Reportage in Dubai: Who They Are and Why It Matters
Reportage Properties is a multi-region mid-market developer with a high-volume affordable-segment positioning across Dubai, Abu Dhabi, and Saudi Arabia. The developer was founded in 2014 (UAE expansion) and operates under DLD-registered entity REPORTAGE INTERNATIONAL REAL ESTATE L.L.C with RERA licence 1117501. Across the operating window, Reportage Properties has shipped more than 5,800 residential units delivered across the UAE since 2014.
Reportage's pitch is the lowest accessible Dubai freehold price entry, supported by the 1% monthly post-handover plan structure. The Verdana series in Dubai South and the Reportage Hills villas in Al Furjan anchor the developer's Dubai inventory at a price band that competitors at scale do not match.
This guide covers Reportage's investor proposition for 2026. Track record across delivered projects, active pipeline, financial profile, where the developer concentrates inventory, quality and pricing posture, risk profile, and the buyer archetypes the developer's stock fits. The objective is a single-page reference investors can use to weight a Reportage purchase against the wider Dubai developer cohort, sourced from DLD records, RERA filings, public corporate disclosures where available, and the Oliva scoring methodology.
Reportage at a Glance
| Metric | Detail |
|---|---|
| Trading name | Reportage Properties |
| DLD registered name | REPORTAGE INTERNATIONAL REAL ESTATE L.L.C |
| RERA licence | 1117501 |
| Founded | 2014 (UAE expansion) |
| Founder / leadership | Reportage Group (regional diversified developer) |
| Parent / ownership | Reportage Properties is part of Reportage Group, with active developments across Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt. |
| Listing status | Private |
| Delivered units (cumulative) | more than 5,800 residential units delivered across the UAE since 2014 |
| Primary Dubai areas | Dubai South, Al Furjan, Dubai Land Residence Complex, International City, Liwan, Dubailand |
| Typical price band | AED 800-1,400/sqft on Dubai South and Verdana stock, AED 1,200-1,600/sqft on Al Furjan and Liwan launches |
| Service charge band | AED 9-14/sqft annually on Dubai South and Verdana apartments, AED 4-7/sqft annually on Al Furjan and outer-cluster villa stock |
| Payment plan norm | See payment plan section below |
| Oliva score band | Most Reportage projects score in the 56-68 band on the Oliva methodology, with prime Dubai South Verdana stock scoring 62-72 and outer Land Residence Complex and Liwan stock scoring 50-62 |
Resumen DLD en vivo
As of June 4, 2026, DLD records show Reportage holds 0 active projects. Data sourced from the Dubai Pulse open data gateway and updated daily by Oliva's data pipeline.
Track Record: Delivered Projects and Handover Discipline
Reportage's published delivery record across the 2017-2025 window shows roughly 78% of projects delivered within 6 months of the announced handover date. The high-volume affordable-segment positioning produces a slightly wider delay band than the prime-segment developer cohort.
Delivery discipline is the single most important developer signal for off-plan buyers. Reportage's record sits within the wider Dubai developer cohort, where listed master-developers like Emaar, Aldar Properties, and RAK Properties typically deliver 88-94% of projects within 6 months of the announced handover date, while higher-volume mid-market developers run 76-86%. Developers operating below 75% on this metric are usually flagged for higher delay risk on new launches.
For Reportage specifically, buyers should anchor expectations to the delivered cohort rather than to the announced handover dates on current launches. Construction-progress fund release through the RERA escrow framework gives buyers visibility into milestone completion via the DLD project portal; verify each milestone payment against the published construction-progress percentage before approving the developer's release request.
The wider master-community moves matter too. Reportage Properties's concentration across Dubai South, Al Furjan, Dubai Land Residence Complex, International City means delivery on any single project draws on shared community infrastructure, master-developer relationships, and the developer's contractor network. A clean handover record on community-anchored projects signals stronger execution capability than a clean record on a standalone tower.
Active Pipeline and Currently Selling Projects
Reportage's active pipeline as of 2026 spans the developer's primary areas of operation. The flagship areas are: Dubai South (multiple Reportage mid-rise apartment buildings near Expo 2020 site), Al Furjan (Reportage Hills villas), Dubai Land Residence Complex (Verdana series), International City.
