Arada vs Aldar Properties: Why the Comparison Matters
Buyers shortlisting Dubai developers in 2026 typically compare Arada and Aldar Properties side by side. The two operate in overlapping price bands and overlapping areas, and the choice between them often comes down to specific differences in payment plan structure, service-charge load, delivery discipline, and investor fit rather than headline brand recognition.
This comparison is not a ranking. It is a structured side-by-side reading of the inputs that shape five-year investor outcomes: per-square-foot pricing, payment-plan menu, service charges as a drag on net yield, the developer's published delivery record, and the typical Oliva score band on each developer's stock. Both developers are DLD-registered and operate under the standard RERA escrow framework. The differentiators sit in product positioning and balance-sheet structure, not in regulatory standing.
Oliva is a Dubai-licensed brokerage (RERA BRN 1573501, DLD Broker Card 92025). We earn brokerage commission on transactions but the comparison weighting below is set by the methodology and not by developer relationships. No paid placements.
Side-by-Side at a Glance
| Metric | Arada | Aldar Properties |
|---|---|---|
| Delivered units | more than 12,000 residential units delivered or under handover across the UAE since 2017 | more than 30,000 residential units delivered across the UAE since 2004 |
| Primary areas | Aljada (Sharjah), Masaar (Sharjah), Nasma Residences (Sharjah), Jumeirah Lake Towers | Yas Island (Abu Dhabi), Saadiyat Island (Abu Dhabi), Al Reem Island (Abu Dhabi), Al Raha Beach (Abu Dhabi) |
| Price band | AED 950-1,500/sqft on Aljada Sharjah apartments, AED 1,400-2,200/sqft on Arada's Dubai-side JLT and Production City launches | AED 1,800-2,800/sqft on Yas Island and Al Reem Island apartments, AED 2,400-4,200/sqft on Saadiyat Island prime stock, AED 2,800-4,500/sqft on Aldar's Dubai-branch launches in Dubai Marina and adjacent freehold zones |
| Service charge | AED 11-16/sqft annually on Aljada Sharjah apartments, AED 14-20/sqft annually on the Dubai-side JLT and Production City stock | AED 14-22/sqft annually on Yas Island and Al Reem apartments, AED 18-28/sqft annually on Saadiyat Island prime inventory, AED 20-30/sqft annually on Aldar's Dubai prime launches |
| Payment plan norm | Arada uses 50/50 and 60/40 payment plans during construction with selected 5-year post-handover terms on Aljada master-plan launches. The post-handover structure is sized to family-buyer cash flow rather than aggressive borrowing. | Aldar uses 60/40 and 70/30 payment plans during construction with selected 30/70 post-handover terms on outer-cluster Yas Island launches. The payment-plan structure is conservative and consistent with the listed-developer disclosure regime. |
| Oliva score band | Most Arada projects score in the 70-82 band on the Oliva methodology, with prime Aljada and Masaar stock scoring 76-84 and the Dubai-side launches scoring 68-78 depending on payment terms and price entry | Most Aldar projects score in the 80-88 band on the Oliva methodology, with prime Saadiyat Island stock scoring 85-92 and outer Yas Acres villa stock scoring 74-82 |
Live DLD data summary
As of June 4, 2026, DLD records show Arada holds 0 active projects. Data sourced from the Dubai Pulse open data gateway and updated daily by Oliva's data pipeline.
Pricing Posture: Per-Square-Foot Reality
Arada's pricing band on currently selling stock is AED 950-1,500/sqft on Aljada Sharjah apartments, AED 1,400-2,200/sqft on Arada's Dubai-side JLT and Production City launches. Aldar Properties's pricing band is AED 1,800-2,800/sqft on Yas Island and Al Reem Island apartments, AED 2,400-4,200/sqft on Saadiyat Island prime stock, AED 2,800-4,500/sqft on Aldar's Dubai-branch launches in Dubai Marina and adjacent freehold zones.
Per-square-foot pricing alone does not settle the comparison. A developer pricing 8-12% above the area median is signalling brand premium positioning, supported by build quality, finish standard, or branded-residence partnership. A developer pricing 8-12% below the area median is either positioning for entry-level demand or carrying a delivery-risk discount that the resale market has priced in.
For Arada buyers comparing against Aldar Properties, the productive question is not which developer is cheaper per square foot, but which developer is pricing closer to fair value once delivery discipline, service-charge load, and resale liquidity are factored in. The Oliva methodology runs that adjustment by combining the developer's track record band with the area's recent DLD secondary-market median.
