Dubai’s Latest Handed Over Projects: May 2025 Completions Every Investor Should Know

Discover the Dubai latest handed over projects that crossed the finish line in May 2025. From Sobha’s S Tower to Nshama’s Regent, see which communities just welcomed brand-new keys—and what these deliveries mean for prices, rents, and future supply.

Dubai’s Latest Handed-Over Projects: May 2025 Completions Every Investor Should Know

May 2025 will be remembered as a milestone month in Dubai’s property market, with a surge of new project handovers that sent ripples through investors’ plans. In the span of just a few weeks, ten notable developments across Dubai received completion certificates and began welcoming residents. These ranged from ultra-luxury towers to affordable community apartments, collectively adding nearly 1,500 new units to the market.

This concentration of May handovers is significant – not only does it reflect developers racing to meet deadlines (and even beating them, in some cases), but it also offers fresh opportunities for buyers amid a booming off-plan era. Below, we break down all the projects officially handed over between May 8 and May 31, 2025 – complete with the project details and a brief analysis of each, followed by key market observations and investor takeaways.

May 2025 Handovers: 10 New Dubai Projects Completed

According to DXB Interact’s data, ten developments were completed in Dubai in the latter part of May 2025. Here’s a project-by-project look at these handovers, including name, location, developer, handover date, and what each means for investors:

