Best American Schools in Dubai 2026: Fees, KHDA Ratings & AP Results Compared

Last updated April 3, 2026
Modern school building with glass facade reflecting the Dubai skyline and Burj Khalifa at sunset

Here is the reality of choosing an American school in Dubai: only one holds a KHDA Outstanding rating. Only one more has reached Very Good. And yet, for families who want a GPA-based transcript, Advanced Placement courses, SAT preparation, and a pathway built around the way US (and increasingly, Canadian and European) universities actually evaluate applicants, the American curriculum remains the clearest route.

With over 40 American curriculum schools in Dubai — compared to over 100 British schools — the market is smaller, but the variation within it is stark. Annual fees range from under AED 16,000 at community-focused schools in Al Quoz and Al Mamzar to over AED 93,000 at GEMS Dubai American Academy. Some schools employ exclusively US-trained, state-licensed teachers; others staff primarily from the wider MENA region. Some offer the full IB Diploma alongside the US High School Diploma; others stop at a standard diploma with no AP programme at all. And unlike British schools, where GCSE and A-Level results provide a common benchmark, American schools in Dubai vary in which external assessments they use, what data they publish, and whether their diploma even carries accreditation that universities will recognise.

Accreditation is the single most important factor that separates American schools from every other curriculum in Dubai, and it is the one parents most often overlook. A school can call itself American, follow US state standards, and still issue a diploma that top universities will not accept if it lacks accreditation from NEASC, MSA, or WASC.

This guide breaks down all 40+ American curriculum schools in Dubai for the 2026–27 academic year: KHDA ratings, fees by grade level, accreditation status, AP and IB availability, and published academic outcomes. Filter by area, rating, budget, and school phase below — or read on for our editorial take on where the American school market stands right now and where the real value lies.

40+
American Curriculum Schools
AED 35K
Average Annual Fee
1
KHDA Outstanding
1
KHDA Very Good

What's New for American Schools in Dubai in 2026

If you read our British schools guide, you will know that 2026 is a blockbuster year for British school openings — Harrow, Rugby School, and Queen Elizabeth's School are all launching Dubai campuses. The American curriculum market is not seeing the same wave of new entrants. Instead, the story here is about consolidation, government investment, and shifts in accreditation and admissions policy that directly affect how families choose.

The Government-Backed "Dubai Schools" Initiative

One of the most significant developments for American education in Dubai is the Dubai Schools initiative — a public-private partnership between the Dubai government and Taaleem Education. Three campuses currently operate under this initiative: Dubai Schools Al Barsha (opened 2021), Dubai Schools Mirdif (opened 2021), and Dubai Schools Nad Al Sheba (opened 2022). All follow the American curriculum based on the New York State Education Department (NYSED) standards. These schools are specifically designed to offer high-quality American education at accessible fees, primarily serving Emirati families but welcoming students of all nationalities. Dubai Schools Nad Al Sheba received its first KHDA inspection in 2025 and was rated Acceptable — a common starting point for new schools that are still building their academic track record. The Al Barsha and Mirdif campuses are continuing to add year groups and are expected to be inspected once the KHDA resumes full inspections.

KHDA Ratings Are Frozen — and That Matters More Here

The KHDA's inspection pause (now in its second year, covering 2025–26 and 2026–27) means every rating in this guide dates from the 2023–24 cycle. For American schools, this freeze has a particular consequence: the gap between the top-rated school and the rest was already wide, and there is no mechanism for any school to close it until full inspections resume. Schools rated Good cannot demonstrate improvement to Very Good. Schools rated Acceptable — even if they have made genuine progress — remain labelled as such. The only exception was schools opened in 2022, which received first-time inspections in 2025; Dubai Schools Nad Al Sheba was rated Acceptable through this process.

💡 Practical Tip

Parents need to look beyond the headline KHDA rating more than ever. Ask schools for their most recent MAP benchmark data (which all American schools are required to track), internal assessment trends, and self-evaluation reports. These are not published centrally, but good schools will share them on request.

New Admissions Age Cut-Off

From the 2026–27 academic year, the UAE has moved the school admissions age cut-off from August 31 to December 31. Children who turn four by December 31 of the admission year can now join KG1 (the standard entry point for American curriculum schools in Dubai). This is a significant change for families with children born between September and December 2022 — they are now eligible to start KG1 this August, a year earlier than previously allowed. Note that the American curriculum typically starts formal schooling at age four (KG1), one year later than the British curriculum's FS1 entry at age three.

Fee Increases Capped at 2.35%

With inspection ratings frozen, no American school in Dubai can raise fees beyond the KHDA's Education Cost Index of 2.35% for 2025–26, regardless of how well the school is actually performing. This is a levelling mechanism: GEMS DAA, with its Outstanding rating, gets the same cap as an Acceptable-rated school. For parents, it means fee schedules are relatively stable year on year — but always confirm the exact 2026–27 figure directly with the school, as the numbers in this guide reflect the most recently published schedules.

Accreditation Developments

The KHDA requires all American curriculum schools in Dubai to hold accreditation from an approved US accrediting body for their High School Diploma to be considered valid by universities. The three main accrediting bodies recognised are NEASC (New England Association of Schools and Colleges), MSA (Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools), and WASC (Western Association of Schools and Colleges). Ignite School achieved NEASC accreditation in June 2024 — a milestone that confirms its programme meets the standards required for acceptance by US and international universities. Parents should always confirm a school's current accreditation status before enrolling, as this directly affects whether the diploma will be recognised for university admission.

