Three years ago, most international property investors looking at the UAE went straight to Dubai. They did not think much about Ras Al Khaimah. RAK was known as a quieter, more affordable emirate, a nice place for a weekend staycation but not a serious investment destination.
That has changed completely. And the change happened fast.
Today Al Marjan Island in Ras Al Khaimah is one of the most watched property markets in the entire Middle East. Transaction volumes have grown by 100%. Prices are rising faster than in Dubai’s prime areas. International buyers who had never previously considered RAK are now actively competing for off-plan units there. And it all traces back to a single announcement that flipped the market on its head.
You can explore current Al Marjan Island and Ras Al Khaimah off-plan listings on My Off Plan Investment alongside the full UAE market to see how RAK stacks up right now.
Before explaining what happened, here are the key figures from 2026 that show the scale of the change:
| The Number | What It Means |
| USD 3.9 billion | Total investment in the Wynn Al Marjan Island resort — the single biggest hospitality project in UAE history |
| 340% | Increase in Al Marjan property transactions between 2022 and 2025 following the Wynn announcement |
| 240% | Year-on-year increase in RAK total property transaction volume in Q1 2026 alone |
| 21% | Average price per sq ft growth on Al Marjan Island compared to the previous year, as of early 2026 |
| 1.36 million | Visitors to Ras Al Khaimah in 2025 — a record, with projections heading toward five million by 2030 |
| Spring 2027 | Scheduled opening of Wynn Al Marjan Island, the first licensed gaming venue in the UAE |
These are not projections or estimates. They are reported market figures from Q1 2026. The momentum here is real, and the catalyst behind it is one development: the Wynn Al Marjan Island resort.
In late 2022, Wynn Resorts announced it would build the UAE’s first integrated casino resort on Al Marjan Island in Ras Al Khaimah. The announcement came alongside news that the UAE had issued its first-ever gaming licence, marking a historic policy shift for a country that had previously prohibited gambling.
The resort itself is genuinely enormous. A 70-storey tower standing 352 metres above the sea, over 1,500 hotel rooms, a full casino, a convention centre, 22 restaurants, a spa, a marina, and 420 metres of private white sand beach. Total investment is around USD 3.9 billion. The tower has now topped out, and the resort is targeting a spring 2027 opening.
For the property market, the Wynn announcement did what these kinds of anchor developments always do. It told the world that this location was no longer a quiet backwater. It was about to become a global tourist destination. And when tourist destinations emerge, the property around them tends to be bought up quickly by people who recognise what is coming before it arrives.
One reason the RAK story is particularly compelling for investors is the price gap compared to Dubai. Even after two years of strong appreciation, Al Marjan Island still offers meaningful value compared to equivalent waterfront property in Dubai.
| Factor | Al Marjan Island (RAK) | Dubai Prime Waterfront |
| Price per sq ft | AED 1,100 – 2,857 per sq ft | AED 2,047 average (Q1 2026) |
| Entry price (apartments) | From AED 1.1M to 1.2M | From AED 1.5M to 2M+ |
| Year-on-year price growth | 18 to 21% in 2025-2026 | 12.5% in Q1 2026 |
| Transaction volume growth | 240% YoY increase in Q1 2026 | Steady established growth |
| Rental yield (apartments) | 5.5 to 8% (7 to 12% short-term) | 6 to 9% in top areas |
| Distance from Dubai Airport | About an hour by road | Within the city |
| Property tax | None | None |
The gap is closing. That is the point. Buyers who got in at 2022 or 2023 prices have already seen significant gains. Buyers entering in 2026 are paying more than early movers did, but they are still buying into what analysts describe as a market in a repricing phase relative to Dubai equivalents. If Al Marjan matures into a genuine global tourism hub, the way the Wynn resort implies, the current prices could look very reasonable in five years.
Several market analysts and developers have noted that 2026 is likely the final year of significant new residential launches at pre-Wynn pricing. Once the resort opens in spring 2027 and the visitor numbers start flowing, the market enters a different phase. Supply thins out, demand from tourists wanting to own near the resort increases, and prices reflect the operating reality rather than the pre-opening speculation.