  1. Westwood Grande II (JVC)Developer: Imtiaz Developments; Handover: 31-May-2025; 153 units. This mid-rise residential tower in Jumeirah Village Circle (District 11) delivers a mix of fully-furnished studio and 1-bedroom apartments with boutique interiors. Impressively, Imtiaz delivered Westwood Grande II roughly six months ahead of its original schedule, reflecting the developer’s fast-track approach (the first Westwood Grande was also handed over early in late 2024). For investors, an on-time (even early) completion is a confidence booster – it means rental income can start immediately and it reinforces Imtiaz’s reputation for timely execution. With 153 new units hitting JVC’s inventory, expect a short-term increase in rental supply in the area. However, JVC’s ongoing popularity with renters should help absorb these units, and Imtiaz’s quality positioning (luxury finishes and amenities) might let Westwood Grande II command slightly higher rents than older JVC buildings.
  2. AURA by Grovy (JVC)Developer: Grovy Real Estate; Handover: 30-May-2025; 151 units. AURA is a boutique low-density development in JVC that prioritizes elegance and privacy. Grovy Real Estate announced that as of May 28, 2025, Aura had received its Building Completion Certificate and began its handover process on May 29. This 14-storey building offers studios, 1BR and 2BR apartments in a relatively intimate setting (fewer units for its size, aiming for exclusivity). For JVC, which is known for many budget-friendly projects, AURA brings a touch of “affordable luxury” – with premium finishes and amenities marketed to young professionals and small families. Investors who bought early in AURA can now either flip the units or list them for rent immediately. Given JVC’s strong rental demand and Grovy’s on-time delivery, many owners may opt to “rent-then-sell” – capitalize on rental yields now and potentially resell in a year or two once the building establishes a track record (and any initial post-handover resale glut subsides).
  3. Mass Residence (JVC)Developer: Jaiedco Real Estate Development; Handover: 30-May-2025; 69 units. Mass Residence is a smaller, six-floor residential project next to Circle Mall in JVC, featuring a selection of studios, 1BR and 2BR apartments with high-end finishes and smart-home features. Notably, Jaiedco achieved a rapid construction cycle – an update in early 2025 highlighted that Mass Residence reached 95% completion in just 7 months, with handover imminent. The project’s quick turnaround exemplifies the pace of development in JVC. For the market, 69 new upscale units near JVC’s main retail hub means more competition for older buildings in the vicinity, potentially putting slight pressure on rents for dated units. However, the modern features and prime location (walking distance to Circle Mall) of Mass Residence could allow it to attract tenants quickly. Investors here might see steady rental income given JVC’s occupancy levels, and those who got in at launch (planned for Q1 2025 completion) have the option to hold for yield or flip at a profit now that the property is ready.
  4. The Regent (Town Square)Developer: Nshama; Handover: 26-May-2025; 238 units. Part of Nshama’s Town Square master community, The Regent Residences marks one of the larger apartment completions in Town Square for 2025. This project delivered 238 units (studios to 3BR apartments) and was originally slated for a mid-2025 handover (estimates ranged from Q2 to August 2025), so a late May delivery is on target. Town Square is known for its affordable pricing and family-friendly amenities, and The Regent adds fresh inventory right by the community’s central park and retail plaza. The handover timing is ideal as it precedes the summer leasing season – investors can immediately list units for rent to capture demand from new graduates and families moving in the summer. Key observation: Town Square’s growing population and limited ready supply mean new handovers often see high occupancy quickly. Some early buyers might attempt flips (reselling now that units are ready, perhaps at 10–15% above off-plan prices if market conditions allow), but many will likely hold and rent out, given Town Square’s solid rental yields and the community’s ongoing development (which could drive price appreciation long-term).
  5. The S Tower (Al Sufouh Second)Developer: Sobha Realty (Sobha Group); Handover: 20-May-2025; 95 units. Sobha’s “The S Tower” is an ultra-luxury 62-story skyscraper located in Al Sufouh (near Dubai Internet City and overlooking Palm Jumeirah). This tower stands out among May’s completions as a trophy asset: it exclusively offers 4 and 5-bedroom apartments (just 95 units in total, indicating very large, full-floor or half-floor residences). The S Tower had been highly anticipated, with Sobha initially aiming for a late-2024 completion; the official handover in May 2025 aligns with minor delays now resolved. For the market, The S Tower’s delivery means new ultra-prime inventory – likely with price tags in the tens of millions of AED. Such high-end stock is niche, so the impact is more reputational: it reinforces Dubai’s luxury segment momentum (following earlier handovers like Atlantis The Royal Residences, etc.). Don’t expect a flood of transactions here; instead, these 4-5BR sky mansions will trickle into the resale market as only a handful of wealthy investors trade them. For owners, the strategy is almost certainly long-term hold – these units are prestige assets where value could appreciate as they become fully operational (especially if held as rare rentals or even kept vacant as a store of wealth). The S Tower also exemplifies how completed ready luxury can command a premium over buying luxury off-plan (due to immediate possession and certainty of finish).
  6. Alef Noon Residence (JVC)Developer: Al Bait Al Duwaliy Real Estate; Handover: 19-May-2025; 113 units. Alef Noon is a 16-storey residential tower in JVC District 16, adding another batch of upscale apartments (studios, 1BR, 2BR) to the area. The project was marketed as “luxury living meets contemporary design” in a vibrant community, and was expected to complete by end of Q1 2025 – the actual handover in mid-Q2 indicates a slight delay but well within allowable grace periods. With 113 units, Alef Noon Residence increases JVC’s supply of new, ready apartments targeted at young professionals and small families. From a market perspective, JVC’s dominance in new completions (Alef Noon is one of six JVC projects handed over in May alone) could start to moderate price growth in the community in the short term, simply due to volume of new options for buyers and tenants. Savvy investors in Alef Noon might adopt a “rent-then-sell” strategy – lease out units now (leveraging JVC’s 7-8% rental yield potential on new units) and look to sell after a year or two once the initial wave of competing new buildings is absorbed. The quality positioning (high-end interiors and amenities) should help Alef Noon stand out in JVC’s crowded market, potentially attracting tenants willing to pay a bit more for a brand-new building.
