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Jebel Ali School (Br of Taaleem Management (L L C))Campus & Facilities in Jabal Ali 1، Dubai

Curriculum
British
KHDA
Very Good
Location
Dubai, Jabal Ali 1
Fees
AED 50K - 82K
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Campus & Facilities

Outstanding
Facilities & Resources Rating
KHDA 2023–24 — highest sub-rating awarded to the school
~AED 60M
Invested Since 2022
Post-Taaleem acquisition campus investment; AED 25M more due 2026–27
2016
Purpose-Built Campus Opened
Relocated from Jebel Ali Village after 35+ years on original site
AED 49,630–82,190
Annual Fee Range
At or above the AED 49,630 median for British curriculum schools in Dubai
1,979
Students on Campus
Single-site campus serving FS1 to Year 13 — one of Dubai's larger British schools
Purpose-Built CampusOutstanding Facilities RatingSwimming PoolSTEAM DepartmentOn-Site ClinicOutdoor Learning Spaces

Jebel Ali School relocated from its original Jebel Ali Village site to a purpose-built 21st-century campus in Damac Hills (Akoya) in September 2016, giving its nearly 2,000 students a modern, spacious environment designed from the ground up for contemporary learning. While the exact campus footprint is not publicly disclosed, the site is generously proportioned, with plentiful outdoor learning spaces that allow teaching to extend beyond the classroom — a feature noted positively by visiting reviewers. The campus serves students aged 3 to 18 across a single, unified site.

The most significant recent development is the scale of investment following Taaleem's acquisition of the school in May 2022: close to AED 60 million has been invested in the campus and its resources since that point, with a further AED 25 million committed for the 2026–27 academic year. For parents, this is a meaningful signal — the physical environment is actively being upgraded, not maintained at a standstill. The specifics of individual capital projects are not fully itemised in available data, but the cumulative investment is substantial by any measure in Dubai's private school market.

Sports provision is broad. The school fields teams across swimming, aquathlon, cross country, athletics, gymnastics, rugby, football, basketball, netball, badminton, rounders, and cricket — competing in DASSA leagues and tournaments from Year 3 through Year 13. A swimming pool supports both curriculum PE and competitive aquathlon and swimwear events. The PE programme includes invasion games, net and wall games, gymnastics, dance, and emerging sports such as ultimate frisbee, water polo, and handball. All year groups receive two dedicated PE lessons per week delivered by trained teachers and specialist coaches.

Academic facilities include a STEAM department, libraries accessed regularly by both Primary and Secondary students, and technology integrated from Foundation Stage onwards — inspectors noted that students are confident users of digital devices across all phases. The school's cafeteria is managed by Leela's Lunches, with tailored meal options by year group and a focus on healthy nutrition. The on-site clinic is staffed by a doctor and two qualified nurses, providing meaningful medical cover for a school of this size. Outdoor learning spaces are a deliberate feature of the campus design.

KHDA inspectors rated Management, Staffing, Facilities and Resources as Outstanding in the 2023–24 inspection — the highest possible rating, and one of only two Outstanding sub-ratings the school received. The inspection report specifically highlighted "the management of daily routines, outstanding facilities and resources" as a school highlight. This is a strong endorsement of the physical environment and how it is run day-to-day.

At fees ranging from AED 49,630 to AED 82,190, JAS sits at and above the median for British curriculum schools in Dubai, where the citywide British school median is AED 49,630. At this fee level, parents should reasonably expect well-resourced, modern facilities — and on the available evidence, the campus broadly delivers. The scale of ongoing Taaleem investment suggests the gap between the school's current physical offer and its fee positioning is narrowing. The primary caveat is that granular detail on specific facility counts — number of science labs, performance spaces, or sports courts — is not publicly disclosed, making a fully precise comparison difficult. What is clear is that the inspection verdict on facilities is the school's strongest single rating, and the investment trajectory is positive.