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Compounds for Rent in Dubai Hills Estate, Dubai

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Living in Dubai Hills Estate

Dubai Hills Estate sits between Al Khail Road and Umm Suqeim Road, roughly 15 minutes from Business Bay and about the same from Dubai Marina. It's a sprawling master-planned community that started delivering units around 2019, covering nearly 11 million square metres. The main draw is greenery—an 18-hole championship golf course anchors the development, and Emaar has kept a fairly low-density layout compared to older Dubai clusters. If you want villa-style living without driving an hour to Arabian Ranches or Damac Hills, this is the option.

What Dubai Hills Estate is known for

The golf course and Dubai Hills Park dominate the landscape. The park alone covers 180,000 square metres with running tracks, sports courts, and dedicated play areas. You also get a proper town centre: Dubai Hills Mall opened in 2022 with around 750 shops, Reel Cinemas, and a central food hall. It's functional rather than flashy—somewhere to run errands without getting on Sheikh Zayed Road. The community feels distinctly residential, which means it's quiet after dark but also means fewer late-night entertainment options within walking distance.

Who lives here

A mix of young families and mid-career professionals, many of them expats working in Media City, DIFC, or the free zones along Sheikh Mohammed Bin Zayed Road. You see a lot of British, European, and South African families, drawn by the proximity to GEMS schools and the suburban feel. Emirati families have also bought here, particularly larger villas backing onto the golf course. It's not a first-time-buyer market—household budgets tend to sit comfortably above AED 150k annual income.

The property mix

Emaar has built this out in phases: apartments in mid-rise blocks (mostly four to eight storeys), three- to six-bedroom townhouses, and standalone villas ranging from four to seven bedrooms. Apartment sizes typically run 700 to 2,000 sqft; townhouses from 1,800 to 3,000 sqft; villas from 3,000 sqft upward. Build quality is standard Emaar—solid but not bespoke. Kitchens come fitted, and most units have balconies or small gardens. Larger villas often include maid's rooms and private pools.

Sub-areas worth knowing

Parkway Vistas and Acacia offer mid-priced townhouses popular with families needing three bedrooms. Sidra Villas and Maple sit closer to the golf course and command a premium. Golf Place and Park Heights are apartment clusters—Golf Place has better retail and café access on the ground floors. Fairways and Mulberry are quieter villa precincts on the northern edge, backing onto green corridors but slightly further from the mall. If school drop-offs matter, favour the western parcels near GEMS Al Khail.

Schools, transit and amenities

GEMS International School Al Khail is within a five-minute drive, and GEMS Wellington Academy and New Millennium are both around ten minutes. Kings College lies just beyond the 3km mark. For older children, some families bus to JESS Arabian Ranches or Repton. Kings Hospital sits right on the southern boundary—a private facility with A&E and outpatient services. Carrefour Market and Spinneys are under two kilometres, and the mall offers Waitrose, Carrefour Hypermarket, and most high-street brands.

Public transport is thin. No metro station yet, though the 2030 route extension may add a stop on Al Khail Road. You'll drive—parking is plentiful, and traffic within the estate stays manageable except during school runs.

Investor view

Rental yields in Dubai Hills Estate have hovered around 5–6% for apartments and 4–5% for villas, reflecting steady tenant demand but also the volume of new supply. Prices have appreciated roughly 15–25% since handover for early buyers, though the market cooled briefly in 2023 as Emaar released further phases. Liquidity is good: properties move within 60–90 days if priced in line with comparables. Villas tend to hold value better than apartments because the plot counts as an asset; smaller apartments can feel generic when stacked against similar schemes in Town Square or Villanova.

Service charges run around AED 12–18 per sqft for apartments, slightly less for townhouses and villas. Community fees are separate and vary by sub-district, but budget AED 5,000–15,000 annually.

How to choose your unit

Prioritise view and orientation. Ground-floor apartments offer garden access but lose privacy; upper floors get better breeze and skyline views. For townhouses, corner plots give you extra side windows and outdoor space. In villas, check whether the golf-course views are genuine or partially obstructed by later phases—site visits matter. Parking allocation varies: some buildings offer one bay per apartment, while villas typically have covered carports for two or three vehicles.

