UAE's most affordable freehold emirate — AED 750/sqft avg, 8–12% gross yields, and just 20 minutes from central Dubai.
| Metric | Value | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Average Price/sqft | AED 750 | Most affordable major emirate in the UAE |
| Gross Yield Range | 8% – 12% | Driven by affordable entry prices & strong rental demand |
| Distance to Dubai | 20 minutes | Via Sheikh Mohammed Bin Zayed Road or Al Ittihad Road |
| Typical Entry Price | AED 340K–430K | Al Nahda and Al Majaz apartments |
| Freehold Zones | Limited | Freehold ownership for expatriates is restricted to specific zones |
| Sharjah Population | ~1.8M | Third largest emirate by population |
| Alcohol Policy | Dry emirate | No alcohol licensed in Sharjah — impacts STR demand vs Dubai |
| Cultural Heritage | UNESCO recognition | Sharjah is designated UNESCO World Book Capital 2019 |
Sharjah's investment case is fundamentally a yield and affordability story. With average prices at AED 750/sqft — less than a third of central Dubai — investors can acquire income-generating assets at price points that are simply unavailable in Dubai or Abu Dhabi. Gross yields of 8–12% reflect the combination of very low entry prices and sustained rental demand from the Dubai overflow market: tenants who work in Dubai but live in Sharjah to save on housing costs. Al Nahda (Sharjah) is ground zero for this dynamic, sitting literally adjacent to the Dubai border. The key risk is liquidity — Sharjah has a smaller investor base than Dubai, and the dry-emirate designation limits short-term rental potential. This is a buy-to-let market for long-term income investors, not capital appreciation speculators.
At AED 340K–430K for a 1-bedroom in Al Nahda, Sharjah offers the lowest freehold entry point among UAE investment markets — enabling higher yields on smaller capital deployed.
Rising Dubai rents have driven a consistent wave of cost-sensitive tenants to Sharjah — particularly Al Nahda, which sits directly on the Dubai–Sharjah border with easy commuter access.
Sharjah hosts 11 universities and is the UAE's designated cultural capital. Student and faculty rental demand provides a stable, lower-churn tenancy base in Al Majaz and central Sharjah.
Al Majaz sits on Khalid Lagoon — one of the UAE's most picturesque urban waterfront locations. Promenade dining, parks, and Sharjah Eye of the Emirates drive lifestyle demand in this district.