The Indian International School (DSO Branch) logo

The Indian International School (DSO Branch)

Curriculum
Indian
KHDA
Good
Location
Dubai, Dubai Silicon Oasis
Fees
AED 10K - 21K
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Campus & Facilities

Good
KHDA Facilities Rating
Management, staffing, facilities & resources rated Good in 2023–2024 inspection
Outstanding
Health & Safety Rating
Rated Outstanding across all four school phases by KHDA 2023–2024
3,143
Students on Roll
One of the larger Indian curriculum schools in Dubai
15
Sports Clubs & Facilities
Supports competitive participation across multiple sports disciplines
AED 9,679–21,000
Annual Fee Range
Below the Indian curriculum Dubai median of AED 15,000 at entry level
15 Sports Clubs6 Guidance CounsellorsShaded Play AreasOn-Site Wellbeing TeamCoding KG–Grade 10In-House Vegetable Patch

The Indian International School (DSO Branch) is located in Dubai Silicon Oasis, a planned technology and residential community on the eastern edge of Dubai. Opened in 2011, the campus is a single-site school serving 3,143 students from KG1 through Grade 11 — making it one of the larger Indian curriculum schools in the city. Campus size data is not publicly disclosed, but the school's capacity to house this student population across multiple phases gives a sense of its physical scale. The inspection report notes that governors have provided extensive shaded areas since the previous inspection, a meaningful improvement for a school in Dubai's climate and one that reflects active investment in the outdoor environment.

Academic facilities include a library, science laboratories, and a technology-integrated learning environment. The school deploys multiple online learning platforms — including Tabbie Math, Achieve 3000, and Rosen Level Up — across all year groups, and coding is integrated into the Computer Science curriculum from KG through Grade 10. Curiosity corners, talent stations, sectional reading corners, and informative corridor displays reflect a deliberate effort to make learning spaces stimulating beyond the classroom. However, the 2023–2024 KHDA inspection specifically flagged that library access and reading resources do not receive high enough priority, and this remains an area requiring attention. Parents should note this finding, as reading development is a stated area for improvement.

Sports provision includes 15 sports clubs and facilities and participation in competitive events such as the Dubai School Games Swim Meet. Students have competed and placed in football, basketball, cricket, table tennis, badminton, and karate at inter-school level, reflecting active use of whatever sports infrastructure is available. Specific facility dimensions — pool size, court counts, gymnasium specifications — are [MISSING: detailed sports facility specifications not publicly disclosed]. The school also lists 10 extra-curricular facilities and an in-house vegetable patch, the latter supporting its sustainability and eco-education agenda.

On wellbeing and pastoral infrastructure, the school employs 6 guidance counsellors, and KHDA rated health and safety Outstanding across all four school phases in the 2023–2024 inspection — a genuinely strong result that reflects well on the physical environment and safeguarding arrangements. The inspection also rated management, staffing, facilities and resources as Good overall.

At fees ranging from AED 9,679 to AED 21,000 per year, IIS DSO sits well below the Indian curriculum median of AED 15,000 at entry level and comfortably within the affordable segment of Dubai's private school market. At this fee level, parents should not expect the premium facilities of higher-fee schools — no Olympic pool, no dedicated performing arts theatre, no maker space of the kind found at schools charging AED 50,000 or above. What the school does offer is a functional, well-maintained environment with genuine investment in technology, wellbeing infrastructure, and outdoor comfort. For families prioritising value within the Indian curriculum, the facilities are broadly appropriate to the fee point — though the library gap is a real limitation that leadership has acknowledged and must address.