How We Compiled This Guide

American curriculum schools in Dubai are harder to compare than British schools. There is no equivalent of GCSE or A-Level results that every school publishes in a standardised format. Some schools report AP pass rates; others do not offer AP at all. GPA scales vary. IB results are only relevant for the handful of schools that offer the Diploma Programme. To account for this, we layered multiple data sources:

  • KHDA's 2023–24 inspection reports for each school's official rating, then cross-referenced published fee schedules from school websites and KHDA fee fact sheets.
  • Academic outcomes — AP scores, IB Diploma averages, GPA distributions, SAT data — were gathered where schools have made them public; we flag where data is unavailable, because that silence is itself informative.
  • Accreditation status (NEASC, MSA, WASC, CIS, or IBO), since this is a non-negotiable requirement for American schools in a way it is not for British schools.
  • EdCare parent community reviews and direct confirmation of admissions details and curriculum pathways from school administrations.

The school listings below default to sorting by KHDA rating (highest first), then fee (lowest first within each tier).

Understanding the American Curriculum in Dubai

The American curriculum is often misunderstood by parents who are more familiar with the structured exam gates of the British system. There are no GCSEs. There are no A-Levels. Instead, the system is built on continuous assessment, a credit accumulation model in high school, and a university application process that evaluates the whole student — not just their exam results on a single day.

Schools in Dubai typically align to a specific US state's learning standards, most commonly New York, California, or Massachusetts. A smaller number use the AERO (American Education Reaches Out) standards, designed specifically for American international schools overseas. While the former Common Core State Standards are no longer implemented as a standalone framework, many of their principles have been absorbed into the individual state standards that Dubai schools now follow.

How the Stages Break Down

Pre-Kindergarten
Ages 3–4 | Pre-KG / KG1
Play-based learning; social-emotional development; early literacy and numeracy
Kindergarten
Ages 5–6 | KG2
Formal academic curriculum begins; foundational reading, writing, maths
Elementary School
Ages 6–11 | Grades 1–5
Core subjects: ELA, maths, science, social studies; inquiry-based learning
Middle School
Ages 11–14 | Grades 6–8
Subject-specific learning; pre-algebra; introduction of electives; PSAT 8/9
High School
Ages 14–18 | Grades 9–12
Credit-based system; core + elective subjects; AP courses; SAT preparation

Critical Understanding: From Grade 9 onwards, the American system uses a credit-based model: students must accumulate a minimum number of credits across required core subjects (English, maths, science, social studies, physical education, modern languages, arts) and electives to earn their High School Diploma. This is fundamentally different from the British model, where students sit a fixed set of GCSE exams. The credit system gives students more choice and flexibility — but it also means the quality of a school's elective catalogue and AP offerings directly determines how competitive your child's transcript will be for university.

The Testing Journey: What Happens When

One of the most common points of confusion for parents new to the American system is the sheer number of standardised tests — and when each one matters. Unlike the British curriculum, where the assessment calendar is anchored to two clear milestones (GCSEs at 16, A-Levels at 18), the American system layers multiple assessments across the years, each serving a different purpose.

Grade Level Assessment What It Is For
KG2 – Grade 9 MAP Testing (3x per year) Internal benchmarking. Tracks your child's growth in reading, maths, and language usage against US national norms. Schools use MAP data to identify strengths and gaps, set targets, and report to the KHDA.
Grade 8–9 PSAT 8/9 Early readiness indicator. Measures literacy and maths skills against the benchmarks students will need for the SAT. Not used for university admission.
Grade 10 PSAT 10 / PSAT NMSQT SAT warm-up. The PSAT 10 mirrors the SAT format at a slightly lower difficulty level. The NMSQT version can qualify US-national students for National Merit Scholarships.
Grade 11 SAT or ACT University admissions and UAE equivalency. The SAT is the high-stakes standardised test in the American system. A minimum SAT Maths score of 440 is currently required for Ministry of Education equivalency.
Grade 11–12 AP Exams (May) College credit and competitive differentiation. Scores of 3–5 (out of 5) can earn university credit in the US and are viewed favourably by admissions committees worldwide.
Grade 12 TOEFL / IELTS English language proficiency. Required by some universities (particularly in the UK, Europe, and for UAE equivalency) even for students educated in English-medium schools.
🎯 Key Takeaway

MAP testing is the engine that runs beneath the surface from KG2 through Grade 9, quietly building the data profile that informs everything from parent-teacher conferences to KHDA inspections. The SAT is the single most consequential external exam your child will take. And AP exams are the optional accelerant that separates a solid transcript from a competitive one.

Key Differences from the British Curriculum

Parents who are comparing American and British schools in Dubai should understand several structural differences:

  • The American system starts formal academics one year later (KG1 at age four vs FS1 at age three in British schools).
  • It uses a credit-based system in high school rather than a fixed exam schedule like GCSEs and A-Levels.
  • Assessment is continuous throughout the year (GPA-based) rather than weighted heavily toward final exams.
  • The American system typically requires students to study a broader range of subjects through to Grade 12, while the British A-Level system narrows to three or four subjects in the final two years.
  • US university applications consider the whole student — GPA, AP scores, SAT/ACT, extracurriculars, essays, and recommendation letters — rather than being primarily exam-result driven.

Accreditation: Why It Matters

For a US High School Diploma issued in Dubai to be recognised by universities worldwide, the school must be accredited by an approved US accrediting body. The three main bodies are NEASC, MSA, and WASC. Without accreditation, the diploma may not be accepted for university admission — particularly in the US, Canada, and the UK. Accreditation also matters for the UAE Ministry of Education equivalency process, which typically requires a valid accredited diploma, a minimum SAT Maths score (currently 440), and TOEFL/IELTS scores. Always verify a school's accreditation status directly before making an enrolment decision.

American Schools in Dubai: Key Facts for 2026

40+
Total American curriculum schools in Dubai
1
KHDA Outstanding (GEMS Dubai American Academy)
1
KHDA Very Good (Universal American School)
~15
KHDA Good American schools
~12
KHDA Acceptable American schools
2-3
New / Not Yet Inspected
~AED 7K
Lowest annual fee
~AED 93K
Highest annual fee
~10
Schools offering AP courses
4-5
Schools offering IB Diploma
~10
Schools with NEASC accreditation
3
Not-for-profit American schools (ASD, UAS, iCademy)

Fee Tiers: Where the Money Goes (and Where It Doesn't)

The American school market in Dubai has a peculiar shape. At the top, you have two or three schools charging AED 80,000–93,000 and delivering genuinely premium outcomes. At the bottom, you have schools under AED 20,000 that offer an accredited diploma at a fraction of the cost. And in between sits a mid-range tier where — arguably — parents get the most interesting value for money, because several of these schools punch well above their fee bracket on KHDA ratings and accreditation.