  7. Damac Hills – Bel Air (Al Hebiah Third)Developer: Damac Properties; Handover: 16-May-2025; 215 units. Bel Air at The Trump Estates in DAMAC Hills is a premium villa enclave that was completed in mid-May. This project, delivered in Phase 2 of the Trump Estates development, comprises around 200+ luxury villas and mansions inspired by the upscale “Bel Air” lifestyle. (In fact, Bel Air is marketed as “the crown jewel of DAMAC Hills”, featuring 4 to 8-bedroom villas with golf course views and opulent finishes.) Initially targeted for late 2024, the handover spilled into Q2 2025 – still aligning with the developer’s schedule for high-end communities. The market impact of Bel Air’s completion is notable in the luxury villa segment: it injects a large batch of multi-million-dirham homes at once. This could present resale opportunities for investors who bought early in the launch (circa 2021) – some may list their villas for sale to cash in on substantial capital gains, especially if villa prices rose during construction. On the other hand, end-user buyers who missed out at launch now have ready units to purchase (likely at higher prices than off-plan, but with immediate handover). For the wider market, an influx of 215 new high-end homes in DAMAC Hills might soften seller’s market conditions slightly for luxury villas, offering more choices and perhaps slightly more negotiability on prices. Yet, demand for turnkey family villas in Dubai remains strong, so we expect healthy absorption. Owners in Bel Air who hold will be looking at either long-term capital appreciation (Damac Hills is a matured community with strong appeal) or rental yields via leasing to high-income tenants seeking spacious homes by the golf course.
  8. The Paragon by IGO (Business Bay)Developer: Invest Group Overseas; Handover: 13-May-2025; 330 units. The Paragon is a modern high-rise in Business Bay developed by IGO, delivering 330 apartments in a prime urban location. Planned for completion in early 2025, it reached handover by mid-May, adding a sizable inventory of studios and 1-2BR units in the Business Bay/Downtown fringe. Business Bay hasn’t seen many large handovers in recent times compared to areas like JVC, so The Paragon’s delivery is significant. It immediately creates new resale and rental opportunities in Business Bay: early investors who bought off-plan could flip now to end-users who prefer ready units, and landlords can tap into the constant tenant demand from young professionals in the area. With state-of-the-art amenities (pool, gym, co-working spaces, etc.), The Paragon will compete with other modern towers in Business Bay, potentially putting slight pressure on rents of older buildings as tenants gravitate to something brand-new. However, the influx of 330 units could also attract more first-time buyers who want a Downtown-adjacent address without paying Downtown prices. All in all, expect active trading on these units in the coming months. Business Bay’s robust sales and rental activity means most units should be occupied quickly – whether by owners or tenants – and any initial resale listings (likely at a markup over the original price) will test just how strong buyer appetite is for ready property in mid-2025. Investors here might find a flip profitable if they bought at a lower launch price; otherwise, holding and renting (with Business Bay’s solid yields around 6-7%) is a sound strategy if capital appreciation prospects remain moderate.
  9. Grand Glow (JVC)Developer: AIZN Developers; Handover: 09-May-2025; 14 units. Grand Glow is a unique outlier in this list – a boutique cluster of townhouses rather than an apartment building. Developed by AIZN in JVC’s District 14, Grand Glow consists of just 14 luxury townhomes (each G+2, four-bedroom + maid’s room) designed for family living. The project’s completion in early May adds a small supply of high-end villa-style residences within JVC. For the market, Grand Glow addresses a niche: offering the space of a villa with the community convenience of JVC. These townhouses likely sold to end-users and long-term investors; any flipper would find only a limited pool of buyers for such properties, so we anticipate most owners will hold for personal use or long-term rental (though villa/townhouse rentals in JVC can command strong rates given scarce supply). The impact on JVC’s market is minimal due to the low unit count, but symbolically, it shows diversification of inventory – JVC is not just apartments but is also seeing more townhouse/villa product to meet demand from families who want to stay in the area. Investors in Grand Glow stand to gain from capital appreciation as JVC’s infrastructure and desirability improve, and from the fact that new townhouses in central Dubai locations are relatively rare. This project’s handover also reflects AIZN’s successful entry in the development scene, and they delivered on their promise of a quality family-oriented product.
  10. Dawn by Binghatti (JVC)Developer: Binghatti; Handover: 08-May-2025; 97 units. Binghatti Developers continued their prolific streak with Dawn, a 5-storey low-rise in JVC offering a selection of studio, 1BR, and 2BR apartments. Initially slated for a late 2024 completion, Dawn saw handover slip into May 2025 – not unusual given market-wide logistical slowdowns. Still, Binghatti’s brand carries weight: they are known for delivering reasonably priced units with distinctive architecture, targeting investors and end-users looking for value. Dawn’s 97 new apartments bring more affordable stock to JVC, likely at price points attractive to budget-conscious buyers. The immediate effect is increased competition among JVC landlords – with multiple new buildings (including Dawn) handing over simultaneously, tenants have a buffet of fresh choices, which could keep rents in check in JVC for the next quarter. For investors in Dawn, a prudent play might be to offer slightly below-market rents initially to lease out quickly (ensuring no void period) and then hold the asset for the long term. Binghatti projects often see price appreciation post-handover as the developer builds its reputation; early buyers may find by late 2025 that their units can resell at a healthy profit once the initial supply surge normalizes. In the meantime, renting out yields income and helps cover costs. Overall, Dawn by Binghatti reinforces JVC’s status as Dubai’s hotspot for new mid-market housing, which is a key observation we turn to next.