If you're buying off-plan, pay attention to handover timelines and snagging reports from earlier phases. Emaar's finishing can be inconsistent, and post-handover fixes take time.

Browse apartments in Dubai Hills Estate or explore the off-plan inventory and ready units currently available.

Buying compounds in Dubai Hills Estate

Compound properties in Dubai Hills Estate are gated, low-rise developments where multiple units share landscaped grounds and amenities — often a mix of villas and townhouses arranged around a central park, pool or clubhouse.

Compound living in Dubai Hills Estate centers on community: kids playing in shared parks, on-site security, walkable retail strips, and tightly managed maintenance. Unit configurations span townhouse-style 3–4 beds up through detached villas with 5+ beds.

All listings in Dubai Hills Estate on Disruptive Real Estate are sourced directly from licensed brokerages and verified through the RERA permit system (ORN 1167819). Use the filters above to narrow down by bedrooms, price, completion status, amenities, or distance from a specific location — and view results on the map to compare locations side-by-side.

Compounds offer the privacy of villa life with the security and amenity of a managed development. Service charges are higher than freestanding villas but the lifestyle pull keeps demand strong from family buyers — both end-users and the long-term-rental market that serves them.

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Frequently asked questions

What documents do I need to rent in Dubai?
To sign a tenancy contract you'll typically need a copy of your passport, UAE residence visa (or entry stamp for non-residents), Emirates ID (for residents), and a salary certificate or bank statement. Most landlords also require post-dated cheques to cover the year's rent in 1–4 instalments.
How are rent payments structured in Dubai?
The standard model is annual rent paid via post-dated cheques, usually split into 1, 2, 4, or 12 cheques. Fewer cheques = lower asking price; monthly payments are possible but typically come at a premium. The first cheque clears on move-in, the rest on the dates printed on each cheque.
What fees should I budget when renting?
Standard one-time fees: 5% real estate agent commission (of annual rent), AED 110 Ejari registration fee, refundable security deposit (5% for unfurnished, 10% for furnished), and DEWA setup (AED 1,000 refundable for apartments). Add chiller deposits if water cooling is metered separately.
What is Ejari and is it required?
Ejari is the official rental contract registration system run by RERA. Every Dubai tenancy contract must be registered with Ejari to be legally binding — it's also required to set up DEWA, get a parking permit, sponsor family residence visas, and enrol children in DHA-affiliated schools.
Can the landlord increase my rent each year?
Rent increases are capped by the RERA Rental Index. If your current rent is more than 10% below market value, the landlord can raise rent up to 5–20% on renewal depending on how far below market you are. The landlord must give 90 days' written notice before contract expiry.
What's the difference between furnished and unfurnished?
Unfurnished is empty (no appliances or furniture). Furnished includes white goods (fridge, oven, washing machine) plus living and bedroom furniture — quality varies, always inspect on viewing. Semi-furnished typically means white goods only. Furnished rents are usually 10–25% higher than unfurnished.
Are utilities included?
Almost never. Tenants pay DEWA (electricity + water), internet (Etisalat or du), and chiller (water cooling) separately. Some buildings have built-in chiller, others bill per usage. Service charges (building maintenance) are paid by the landlord, not the tenant.
Can I break my tenancy contract early?
Yes, but most contracts include a 'two-month notice + two-month penalty' clause for early termination. Negotiate this clause before signing. If you're transferred abroad or cancelling your visa, some landlords will release you penalty-free with proof.
Do I need a UAE resident visa to rent?
No — short-term rentals (under 12 months) and some long-term contracts are open to non-residents with a tourist visa. However, Ejari registration and DEWA setup are easier with a resident visa, and most landlords prefer residents for stability.
What is RERA and why does it matter?
RERA (Real Estate Regulatory Agency) is the Dubai government body that licenses brokerages, regulates rents, and enforces tenancy law via the Rental Disputes Centre. Every legitimate listing in Dubai must carry a RERA permit number. Disruptive Real Estate operates under ORN 1167819.
Compounds for Rent in Dubai Hills Estate, Dubai | Disruptive Real Estate