Premium Tier
Premium
AED 60,000+ per year

Schools in this bracket include the most established and highest-rated American school brands in Dubai.

  • GEMS Dubai American Academy (AED 66,185–93,300) — Only KHDA Outstanding rated American school, IB Diploma offered, consistently above-global-average IB scores
  • American School of Dubai (AED 60,571–89,319) — Founded 1966, not-for-profit, college-preparatory with AP courses
  • Dunecrest American School (AED 41,500–90,050) — Purpose-built 8.5-acre campus near Al Barari
  • Clarion School (~AED 94,680 at high school) — Progressive American school in Al Quoz

⚡ Waitlists common, particularly for KG1 and Grade 6 entry.

Mid-Range Tier
Mid-Range
AED 25,000–60,000 per year

This segment includes schools that often punch above their fee bracket.

  • Universal American School (AED 39,450–81,021) — Only KHDA Very Good-rated American school in affordable range, not-for-profit, triple accreditation (MSA, CIS, IBO)
  • Collegiate International School (AED 39,478–70,630) — 1:6 student-to-teacher ratio, multiple pathways (IB, AP, US Diploma)
  • Al Mawakeb Schools (~AED 15,365–68,004) — California State Standards, multiple campuses
  • Next Generation School (AED 28,714–44,968) — American Common Core + Islamic education

⭐ KHDA ratings range from Good to Very Good.

Affordable Tier
Affordable
Under AED 25,000 per year

Several American curriculum schools with fees below AED 25,000.

  • Dubai International Private School (from AED 15,607) — Lowest fees of any accredited American school, operating since 1985
  • Al Ittihad Private School (from AED 18,207) — Strong Arabic/Islamic values, separate sections for boys/girls from Grade 5
  • International City, Al Muhaisnah, Al Qusais schools — Starting from ~AED 7,000–15,000 at lower grades

💰 Trade-offs in facilities and extracurriculars, but core diploma pathway remains intact.

What Actually Matters When Picking an American School in Dubai

Parents transferring from the British school world — or arriving fresh from the US, Canada, or elsewhere — often apply the wrong filters when evaluating American schools in Dubai. KHDA rating matters, but it tells a different story for this curriculum. Here is where to focus your shortlisting energy.

KHDA Rating — Read the Report, Not Just the Grade

Unlike the British curriculum sector where 14 schools hold the Outstanding rating, the American curriculum has exactly one: GEMS Dubai American Academy. Universal American School stands alone at Very Good. The rest — the vast majority — sit at Good or Acceptable. This does not mean American schools are inherently weaker. It reflects the smaller pool size and, critically, the KHDA's inspection criteria, which include Arabic and Islamic studies performance. Many American schools with strong English, maths, and science outcomes see their overall rating pulled down by developing Arabic results — a subject where British schools face the same challenge but have more room to absorb it statistically across 14 Outstanding peers.

📋 Practical Lesson

Do not dismiss a Good-rated American school without reading the full inspection report. Look at the subject-by-subject breakdown and the phase-specific ratings (Kindergarten, Elementary, Middle, High). A school rated Good overall but Very Good in your child's phase and in the subjects that matter to your family may be a better fit than a higher-rated school with larger class sizes or fewer AP options.

Academic Outcomes — The Transparency Problem

One of the biggest frustrations for parents comparing American schools in Dubai is the lack of a universal results benchmark. British schools have GCSEs and A-Levels — standardised, externally assessed, and published. American schools have no equivalent. Each school may track different metrics, publish different data, or publish nothing at all. Here is what to look for and what it means when a school does not share it:

For American curriculum schools, the most relevant academic measures are:

  • GPA Distributions: The percentage of students achieving above 3.75 or 4.0 GPA. The American School of Dubai reports close to 15% of students with a GPA above 4.0 and over 30% in the 3.75–3.99 range.
  • AP Scores: The number of AP courses offered and the percentage of students scoring 3 or above (the threshold most US universities consider for credit). Not all American schools in Dubai offer AP courses — this is itself a signal worth noting.
  • IB Diploma Results: For schools offering the IB alongside the US curriculum (GEMS DAA, Universal American, Collegiate International), the average IB points score and pass rate. GEMS DAA's Class of 2024 averaged approximately 34 points with a 97% pass rate against the global average of 30.3 points and 80% pass rate.
  • SAT Scores: Some schools publish average SAT scores, which are required for UAE Ministry of Education equivalency and useful for US university applications.
  • University Destinations: Where graduates are accepted — top-tier US, UK, and global university placements indicate the quality of the school's college counselling and academic preparation. GEMS DAA reports placements at Princeton, Columbia, Johns Hopkins, UCL, and McGill among others.

Location — American Schools Cluster Heavily in the West

Unlike British schools, which are spread across virtually every neighbourhood in Dubai, American schools are concentrated. The Al Barsha corridor alone has five or six options within a few kilometres — GEMS DAA, American School of Dubai, Next Generation School, Al Mawakeb Al Barsha, and Dubai Schools Al Barsha. Dubai Festival City houses Universal American School. If you live in eastern Dubai, your choices narrow to Al Mawakeb Al Khawaneej, Mirdif American School, Dubai Schools Mirdif, Bright Learners (Al Rashidiya), and Ignite School (Al Warqa). The central Al Quoz area is served by Dubai International Private School and Clarion School. If your commute tolerance is under 30 minutes, geography may narrow the list to three or four realistic options before you even consider ratings or fees.

