Bahamas Phase 2: Damac Islands Townhouses with a Four-Year Runway
Damac's Expanding Islands Community
Bahamas Phase 2 is a townhouse development by Damac Properties, sitting within the broader Damac Islands 2 master community in Dubai Land. Damac has form with island-themed residential clusters in this corridor, and Bahamas Phase 2 follows that same logic: a self-contained neighbourhood built around shared amenities, positioned to attract buyers who want space and community feel without paying Peninsula or Creek Harbour prices.
Dubai Land remains one of the city's more active growth zones. It sits inland, south of Emirates Road, and is not a waterfront or downtown location. That is not a negative, it is a context. Buyers here are typically prioritising square footage and value per metre over address prestige. For investors, the thesis rests on infrastructure maturation: as road connections improve and surrounding communities fill in, early entry into master developments like this one has historically rewarded patience. For end users, the appeal is a quieter, more suburban pace of life with good internal community infrastructure.
What AED 2.75M to AED 3.57M Gets You
The price range here spans AED 2,750,000 to AED 3,570,000, and the spread of roughly AED 820,000 across a single property type tells you something specific. These are all townhouses, so the variance is almost certainly driven by size, unit position, and outlook. Units at the lower end likely represent smaller configurations or interior-facing plots. The upper end, closer to AED 3.57M, points to larger floor plans and the water-view units the development features.
If you are comparing this against other Damac Islands product or nearby townhouse communities in Dubai Land, this range puts Bahamas Phase 2 in mid-tier off-plan territory. You are not getting a bargain-basement entry, but you are not paying the premium of an established community either. The spread means it is worth being clear about which configuration you are pricing before comparing.
Townhouses Across the Range
Every unit in this project is a townhouse. That makes the buyer profile fairly consistent: families or buyers who want multi-floor living, a private outdoor footprint, and proximity to shared community facilities. Townhouses in master communities like this also tend to perform reasonably well on resale and rental because the format appeals broadly. Investors looking for a single unit to lease should find decent demand from the family rental market in Dubai Land, which has deepened as the area has grown.
What the Amenity Set Says About the Project
| Theme | Amenities |
|---|---|
| Fitness and wellness | Indoor Swimming Pool, Gymnasium |
| Outdoor and social | Landscaped Gardens, Barbecue Area, Children's Play Area |
| Outlook | View of Water |
| Security | CCTV Security |
The indoor pool is the standout here. Most townhouse communities at this price point offer a standard outdoor pool. An indoor option extends usability through summer months and signals a level of fit-out ambition above the baseline. The combination of a barbecue area, children's play space, and landscaped gardens confirms this is a community built for families who actually spend time at home, not a transient investor product dressed up with amenities.
Four Years Out: What That Means for an Off-Plan Buyer
Construction starts in May 2026 with an expected completion of June 2030. That is a four-year build period from groundbreak. For a buyer entering now, that means capital is being deployed well ahead of physical delivery. The off-plan upside is real if Dubai Land's trajectory continues, but buyers should be clear-eyed that this is a long-horizon commitment. The project has not yet broken ground, which is normal for a phased master development of this scale, but it does mean the clock starts next year, not today.
Getting In at 20%
| Stage | Payment |
|---|---|
| Down payment | 20% |
| During construction | 55% |
| On handover | 25% |
A 20% down payment is in line with the current Dubai off-plan market, neither unusually generous nor demanding. The structure asks for more than half the purchase price across the construction period, which means buyers need to plan for consistent capital deployment over four years rather than a back-loaded structure. The 25% due at handover is meaningful and should factor into financing planning well in advance of the 2030 delivery date.