Key Market Observations from May 2025’s Handovers

  • JVC Dominance: Jumeirah Village Circle clearly led the pack in May 2025 completions, with 6 out of 10 handed-over projects located in JVC. This reflects JVC’s maturing pipeline – multiple developers (Imtiaz, Grovy, Jaiedco, AIZN, Binghatti, etc.) finished projects simultaneously. The immediate impact is a short-term supply glut of new apartments in JVC, which could flatten rent and price growth in that community for the next few months. However, JVC’s popularity (thanks to its central location and affordable pricing) means new supply historically gets absorbed relatively quickly. Investors should note that JVC is entering a phase of high turnover: older buildings may need renovations or price adjustments to compete with shiny new options, and tenant leverage increases in the near term (good news for renters, who can negotiate or upgrade to new buildings without huge rent jumps). In the long run, this wave of completions solidifies JVC’s appeal as a fully established community – it has ever more modern housing stock, and the area’s infrastructure (roads, malls, parks) has kept pace.
  • Ultra-Luxury Completions: May 2025 wasn’t just about quantity; it also saw the delivery of ultra-lux projects like Sobha’s The S Tower and Damac’s Bel Air villas. These completions highlight that the top end of the market is also getting new inventory, not just the mid-tier. An ultra-luxury handover can be a double-edged sword: on one hand, it raises the bar for quality and price benchmarks (e.g. setting new record asking prices in an area if a penthouse in The S Tower or a mansion in Bel Air lists for resale). On the other hand, adding supply in a niche high-end segment can test depth of demand. Dubai’s luxury segment has been extremely strong through 2023–2024, so these new deliveries are likely to be well-received. We anticipate record-breaking resale listings – for instance, a 5-bedroom full-floor in The S Tower could appear on the market at a headline price, which, even if it takes time to sell, grabs attention and sets a reference point for luxury values. For ultra-luxury investors, May’s handovers mean more choices to diversify (some might rotate capital from one project to another if they see better potential). But overall, the exclusivity of these projects should help them hold value; there aren’t dozens of comparable units flooding in. It’s also worth noting these deliveries send a message: developers are concluding high-profile projects successfully, which boosts global confidence in Dubai’s luxury real estate.
  • Business Bay & Urban Handover Opportunities: The completion of The Paragon in Business Bay underscores an interesting market dynamic – while off-plan sales have been booming citywide, ready units in prime areas like Business Bay are still scarce at any given moment. This handover suddenly creates 330 new ready apartments in a location where demand is constant. The observation here is that newly completed stock in core areas can present great “in-between” opportunities: Off-plan buyers who got in early now hold a ready asset in a desirable spot (and might sell for a profit to those who didn’t want to buy off-plan), and end-users or investors who prefer ready property can now enter the market without the two-year wait, albeit at current market prices. We expect active secondary market trading in Business Bay following this handover – essentially, The Paragon’s units will test what premium today’s buyers place on ready-to-move vs off-plan. If they sell briskly, it signals confidence in ready stock and possibly that prices have room to rise. If many units linger on listings, it might indicate buyers are content to stick with off-plan options at lower prices. Early signs, however, lean toward the former – Dubai’s population growth and the record sales months of 2025 suggest appetite for quality ready units is high. In fact, May 2025 overall was a historic month for Dubai real estate by sales value (hitting around AED 66.7B in deals), showing strong transaction momentum that should benefit these new completions.