Watch Out for Schools That Do Not Go to Grade 12

Most American curriculum schools in Dubai run KG through Grade 12, which is an advantage — no forced transition at age 11 the way the British system sometimes requires. But there are exceptions. Mirdif American School stops at Grade 8. The Dubai Schools campuses are still adding grades year by year and do not yet offer the full high school programme. Clarion School is also still expanding its upper grades. If continuity through graduation matters, confirm that the school offers Grades 9–12 before you enrol, and ask specifically about AP and diploma pathway availability at the high school level — some schools that nominally go to Grade 12 offer very limited AP subject choices compared to the premium tier.

The Grade 11–12 Decision: Standard Diploma, AP, or IB?

This is where the American curriculum conversation in Dubai gets genuinely interesting — and where the difference between a AED 20,000 school and a AED 90,000 school becomes most tangible. There are three pathways available, and not every school offers all of them:

US High School Diploma (Standard)
All accredited schools
Students complete credits across core and elective subjects. Sufficient for university admission with strong GPA and SAT scores, but does not carry the same weight as AP or IB for competitive universities.
Advanced Placement (AP)
~10 schools in Dubai
College-level courses assessed by College Board. Scoring 3-5 can earn university credit in the US. Schools: GEMS DAA, American School of Dubai, Collegiate International, and others.
IB Diploma Programme
4-5 schools
Two-year programme requiring six subjects across groups, Extended Essay, Theory of Knowledge, and CAS. Offered at GEMS DAA, Universal American School, and Collegiate International.

American vs British Curriculum: A Quick Comparison for Dubai Parents

Many families arriving in Dubai are deciding between American and British curriculum schools. Here is a practical comparison:

Factor American Curriculum British Curriculum
Entry age KG1 at age 4 FS1 at age 3
Structure KG–Grade 12 (credit-based) FS1–Year 13 (stage-based with external exams)
Key external exams SAT, AP exams (optional but recommended) GCSEs (Year 11), A-Levels (Year 13)
Assessment style Continuous (GPA across all four high school years) Weighted toward terminal exams
Subject breadth at 16–18 Broad: 6–8 subjects through Grade 12 Narrow: 3-4 A-Level subjects
University application Holistic: GPA + SAT + AP + essays + extracurriculars Primarily exam-based: predicted/actual A-Level grades
Best suited for US, Canadian, and some European university applications UK university applications (UCAS system)
Schools in Dubai 40+ ~105
Outstanding KHDA schools 1 14
Fee range AED 7,000–93,300 AED 7,000–118,000

Both curricula are well-regarded by universities worldwide, and some Dubai schools offer both (e.g., US curriculum with IB Diploma option, or British curriculum with IB Diploma option). The best choice depends on where your child is most likely to apply for university and which assessment style suits their learning.

Frequently Asked Questions

There are over 40 schools in Dubai offering the American (US) curriculum. This makes it the third most widely offered curriculum in the emirate, after British (approximately 105 schools) and Indian.

Several American curriculum schools in Dubai offer annual fees starting from approximately AED 7,000–16,000 at the Kindergarten level. Dubai International Private School has some of the lowest published fees for a KHDA-regulated, accredited American school, starting from AED 15,607 for KG.

GEMS Dubai American Academy has the highest published fees among established American schools, at AED 93,300 per year for Grades 1–12. Clarion School reaches approximately AED 94,680 at the high school level. Dunecrest American School reaches approximately AED 90,050 for its highest grade levels.

As of the 2023–24 inspection cycle, only one American curriculum school holds the KHDA Outstanding rating: GEMS Dubai American Academy. It has held this rating uninterrupted since 2011 — making it one of the most consistently high-performing schools of any curriculum type in Dubai.

Universal American School in Dubai Festival City holds the KHDA's Very Good rating — the second-highest tier. It operates as a not-for-profit school under the Al Futtaim Education Foundation and offers a blended US/IB curriculum.

The KHDA paused full inspections for the 2025–26 and 2026–27 academic years. All ratings shown are from the 2023–24 inspection cycle, with the exception of schools opened in 2022 (such as Dubai Schools Nad Al Sheba), which received their first ratings in 2025. Schools continue to be monitored through self-evaluations and targeted visits.

From the 2026–27 academic year, the age cut-off has moved from August 31 to December 31. Children who turn four by December 31 of the admission year can now start KG1 in August/September. For American curriculum schools, this is particularly relevant because KG1 (age four) is the standard entry point — not Pre-KG (age three), which not all schools offer.

Yes. The KHDA requires all American curriculum schools to hold accreditation from a recognised US accrediting body (NEASC, MSA, or WASC) for their High School Diploma to be considered valid. This is essential for university admission both in the US and internationally. Always verify a school's accreditation status before enrolling.

Advanced Placement (AP) courses are individual college-level classes within the American system, assessed by the College Board. Students can take as many or as few as they choose. The IB Diploma Programme is a comprehensive two-year programme requiring study across six subject groups plus additional core components. Some Dubai American schools offer both, giving students flexibility. AP is more modular and suits students who want to specialise; the IB Diploma is broader and particularly valued for non-US university applications.

Common assessments include MAP (Measures of Academic Progress) for ongoing benchmarking from KG2 onwards, PSAT 8/9 and PSAT 10 for high school readiness, the SAT for university admissions and UAE equivalency, and AP exams for students enrolled in AP courses. Some schools also require TOEFL or IELTS for students applying to universities where English language proficiency must be demonstrated.

Yes, and this is relatively common in Dubai. The main adjustment is moving from the year-group system to the grade-level system and adapting to continuous GPA-based assessment rather than terminal exams. Most American schools will assess transferring students and may require placement tests. The earlier the transition, the smoother the adjustment — transferring before Grade 9 is generally recommended to allow enough time to build a strong four-year high school transcript.

