Ras Al Khaimah, UAE — As Ras Al Khaimah moves into a heavier tourism-led residential delivery cycle, investor interest is increasingly shifting toward smaller, rental-optimised units within branded developments. Al Marjan Island, positioned at the centre of the emirate’s hospitality expansion, is seeing this demand translate into product rebalancing rather than pure price escalation.
The latest release at Gianfranco Ferré Residences reflects this shift, as developers adjust unit mix to capture short- and mid-term rental demand while still catering to longer-stay end users.
What Has Been Released
Mira Developments, working with Gianfranco Ferré Home, has announced an expanded selection of fully furnished and fully serviced apartments at Gianfranco Ferré Residences, located at the tip of Al Marjan Island and surrounded by water on three sides, the developer said.
The update introduces a larger studio inventory, bringing the total to 109 units, alongside 46 one-bedroom and seven two-bedroom apartments. The release also includes newly introduced duplex residences, comprising 18 two-bedroom, three three-bedroom, and eight four-bedroom layouts, broadening the development’s appeal beyond short-stay buyers to families and longer-term residents.
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Prices for the residences start from AED 1.6 million, according to the company.
Al Marjan Island Branded Residences Evolve
Al Marjan Island has emerged as Ras Al Khaimah’s primary branded residential and hospitality corridor, supported by rising visitor volumes and expanding resort infrastructure. Market trackers including Bayut and Zawya have noted sustained transaction activity tied to tourism-linked residential formats rather than traditional owner-occupier housing.
Within this context, Al Marjan Island branded residences are increasingly being structured around operational readiness—furnishing, services, and rental handover speed—rather than customisation flexibility. This reflects a broader UAE trend where turnkey delivery has become a key absorption lever, particularly in resort-adjacent markets.
Studios as Rental Entry Points
The expansion of studio inventory is a notable signal of how developers are reading demand. Smaller units typically offer lower capital entry points and greater leasing flexibility, especially in destinations with short-stay and holiday rental depth.
Mira Developments’ co-founder and chief executive, Timur Mamaikhanov, said demand since launch has come from both investors and lifestyle buyers, noting that interest has been particularly strong for family-sized homes as well as studios suited to flexible rental strategies.
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From an investor perspective, the appeal lies less in headline appreciation narratives and more in operational readiness and occupancy velocity. Fully furnished delivery reduces setup timelines, allowing owners to enter the rental pool faster, while service integration supports hands-off ownership models, particularly relevant for non-resident buyers.
Design and Brand Positioning in Context
All units are delivered fully furnished under the Gianfranco Ferré Home label, with interiors reflecting the brand’s structured design language and neutral material palette, the developer said. This approach positions the project squarely within the branded-residences segment, where design consistency and recognisable aesthetics often support pricing discipline at resale.
In resort-oriented markets such as Al Marjan Island, branding has become less about prestige signalling and more about standardisation and predictability, particularly for investors evaluating exit liquidity.
Servicing Model and Use Case Flexibility
The development operates on a fully serviced residential model, incorporating concierge services, valet parking, housekeeping, and à la carte offerings as part of day-to-day operations, according to the company.
This structure allows residences to function either as primary homes or as managed rental assets without the fragmentation often seen in conventional apartment buildings. Shared amenities, including fitness facilities, pools, and leisure zones, are integrated into the community while maintaining unit-level privacy.
For investors, this reduces operational friction but also introduces dependency on service cost structures, which will influence net rental outcomes over time.
Risk and Constraint
The primary consideration for buyers is supply concentration within Al Marjan Island itself. As multiple branded and hospitality-linked projects move toward delivery over the next two to three years, rental competition is likely to increase, particularly for studio formats.
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While tourism growth supports demand, sustained performance will depend on differentiated positioning, service efficiency, and cost management rather than branding alone. Investors should also factor in service charges and management fees, which can materially affect holding economics in fully serviced formats.
What to Watch Next
Market participants will be watching leasing absorption once early projects on Al Marjan Island transition from launch to stabilised occupancy. Studio rental performance, average stay duration, and resale liquidity will provide clearer signals on whether Al Marjan Island branded residences can sustain investor interest beyond the current growth phase.
Infrastructure delivery, hospitality footfall, and regulatory clarity around short-term rentals will also shape medium-term outcomes.
For investors, the expansion of studio supply reflects a deliberate move toward rental-driven demand, offering lower entry points but heightened sensitivity to competition and operating costs. Returns will be shaped by execution and occupancy rather than scarcity.
For end users, particularly second-home buyers, the appeal lies in turnkey ownership and a serviced lifestyle within a resort setting, though community maturity will evolve over time.
For Indian and NRI buyers, Al Marjan Island presents a tourism-linked residential exposure outside Dubai’s higher-priced coastal zones. However, decisions should be anchored in rental depth, service economics, and holding horizon rather than short-term appreciation narratives.
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