Buyers should also weight the floor-plate efficiency of the unit type under consideration. Two units listed at the same per-square-foot price can carry materially different usable-area ratios; a 2-bed apartment at 1,200 square feet built-up with a 78% efficient floor plate delivers the equivalent of a 950-square-foot fully-usable unit at the equivalent price, while the same 1,200 square feet at 88% efficiency delivers 1,055 square feet of usable area at the same headline cost.
Payment Plan Structure: Cash-Flow Versus Total Cost
Payment plan structure is the single most underweighted comparison variable. Arada's norm is: Arada uses 50/50 and 60/40 payment plans during construction with selected 5-year post-handover terms on Aljada master-plan launches. The post-handover structure is sized to family-buyer cash flow rather than aggressive borrowing.
Aldar Properties's norm is: Aldar uses 60/40 and 70/30 payment plans during construction with selected 30/70 post-handover terms on outer-cluster Yas Island launches. The payment-plan structure is conservative and consistent with the listed-developer disclosure regime.
The cash-flow versus total-cost trade-off works in both directions. A 30/70 post-handover plan reduces the cash needed during construction but exposes the buyer to multi-year payment obligations to the developer post-completion. If the developer carries the post-handover paper at zero interest (the typical structure), the plan is effectively interest-free use. If the developer's pricing on the same unit is 6-9% above the equivalent cash-purchase ticket, the buyer is paying an embedded financing cost that should be modelled against the prevailing UAE mortgage rate before contracting.
Mortgage-backed buyers should weight payment plans differently again. Construction-phase milestone payments are typically funded from cash reserves rather than mortgage drawdowns, since most UAE banks do not release mortgage funds until the property is registered with title. This means a 50/50 plan with 50% on handover effectively requires 50% cash through construction plus the standard 20-25% deposit at handover, with the mortgage financing the residual. Run the cash-flow model on a worst-case 12-month construction-delay scenario before committing.
Delivery Discipline: The Risk-Adjusted Anchor
Arada's published delivery record: Arada's published delivery record across the 2017-2025 window shows roughly 88% of projects delivered within 6 months of the announced handover date. The young developer cohort entry plus the master-developer scale drives the delivery discipline.
Aldar Properties's published delivery record: Aldar's delivery record across the 2015-2025 window shows roughly 92% of projects delivered within 6 months of the announced handover date. The listed master-developer disclosure regime plus Mubadala anchor shareholder drives consistent project execution.
Delivery discipline is the anchor for off-plan risk. A developer delivering 90%+ of projects within 6 months of the announced handover date is operating at the top of the Dubai cohort and supports the brand premium often visible in resale-market pricing. A developer delivering 75-85% within the same window operates at the wider mid-market norm; buyers should size the position with delay-sensitivity in mind. A developer delivering below 75% should be approached with a payment-plan structure that minimises buyer cash exposure during the construction window, plus an acceptance that some phases will hand over 9-15 months past the announced date.
For the Arada versus Aldar Properties comparison specifically, the delivery-discipline read is the input that most often flips a buyer's preference once they look at it carefully. Headline pricing comparisons rarely move conclusion; delivery records often do.
Investor Archetype Fit
Arada's typical buyer fit: Yield-led Sharjah investors on Aljada inventory, end-users on Masaar villas, capital-appreciation Dubai investors on the JLT launches, and cross-emirate diversification buyers spreading exposure between Sharjah and Dubai.
Aldar Properties's typical buyer fit: Cross-emirate diversification investors spreading exposure between Abu Dhabi and Dubai, capital-appreciation buyers on Saadiyat Island prime stock, end-users on Yas Island master-community villas, and golden-visa applicants assembling AED 2 million qualifying combinations.
The archetype check is the cleanest way to separate the two developers. End-users who prioritise build quality and finish standard typically gravitate to one; yield-led investors using post-handover plans for cash-flow management typically gravitate to the other. The same buyer profile may not be equally well-served by both, even if the headline pricing looks similar.
Run your own archetype check before contracting. If your investor profile matches the developer's typical buyer, the developer's pricing, payment-plan structure, and product positioning are calibrated to work for you on resale and on yield realisation. If it does not, the structural mismatch will compound across the hold period.
Service Charges and Net Yield Drag
Service charges are the most consistent net-yield variable across the two developers. Arada's typical band is AED 11-16/sqft annually on Aljada Sharjah apartments, AED 14-20/sqft annually on the Dubai-side JLT and Production City stock. Aldar Properties's typical band is AED 14-22/sqft annually on Yas Island and Al Reem apartments, AED 18-28/sqft annually on Saadiyat Island prime inventory, AED 20-30/sqft annually on Aldar's Dubai prime launches.