Dubai Schools is a public-private partnership initiative between the Dubai government and Taaleem Education. Three campuses currently operate — in Al Barsha, Mirdif, and Nad Al Sheba — all following the American curriculum based on New York State Education Department standards. These schools are designed to offer quality American education at accessible fees, primarily serving Emirati families but open to all nationalities.

The American curriculum is not seeing the same wave of new school openings as the British curriculum in 2026 (where Harrow, Rugby School, and Queen Elizabeth's School are all launching). The most notable recent development is the continued expansion of the Dubai Schools campuses, which are adding new grade levels each year. Parents seeking new American-curriculum options may also wish to watch for announcements from GEMS Education and other operators, as the KHDA's Education 33 strategy envisions significant school capacity expansion across all curricula through 2033.

Schools in this Guide

42schools
GEMS Dubai American Academy - Dubai Branch campus in Al Barsha South 1, Dubai

GEMS Dubai American Academy - Dubai Branch

Dubai , Al Barsha South 1

Rating

Outstanding

Fees

AED 66,185 - 93,300

Curriculum

International Baccalaureate / American

Founded

1998

Ages

418

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

GEMS Dubai American Academy in Al Barsha South 1 is the only American curriculum school in Dubai to hold an Outstanding KHDA rating, a distinction it has maintained across twelve consecutive inspection cycles since 2011–12. Accredited by both NEASC and IB, the school offers dual American and IB Diploma pathways to its 3,000-plus students.

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Universal American School - Branch campus in Dubai Festival City, Dubai

Universal American School - Branch

Dubai , Dubai Festival City

Rating

Very Good

Fees

AED 39,450 - 81,021

Curriculum

International Baccalaureate / American

Founded

2005

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

Universal American School sits within Dubai Festival City and holds a Very Good KHDA rating — a distinction shared by very few American curriculum schools in the emirate. Founded in 2005, it operates as a not-for-profit institution and offers both a US curriculum and the International Baccalaureate, giving families a dual pathway through to graduation.

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Al Ittihad Private School - Al Safa campus in Al Safa 1, Dubai

Al Ittihad Private School - Al Safa

Dubai , Al Safa 1

Rating

Good

Fees

AED 22,219 - 43,272

Curriculum

American

Founded

1998

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

Founded in 1998 and situated in Al Safa 1, Al Ittihad Private School - Al Safa was established to serve the Emirati community and continues to reflect that identity across its 2,580-strong student body. The school follows the American curriculum and holds a KHDA rating of Good. Its deep community roots and long track record make it a notable choice for families in the area.

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Al Ittihad Private School campus in Al Mamzar, Dubai

Al Ittihad Private School

Dubai , Al Mamzar

Rating

Good

Fees

AED 18,635 - 42,434

Curriculum

American

Founded

1975

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

Al Ittihad Private School in Al Mamzar is one of Dubai's oldest private schools, having served the community since 1975 — a span of five decades that few institutions in the emirate can match. Operating under the American curriculum aligned to California Common Core Standards, the school holds a KHDA rating of Good and enrols 1,543 students. Its longevity and community focus distinguish it within the Al Mamzar area.

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Al Mawakeb School - Al Garhoud campus in Al Garhoud, Dubai

Al Mawakeb School - Al Garhoud

Dubai , Al Garhoud

Rating

Good

Fees

AED 15,726 - 25,493

Curriculum

American

Founded

1995

Ages

418

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

Al Mawakeb School - Al Garhoud has been a fixture of the Al Garhoud community since 1979, making it one of the longest-running American curriculum schools in Dubai. Accredited by NEASC and rated Good by KHDA, the school draws more than 2,310 students from over 60 nationalities. That breadth of cultural diversity, combined with its sustained rating, reflects a school with genuine depth of experience.

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Al Mawakeb School - Al Khawaneej campus in Al Khwaneej 1, Dubai

Al Mawakeb School - Al Khawaneej

Dubai , Al Khwaneej 1

Rating

Good

Fees

AED 36,181 - 69,602

Curriculum

American

Founded

2018

Gender

mixed

The newest campus in the Al Mawakeb network, Al Mawakeb School - Al Khawaneej opened in 2018 and has grown steadily from Pre-KG through to Grade 12 in Al Khwaneej 1. With 1,204 students and a KHDA rating of Good, it has established itself quickly within the AMSI group. Families in the area benefit from the network's experience while gaining access to a modern, purpose-built campus.

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Al Mawakeb School Al Barsha campus in Al Barsha 2, Dubai

Al Mawakeb School Al Barsha

Dubai , Al Barsha 2

Rating

Good

Fees

AED 14,976 - 25,493

Curriculum

American

Founded

1998

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

With 3,329 students, Al Mawakeb School Al Barsha is one of the larger American curriculum schools in Dubai, operating under the AMSI group from its Al Barsha 2 campus since 1998. A consistent KHDA rating of Good reflects the school's stable academic environment across more than two decades. Its scale means students have access to a wide range of programmes and extracurricular opportunities.

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Al Nibras International Private School campus in Dubai Investment Park 1, Dubai

Al Nibras International Private School

Dubai , Dubai Investment Park 1

Rating

Good

Fees

AED 25,316 - 50,321

Curriculum

American

Founded

2005

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

Al Nibras International Private School has undergone notable development since its founding in 2005, now operating under the International Schools Partnership in Dubai Investment Park 1. The school delivers the American curriculum to 1,488 students and holds a KHDA rating of Good. Its location within a planned residential and commercial zone makes it a practical option for families based in that part of the city.

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American Academy for Girls campus in Al Mizhar 1, Dubai

American Academy for Girls

Dubai , Al Mizhar 1

Rating

Good

Fees

AED 36,485 - 65,270

Curriculum

American

Founded

2005

Ages

318

Gender

girls

American Academy for Girls in Al Mizhar 1 holds a genuinely rare position in Dubai — it is the only girls-only school in the emirate offering an international curriculum, running from Pre-KG through to Grade 12. NEASC-accredited and rated Good by KHDA, the school serves 549 students in a focused, single-gender environment. Founded in 2005, it has built a distinct identity around that deliberate educational choice.

