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All areas →Fujairah is the only emirate on the Indian Ocean — a distinctive coastline, the Hajar Mountains, and an international port. A tourism-led, upscale, nature-oriented destination. Low entry prices and attractive vacation rental potential.
Access via the Hajar Mountains.
Fujairah is the <b>nature-and-tourism emirate</b> — the Indian Ocean coast, mountains, and vacation rentals.
Live from the catalog — sorted cheapest first.
Partially — primarily usage rights (Leasehold). Fujairah does not have a broad freehold regime like Dubai, but you can acquire a 99-year usage right in several master-planned projects, mainly in Dibba Al-Fujairah and the hotel zones along the coast. This right enables practical ownership — selling, leasing and inheritance — but the land remains registered to an Emirati/GCC owner. Ajman and RAK are more foreigner-friendly. Fujairah is best suited to: vacation rental investors, anyone seeking a holiday home with a distinctive character, or a bet on future tourism growth.
Fujairah is the only emirate with access to the Indian Ocean (all the others sit on the Arabian Gulf). That means open beaches (real waves, fewer man-made beaches), mountains (the Jebel Jais range at 1,500–2,000 m), and a different climate — slightly cooler with milder humidity. Attractions: Snoopy Island (snorkelling), Wadi Wurayah (a national park), and Fujairah Fort. An emerging tourism market: hotels are open (Le Méridien, InterContinental, Iberotel), but it is less commercialised. Well suited as a second home or vacation rental, less so as a stable cash-flow investment.
Gross yield: 6–7.5% on long-term lets (lower than RAK and Ajman). Short-term lets (vacation rental): 9–13% in season (Oct–Mar) if the property is beachfront, 5–7% off-season. The risk: occupancy is heavily seasonal — unlike Dubai, which is a year-round destination. The tourism infrastructure is still developing, so professional property management is essential. Long-term rental market: port workers (Fujairah has a huge port), hotel staff and industrial workers — steady but modest cash flow.
Entry points in 2026: a 1BR apartment in a beachfront project in Dibba Al-Fujairah from AED 450–650K. A 2BR apartment from AED 750K–1.1M. Small beachfront villas (2–3BR) from AED 1.5M. Luxury villas (4–5BR + pool) from AED 3–5M. The market is small (~1 active project in the Palmera catalogue right now) — limited supply, but that also creates the potential for value appreciation if tourism takes off.
In theory yes, in practice rare. A Golden Visa is granted on property purchases of AED 2M+ anywhere in the UAE, but it usually requires freehold ownership or formal long-term registration. In Fujairah, most projects are 99-year leasehold — something that can complicate approval. It is advisable to confirm with a local lawyer before buying if the goal is a Golden Visa. If that is the objective, RAK, Ajman, or going back to Dubai/Abu Dhabi are safer bets.
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