This does not mean buying after 2027 is a bad idea. It means buying before the opening captures a different part of the value story, specifically the repricing that happens as a speculative market becomes a proven one.
Investors who study these patterns point to Singapore. When Marina Bay Sands opened in 2010, the nearest residential areas appreciated roughly 25 to 40% over the following two years. International visitor arrivals to Singapore jumped from 9.7 million to 14.4 million in just two years after opening. The parallel being drawn is that Al Marjan Island could follow a similar trajectory as Wynn opens and RAK transforms from a domestic staycation destination to an international one.
The parallel has limits. RAK is not Singapore. The scale is different, and the context is different. But the mechanism, a world-class gaming resort anchoring a new tourism economy and driving property values in the surrounding area, is the same.
RAK saw 1.36 million visitors in 2025, a record for the emirate. This growth is happening before the Wynn is even open. Hotels in RAK are reporting strong occupancy. Short-term rental platforms show Al Marjan Island waterfront units already achieving AED 300 to 450 per night on Airbnb. Post-Wynn, with the resort expected to draw three to five million additional visitors annually by 2030, those nightly rates and occupancy levels are expected to rise further.
Al Marjan Island is genuinely interesting. But no investment story is without risk, and the honest version of this one includes a few things worth knowing before you commit money.
None of these risks make Al Marjan Island a bad investment. They make it an investment that requires clear eyes and a sensible time horizon. Go in with realistic expectations, and the story remains compelling.
Al Marjan Island is a designated freehold zone. Foreign nationals can own property there outright, same as in Dubai’s freehold areas. There is no restriction on repatriating rental income or sale proceeds.
Off-plan projects on the island typically come with payment plans spread over two to three years, with some developers offering post-handover options. Entry-level apartments start from around AED 1.1 to 1.2 million. Buyers investing AED two million or more may also qualify for the UAE Golden Visa.
My Off Plan Investment tracks active off-plan launches across Ras Al Khaimah alongside the full UAE market. Browse current listings, compare developer track records, or explore how RAK fits alongside Dubai and Abu Dhabi in your broader investment thinking. Get in touch through the contact page if you want a personalised recommendation based on your budget and timeline.
Q1. Why is Al Marjan Island becoming popular for property investment?
The main catalyst is the Wynn Al Marjan Island resort, a USD 3.9 billion integrated casino-hotel that is the first licensed gaming venue in the UAE, scheduled to open in spring 2027. Since the announcement in late 2022, property transactions on Al Marjan Island have grown by over 340%, and prices have risen by around 21% year-on-year as of early 2026. Investors are buying ahead of the resort opening and the tourism boom it is expected to bring.
Q2. How does Al Marjan Island compare to Dubai for property investment?
Al Marjan Island currently offers lower entry prices than comparable Dubai waterfront property, typically 30 to 40% below Dubai equivalents per square foot. However, Al Marjan is growing faster in price terms, recording 18 to 21% year-on-year appreciation compared to 12.5% in Dubai’s prime areas in Q1 2026. The trade-off is that RAK is less established and carries more development risk. Investors see it as a higher-upside, slightly higher-risk play compared to Dubai.
Q3. Can foreigners buy property on Al Marjan Island?
Yes. Al Marjan Island is a designated freehold zone in Ras Al Khaimah where foreign nationals can own property outright. There are no restrictions on ownership percentage, and buyers can repatriate rental income and sale proceeds freely. Investors spending AED two million or more may qualify for the UAE Golden Visa.
Q4. What rental yield can I expect from an Al Marjan Island property?
Long-term rental yields on Al Marjan Island apartments currently sit around 5.5 to 8%. Short-term rental platforms are already achieving AED 300 to 450 per night on waterfront units, which translates to higher effective yields for well-managed short-term rental properties. Post-Wynn opening, with visitor numbers expected to rise significantly, both nightly rates and occupancy are projected to improve further.
Q5. Where can I find off-plan listings on Al Marjan Island?
My Off-Plan Investment tracks active off-plan launches across Ras Al Khaimah, including Al Marjan Island. Browse the RAK property listings to compare current projects, payment plans, and developer track records, or get in touch for a personalised recommendation based on your budget and investment goals.
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