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Abu Dhabi's spacious family suburb.

Khalifa City

Khalifa City is one of Abu Dhabi's most established family suburbs — a low-density mainland community of standalone villas and townhouses set between the capital's centre and Abu Dhabi International Airport. It is prized for space, schools and value: residents get noticeably more indoor and outdoor area per dirham than the island districts, while enjoying among the lowest residential vacancy rates in the emirate. On Palmera the area is represented by Reportage Village Abu Dhabi, a community of 312 Italian-inspired townhouses by Reportage.

Khalifa City A · Khalifa City B · adjoining Zayed City · part of mainland Abu Dhabi Suburban · Family-oriented · Low-density mainland
6.5–8%
Gross rental yield
AED 4.37M
Entry on Palmera
CONNECTIVITY

Where Khalifa City sits.

Positioned between the city centre and the airport, with direct access to both the Dubai and Al Ain corridors — a favourite for commuters and frequent travellers.

Drive times

Abu Dhabi International Airport~15 min
Downtown Abu Dhabi~25 km
Yas Island~18 min
Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque~15 min

Metro & transport

— · No metro
Nearest station today: Car-dependent suburb
Khalifa City is a low-density mainland suburb served by road rather than rail; getting around is car-based, with major arteries (E11, E22) on the doorstep.

Major roads

Abu Dhabi – Dubai HighwayE11
Abu Dhabi – Al Ain RoadE22
NEIGHBORHOOD LIFE

A full life — without leaving.

Education

  • GEMS American Academy Abu Dhabi
  • Al Raha International School
  • Al Yasmina Academy
  • The International School of Choueifat

Healthcare

  • Mediclinic Khalifa City
  • NMC Royal Hospital
  • HealthPlus Family Clinic

Shopping

  • Carrefour
  • Spinneys
  • community retail centres

Leisure

  • Umm Al Emarat Park
  • Abu Dhabi Golf Club
  • Al Forsan International Sports Resort

Landmarks

  • Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque (nearby)
  • Abu Dhabi Golf Club
  • Masdar City (nearby)
  • Yas Island (nearby)
THE DATA

The numbers. No fluff.

Khalifa City rides the wider <b>Abu Dhabi upcycle</b> — emirate-wide residential prices rose roughly <b>17% in H1 2025</b>, with villa values up <b>~13.6% year-on-year</b> by late 2025 and a <b>more moderate +5–8% forecast for 2026</b>. The area itself is positioned as an <b>affordability-led, family-demand</b> location: average sale prices sit well below the Abu Dhabi average, vacancy is among the lowest in the emirate, and a 2BR apartment delivers around a <b>7% gross / 5.6% net</b> yield. <b>Zero annual property tax</b> applies across the UAE.

6.5–8%
Gross rental yield · city avg ~6% (Abu Dhabi, considered a healthy benchmark)
~1,080 median · villas ~1,280 · townhouses ~1,500 (sale) AED/sqft
Current price · per sq.ft
Varies by community (paid to the owners' association) AED/sqft
Service charge · per year
Avg. price per sq.ft · 2024–2026 ▲ Abu Dhabi villas +13.6% in 2025
202420252026
Apartments (2BR)~7%
Villas / Townhouses6.5–7.5%
FIGURES INDICATIVE, NOT A GUARANTEE · AS OF 2026-05-30
IS IT RIGHT FOR YOU?

Who Khalifa City suits best.

A strong fit if you're…
  • Family-focused investors targeting steady, low-vacancy tenant demand for spacious villas and townhouses
  • Value buyers who want more built area and plot per dirham than Abu Dhabi's island districts
  • Buyers who want a turnkey new-build — Reportage Village delivers fully landscaped townhouses with private pools
Look elsewhere if you want…
  • Investors needing rail access or short-let / tourism yield should look elsewhere — this is a quiet, car-based residential suburb
  • Foreign buyers should confirm ownership status before committing — much of Khalifa City is non-freehold; investment-zone projects are the route for non-Emiratis
1 PROJECT IN KHALIFA CITY

What's available right now.

Live from the catalog — sorted cheapest first.

GOOD TO KNOW

Common questions about Khalifa City.

Where is Khalifa City and why is it popular?+

Khalifa City is a mainland suburb of Abu Dhabi, sitting roughly 25 km from Downtown and only about 15 minutes from Abu Dhabi International Airport, with direct access to the E11 (Abu Dhabi–Dubai) and E22 (Abu Dhabi–Al Ain) highways. It is one of the capital's most established family communities — low-density, quiet and green, built mainly around standalone villas with private gardens. Its appeal is space and value: residents get materially more indoor and outdoor area per dirham than comparable homes on Abu Dhabi Island or Al Reem Island, alongside strong schools and everyday amenities.

