing the development. With the Dubai property market and wider UAE market seeing increased interest in culturally anchored communities, this project sits in an interesting position. Overall, Manarat Living II is for people who don’t just want a home, but a place that feels aligned with how they think and create. It’s quietly inspiring — not loud or overly polished. And maybe that’s why it stands out. It balances culture, comfort, and investment opportunity in a way that feels genuine, especially for those drawn to the unique character of Saadiyat Island.
Set in the cultural heart of Saadiyat Island, Manarat Living II places you at the crossroads of art, leisure, and inspiration. Surrounded by pristine beaches and world-renowned institutions like the Louvre Abu Dhabi and Manarat Al Saadiyat, this address celebrates the intersection of creativity and calm. Residents are just minutes away from Saadiyat Grove, Zayed National Museum, and the island’s scenic waterfront promenades. Designed with Aldar’s clean geometry and flowing vertical lines, the architecture reflects both the natural dunes of Saadiyat and the modern artistry that defines Abu Dhabi’s evolving skyline.

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Find answers to common questions about this property and the purchase process.
Explore all FAQHandover is scheduled for Q1 2027, aligned with Aldar’s Saadiyat development timeline.

Dubai’s 2026 off plan market is leaning hard into high end, sustainability-led, and waterfront masterplans, mostly from the usual heavyweights like Emaar and Nakheel, plus a long tail of smaller developers trying to ride the same wave. Palm Jebel Ali and The Oasis are the obvious headline communities right now, and then you’ve got lagoon and lifestyle concepts like Azizi Venice, plus ultra luxury branded towers that are basically “Dubai doing Dubai.”

Family offices are rapidly moving to Dubai to tap into a genuinely rare mix, a 0% personal tax environment, a high-end lifestyle that is not just marketing, and unusually practical access to Europe, Asia, and Africa in one flight pattern. The big pull factors keep repeating in conversations, predictable frameworks in DIFC and ADGM, growing availability of Foundations and Trust-style structures, 100% foreign ownership options for many business activities, and residency routes that are clearer than most places right now. And yes, the “safe, geopolitically neutral hub” line can sound like a brochure, but I keep hearing the same thing from different angles, families want a jurisdiction that feels operationally calm.

Investing in Emaar Beachfront is attractive for a simple reason that sounds obvious, but still matters, it is one of the rare “central Dubai” beachfront addresses that sits right between Dubai Marina and Palm Jumeirah, inside Dubai Harbour, with a private-beach, resort-style feel that is hard to replicate at scale. It is Emaar, it is gated, it is limited supply, and the buyer pool is not just local end users, it is global investors, second-home buyers, and short-stay demand in one of Dubai’s most liquid waterfront corridors. The result is usually a blend of lifestyle value and investment value, rental demand that stays relatively deep in both long-term and holiday-home cycles, and an exit story that tends to be easier than most newer communities.

Buying off-plan in Dubai in 2026 needs a more cautious, data-driven approach than it did a couple of years ago, mostly because the market is maturing and shifting toward stabilization. Supply is a big part of that story, forecasts vary depending on the research you follow, but the common theme is, a lot of homes are scheduled to complete in 2026 and 2027, which means buyers can’t rely on hype and momentum alone.

Living in Dubai as an American can feel like a lifestyle upgrade, high safety, modern infrastructure, and no UAE personal income tax. But you still file US taxes, visas tie you to work or investment, summers are intense, and culture and laws require respect. The win is real, if you plan properly.

Rashid Yachts & Marina (sometimes still called Mina Rashid) is one of those Dubai waterfront communities that feels like it should be “only for yacht people”, but in reality it is becoming a broader lifestyle and investment play, especially because it sits right on the edge of Old Dubai, with surprisingly quick access to Downtown and DXB.