Fay Valley is a new residential phase of Fay Hills — a 380-acre master community by Taraf in Masdar City, Abu Dhabi. The phase offers 381 sustainable homes across 80 acres: 2-3BR townhouses with guest room, and 4-6BR villas from 2,249 to 5,514 sq ft. In Masdar City, Fay Valley by Taraf brings a low-rise residential format to one of Abu Dhabi’s most recognisable sustainability-led districts. The project is part of Fay Hills and is built around villas, townhouses, outdoor wellness and shaded community movement rather than a conventional tower product. For investors and end users, the positioning is straightforward: sustainable family villas and townhouses in Masdar City, with lifestyle amenities and strong connectivity to the airport, Khalifa City and Yas Island.
Amenities are one of the core reasons to look at Fay Valley seriously. The project includes tennis courts, padel courts, jogging trails, wellness trails, yoga lawns, botanical gardens, hammock lounges, canopy walks, nature play zones, a dedicated cycle track, a clubhouse, hydrotherapy pools, fitness facilities, outdoor lounges, café terraces, reflecting pools, a water cascade, a shaded event lawn, community retail, park pavilions and pocket parks. This is a lifestyle structure designed around activity, wellness and family use, not only a decorative list of facilities.
From a family perspective, Masdar City’s geography is one of its strongest advantages. The project is about 10 minutes from Abu Dhabi International Airport and Khalifa City, about 20 minutes from Yas Island and Zayed University, and around 20 – 25 minutes from Downtown Abu Dhabi and Louvre Abu Dhabi. This puts Fay Valley near the airport/Yas Island corridor while still keeping a calmer residential setting than many denser urban districts.
The economic appeal is therefore based on a practical set of factors. Fay Valley offers freehold ownership, a villa and townhouse product mix, an entry point from 3 100 000 AED (837 000 $), a 40/60 payment structure and a Q2 2030 handover timeline. It does not need exaggerated return promises to make sense. The project’s stronger argument is that family-sized freehold homes in a sustainability-led Abu Dhabi district can appeal to residents who want space, parks, wellness amenities and access to major daily routes.