What rental yield can I expect in Khalifa City?+

Gross yields in Khalifa City typically run around 6.5–8%, depending on the property. A 2-bedroom apartment has been recorded at roughly 7.0% gross / 5.6% net, while villas and townhouses generally sit in the 6.5–7.5% range. That places the area at or slightly above the Abu Dhabi benchmark, where a gross yield of around 6% is considered healthy. A major draw is reliability rather than headline numbers: Khalifa City has had among the lowest residential vacancy rates in the emirate, driven by consistent family demand.

How much does property cost in Khalifa City in 2026?+

Pricing is value-led for Abu Dhabi. The median sale price works out to roughly AED 1,080 per sqft, with the area's average sale price sitting well below the Abu Dhabi average — making Khalifa City one of the capital's more affordable established communities. Villas for sale generally start around AED 3.45M and average in the mid-AED 5M range for larger homes, with plots commonly between 2,700 and 8,800 sqft. On Palmera, Reportage Village Abu Dhabi townhouses are listed from AED 4.37M.

What is Reportage Village Abu Dhabi?+

Reportage Village is the Khalifa City community featured on Palmera — a development of 312 Italian-inspired townhouses by Reportage. The homes are modern three-storey units with 3–4 bedrooms, fully landscaped plots and private parking, sized roughly 4,074–4,120 sqft. Amenities include a private swimming pool, a kids' pool, a fully equipped gymnasium and BBQ stations, set within a community designed around parks, schools, mosques and retail. On Palmera, entry is from AED 4.37M.

Can a foreign national buy in Khalifa City?+

Ownership status matters here. Much of older Khalifa City is a non-freehold area, historically open for purchase to UAE and GCC nationals, with foreign nationals able to rent. Foreign investors access the area through designated investment-zone / freehold projects — which is how off-plan communities marketed to international buyers, such as Reportage Village, are sold. Because the rules differ project-by-project, you should confirm the exact ownership title for the specific unit (freehold versus other tenure) before committing. Abu Dhabi has been steadily expanding the areas open to foreign ownership.

Is there an annual property tax in Abu Dhabi?+

No. There is no annual property tax in the UAE — no property tax and no municipal rates on ownership. Costs to budget for are a one-time transfer / registration fee at purchase and ongoing service charges paid to the owners' association based on the size of the home. There is no tax on rental income and no capital gains tax on a sale within the UAE. Investors should always confirm their own reporting obligations under the tax rules of their country of residence.

How is Khalifa City for schools and family life?+

It is one of Abu Dhabi's strongest catchments for families. Reputable schools in and around the area include GEMS American Academy Abu Dhabi, Al Raha International School, Al Yasmina Academy and The International School of Choueifat. Everyday needs are well covered — Carrefour and Spinneys supermarkets, clinics and pharmacies, casual dining, and green space at Umm Al Emarat Park, with the Abu Dhabi Golf Club and Al Forsan sports resort minutes away. The result is a quiet, low-density, community-focused lifestyle built around private outdoor space.

How are property prices in Abu Dhabi trending?+

Strongly upward, then moderating. Emirate-wide residential prices rose around 11% in 2024 and roughly 17% in H1 2025, with villa values up about 13.6% year-on-year by late 2025. Forecasts for 2026 point to more moderate growth of around +5–8% as the market normalises from an exceptional run, supported by population growth and record transaction volumes. Khalifa City participates in this cycle while remaining one of the capital's better-value established communities.

Is Khalifa City a good buy-to-let investment?+

It suits income-and-stability investors more than yield-chasers. The combination of 6.5–8% gross yields, very low vacancy and deep, recurring family-tenant demand makes Khalifa City a defensive rental hold. What it is not is a high-turnover short-let or tourism play — it is a quiet residential suburb, so returns come from steady annual leases rather than nightly rates. For investors who value occupancy reliability and capital participation in the wider Abu Dhabi upcycle, it is a sensible mainland choice.

How does Khalifa City compare with the island districts?+

Space and value versus location and waterfront prestige. Compared with island communities such as Yas Island, Saadiyat or Al Reem, Khalifa City trades a central or beachfront address for larger homes, private gardens and lower prices per dirham. Reported figures suggest residents get materially more built and outdoor area for the same budget than on the islands. The trade-off is that it is car-dependent and lacks the leisure-and-tourism premium of the waterfront, which is reflected in its more accessible entry prices.

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