American International School logo

American International SchoolCampus & Facilities in Al Qusais 1، Dubai

Curriculum
American
KHDA
Good
Location
Dubai, Al Qusais 1
Fees
AED 13K - 22K
Back to Overview

Campus & Facilities

Acceptable
Facilities & Resources Rating
KHDA 2023–24 — second-lowest band; inspectors flagged deficiencies in science, sport, arts and digital learning
AED 13,405–21,732
Annual Fee Range
Well below the American curriculum median of AED 33,610 in Dubai — facilities reflect this positioning
2,725
Students on Roll
Large school by Dubai standards; single campus in Al Qusais
197
Students of Determination
Inclusion rated Good; one of the stronger aspects of the school's support environment
Good
Wellbeing Rating
KHDA 2023–24; students report high positivity and strong sense of school community
Elementary LibraryExam Hall (New)On-Site CanteenInclusion SupportInnovation ClassesAffordable Fee Band

American International School is located in Al Qusais, one of Dubai's most school-dense residential communities, with 15 private schools within the neighbourhood. Established in 2003, the school operates as a single campus serving 2,725 students from KG1 through Grade 12. Campus size data is not publicly disclosed, and detailed specifications for sports facilities, swimming pools, gymnasiums, and medical infrastructure are not available in published school materials — a transparency gap that parents should note when visiting. [MISSING: campus size in acres or sqm; sports facility specifications; medical centre details]

In terms of academic infrastructure, the school's documented facilities are modest. The elementary library is cited in the 2024 KHDA inspection as a valuable resource that has helped accelerate reading progress in upper elementary. A computer-based examination hall was added as part of a newly constructed section that also relocated the high school girls' cohort — representing the school's most visible recent capital investment. Innovation classes are offered as a curriculum feature, though dedicated maker space or STEAM lab facilities are not formally documented. [MISSING: science lab count; technology infrastructure details; arts and performance spaces]

The KHDA's 2023–2024 inspection is candid on the subject of facilities: inspectors explicitly identified deficiencies in staffing, resources and facilities across science, music, art and design, digital learning, and sport as a formal key recommendation. The report also noted that teaching spaces are not consistently conducive to active learning — a finding that points to limitations in both the physical environment and its configuration. Management, staffing, facilities and resources were rated Acceptable — the second-lowest band in the KHDA framework — underscoring that the physical environment remains an area requiring meaningful investment.

At fees ranging from AED 13,405 to AED 21,732, AIS sits well below the median for American curriculum schools in Dubai, where the median annual fee is AED 33,610 and the average reaches AED 37,431. At this price point, the facility offering is broadly consistent with what the fee level implies — parents are not paying premium rates, and the campus reflects that. The school is positioned as an accessible, affordable American curriculum option rather than a facilities-led proposition. That said, the inspection's explicit call to improve resources across multiple subject areas signals that even relative to its fee band, the current provision falls short of what students need to perform competitively in external assessments.

On the positive side, the school's wellbeing provision was rated Good by KHDA inspectors, with students reporting high levels of positivity and a strong sense of community. A canteen and bookstore are on site. The school's inclusion infrastructure — supporting 197 students of determination — is a genuine strength, with appropriate IEPs and trained staff in place. Parents considering AIS should visit the campus in person to assess whether the physical environment meets their expectations, particularly for secondary-age students.