For investors weighing a Reportage purchase in 2026, the active-pipeline question splits into three: where is the developer selling, what are the typical handover dates on currently-selling phases, and what payment-plan structures are available. Currently-selling projects across Reportage's portfolio target handover windows in the 2026-2029 range, with the standard developer-cycle pattern of 24-36 months from launch to handover on apartment stock and 30-42 months on villa product.
Total active pipeline units sit in the multi-thousand range across Reportage Properties's currently-selling launches. Investors should request the specific Trakheesi project number and current construction-progress percentage on any project under consideration; the DLD project portal exposes both data points and they form the basis of the buyer's escrow protection during construction.
Browse Reportage's active pipeline on Oliva: /projects?developerId=reportage.
Financial Profile and Parent Company Structure
Reportage Properties is part of Reportage Group, with active developments across Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt.
Reportage is privately-held and has not announced public-listing plans.
Capital-structure transparency matters to off-plan buyers because the developer's balance sheet is the ultimate backstop on completion-guarantee performance. Listed developers publish audited annual reports, quarterly disclosures, and cash-flow statements that buyers and brokers can read alongside the RERA escrow framework. Privately-held developers do not publish equivalent disclosures, and the buyer's due diligence has to substitute named-trustee escrow verification, construction-progress milestone tracking, and developer track-record analysis for the public-disclosure inputs that listed peers provide.
For Reportage, the relevant capital-structure check for buyers is: verify the DLD-registered entity matches the trading name on the marketing material, confirm the RERA licence is current and not under regulatory action, and check the project Trakheesi number against the named escrow trustee on the DLD project portal. These three checks plus the Oliva score complete the developer-side due diligence inputs an off-plan buyer needs.
Where They Build: Area Concentration and Master-Community Moves
Reportage's active inventory concentrates across Dubai South, Al Furjan, Dubai Land Residence Complex, International City, Liwan, Dubailand, Jumeirah Garden City.
Area concentration matters for two reasons. First, a developer's repeated builds in the same community signal master-community-relationship depth, which typically translates into faster milestone approvals, smoother contractor mobilisation, and tighter handover discipline. Second, area concentration shapes the resale liquidity profile of the developer's stock; buyers who concentrate purchases in a single developer-area combination get reinforced rental-comp data and resale price reference points but accept correlated downside if the area's pricing moves against them.
For Reportage Properties specifically, the flagship areas are: Dubai South (multiple Reportage mid-rise apartment buildings near Expo 2020 site), Al Furjan (Reportage Hills villas), Dubai Land Residence Complex (Verdana series), International City.
Investors should weight Reportage exposure against existing portfolio concentration. A buyer already holding inventory in one of Reportage's flagship areas should size the Reportage purchase against the concentration risk of adding to the same area; a buyer with no Dubai exposure can use a Reportage purchase to anchor a developer-area combination with depth of comparables and resale liquidity.
Quality Signals: Service Charges, Mollak Data, and RERA Compliance
Service charges on Reportage's delivered stock typically run AED 9-14/sqft annually on Dubai South and Verdana apartments, AED 4-7/sqft annually on Al Furjan and outer-cluster villa stock. The Mollak service-charge framework, the DLD's centralised owners-association payment system, exposes per-project service-charge collections and is the most reliable independent reference for actual versus advertised service-charge levels on delivered inventory.
Service charges are a meaningful component of net yield. On a 1-bed apartment with a built-up area of 750 square feet at AED 1.6 million, an AED 18/sqft service charge translates into AED 13,500 per year, or roughly 0.85% of capital value annually. A 4-percentage-point gap in service-charge levels between developers (say AED 14/sqft versus AED 22/sqft on comparable product) translates into roughly 0.4 percentage points of net yield differential. Over a 5-year hold period that compounds materially.
On RERA compliance, Reportage Properties operates as a DLD-registered developer under licence 1117501. Buyers should verify the licence is current and not under regulatory action via the DLD project portal before contracting. Trakheesi project numbers should be present on every off-plan project marketing piece; no Trakheesi number means the project is not currently registered and buyers should not contract.
