
Amity English School occupies a single campus in the Al Qusais School Zone — one of Dubai's most school-dense neighbourhoods, with 15 private schools located in the immediate area. The school opened in September 2024, making it one of Dubai's newest British curriculum institutions, and its physical environment reflects that newness: facilities are purpose-built and presented as contemporary, though independent verification of specifications remains limited at this early stage.
The academic facility offering includes technology-enabled classrooms, a library, science labs, ICT labs, and a maker's room dedicated to design thinking and project-based learning. Creative studios support the arts programme, and Foundation Stage children benefit from dedicated outdoor play areas — an important consideration for parents of younger children. An indoor multi-purpose area serves as the school's main flexible gathering and activity space. Campus size, total floor area, and classroom counts have not been disclosed, which limits a full comparative assessment.
On the sports side, the school offers a swimming pool and a football field — a reasonable provision for a primary-phase school at this fee level. Details on pool dimensions, court facilities, or gymnasium provision have not been published. Dining, medical, and dedicated wellbeing facilities are similarly [MISSING: no data provided on canteen, on-site clinic, or counselling facilities].
Amity has not yet been inspected by KHDA/DSIB, which is expected for a school that opened in 2024 — it sits among the 27 schools in Dubai currently classified as New Schools without a substantive inspection rating. Parents should note this absence of independent quality verification when evaluating the campus environment. Among British curriculum schools in Dubai, inspection ratings range widely, with 18 of Dubai's 23 Outstanding-rated schools following the British curriculum — a benchmark Amity will eventually be measured against.
At discounted fees of AED 19,200 to AED 23,250, Amity sits well below the British curriculum median of AED 49,630 and even below the citywide median of AED 35,525. At this fee point, the facilities on offer — a pool, football field, science and ICT labs, a maker's space, and technology-enabled classrooms — represent a creditable provision. Parents should calibrate expectations accordingly: this is not a premium-facility campus, but for an affordable British curriculum option, the core infrastructure appears fit for purpose for the current FS1 to Year 7 cohort. As the school expands toward its planned Year 13 all-through model, the adequacy of facilities for older secondary students will require close monitoring.