
Jumeirah Dar Al Masyaf
When you book Jumeirah Dar Al Masyaf in Dubai, UAE through our Jumeirah Passport to Luxury partnership, your stay includes daily breakfast, room upgrades and a $75 hotel credit.
Exclusive Booking Perks
- Daily complimentary buffet breakfast for two
- Room upgrade on arrival, based on availability
- $75 food and beverage or spa credit, per room per stay
- Early check-in and 4 PM late check-out, based on availability
- A personalized welcome amenity
- VIP status
- Complimentary one-way airport transfer to suite guests.
Location
Jumeirah Dar Al Masyaf stands within the Madinat Jumeirah complex in Al Sufouh, a western Dubai neighbourhood where the Persian Gulf coastline meets ambitious modern development. The area balances resort enclaves with free-zone business clusters like Dubai Internet City and Dubai Knowledge Village, creating an unusual mix of leisure and enterprise. Al Sufouh stretches along the coast south of Palm Jumeirah, its sandy beaches punctuated by resort properties and marina developments. The neighbourhood's name derives from the Arabic word for "rows" or "lines", referencing its ordered coastal geography.
Dubai's trademark ambition is palpable here: the skyline tilts between low-rise traditional Arabian architecture and glass towers, while the D 94 Al Sufouh Road carries steady traffic between Jumeirah Beach and the sprawling developments further inland. Dubai International Airport lies twenty-three kilometres northeast, connected by Sheikh Zayed Road, while the newer Al Maktoum International sits twenty-six kilometres south.
The property itself channels an Arabian heritage aesthetic within the Madinat Jumeirah resort, offering a counterpoint to Dubai's glass-and-steel modernism.
The Madinat Jumeirah complex offers multiple dining venues within its resort grounds, though for serious culinary ambition, venture beyond. Trèsind Studio, nearly five kilometres away, holds three Michelin stars for its intricate multi-course exploration of regional Indian cooking, where precision and originality reshape familiar spice profiles. FZN by Björn Frantzén, seven kilometres distant, delivers another three-star experience behind a discreet doorbell entrance, its elevated tasting menu unfolding in intimate residential surroundings. STAY by Yannick Alléno occupies a colonial-style property at the end of Palm Jumeirah, six kilometres away, where two-starred French cuisine meets opulent tropical gardens and private dock views. Book a table at any of these well in advance.
Closer to the property, Jumeirah Public Beach stretches two kilometres north, a sandy expanse where the Gulf waters stay warm year-round. The Majlis Course at Emirates Golf Club, five kilometres inland, offers challenging play across manicured desert fairways. D-Marin Marsa Al Arab Marina sits less than two kilometres away for those seeking boat excursions along the coast.
Dubai's climate divides neatly into tolerable and testing. November through March delivers the city's kindest weather, daytime highs hovering in the mid-twenties to low thirties Celsius, nights cooling to the mid-teens. The light during these months softens, the Gulf breeze carries less weight, and terraces fill with diners who've waited months for outdoor comfort. April and October serve as shoulder seasons, temperatures climbing into the mid-thirties but still manageable for beach days and late-afternoon wandering.
May through September brings punishing heat: mercury regularly tops forty degrees, humidity thickens the air, and the city retreats indoors to air-conditioned interiors. Rain is negligible year-round, with brief winter showers the only interruption.
Visit between December and February for the best balance of warmth and movement.
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