Ejari rental absorption on Reportage's delivered stock typically tracks the wider area average for the buildings' age cohort. Investors planning yield-led purchases should request the specific Ejari listing-to-let median for the building under consideration rather than relying on developer-portfolio averages.
Pricing Posture and Payment Plan Structure
Reportage's pricing band is AED 800-1,400/sqft on Dubai South and Verdana stock, AED 1,200-1,600/sqft on Al Furjan and Liwan launches.
Pricing posture relative to the area median is a meaningful signal. A developer pricing at the 75th percentile of an area's per-square-foot range is signalling brand premium pricing; a developer pricing at the 25th percentile is signalling either entry-level positioning or pricing pressure on a specific launch. For Reportage specifically, the developer's typical pricing posture is consistent with the brand band described above.
On payment plans: Reportage uses 30/70 and 40/60 payment plans extensively, with the structure delivering the lowest deposit ticket in the Dubai mid-market cohort. The 1% monthly post-handover plans on selected Verdana launches are the developer's primary commercial differentiator.
Payment-plan structure compounds in importance as the buyer's borrowing position and time horizon shift. Cash buyers planning to hold for 5+ years are largely indifferent between 50/50 and 30/70 plans. Mortgage-backed buyers using off-plan to manage cash flow during a transition between properties or careers should weight post-handover plans more heavily but understand the developer payment-exposure structure that comes with them. Always model the payment-plan cash flow against a worst-case construction-delay scenario before contracting.
Risk Profile: Escrow Practice, Completion Guarantees, and Cycle History
All Reportage off-plan projects are registered under DLD Trakheesi numbers and RERA escrow framework. The 1% monthly post-handover structures keep the developer exposed to buyer payment performance over multi-year horizons.
Completion-guarantee history is the single most important developer-risk signal. Reportage's risk profile is the high-volume affordable-segment developer profile: tight margin per unit, multi-region operational exposure, and the post-handover plan structure that retains payment exposure to buyers over multi-year horizons. The developer has not cancelled launched projects, but selected handover-delay periods have run 9-15 months past the announced date.
Cycle history adds context. Dubai's residential market has moved through three full cycles since 2008: the post-2008 correction (2009-2012), the 2014-2016 slowdown driven by oil pricing and regional capital flows, and the COVID-19 demand pause (2020-2021) followed by the 2022-2025 expansion. Developers that operated through all three cycles without project cancellations or balance-sheet restructurings have demonstrated the resilience that matters most to buyers entering at price-cycle peaks. Reportage Properties's history across these cycles informs the risk weighting on current launches.
For 2026 buyers, the risk-profile takeaway is: combine RERA escrow protection (the structural floor for off-plan buyer protection during construction), developer track-record analysis (the predictive signal for handover discipline), and the Oliva scoring methodology (the integrated weighting of community, project, developer, and price-of-money inputs) to size Reportage exposure within a Dubai property portfolio.
Buyer Fit: Investor Archetypes That Match
Reportage's stock fits a defined set of investor archetypes. Specifically: Yield-led investors targeting AED 500,000 to AED 1.2 million entry tickets, end-users seeking the lowest accessible Dubai freehold price entry, golden-visa applicants assembling 2-3 unit combinations to reach the AED 2 million threshold, and first-time off-plan buyers using the 1% monthly plan as a cash-flow management tool.
Yield-seekers should weight gross-versus-net yield, void rate assumptions calibrated to the building's tier, and management-fee assumptions for self-managed versus professionally-managed inventory. Capital-appreciation buyers should weight DLD secondary-market liquidity, year-on-year pricing progression on comparable stock, and the developer's resale-pricing pattern over the previous 3-5 years. End-users should weight build quality, finish standard, service-charge level relative to area median, and proximity to schools, healthcare, and transport. Golden-visa applicants should weight the AED 2 million threshold qualifying combinations and the property-residency processing timeline through the General Directorate of Residency and Foreigners Affairs (GDRFA).
The mismatch case matters too. If your investor archetype does not match Reportage's typical buyer profile, the developer's pricing, payment-plan structure, and product positioning will work against you on resale and on yield realisation. Run the archetype check before contracting.