Investor Angle: Strategies for Newly Handed-Over Projects

For real estate investors, a batch of new completions like those in May 2025 presents a spectrum of strategies. Here are key approaches to consider for these freshly delivered units:

  • Immediate Flip (Post-Handover Resale): Some investors will choose to flip the property upon handover – selling the unit now that it’s completed to realize profit. This strategy works best when property values have risen significantly during construction (which has been the case in many Dubai areas from 2021 to 2025). For example, early investors in The Paragon (Business Bay) or The Regent (Town Square) might find ready buyers now at prices well above what they paid two years ago, thanks to market appreciation. Flipping is also attractive for unique units that can fetch a premium (say, a top-floor penthouse in Westwood Grande II or a single-row golf-facing villa in Bel Air). The goal is a quick capital gain without ever becoming a landlord. Pro tip: If flipping, list the property as soon as NOC and snagging are done – being among the first sellers can give you a competitive edge before a wave of similar listings hits. Ensure your asking price is competitive; remember other investors may also be flipping concurrently.
  • Rent-Then-Sell (Hold Short-Term): Another strategy is to lease out the unit for 1-2 years before selling. This can be smart when immediate resale profits are marginal or when the area is momentarily oversupplied (like JVC in mid-2025). By renting the property now, investors generate income (perhaps covering mortgage interest or service charges) and wait for the market to digest the new supply. In a year or two, there may be fewer competing listings and potentially higher prices. Projects such as AURA by Grovy (JVC) or Alef Noon Residence (JVC) might benefit from this approach – they are high-quality, so they’ll attract tenants easily, but JVC’s current new supply might mean selling today doesn’t yield the best price. Rent-then-sell lets an investor capture both rental yield and some appreciation, essentially “seasoning” the asset before exit. Additionally, having a tenant and rental history can make the unit attractive to a buyer looking for an income-generating property down the line.
  • Long-Term Hold (Buy-to-Rent): Investors with a longer horizon may simply hold the property as a rental investment for the foreseeable future. This is often advisable for prime and luxury properties where long-term capital growth is expected (e.g., The S Tower units or Bel Air villas). It’s also sensible if the investor’s goal is steady cash flow – many of these new projects can offer excellent rental yields, especially those in emerging areas acquired at low prices (Town Square’s yields, for instance, are attractive). By holding, investors benefit from ongoing rental income and can ride the property cycle, possibly doubling down on gains if Dubai’s growth continues. A long-hold strategy also avoids transactional costs and efforts of flipping. Example: An investor in a 5-bedroom Sobha S Tower apartment might lease it in the ultra-luxury rental market (perhaps as a premium corporate lease or to a celebrity client), enjoying a generous rent, and only consider selling after several years when the property has appreciated into a higher bracket of value. Long-hold investors should stay vigilant on maintenance and quality of tenants, as preserving the “brand-new” allure of these 2025 completions will help maximize future resale value.

