Four waterfront mansions priced up to AED363 million have found buyers at The Ritz-Carlton Residences at Keturah Resort, where wellness certification matters more than gold-plated taps.
The sales, alongside 110 luxury apartments, signal a shift in what Dubai’s wealthiest buyers actually want from a home. Not just space. Not just marina access. But circadian lighting systems, air purification, and 20,000 flamingos as neighbours.
Keturah Resort sits on the shores of Dubai Creek, adjacent to the Ras Al Khor Wildlife Sanctuary. It’s the Middle East’s first fully wellness-certified resort, a distinction that appears to be worth a significant premium. Construction continued as planned in recent weeks, the luxury developer confirmed on 6th April.
Eight mansions remain available. All are priced between AED335 million and AED363 million.
The gated community spans 12 Creek-side mansions of 42,000 square feet each, eight residential buildings housing 193 apartments, a five-star Ritz-Carlton boutique hotel, a standalone wellness centre, and a private marina accommodating yachts up to 120 feet. More than half the apartments have sold. The four secured mansions represent a third of the ultra-prime inventory.
Talal M. Al Gaddah, CEO and founder of the Keturah luxury brand, attributes the momentum to buyers reassessing what luxury actually delivers. “Dubai recognises that there has been a clear shift in how luxury real estate is defined and valued, with buyers now asking whether a home will improve their health, enhance sleep, lift mood, support family wellbeing, and strengthen their connection to nature,” he explained.
The UAE’s wellness economy reached $40.8 billion, according to the latest Global Wellness Institute rankings. The Emirates leads globally in five-year wellness growth—a position Talal links directly to the government’s Wellbeing 2031 agenda.
“The UAE’s wellness economy is already the fastest-growing in the MENA region, as a direct result of genuine intent, and Keturah Resort is our contribution to that vision,” he noted.
That growth isn’t abstract. The UAE dominates regional wellness real estate at $1.4 billion, spa revenue at $2.9 billion, and personal care and beauty at $14.8 billion, according to the 2025 Global Wellness Institute report. Gains in public health, prevention, personalised medicine, physical activity and workplace wellness outpace every other MENA country.
Keturah Resort carries certification from Delos, the US-based wellness real estate and technology firm, and the International WELL Building Institute. In practice, that means building materials tested for off-gassing, water filtration systems throughout, optimised acoustics, and biophilic design principles embedded across 80,000 square metres of landscaped green space.
Residents access a dedicated wellness centre featuring a five-star spa, health and fitness club, multiple yoga rooms and an organic healthcare facility. Ritz-Carlton management provides personalised concierge and butler services, plus in-residence dining. The 550-metre waterfront promenade overlooks natural mangroves that attract 67 bird species, including the greater flamingo that congregates in flocks exceeding 20,000.
A recent survey Keturah conducted among Dubai real estate brokers revealed that most global investors in luxury property intend to live in the city, not simply hold assets. Lifestyle quality and wellness ranked as primary factors shaping purchase decisions—ahead of rental yields or capital appreciation.
Talal remains confident about the eight remaining mansions, pointing to sustained interest from buyers relocating to Dubai rather than speculating. “Dubai’s luxury property market has always emerged from periods of uncertainty with renewed momentum,” he said. “We see high-net-worth capital continuing to flow from international buyers, particularly those seeking freehold assets underpinned by a globally recognised hospitality brand.”
The flamingos, notably, come with the territory. No additional charge.