How Oliva Scores Reportage Projects
Oliva scores Dubai projects on the integrated methodology described at /en/learn/methodology. The scoring framework weights community fundamentals (transit access, school catchment, retail anchors, master-developer record), project-specific fundamentals (developer track record, service-charge level, finish standard, payment plan structure), and price-of-money fundamentals (per-square-foot pricing relative to area median, gross and net yield projections, expected capital appreciation across the hold period).
For Reportage projects specifically, the typical score band is Most Reportage projects score in the 56-68 band on the Oliva methodology, with prime Dubai South Verdana stock scoring 62-72 and outer Land Residence Complex and Liwan stock scoring 50-62.
The Oliva score is independent of who pays us. We are a Dubai-licensed brokerage (RERA BRN 1573501, DLD Broker Card 92025) and we earn brokerage commission on transactions, but the score weighting is set by the methodology and not by developer relationships. No paid placements, no developer-specific score adjustments, no editorial conflicts.
Use the Oliva score as one input among several. Combine the score with your own area-and-archetype analysis, a verified site visit on delivered inventory, and a financial model that runs the payment-plan cash flow against a 12-month construction-delay sensitivity. The score is the structured starting point, not the final answer.
Browse and Compare
Browse Reportage's active project pipeline on Oliva: /en/projects?developerId=reportage.
Compare Reportage against peer developers using Oliva's scoring methodology: /en/learn/methodology.
Cross-reference Reportage's typical areas with the area investor guides on Oliva's blog. The combined developer-and-area lens is the single most robust due-diligence shortcut for off-plan buyers.
This guide reflects 2026 data and 2026 pricing. Past performance does not guarantee future returns. Run a personalised due-diligence pass against your specific investment objectives before contracting.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Reportage a reliable developer in Dubai?
Reportage Properties operates under RERA licence 1117501 and the DLD-registered entity REPORTAGE INTERNATIONAL REAL ESTATE L.L.C. The developer has shipped more than 5,800 residential units delivered across the UAE since 2014. Reportage's risk profile is the high-volume affordable-segment developer profile: tight margin per unit, multi-region operational exposure, and the post-handover plan structure that retains payment exposure to buyers over multi-year horizons. The developer has not cancelled launched projects, but selected handover-delay periods have run 9-15 months past the announced date. Verify the specific Trakheesi project number and named escrow trustee on the DLD project portal before contracting on any specific launch.
What is the typical price range for Reportage projects in Dubai?
Typical pricing on Reportage's active inventory runs AED 800-1,400/sqft on Dubai South and Verdana stock, AED 1,200-1,600/sqft on Al Furjan and Liwan launches. Pricing varies by area, phase, and floor plate; verify the per-square-foot price against the area's recent DLD secondary-market median before contracting. The Oliva score band on Reportage projects is Most Reportage projects score in the 56-68 band on the Oliva methodology, with prime Dubai South Verdana stock scoring 62-72 and outer Land Residence Complex and Liwan stock scoring 50-62.
What payment plans does Reportage offer?
Reportage uses 30/70 and 40/60 payment plans extensively, with the structure delivering the lowest deposit ticket in the Dubai mid-market cohort. The 1% monthly post-handover plans on selected Verdana launches are the developer's primary commercial differentiator. Payment-plan terms vary by project and launch phase; verify the specific structure on the marketing material and against the SPA before paying the booking fee.
How are Reportage's service charges?
Service charges on Reportage Properties's delivered inventory typically run AED 9-14/sqft annually on Dubai South and Verdana apartments, AED 4-7/sqft annually on Al Furjan and outer-cluster villa stock. Cross-reference advertised service-charge levels against the Mollak system, the DLD's centralised owners-association payment portal, for actual collections on delivered buildings. Service charges affect net yield by 0.6-1.0 percentage points across typical Dubai apartment stock.
Which areas does Reportage build in?
Reportage Properties concentrates active inventory across Dubai South, Al Furjan, Dubai Land Residence Complex, International City, Liwan, Dubailand. The flagship master-community presence is in Dubai South. Investors weighing a Reportage purchase should weight existing portfolio concentration when adding exposure to a developer-area combination.
Explore further
The project, area, and developer this post covers, with live Dubai Land Department data.
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