In practice, an investor’s approach could blend these strategies across their portfolio. What’s crucial is to align the strategy with the property type and market context: flipping works in a hot market or for unique units, rent-then-sell works when short-term supply is high or growth is expected to be stronger in a year or two, and long-hold works for blue-chip assets or high-yield plays where patience will be rewarded.

Why Completed Stock Still Matters in an Off-Plan Market

Dubai’s real estate headlines in recent years have been dominated by off-plan sales and new project launches. Indeed, between January and mid-May 2025, off-plan transactions hit a record AED 90 billion (≈$24.5B), which was 38% of all property deals in that period. This boom underscores developer confidence and investor appetite for future projects. However, completed (ready) stock remains the backbone of the market, and May’s flurry of handovers is a prime reminder of why ready properties still matter even amid an off-plan frenzy:

  • Immediate Utility and Cashflow: A completed unit can be lived in or rented out today. For end-users, that means no waiting – the keys are in hand. For investors, it means rental income can start right away, which is especially appealing given rising rents. Off-plan purchases, by contrast, tie up capital and only generate returns upon completion years later. Many buyers will pay a premium for a ready unit to avoid that waiting period. For example, those who missed buying in Nshama’s The Regent off-plan can now buy a unit today (perhaps at a higher price than launch, but with the benefit of immediate possession and/or rental income). In essence, ready stock provides instant gratification and cashflow, which will always have its market.
  • Known Quantity and Risk Mitigation: With a delivered project, “what you see is what you get.” The construction risk is gone – there’s no uncertainty about the developer finishing the project, no construction delays, and the final quality is visible and verifiable. In an off-plan market, even with escrow laws and reputed developers, there’s always a degree of risk and uncertainty. Some investors or homebuyers simply prefer the safety of completed properties. They can inspect the actual unit, check the views, the build quality, and even gauge the community occupancy/vibe. This tangibility is reflected in financing too: banks often lend more readily or on better terms for completed properties than off-plan. Thus, completed stock appeals to more conservative buyers and end-users who form a substantial portion of the market (remember, about 62% of transactions as of mid-May 2025 were in ready properties, not off-plan).
  • Market Benchmarking and Liquidity: Ready property transactions set the benchmark prices that help value the off-plan market. When a wave of new projects (like those in May 2025) is handed over and starts selling on the secondary market, it provides crucial comparable data. For instance, if Westwood Grande II units begin selling for X AED per square foot in JVC as completed units, that informs what buyers might be willing to pay for the next off-plan launch in JVC. Completed stock sales thus help calibrate prices and keep the market realistic. Additionally, ready properties add liquidity to the market; an owner can sell relatively quickly if needed (the pool of buyers is larger for ready units, including those needing immediate housing or those needing a mortgage). This liquidity is healthy for the market’s overall stability.
  • End-User Demand: Not everyone wants off-plan. A significant segment of buyers are end-users with immediate housing needs (new expats, relocating families, etc.) who must buy or rent something that exists now. Completed projects, especially new ones, cater to this group by offering modern homes without the wait. For example, a family relocating this summer might opt to purchase a brand-new villa in DAMAC Hills Bel Air rather than wait for an off-plan villa in a new community that will be ready in 2026. Thus, as much as off-plan grabs attention, the lived-in reality is driven by ready homes. Developers know this, which is why we see them racing to complete projects on time – delivering on promises boosts their brand and satisfies that end-user demand.

In summary, off-plan is exciting and can be very profitable, but completed stock provides immediacy, certainty, and indispensability in the market. May 2025’s completions show that behind every off-plan hype cycle comes the delivery phase, where true market dynamics play out and real end-users get their homes. A balanced portfolio or strategy will value both: securing good off-plan deals for the future, while not underestimating the power of a high-quality ready property in hand.