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American International School campus in Al Qusais 1, Dubai

American International School

Dubai , Al Qusais 1

Rating

Good

Fees

AED 13,405 - 21,732

Curriculum

American

Founded

2003

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

American International School in Al Qusais 1 is the area's largest American curriculum provider, enrolling 2,725 students from KG1 through Grade 12 under a NEASC-accredited framework. Founded in 2003 and rated Good by KHDA, the school has grown into a well-established presence in one of Dubai's more densely populated residential districts. Its size supports a broad range of academic and extracurricular offerings.

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American School Dubai campus in Al Barsha 1, Dubai

American School Dubai

Dubai , Al Barsha 1

Rating

Good

Fees

AED 60,571 - 89,319

Curriculum

American

Founded

1973

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

Founded in 1966 — before the UAE itself existed — American School Dubai in Al Barsha 1 holds the distinction of being the city's oldest American curriculum institution. Governed by a Board of Trustees as a not-for-profit school, it serves over 2,000 students and carries a KHDA rating of Good.

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American School of Creative Science campus in Nadd Al Shiba 2, Dubai

American School of Creative Science

Dubai , Nadd Al Shiba 2

Rating

Good

Fees

AED 35,822 - 72,669

Curriculum

American

Founded

2016

Gender

mixed

American School of Creative Science in Nadd Al Shiba 2 stands out as the area's only school combining the American curriculum with a dedicated focus on STEM and creative learning. Rated Good by KHDA and founded in 2016, the school serves close to 730 students across a mixed-gender community.

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Collegiate International School campus in Umm Suqeim 2, Dubai

Collegiate International School

Dubai , Umm Suqeim 2

Rating

Good

Fees

AED 39,478 - 70,630

Curriculum

American / International Baccalaureate

Founded

2011

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

Collegiate International School in Umm Suqeim 2 is the only school in Dubai to combine New York State Next Generation Standards with the full IB continuum — PYP, MYP, and Diploma — under one roof. Rated Good by KHDA and founded in 2011, it offers a genuinely dual-pathway experience for its 730 students.

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Dubai International Private School - Al Qouz campus in Al Qouz 1, Dubai

Dubai International Private School - Al Qouz

Dubai , Al Qouz 1

Rating

Good

Fees

AED 14,836 - 25,080

Curriculum

American

Founded

1999

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

Dubai International Private School in Al Qouz 1 delivers a full American curriculum from KG1 through Grade 12 and carries a KHDA rating of Good. Notably, over half of its 1,830-strong student body is Emirati — an unusually high demographic profile for a private American curriculum school in Dubai.

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Dubai National School AlTwar campus in Al Twar 1, Dubai

Dubai National School AlTwar

Dubai , Al Twar 1

Rating

Good

Fees

AED 23,690 - 38,836

Curriculum

American

Founded

2000

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

Dubai National School AlTwar has served families in Al Twar 1 since 2000, offering a complete American curriculum pathway from KG1 through Grade 12. The school holds a KHDA rating of Good — a standard it has maintained consistently since the 2015–2016 inspection cycle — and currently enrols over 1,100 students.

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Dubai National School campus in Al Barsha 1, Dubai

Dubai National School

Dubai , Al Barsha 1

Rating

Good

Fees

AED 24,172 - 39,665

Curriculum

American

Founded

1988

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

With roots going back to 1988, Dubai National School in Al Barsha 1 is one of the longer-established American curriculum schools in the emirate, drawing more than 2,400 students from 59 nationalities. Its KHDA Good rating has been a consistent feature of its inspection record for well over a decade.

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Dunecrest American School campus in Al Barari, Dubai

Dunecrest American School

Dubai , Al Barari

Rating

Good

Fees

AED 58,407 - 96,263

Curriculum

American

Founded

2018

Gender

mixed

Dunecrest American School sits on a purposefully designed 8-acre campus in the leafy residential community of Al Barari, offering the American curriculum to around 667 students. Opened in 2018 and rated Good by KHDA, the school is the UAE flagship of Esol Education and benefits from a setting that is notably distinct from Dubai's more urban school corridors.

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GEMS Al Khaleej International School - Al Warqa campus in Al Warqa 4, Dubai

GEMS Al Khaleej International School - Al Warqa

Dubai , Al Warqa 4

Rating

Good

Fees

AED 33,932 - 52,129

Curriculum

American

Founded

1992

Ages

418

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

Founded in 1992, GEMS Al Khaleej International School in Al Warqa 4 holds NEASC accreditation and serves a predominantly Arab and Emirati community through the American curriculum. Rated Good by KHDA and enrolling close to 2,800 students, it occupies an unusual niche as a long-established US curriculum school with deep roots in the local community.

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Greenwood International School campus in Muhaisanah 1, Dubai

Greenwood International School

Dubai , Muhaisanah 1

Rating

Good

Fees

AED 20,124 - 30,860

Curriculum

American

Founded

1992

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

Greenwood International School has been part of the Muhaisanah 1 community since 1992, offering the American curriculum from KG1 through Grade 12 to over 1,200 students. Rated Good by KHDA, the school provides a full K–12 pathway in a part of Dubai that has relatively few schools offering progression all the way to graduation.

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Mirdif American School campus in Al Mizhar 1, Dubai

Mirdif American School

Dubai , Al Mizhar 1

Rating

Good

Fees

AED 25,944 - 47,081

Curriculum

American

Founded

1995

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

Mirdif American School has been part of the Al Mizhar 1 community since 1995, making it one of the longer-established American curriculum schools in the area. Operating from a purpose-built campus behind the Arabian Center, it holds a Good rating from KHDA and currently serves close to 700 students across a mixed-gender setting.