On a 1-bedroom apartment with 750 square feet built-up area at AED 1.6 million, a 4 AED-per-square-foot gap in service charges (e.g. AED 16/sqft on one developer versus AED 20/sqft on the other) translates into AED 3,000 per year. Across a 5-year hold, that compounds to AED 15,000 plus the lost time-value. As a share of the gross yield on a typical AED 100,000 annual rental, AED 3,000 is roughly 3 percentage points off net yield. It matters.
Cross-reference advertised service-charge levels against the Mollak system, the DLD's centralised owners-association payment portal. Mollak exposes per-project service-charge collections on delivered buildings and is the most reliable independent reference for actual versus advertised levels.
Verdict: How to Pick
There is no universal answer to the Arada versus Aldar Properties question. The right answer depends on your investor archetype, your time horizon, your cash-flow flexibility, and the specific unit-type and area combination you are weighing.
Anchor the decision on three filters in sequence. First, archetype fit: which developer's typical buyer profile matches yours. Second, payment-plan-adjusted total cost: which developer prices the unit you want closer to fair value once the embedded financing structure is factored in. Third, delivery-record-adjusted risk: which developer's track record gives you the right exposure for your time-to-handover tolerance.
Run that three-step filter first. Use the headline pricing comparison last. The headline rarely settles the question and can mislead buyers who anchor on per-square-foot price alone.
Browse Arada's active pipeline on Oliva: /projects?developerId=arada. Browse Aldar Properties's active pipeline: /projects?developerId=aldar-properties.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Arada better than Aldar Properties for Dubai investors?
Neither developer is universally better. Arada fits Yield-led Sharjah investors on Aljada inventory; Aldar Properties fits Cross-emirate diversification investors spreading exposure between Abu Dhabi and Dubai. The right answer depends on the buyer's archetype, time horizon, and cash-flow flexibility. Verify the specific Trakheesi project number and the project's escrow trustee on the DLD project portal before contracting on any specific launch from either developer.
How do Arada and Aldar Properties compare on price per square foot?
Arada's typical pricing is AED 950-1,500/sqft on Aljada Sharjah apartments, AED 1,400-2,200/sqft on Arada's Dubai-side JLT and Production City launches. Aldar Properties's typical pricing is AED 1,800-2,800/sqft on Yas Island and Al Reem Island apartments, AED 2,400-4,200/sqft on Saadiyat Island prime stock, AED 2,800-4,500/sqft on Aldar's Dubai-branch launches in Dubai Marina and adjacent freehold zones. Per-square-foot pricing alone does not settle the comparison; weight the developer's payment-plan structure, service-charge band, and delivery discipline alongside the headline price.
Which developer has stronger delivery discipline, Arada or Aldar Properties?
Arada: Arada's published delivery record across the 2017-2025 window shows roughly 88% of projects delivered within 6 months of the announced handover date. The young developer cohort entry plus the master-developer scale drives the delivery discipline. Aldar Properties: Aldar's delivery record across the 2015-2025 window shows roughly 92% of projects delivered within 6 months of the announced handover date. The listed master-developer disclosure regime plus Mubadala anchor shareholder drives consistent project execution. For off-plan buyers, delivery discipline is the anchor risk variable. Verify the published track record against the developer's most recent handover cohort rather than the long-run average.
Do Arada and Aldar Properties offer post-handover payment plans?
Arada: Arada uses 50/50 and 60/40 payment plans during construction with selected 5-year post-handover terms on Aljada master-plan launches. The post-handover structure is sized to family-buyer cash flow rather than aggressive borrowing. Aldar Properties: Aldar uses 60/40 and 70/30 payment plans during construction with selected 30/70 post-handover terms on outer-cluster Yas Island launches. The payment-plan structure is conservative and consistent with the listed-developer disclosure regime. Post-handover plans reduce cash exposure during construction but expose the buyer to multi-year payment obligations post-completion. Model the embedded financing cost against the prevailing UAE mortgage rate before contracting.
What is the Oliva score band on Arada versus Aldar Properties?
Arada: Most Arada projects score in the 70-82 band on the Oliva methodology, with prime Aljada and Masaar stock scoring 76-84 and the Dubai-side launches scoring 68-78 depending on payment terms and price entry. Aldar Properties: Most Aldar projects score in the 80-88 band on the Oliva methodology, with prime Saadiyat Island stock scoring 85-92 and outer Yas Acres villa stock scoring 74-82. The Oliva score is independent of who pays us and is set by the methodology rather than developer relationships.
Explore further
The project, area, and developer this post covers, with live Dubai Land Department data.
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