Looking Ahead: June–July 2025 Completions on the Horizon

The momentum from May is set to continue, as Dubai’s property supply surge of 2025 rolls on. Industry data projected around 41,000 new units to be delivered in 2025 (an enormous jump from ~27,000 in 2024), and we are beginning to see that play out. For June and July 2025, investors should watch for another wave of handovers across various segments:

  • Master Community Phases: Large-scale communities launched in recent years will see major phases completing. For instance, Damac Lagoons – the mega-project of themed villa clusters – is expecting handovers in mid-2025 (clusters like Portofino and Nice are slated for completion around this time). These will release hundreds of villas to the market, potentially at price points below similar ready units in more central areas, drawing attention from villa buyers and speculators alike. Another one is Emaar’s The Valley (Talia) out on Dubai-Al Ain Road, and Expo City might also have some first residences ready – these mark new frontiers adding stock in outer areas.
  • High-Profile Towers: A few marquee towers are targeting mid-2025 completion. Keep an eye on projects in Dubai Marina and Downtown that were launched during the 2019–2020 period. For example, MBR City’s Azizi Riviera (various phases including the upscale Riviera Reve) is due to complete around Q2/Q3 2025, adding thousands of apartments in Mohammed Bin Rashid City. In Downtown, Emaar’s twin-tower development Forte is rumored to be approaching handover, which would be a significant addition of luxury apartments next to the Opera House. Additionally, Cavalli Estates (ultra-luxe villas in Damac Hills) are on the horizon for later in 2025, but any early handovers in summer will be notable in the luxury villa scene.
  • Trends to Watch: As these completions come in, watch the sales volume and price indices. If June–July see as many handovers as May, we might observe a slight dampening in overall price growth – which is not a bad thing, as it indicates the market absorbing supply healthily. On the flip side, continued record transaction volumes (as seen in May) could mean the market is confidently absorbing new stock without losing momentum – a sign of a very robust market. We’ll also watch rental trends; late summer 2025 (moving season) will reveal if rents in areas with heavy new supply (like JVC or Town Square) cool off or if demand keeps them aloft.

From an investment perspective, June–July 2025 completions will bring new opportunities to negotiate. Buyers who missed out on off-plan launches can pick from newly finished inventory. Developers with Q2 handovers might also run post-handover payment plan promotions to sell remaining units – giving buyers a chance to buy “ready” with extended payment terms. We expect a healthy mix of budget-friendly apartments (several mid-market buildings in JVC, JVT, Dubailand are lined up), upscale beachfront units (could there be a handover in Emaar Beachfront or Dubai Harbour mid-year?), and more ready villas in communities like Arabian Ranches 3, Dubai South, etc., as those projects mature.

Overall, the next couple of months will be an exciting continuation of Dubai’s “Year of Handover”. Investors should stay agile: do due diligence on upcoming handovers, compare secondary market prices with off-plan, and be prepared to act if a good deal appears – whether it’s an anxious seller of a just-handed-over unit or a developer incentive on a nearly completed project. The summer of 2025 could be a buyer’s moment to secure quality ready assets before the inevitable next cycle of launches in the fall.

Ready to Invest in Dubai’s Newest Properties?

May 2025’s flurry of completions has opened up a world of possibilities for investors and homebuyers – and this is just the beginning of the supply wave. Are you looking to capitalize on these fresh opportunities? Whether you’re considering flipping a brand-new unit, hunting for a high-yield rental property, or searching for your dream home among the latest handovers, having the right guidance is crucial. K&S Properties is here to help you navigate the market: our experts have up-to-date intel on every new project, access to exclusive listings in these handed-over developments, and tailored investment strategies to suit your goals.

Don’t miss out on Dubai’s latest offerings. Contact K&S Properties today to consult with our seasoned advisors – we’ll help you identify the best units from these May 2025 completions (and upcoming June-July handovers), negotiate the smartest deals, and manage your investment for maximum returns. Reach out now and let K&S Properties connect you with the newest keys in Dubai’s property market – your next profitable investment or perfect home could be one of these newly delivered projects!

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