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New Academy School campus in Al Raffa, Dubai

New Academy School

Dubai , Al Raffa

Rating

Good

Fees

AED 9,238 - 24,625

Curriculum

American

Founded

1990

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

New Academy School brings over three decades of history to the Al Raffa area, having first opened its doors in 1990. Accredited by NEASC and rated Good by KHDA, it offers an American curriculum to more than 1,300 students and is notable for combining international accreditation with comparatively accessible fee levels.

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Next Generation School campus in Al Barsha 1, Dubai

Next Generation School

Dubai , Al Barsha 1

Rating

Good

Fees

AED 25,076 - 49,376

Curriculum

American

Founded

2016

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

Next Generation School in Al Barsha 1 holds dual accreditation from both NEASC and the Council of Islamic Schools of North America — a combination that sets it apart from most American curriculum schools in Dubai. Rated Good by KHDA since opening in 2016, it integrates U.S. Common Core Standards with an explicit Islamic values framework across its 1,200-strong student body.

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Philadelphia Private School campus in Al Qusais 1, Dubai

Philadelphia Private School

Dubai , Al Qusais 1

Rating

Good

Fees

AED 19,069 - 35,160

Curriculum

American

Founded

2006

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

Philadelphia Private School in Al Qusais 1 is one of the few American curriculum schools in Dubai to offer Advanced Placement programmes alongside a California State Standards framework that also incorporates Next Generation Science Standards. Rated Good by KHDA and founded in 2006, it provides a clear academic pathway for students aiming for university entry through the AP route.

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Sharjah American International Private School campus in Al Warqa 1, Dubai

Sharjah American International Private School

Dubai , Al Warqa 1

Rating

Good

Fees

AED 17,976 - 44,938

Curriculum

American

Founded

2005

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

Sharjah American International Private School — known locally as SAIS-D — is one of the larger American curriculum schools in Al Warqa 1, educating more than 2,000 students since 2005. Rated Good by KHDA, it is frequently noted for offering a broad American programme at fee levels that represent strong value relative to comparable schools across Dubai.

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The School of Research Science (US High School) campus in Al Warqa 4, Dubai

The School of Research Science (US High School)

Dubai , Al Warqa 4

Rating

Acceptable

Fees

AED 60,168 - 70,039

Curriculum

American

Founded

2020

Ages

1318

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

The School of Research Science (US High School) is the American curriculum branch of an established school group, located in Al Warqa 4 and founded in 2020. Despite its relatively short history, it has grown to serve around 830 students and currently holds a KHDA rating of Acceptable. Families considering the school should note its accreditation under the US framework and its ongoing development as a young institution.

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Al Maaref Private School campus in Al Seeb, Dubai

Al Maaref Private School

Dubai , Al Seeb

Rating

Acceptable

Fees

AED 14,144 - 39,007

Curriculum

American

Founded

1987

Ages

418

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

Al Maaref Private School, now formally known as Al Maaref American School, has been part of Dubai's education landscape since 1987, making it one of the emirate's longer-standing American curriculum providers. Located in Al Seeb and US-accredited, the school serves 1,368 students and currently holds a KHDA rating of Acceptable. Its decades of operation give it an established presence that newer schools in the area cannot replicate.

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Bright Learners Private School campus in Al Rashidiya, Dubai

Bright Learners Private School

Dubai , Al Rashidiya

Rating

Acceptable

Fees

AED 24,606 - 32,719

Curriculum

American

Founded

2020

Ages

318

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

Bright Learners Private School brings an affordable American curriculum option to Al Rashidiya, one of Dubai's more established residential neighbourhoods. Founded in 2020 and currently rated Acceptable by KHDA, the school is still in its early years, serving students from Pre-K through Grade 8.

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Dubai International Private School campus in Al Garhoud, Dubai

Dubai International Private School

Dubai , Al Garhoud

Rating

Acceptable

Fees

AED 14,705 - 23,629

Curriculum

American

Founded

1985

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

Established in 1985, Dubai International Private School in Al Garhoud is among the older American curriculum schools in the city, with a history spanning four decades. The school holds a KHDA rating of Acceptable and remains one of the few private American curriculum options serving the Garhoud community.

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Dubai Modern Education School campus in Al Mizhar 1, Dubai

Dubai Modern Education School

Dubai , Al Mizhar 1

Rating

Acceptable

Fees

AED 13,487 - 24,911

Curriculum

American / Ministry of Education

Founded

1996

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

Dubai Modern Education School in Al Mizhar 1 has been part of the local community since 1996, offering both the American curriculum and the UAE Ministry of Education curriculum within a single institution. Rated Acceptable by KHDA, it serves over 1,400 students across a mixed-gender environment.

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Dubai Schools - Al Khawaneej campus in Al Khwaneej 1, Dubai

Dubai Schools - Al Khawaneej

Dubai , Al Khwaneej 1

Rating

Acceptable

Fees

AED 30,603 - 46,800

Curriculum

American

Founded

2021

Ages

413

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

Dubai Schools - Al Khawaneej is a public-private partnership between the Dubai Government and Taaleem, opened in 2021 in Al Khwaneej 1. The school follows the American curriculum with an IB framework and holds an Acceptable KHDA rating. Its government-backed model makes it one of the more affordable American curriculum options in east Dubai.

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Dubai Schools - Albarsha campus in Al Barsha South 2, Dubai

Dubai Schools - Albarsha

Dubai , Al Barsha South 2

Rating

Acceptable

Fees

AED 30,603 - 46,800

Curriculum

American

Founded

2021

Ages

412

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

Situated in Al Barsha South 2, Dubai Schools - Albarsha operates as a government-backed, public-private partnership between the Dubai Government and Taaleem, delivering the American curriculum to over 1,200 students. Opened in 2021 and rated Acceptable by KHDA, it is designed to offer accessible, quality education at fees below the typical private school range.

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Emirates National Schools - Dubai - Al Khwaneej 1  Branch campus in Al Khwaneej 1, Dubai

Emirates National Schools - Dubai - Al Khwaneej 1 Branch

Dubai , Al Khwaneej 1

Rating

Acceptable

Fees

AED 23,330 - 45,000

Curriculum

American

Founded

2021

Ages

413

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

Emirates National Schools - Dubai - Al Khwaneej 1 Branch opened in September 2021, delivering the American curriculum through the IB Primary Years Programme framework in Al Khwaneej 1. Accredited by both IB and Cognia and rated Acceptable by KHDA, the school positions itself as a culturally grounded institution with a dual-accreditation foundation from its earliest years.

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Ignite School campus in Al Warqa 3, Dubai

Ignite School

Dubai , Al Warqa 3

Rating

Acceptable

Fees

AED 29,682 - 45,034

Curriculum

American

Founded

2018

Gender

mixed

Ignite School in Al Warqa 3 follows the American curriculum aligned to New York Common Core State Standards, offering a continuous Pre-Primary to Grade 12 pathway under one roof. Opened in 2018 and rated Acceptable by KHDA, it is one of the few schools in Dubai to combine a full K–12 American programme with fees positioned firmly in the affordable range.

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International Academic School campus in Al Warqa 1, Dubai

International Academic School

Dubai , Al Warqa 1

Rating

Acceptable

Fees

AED 14,992 - 28,112

Curriculum

American

Founded

2006

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

International Academic School in Al Warqa 1 holds the distinction of being the first WASC-accredited American curriculum school in Dubai, offering a recognised US High School Diploma pathway from KG1 through Grade 12. Established in 2006 and rated Acceptable by KHDA, it serves nearly 1,500 students at fees that place it among the more accessible options in the American curriculum segment.

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Modern Skills School campus in Muhaisanah 1, Dubai

Modern Skills School

Dubai , Muhaisanah 1

Rating

Acceptable

Fees

AED 17,491 - 29,572

Curriculum

American

Founded

2006

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

Founded in 2006, Modern Skills School is one of Muhaisanah 1's more established American curriculum institutions, enrolling nearly 1,700 students from KG1 through Grade 12. The school carries an Acceptable KHDA rating and follows a student-centered American framework with a broad range of standardised assessments across its all-through programme.

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North American International School campus in Al Mizhar 1, Dubai

North American International School

Dubai , Al Mizhar 1

Rating

Acceptable

Fees

AED 30,664 - 49,061

Curriculum

American

Founded

2007

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

North American International School has operated in Al Mizhar 1 since 2007, offering a full American curriculum pathway from KG1 through to Grade 12. The school currently holds an Acceptable KHDA rating and serves around 890 students in a co-educational environment.

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Renaissance School campus in Dubai Sports City, Dubai

Renaissance School

Dubai , Dubai Sports City

Rating

Acceptable

Fees

AED 36,050 - 56,650

Curriculum

American

Founded

2018

Ages

412

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

Opened in 2018, Renaissance School is a relatively young American curriculum school situated within Dubai Sports City, currently educating students from KG1 through Grade 8. It follows New York State Standards — among the more rigorous US frameworks — and holds an Acceptable KHDA rating as it continues to grow its enrolment of around 580 students.

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The International School of Choueifat (Branch) campus in Dubai Investment Park 1, Dubai

The International School of Choueifat (Branch)

Dubai , Dubai Investment Park 1

Rating

Acceptable

Fees

AED 26,000 - 50,077

Curriculum

American / British

Founded

2012

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

The International School of Choueifat's Dubai Investment Park branch is a sizeable all-through school, enrolling close to 3,000 students from KG1 to Grade 12 within the SABIS network's structured, proprietary curriculum. Opened in 2012 and currently rated Acceptable by KHDA, it delivers both American and British curriculum elements through the SABIS framework.

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The International School of Choueifat campus in Al Safouh 2, Dubai

The International School of Choueifat

Dubai , Al Safouh 2

Rating

Acceptable

Fees

AED 21,393 - 33,222

Curriculum

American / British

Founded

1994

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

The International School of Choueifat on Al Safouh 2 is among Dubai's earliest established private schools, operating since 1994 and now educating nearly 4,000 students from Pre-KG through Grade 12. As the original UAE campus within the global SABIS network, it delivers a proprietary curriculum that blends American and British elements, though it currently holds an Acceptable rating from KHDA.

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Vernus International Primary School campus in Dubai Silicon Oasis, Dubai

Vernus International Primary School

Dubai , Dubai Silicon Oasis

Rating

Acceptable

Fees

AED 34,884 - 41,445

Curriculum

American

Founded

2020

Ages

411

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

Opened in 2020, Vernus International Primary School is a small American curriculum school in Dubai Silicon Oasis catering exclusively to children from Pre-K through Grade 5. With 238 students and an Acceptable KHDA rating, it offers a focused primary-years environment built around California Common Core State Standards.

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Dubai Schools -  Nad AlShiba campus in Nadd Al Shiba 4, Dubai

Dubai Schools - Nad AlShiba

Dubai , Nadd Al Shiba 4

Rating

New School

Fees

AED 30,603 - 46,800

Curriculum

British / American

Founded

2022

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

Dubai Schools – Nad Al Shiba is a government-backed school in Nadd Al Shiba 4 that blends American and British curriculum frameworks with a strong Arabic and Islamic identity. Having opened in 2022, it does not yet hold a KHDA rating, but forms part of an ambitious national schools network with a distinctive dual-curriculum model.

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Icademy Middle East campus in Dubai Knowledge Park, Dubai

Icademy Middle East

Dubai , Dubai Knowledge Park

Rating

New School

Fees

AED 19,828 - 27,767

Curriculum

American

Founded

2008

Gender

boys & girls (mixed)

Based in Dubai Knowledge Park, Icademy Middle East is the only KHDA-licensed, NEASC-accredited American online school operating in the emirate, serving students from Kindergarten through Grade 12. Its fully virtual model makes it a genuinely singular option in the UAE for families seeking an accredited US curriculum delivered entirely online.

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